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Are Evangelicals On the Global Warming Bandwagon?

Are Evangelicals On the Global Warming Bandwagon?

Dr. E. Calvin Beisner

Cornwall Alliance for the Stewardship of Creation


November 3, 2008

For more than three years, a number of politicians and media observers have prophesied about the fracturing of the coveted “Evangelical Vote” over the issue of environmental stewardship.  And during the same period, a handful of evangelicals have toiled to persuade the faithful that manmade global warming is such a serious threat that it deserves top priority in their social witness.

Now, as Election Day approaches and both parties vie for that Evangelical vote, one can’t help reminding the candidates that global warming hype, despite all the media buzz, is not an issue that evangelicals embrace.

National Association of Evangelicals Vice President for Governmental Affairs Richard Cizik and Evangelical Environmental Network President Jim Ball, among others, have spoken at hundreds of churches, colleges, and other venues promoting the “Green” evangelical cause. Two years ago they even managed to persuade 86 high-profile pastors, college presidents, and others to sign “Climate Change: An Evangelical Call to Action” – a declaration heralded by mainstream media that normally ignore evangelical pronouncements on other, less politically correct issues.

Yet there was less to that document than met the eye. Its backers fell short of their main goal: endorsement by the National Association of Evangelicals, representing over 30 million evangelicals.

Instead, in January 2006 the NAE board’s executive committee reaffirmed its commitment to an earlier document, “For the Health of the Nation: A Call to Civic Responsibility,” which said nothing about global warming, and instructed its staff not to exceed its statements.

Ignoring the executive committee’s instruction, Cizik helped convene a joint venture between academic and evangelical global warming alarmists the following fall, carefully implying the NAE’s endorsement. At a January 2007 press conference he called climate change “a moral concern for all Americans” and insisted that “God will judge us” if we don’t respond. He invited evangelicals with questions about the science to enter into a dialogue, but by June he had begun warning that:

“God will judge those who destroy the earth. In fact it says in Revelation 11:18 that God will destroy those who destroy the earth. That is a warning. That is a warning to all of those who would say this doesn’t matter. And so for those who have an argument on this issue, I say, 'I’m sorry. Your argument is not with me. Your argument is with God, because either His Word says this or it doesn’t, and it does.'”

Cizik implies that Christians who fail to support his position on climate change are hypocrites or worse, going so far as to rebuke them from Hebrews 10:31 (a warning of damnation for those who reject the faith): “It is a fearful thing to fall into the hands of the living God.” This isn’t hyperbole because “climate change,” in his view, “is an overarching issue of justice — the biggest of the 21st century."

While Cizik’s advocacy has been growing over the past two years, the original document rejected by the NAE board in 2006 (the “Evangelical Call to Action” on climate change) still suffers from a lack of credibility. It fails to list any authors, offers almost no evidence, and cites no authoritative scientific or economic studies. None of its 86 original signers had scientific or economic expertise needed to assess its claims, and in the years since then, while several signers have removed their signatures, no new signers with such expertise have been added.

‘A Call to Truth’

In contrast, the Cornwall Alliance for the Stewardship of Creation produced “A Call to Truth, Prudence, and Protection of the Poor: An Evangelical Response to Global Warming,” co-authored by world-renowned global climate change research scientist Dr. Roy Spencer, environmental economist Dr. Ross McKitrick, energy policy expert Paul Driessen, and myself, a theologian and ethicist with recognized expertise in economic and environmental studies. The “Call to Truth” cited extensive data and sources in its point-by-point refutation of the “Call to Action.”

“Call to Truth” signers, over 170, reflect its credibility. They include mostly scientists and economists able to evaluate data and arguments about climate change and related policy, plus leading evangelical pastors and educators.

Having failed to convert evangelicals as a body to their cause, the global warming activists have resorted instead to simply declaring victory. They have claimed, and mainstream media have eagerly reported, a major shift in opinion about global warming among evangelicals.

But facts don’t support the claims. Polling by the Barna Research Group, which specializes in tracking opinion among evangelicals, showed no major shift. Instead, it found that global warming was the issue on which evangelicals were in starkest disagreement with the American population at large. Another Barna study found that while 90% of evangelicals want Christians to “take a more active role in caring for creation,” 65% percent believe the media have hyped global warming, 62% believe climate change is cyclical and not primarily manmade, and 60% fear that proposed solutions would harm the poor, especially outside the United States. And this summer’s National Survey on Religion and Public Life by Calvin College found that support among evangelical Christians for environmental regulation has declined by almost 10 percentage points in just the past four years.

New Developments in Science

Meanwhile, developments in climate science and economics are going the wrong way for the alarmists.

Among others in science, there was the discovery, reported in August of 2007, that cirrus clouds, rather than enlarging in response to surface warming and thus being a positive feedback, shrink and thus are a negative feedback–precisely the opposite of what was assumed in all the computer climate models. By itself that was thought sufficient to explain 70 percent of all global temperature variability in the twentieth century. That was followed by the discovery, reported in December, that formulae to correct for urban warming were insufficient; when corrected, the result was to reduce apparent warming from 1980 to 2002 by 50 percent, essentially eliminating the apparently anomalously rapid warming on which the case for alarm rested.

Several studies followed concluding that “climate sensitivity” (a misleading name for a complex and highly theoretical concept) is much lower than thought by the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change–probably no more than one-sixth as high (about 0.5̊ C instead of 3.0̊ C). The conclusion was reached in light of both critical analyses of the mathematical models calculating climate sensitivity and empirical studies that found that several factors the IPCC had thought were positive (heat-enhancing) feedbacks were negative (heat-reducing) instead. Such a temperature increase cannot be expected to cause significant harm, particularly to the increasingly wealthy world of the future.

In economics, multiple studies showed that the costs of reducing CO2 emissions to minimize future temperature increases far outweighed benefits to be expected from them. Perhaps most significant were the findings of Bjørn Lomborg and the Copenhagen Consensus. By comparing the benefit/cost ratios of spending on various problems, they concluded that fighting climate change was among the worst possible investments, while such simple things as adding micronutrients to diets in poor countries, increasing free trade, and providing sewage sanitation and water purification yielded great multiples of benefits over costs.

Other Voices, Other Opinions

It should be no surprise, then, that last December a hundred eminent scientists wrote an open letter to UN Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon saying, in part, “it is not established that it is possible to significantly alter global climate through cuts in human greenhouse gas emissions. On top of which, because attempts to cut emissions will slow development, the current UN approach of CO2 reduction is likely to increase human suffering from future climate change rather than to decrease it.”

Neither should it be surprising that over 31,000 scientists (including 9,021 PhDs) signed the “Petition Project” saying, in part, “There is no convincing scientific evidence that human release of carbon dioxide, methane, or other greenhouse gases is causing or will, in the foreseeable future, cause catastrophic heating of the Earth’s atmosphere and disruption of the Earth’s climate. Moreover, there is substantial scientific evidence that increases in atmospheric carbon dioxide produce many beneficial effects upon the natural plant and animal environments of the Earth.”

In the face of such developments, it is increasingly difficult to view the passionate promotion of alarm over global warming as anything other than pseudo science.

Raising an alternative voice to Ball, Cizik, and other global warming alarmists among evangelicals, six national organizations (the Southern Baptist Convention’s Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission, the Family Research Council, Wallbuilders, the Acton Institute for the Study of Religion and Liberty, the Institute on Religion and Democracy, and the Cornwall Alliance for the Stewardship of Creation) in May issued the WeGetIt.org declaration stating, among other things:

  • “Stewardship of creation must be based on Biblical principles and factual evidence. We face important environmental challenges, but must be cautious of claims that our planet is in peril from speculative dangers like man-made global warming,” and
  • “With billions suffering in poverty, environmental policies must not further oppress the world’s poor by denying them basic needs. Instead, we must help people fulfill their God-given potential as producers and stewards."

The WeGetIt.org campaign aims to gather a million signatures of evangelicals, putting to rest the notion of a major shift among evangelicals toward environmental alarmism. Endorsed by leading evangelicals like Chuck Colson, James Dobson, Richard Land, and evangelical climate scientists like Roy Spencer and David Legates, the declaration has since been signed by thousands of pastors, evangelical leaders, and Christians nationwide, and seems likely to crush climate alarmism among evangelicals once and for all.


E. Calvin Beisner, Ph.D., is national spokesman for the Cornwall Alliance for the Stewardship of Creation, http://www.cornwallalliance.org/ and author of Where Garden Meets Wilderness: Evangelical Entry into the Environmental Debate.

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