General Discussion
Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsHow Fossil Fuel Money Made Climate Change Denial the Word of God
In 2005, at its annual meeting in Washington, D.C., the National Association of Evangelicals was on the verge of doing something novel: affirming science. Specifically, the 30-million-member group, which represents 51 Christian denominations, was debating how to advance a new platform called For the Health of a Nation. The position paperwritten the year before An Inconvenient Truth kick-started sense of public urgency around climate changeincluded a call for evangelicals to protect Gods creation, and to embrace the governments help in doing so. The NAEs board had already adopted it unanimously before presenting it to the membership for debate.
At the time, many in the evangelical movement were uncomfortable with its close ties to the Republican anti-environmental regulation agenda. That year, a group called the Evangelical Alliance of Scientists and Ethicists protested the GOP-led effort to rewrite the Endangered Species Act, and the NAEs vice president of governmental affairs Richard Cizik pushed for the organization to endorse John McCain and Joe Liebermans cap-and-trade bill. For the Health of a Nation, which Cizik also pushed, was an opportunity to draw a bright line between their support of right-wing social positions on abortion and civil rights and a growing sentiment that Gods creation needed protection from industry.
Evangelicals dont want themselves identified as the Republican Party at prayer, the historian and evangelical Mark Knoll said at the time in support of the platform.
He was wrong. The rank-and-file membership rejected the effort. Like the oil and utilities industries, they decided that recognizing climate change was against their political interests.
Much more: https://splinternews.com/how-fossil-fuel-money-made-climate-denial-the-word-of-g-1797466298