This Week in God

First up from the God machine this week is an encouraging religious development on climate change, from an unexpected source.

Signaling a significant departure from the Southern Baptist Convention’s official stance on global warming, 44 Southern Baptist leaders have decided to back a declaration calling for more action on climate change, saying its previous position on the issue was “too timid.”

The largest denomination in the United States after the Roman Catholic Church, the Southern Baptist Convention, with more than 16 million members, is politically and theologically conservative.

Yet its current president, the Rev. Frank Page, signed the initiative, “A Southern Baptist Declaration on the Environment and Climate Change.” Two past presidents of the convention, the Rev. Jack Graham and the Rev. James Merritt, also signed.

“We believe our current denominational engagement with these issues has often been too timid, failing to produce a unified moral voice,” the church leaders wrote in their new declaration.

The new SBC declaration, to be released on Monday, states, “Our cautious response to these issues in the face of mounting evidence may be seen by the world as uncaring, reckless and ill-informed.” The NYT added, “The document also urges ministers to preach more about the environment and for all Baptists to keep an open mind about considering environmental policy.”

Richard Land and the SBC’s political arm, the Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission, refused to sign the declaration. That, sadly, was rather predictable.

But this is still significant progress. Talk in evangelical circles about global warming has, slowly but surely, been getting louder in recent years, but the chances of the politically conservative Southern Baptist Convention taking a firm stand on the issue like this seemed remote.

The meaning, in religious circles, of the phrase “moral issue” is beginning to change. This doesn’t mean evangelicals are prepared to give up their opposition to gay and abortion rights, but it does mean that, for a new generation of the faithful, moral rights and wrongs will include more than just those two issues.

Other items from the God Machine this week:

* This year, for the first time, the Democratic National Convention will be kicked off by an interfaith prayer service (though it’s still unclear exactly who will officiate), and, in another first, there will be a caucus during the convention explicitly for “people of faith.”

Some Democratic leaders resolved to reach out to religious voters after the 2004 election, when polls showed Republicans had a lock on “values voters” — mostly evangelical Christians. Leading these efforts is the Rev. Leah D. Daughtry, chief executive of the convention. Ms. Daughtry (daughter of Herbert Daughtry, a minister in Brooklyn) flies from Denver to Washington every other weekend to lead her small Pentecostal congregation.

Ms. Daughtry announced in a conference call with members of the religious news media on Wednesday that convention committees had been seeded with religious leaders like the Rev. Tony Campolo, an evangelical author; Imam Abdul Malik Mujahid, chairman of the Council of Islamic Organizations of Greater Chicago; and Bishop Vashti McKenzie, the first woman to be a bishop in the African Methodist Episcopal Church.

* Remember the Seven Deadly Sins? This week, L’Osservatore Romano, the Vatican newspaper, published a list of the seven new deadly sins for the modern age.

Although it doesn’t reflect a change in official doctrine, the expansion of sins brought on by technology and science aligns with Pope Benedict XVI’s emphasis on communal rather than individual piety, observers say.

In an interview with L’Osservatore Romano, the Vatican’s official newspaper, Monsignor Gianfranco Girotti said priests must take into account “new sins which have appeared on the horizon of humanity as corollary to the unstoppable process of globalization.”

Among the new ones: drug dealing, obscene wealth, pollution, and “manipulative” genetic science.

* And finally, when I worked at Americans United for Separation of Church and State years ago, I would sometimes get asked, “Where are the worst church-state offenses?” A few places in Alabama would usually come to mind, but there’s one town in Louisiana that tops ’em all.

There are certain things you can count on. The sun will rise in the east and set in the west. Old Faithful will erupt. And, every few years, the American Civil Liberties Union will sue the Tangipahoa Parish School Board in Louisiana.

The members of this board seem to be having difficulty grasping the concept of separation of church and state. It’s a long-running problem. For some reason, school board members don’t seem to understand that their job is to oversee the education of young people, not meddle in their religious lives.

Every few years, local officials ignore the First Amendment, get sued, and lose. It costs local taxpayers a fortune. Why they refuse to give up on creating a local theocracy remains a mystery.

Among the new ones (deadly sins): drug dealing, obscene wealth, pollution, and “manipulative” genetic science.

I guess that includes bioengineered foods. In any case, I wonder if the pope discussed any of these things with President Bush. I know my local priest has no problems with any of this things. His ONLY issue is abortion.

  • It amazes me that groups like the SBC would have an “official position” on global warming in the first place.

    Last time I checked, Jesus didn’t have any lobbyists in his group.

  • A little off topic…

    First time I had read the Bible
    It had stroke me as unwitty
    I think it may started rumor
    That the Lord ain’t got no humor

    Put me inside SSC
    Let’s test superstring theory
    Oh yoi yoi accelerate the protons
    stir it twice and then just add me, ’cause

    I don’t read the Bible
    I don’t trust disciple
    Even if they’re made of marble
    Or Canal Street bling

    From Gogol Bordello’s “Supertheory of Supereverything”. You can watch a stripped down version of the band playing the song here:
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zOWx5G76pkU

    If you’ve never heard them, check ’em out. What could possibly be better than Russian folk-punk-rock, eh? It’s hard to crowd surf with an accordion, but leave it to a Slav to try anyway. And everyone knows that nothing gets butts shaking like that good ole 2/4 polka beat.

    Sorry for the pimp…it’s probably one of the new seven deadly sins, or should be.

  • to mellowjohn: here’s the list of all seven, and you’re in luck… because what you were worried of not being included is prominently listed on that list as well…

    “…pollution and genetic engineering, as well as drug dealing, abortion, pedophilia, social injustice and extreme wealth were now on record as mortal sins.”

    I guess a lot of those high powered republicans will fall in the ‘social injustice’ category. What about all those wealthy donors on the republican side, who keep funding weird conservative issues. It’s too bad that they can wait until their dead bed and ask for absolution, otherwise they might think of redistributing their ‘extreme wealth’ sooner.

  • The traditional Seven Deadly Sins were traits that are hard-wired into human nature:

    Pride! Envy! Gluttony! Lust! Anger! Greed! Sloth!

    Aren’t those great? Don’t they show wonderful insight? All of us have fallen prey to each and every one of them!

    Or am I speaking only for myself? 🙂

    “Pollution, genetic engineering, drug dealing, abortion, pedophilia, social injustice, and extreme wealth.” These don’t have the same ring to them, do they?

    I’m going straight to Heaven, because I’m innocent of all of them! Especially “extreme wealth.”

    But there’s one inescapable conclusion from all this: REPUBLICANS ARE ALL GOING TO HELL!

    For the Church’s sake, it’s a good thing they included pedophilia in the list, although I think it’s just an ugly subcategory of Lust.

  • Now that even Southern Baptists have awakened to the problem of global climate change, what will the people do who don’t believe that it’s happening? The Southern Baptists are usually so far behind the curve that you can’t even see them way back there. There usually isn’t anyone grasping an issue later than they do.

    Even George W. Bush recognizes the problem of global warming, although he hasn’t done anything about it but mention it a few times. But for the deniers to be lagging behind the Southern Baptists? That’s really embarrassing for them!

    I think that the deniers’ problem is that they refuse to admit that Al Gore could possibly be right about anything at all.

  • so before “fucking little boys” wasn’t a deadly sin? and know it is?

    good to know. thanks for the tip, bruno 😉

    and a big “me too” to okie. it’s good to know that there are now deadly sins that i’ll never ever ever be tempted to break!

  • the Democratic National Convention will be kicked off by an interfaith prayer service (though it’s still unclear exactly who will officiate)

    The Rev. Jeremiah Wright maybe?

  • Woo hoo new sins! That’ll keep the old theocracy in business for a few more centuries.

    Invade the SBC and convert them to atheism.

  • Pride! Envy! Gluttony! Lust! Anger! Greed! Sloth!

    “Do you know what your sin is?”
    “Hell, I’m a fan of all seven. But right now, I’m going to have to go with, wrath!”

  • Ms. Daughtry (daughter of Herbert Daughtry, a minister in Brooklyn) flies from Denver to Washington every other weekend to lead her small Pentecostal congregation.

    Clearly she hasn’t talked to the Baptists about global warming. I wonder how happy her flock is to be paying that airfare every couple weeks. Or maybe she’s got a private jet???

  • There is a prefecta of idiotcy going on as people talk about how they are going to “stop global warming”, it reminds me of the nonsense in California about “Saving the Whales”— apparently whales were sufficiently far out in the ocean and sufficiently away from anyone’s political turf that there was no way for anyone to become offended by ostensible whale savers. Well, I guess I better buy some rubber boots because I can see the level of the ocean rising as I speak, or is that just the tide coming in!

  • John, I agree that the idea that we can “stop global warming” is a bit far-fetched considering that there’s a lot of evidence we’ve reached some tipping points, e.g. the melting permafrost in Siberia liberating vast amounts of methane, which is 20X more potent than CO2 as a greenhouse gas (though considerably less persistent). Yet there are technologies we have available right now that could virtually eliminate anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions if our politicians would make the policy decisions to do so. If they did, there are ways of reversing the warming that could almost surely be employed, a sort of terraforming, if you will. But as soon as we’d start to purposely chill out, as soon as there was a cold snap where people died all hell would break loose. Between recalcitrant and, yes, abysmally ignorant politicians and litigious uninformed citizens, getting out of this tight spot is a pretty long shot, I fear. It is, however, possible.

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