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God & the Environment: A Grist Special Series
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Go Tell It on the MountainAllen Johnson rallies Christians to fight against mountaintop-removal mining07 Nov 2006
Allen Johnson.
Rather than leaving their fate in the hands of mainstream environmentalists, Appalachians are organizing themselves. Exhibit A: Christians for the Mountains, a group of environmental activists reaching out to their fellow citizens via church pulpits. The head of the organization, Rev. Allen Johnson, spoke with me by phone about his frustrations with some evangelical leaders, the scriptural basis for caring for the earth, and why science will eventually triumph.
Introduction to the series.
Interview with Bill Moyers about his PBS special Is God Green?
Article by Bill McKibben on the spread of environmental concern among evangelicals
Interview with J. Matthew Sleeth, evangelical environmentalist and author
Interview with E.O. Wilson about his new book on religion and science
Interview with environmental scientist and evangelical leader Calvin DeWitt
Interview with Joel Hunter on broadening the evangelical agenda
I've gotten some criticism: "Why aren't you interfaith?" We are willing to work interfaith, but if we can speak out of the thrust of who we are, our values, theology, and scripture, we have more impact. If other organizations or religions want to work with us, we'll work within a partnership.
I love the outdoors. I have a biology degree, and I was going to be a naturalist. But still, the reason I'm involved with this is that I'm a Christian. That's the driving force for me. God loves me, and therefore I want to give that to others, and to the world.
We point to Psalm 24:1: "The earth is the Lord's and the fullness thereof. And everything in it." We say, this is God's property. He's saying, you can use it, and it will feed you and take care of your needs. But I'd like you to take care of it, because I have a covenant with future generations. I made these plants and animals, and they have their space too. You can carve out a space for yourself, but leave some room for the others.
The average guy in the pews is listening to the radio or TV preachers -- the Jerry Falwells, the [Pat] Robertsons, the James Kennedys, the [James] Dobsons, the [Chuck] Colsons, on and on. They have this individualist, American, do-what-you-want, frontier mentality. These guys are largely in league with the financial people -- the Council for National Policy, if you've heard of that.
They don't want to talk about the Sermon on the Mount. They don't talk about Jesus' teachings. They talk about Jesus is going to get you to heaven, but they don't talk about how you follow him. Jesus says as clearly as can be, you cannot serve God and Mammon simultaneously. Mammon is the pursuit of wealth and money and power.
How can we have a covenant with future generations when we destroy land permanently, which is what's going on with mountaintop removal? West Virginia has an abundance of fresh water, and we're going to ruin that by pumping this garbage [mining waste] in the groundwater.
The thing is, to wait another generation for this to take shape ... global climate change can't wait that long. That issue is the key one. That's the one rattling the Council for National Policy preachers, because they're tied to the fossil-fuel folks so closely. They're false prophets. They're leading people astray. They could change things around -- all they'd have to do is say it: Global climate change is real, folks, we've got to do something about it. We talk about being pro-life on abortion. We've gotta be pro-life on the environment.
Even though I'm being harsh, I want to believe. This is what prayer is -- God moves in people's hearts. People do change.
The evangelicals will make more difference than the mainline protestants right now, because that's then going to shift politics, it's going to shift Karl Rove and Bush. It's going to rattle them. They're going to have to respond.
As far as embracing environmentalists ... for a while there I started getting criticism. It's a bad buzzword. It puts people off. Use "conservationist" or something like that. Instead of environmentalism, use "creation care."
You know, I've been waiting for this time, and in the last couple years things are moving. I don't know how fast it will break through, and there will be efforts to turn it back. But the Colsons and Dobsons cannot counter the science. They cannot come up with theology to turn it back. You've got to take care of this planet. You can't say otherwise. It won't fly.
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