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Al Gore's Amen Corner By: Mark D. Tooley
FrontPageMagazine.com | Monday, February 11, 2008


Hailed as a "Baptist prophet," Al Gore brought his Gospel of Global Warming to Jimmy Carter's rally for leftist Baptists at a New Baptist Covenant Celebration in Atlanta last week.  Gore toted a green Bible as he warned of Old Testament style famine and flood unless the planet hearkens unto the most apocalyptic of Global Warming scare stories.

"The evidence is there," Gore implored in ever-rising, apocalyptic tones. "The signal is on the mountain. The trumpet has blown. The scientists are screaming from the rooftops. The ice is melting. The land is parched. The seas are rising. The storms are getting stronger. Why do we not judge what is right?"

No hyperbole there.

Gore likened climate change to "a rising storm" eerily like the rise of Nazism in the 1930's.  In case anybody missed his point, Gore quoted Winston Churchill for good measure:  "The era of procrastination, of half-measures, of soothing and baffling expedients, of delays, is coming to its close. In its place we are entering a period of consequences."

Very stirring! And very appropriate for Carter's new confab of Baptists, who are rallying around political themes of the Left rather than Christian doctrinal creeds.

Gore was addressing about 2,500 like-minded, left-leaning Baptists at a special Global Warming luncheon.  Reportedly, 15,000 attended Carter's overall event. The former president left the Southern Baptist Convention several years ago, miffed over that denomination's conservative shift in the 1980's.  Carter, and some other Baptist refugees, prefer the Social Gospel activism of failing, mainline denominations to conservative Christianity.

Employing some of his slide show of melting glaciers and mourning polar bears that fueled his apocalyptic documentary, "An Inconvenient Truth," Gore added Bible verses to the scenes of environmental disaster so as to "put it in the context of my own faith as a Baptist."  Quoting the prophet Isaiah, the former vice president urged, "Come let us reason together," he said, "and tell one another the truth, inconvenient though it may be, about the crisis, including the opportunity that we now face."  Shifting to the Book of Deuteronomy, Gore then declared:  "The ancient prophet laid the choice before the people," he said: "Life or death, blessings or curses. Therefore choose life so both thou and thy seed may live."

Like the prophets he quoted, Gore outlined the various calamities that will unfold if wicked humanity does not repent of its environmental sins: flooding, hurricanes, tornados, and droughts of biblical proportions.   "Never in the past has all human civilization been at risk," he insisted about the "crisis" of Global Warming.   He quoted more Scripture:  "When I consider your heavens, the work of your fingers, the moon and the stars that you have set in place, Lord what is man that you are mindful of him, the son of man that you care for him?" And he offered hope of repentance:  "I think that there is a distinct possibility that one of the messages coming out of this gathering and this new covenant is creation care-that we who are Baptists of like mind and attempting in our lives to the best of our abilities to glorify God, are not going to countenance the continued heaping of contempt on God's creation."

When pro-life Christians cite the Bible this way, they are derided as fundamentalist whackos; when Al Gore screams that God is going to drown the East Coast if we don't change our global warming policies, he is called a prophet -- specifically, a "Baptist Prophet." That's how Robert Parham, executive director of the Nashville-based Baptist Center for Ethics, feted Gore during his introduction.

Like the true prophets of the Bible, Gore provided his audience a way of redemption; unlike true prophets, his salvation would come through left-wing politics.

"We have everything we need to do the right thing to save its grace and beauty for our children and their children," he asserted. "Everything, that is, with the possible exception of political will." And "solving the climate crisis" will be inexpensive.  "With one week's worth of the money spent on the war in Iraq, we'd be well down the road."

In fact, the entire cost of the Iraq War would potentially be only a down payment on the ultimate bill of the Global Warming alarmists' political/economic agenda, which could reduce world economic growth by trillions of dollars in pursuit of a phantom-like, climate equilibrium. All skeptics who question whether the cost in reduced wealth and perpetuated global poverty is worth the supposed benefit of a slight temperature adjustment are, of course, motivated only by profit.

"Too many spokespersons-who don't really speak for me but who claim to-have said global warming's not real, this is just a myth and etcetera," Gore said, in an oblique reference to conservative Baptists who are not yet ready to join Gore's green fire brigade.  "When did people of faith get so locked into an ideological coalition that they've
got to go along with the wealthiest and most powerful--who don't want to see change of a kind that's aimed at helping the people and protecting God's green earth?"  Presumably, Gore and his Global Warming allies are themselves free of any ideological baggage.

Gore's allegedly non-ideological solutions to climate change include new, international regulatory bureaucracies to restrict economic growth for decades. Its tenets are merely the Left's old economic agenda. They include expanding carbon taxes that would penalize free enterprise while enriching government treasuries in perpetuity.

"We need to combine the struggle against climate crisis and the fight against extreme poverty," Gore proposed, seemingly unaware that reducing global economic activity will require keeping hundreds of millions chronically poor.

Naturally, Carter loved Gore's climate scare-mongering and warnings against dissent. "How many of you think we should join Al Gore in being one of the strongest voices on earth?" the former president enthusiastically asked.  "Does anyone disagree? OK, now you see that was a unanimous vote. Thank you very much."

Ostensibly distressed over theological "fundamentalism" among Southern Baptists, Carter's new coalition of left-leaning Baptists seems to prefer a political fundamentalism of the left that tolerates no skepticism about the most alarmist Global Warming theories.

Mark D. Tooley is president of the Institute on Religion and Democracy. He is the author of Taking Back the United Methodist Church.


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