Dear friends:
"Green" mania is sweeping the nation and the world.
Mania is related to the word maniac, and maniacal. And that is exactly what it
is. If you want to know the truth about climate change, see this scientific Web
site: http://www.oism.org/pproject/s33p36.htm
Jan Markle
has some wise words on the subject, below. Personally, I am opposed to most
recycling. A few years ago I read an article that proved the resources consumed
in recycling are greater than that saved. For example, can you imagine the
resources used up in the manufacturing then servicing and staffing one of those
large recycling trucks? Or a fleet of them? Most all of this is sheer folly,
pursued with religious-like fervor as a spiritual effort by many who otherwise
have no spiritual purpose.
Besides, if we are as near to the Tribulation
as millions believe, check the extensive damage to the environment done as
described in the book of Revelation chapter 8. Poor Al Gore and all his
environmental wacko friends will go nuts (or nuttier)!
Frankly, I am
tired of the word "green." Don't buy me anything green. Come to think of it,
green is the color most prominent in Muslim countries and amongst the
Palestinian terrorists. That makes me like it even
less.
Jim
___________________________________________
What Commandment Tells Us to
Recycle?
By Jan Markell
From Sydney, Australia, to San Francisco, nearly 4,000
cities in 88 countries turned off their lights this past weekend for "Earth
Hour." The campaign was designed to highlight the threat of climate change. If
people want to spend their weekends this way that is fine; however, I have a
real problem with the root of their thinking which would be that man is
causing a climate catastrophe, and that man is at the root of global
warming. So in light of my sentiment, I kept my lights on and chose not to
dine by candlelight.
In spite of the attempts of Al Gore, I have yet to
be shown absolute scientific proof that man is at the root of the global climate
"catastrophe." I suspect the sun is somehow involved; however, visit my home
state of Minnesota just about any January and you would actually wish that
Gore's fake science would come true.
This rather secular cause has
made its way into the heart of many Christians! What fuels it? First we
have many churches that belong to the National Association of Evangelicals (NAE)
who make it a primary issue. The NAE was birthed in the 1940s to be an
instrument to counter the more liberal National and World Council of Churches
that never met a social cause behind which they didn't rally. The NAE for
decades focused like a laser beam on gospel preaching, missions, evangelism,
Bible memorization, and more.
If you visit their Web site, www.nae.net,
you are hit with propaganda such as this: "What do you personally do to
take care of God's creation?" "Evangelical" leaders and pastors
respond by talking about recycling, picking up (garbage) after others, and
purchasing used furniture. One person polled proudly stated that his goal was
to fill just one garbage can a month! How about a call to win one lost soul to
Jesus a month? But this is the new NAE!
Moving on to a similar
example, now we have The Green Bible. This Bible is trying to make
gardeners out of all of us. It is put out by Harper Collins, and it calls
attention to more than 1,000 verses related to nature. It is printed in forest
green and on soy paper. As much as I love the nature that surrounds my townhouse
complex, if I am looking for a new Bible, it will be one that has 1,000
verses highlighted about winning lost souls.
The Green
Bible furthers the cause of "creation care" by containing supplementary
writings by Desmond Tutu, Emergent leader Brian McLaren, and others who are not
sound in their theology. Some contributors to this Bible suggest that
eco-neglect violates Jesus' call to care for the least among us. In other words,
a tree is now the "least among us." How tragic things have gone this far off
course.
Southern Baptist leader Richard Land says, "Sure it is
important (to take care of the earth), but when Jesus was asked what was the
most important issue, He said, 'Love your God, and love your neighbor as
yourself.' He didn't say a word about eco-neglect."
I
wonder if churches, including so-called "evangelical churches" that are printing
their Sunday bulletin on eco-friendly paper, have the same zeal for witnessing
to the lost because the time is short? The magazine Christianity
Today, normally pretty friendly to left-leaning causes, is critical of
The Green Bible because "its aim is to orient readers to the
Bible's concern for the natural world along with its call for social justice and
poverty relief." Christianity Today goes on to point out that
this Bible includes "tips for getting started in Christian environmentalism,
which looks basically like secular environmentalism along with a list of secular
organizations devoted to the environment."
Yes, we are
commanded in the Bible to take care of the earth. It sickens me every time I
hear of another species that has become extinct. The reckless targeting of
whales and dolphins is deplorable. Man has a responsibility to the earth and the
creatures and elements over which we have been given authority to rule. But
fighting the pollution and global warming wars will lead to only one thing:
One-world globalism. The source of our ecological problem is man's fallen
nature. He has set himself at the center of the universe. In the absolute
extreme, some of the eco-efforts going on, even in the church, can lead
ultimately to "mother earth" worship.
The Bible says, "For we know
that the whole creation groans and labors with birth pangs" (Romans 8:20-22)
as it waits for earth's real liberation -- the return of Christ. The
Green Bible and a form of Christianized Sierra Club activity are not
what the church is called to today. Souls are eternal and plant life is
not! Preaching the good news of Jesus Christ and using a Bible that most
effectively aids in that should be our focus when selecting a
Bible.
Please walk past the aisle, and keep moving, when you spot
The Green Bible, and why don't you remind the NAE of its roots?
They have nothing to do with recycling.
To better understand these
discernment issues, visit my Web site and the category of "Spiritual
Deception."
Awaiting His return,
Jan Markell