Our last blog described the Vatican’s condemnation of pollution.
Yesterday, a group of over 40 Southern Baptist leaders called their past stance on global warming “too timid."
Leaders including the president and two past presidents of the Southern Baptist Convention, the largest Protestant group in the US with 16.3 million members, signed a declaration that said, "Our cautious response to these issues in the face of mounting evidence may be seen by the world as uncaring, reckless and ill-informed. We can do better."This was the turning of a new leaf for the SBC, who in 2007 maintained that there was not sufficient proof for climate change.
Why the new stance? Tanya Erzen, an expert in US evangelicals at Ohio State University, surmises that church leaders are responding to the increasing concerns about environmental stewardship expressed by congregation members. But Jonathan Merritt, son of former SBC president James Merritt and organizer of the declaration’s release, said he had a Road to Damascusian revelation in which he realized that destroying the environment was “no different to tearing a page from the Bible.”
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