A Response to Richard Wright's "Tearing Down the Green"
Edwin A. Olson
Emeritus Professor of Geology
Whitworth College
Spokane, Washington 99251
Richard Wright's article, "Tearing
Down the Green," (Perspectives on Science and Christian Faith, June
1995) defines and debunks a group he calls the "evangelical backlash"
-- personified mainly by E. Calvin Beisner. More than a critique, however,
Wright's paper also serves as a vehicle for communicating his overall outlook
on environmental matters. In this paper, I take issue with Wright in a number
of areas. I see regulatory excess, a slighting of scientific input for political
gain, biased sources of environmental information, indoctrination masquerading
as environmental education and Christian doctrine held hostage to an environmental
agenda. Yes, there are environmental problems. But a crisis? No.
In his paper, "Tearing Down the Green: Environmental Backlash in the
Evangelical Sub-culture,"1 Richard Wright infers that there exists
a "backlash movement" (p. 80) within evangelicalism which he labels
"Christian anti-environmentalism" (p. 89). The attack of these
anti-environmentalists on the environmental movement, says Wright, is "primarily
a political attack from the right in the name of Christianity" (p.
80). In his view these anti-environmentalists "make use of poor scientific
work and discount the mainstream scientific consensus on the environment"
(p. 80). To Wright, their scientific arguments are "patently indefensible
when scrutinized carefully" (p. 90).
On what evidential grounds does Wright propose the existence of an evangelical
backlash? He says that "without any doubt the two most prominent critics
of environmentalism from within the Evangelical fold are E. Calvin Beisner
and Larry Burkett" (p. 83). Burkett's specialty is advising Christians
on financial management, and so Wright has no trouble exposing his lack
of environmental expertise. Beisner, on the other hand, has done his homework
regarding both environmental controversies and relevant biblical material.
In fact, Wright acknowledges that "the presumed biblical support for
[the emerging Christian anti-environmentalism] is currently found in Beisner's
work" (p. 88). So when Wright describes the strategy of the environmental
backlash as "calling into question most of the scientific claims of
the environmentalists about resources, pollution, and population" (pp.
80-81), he really has in mind the writings of Calvin Beisner.2 Thus, Wright's
effort "to understand the environmental backlash within evangelical
Christianity" (p. 89) seems reduced to finding out what makes Beisner
tick. One wonders whether there is anything beyond a clash of two competent
Christian brothers with contrasting ideological outlooks on environmental
issues. Further insight into that clash was provided in a recent exchange
between the two men in the pages of PSCF.3
If there is doubt about the reality of Wright's "evangelical backlash"
as a movement, there is no question that he is provoked by certain secularists
who furnish ammunition for Beisner to "put a Christian spin on"
(p. 83). Calling them prominent anti-environmentalists, Wright lists Julian
Simon, Herman Kahn, Fred Singer, and Dixy Lee Ray as Beisner's "scientific"
sources. Notice the quotation marks enclosing scientific. They are the equivalent
of pseudo -- not a civil way to treat prominent people, even those with
whom one differs.
Except for the first section, my critique of Wright's paper considers some
of the same facets of environmental controversy which he addresses -- political,
scientific, informational, educational, and religious. To start, however,
I call for a change in how debate is conducted.
Setting the Terms of the Debate
Winning a debate is made easier if you can either saddle your opponent's
position with a label having bad connotations or adopt for your own ideas
a term with winsome overtones. For example, members of the Institute for
Creation Research and the multitudes in their sphere of influence have locked
up the word creationist by their incessant use of that term to describe
believers in fiat creation, a young earth, and flood geology. In so doing,
they have pre-empted its use by Christian people who oppose their ideas
yet hold to Divine creation. The latter are left with the label evolutionist
simply because they are anti-"creationist."
The same kind of tactic is now being used in controversies over environmental
issues. While Wright did not originate the practice, he makes full use of
it. To him, environmentalists are "people with a strong interest in
protecting the natural world and encouraging greater human concern for the
world" (p. 80). They act "out of a deep love of nature and often
out of sincere humanitarian concern" (p. 90). On the other hand, anti-environmentalists
"deliberately downplay and deny unmistakable evidence that all is not
right with the earth" (p. 90). This stark dichotomy is unfair and self-serving,
creating a strong temptation to win points by applying the label anti-environmentalist
without engaging the opposition's ideas.
In my experience, anti-environmentalists are not a very large group. At
least, I do not find many people who are either unconcerned about their
surroundings or knowingly trash the planet. Consequently, when I oppose
some of the ideas of those who call themselves environmentalists, I do not
become thereby an anti-environmentalist. Indeed, if called that, I would
be offended. I know from firsthand experience what bad air pollution is
like, having grown up in Pittsburgh during the 1930s. I remember both the
Donora tragedy of 1948 and the earlier rejuvenation of Pittsburgh when natural
gas came flowing our way from Texas to replace soft coal in home-heating.
Thus, I place myself among a vast throng for whom environmentalist is a
proper description. We are people who like clean air, good water, and healthful
food; we appreciate a diverse biota, beautiful scenery, and the time and
mobility to enjoy them. At the same time, some of us realize that perfection
is not an option, that cost-benefit analyses are a part of the equation,
and that trade-offs are sometimes necessary. We want to be full participants
in the discussions without being dismissed as anti-environmentalist or backlash.
Politics and Environment
Wright's analysis of the political dimension of environmental concern is
generally on the mark. He could easily have merged his world view analysis
with politics, labeling the opposing viewpoints liberal and conservative.
Thomas Sowell's categories of constrained and unconstrained visions also
come close to describing the opposing views which Wright sketches out.
In bringing politics to bear on environmental issues, I differ from Wright
mainly in two ways. First, I believe he sees too sharp a boundary between
the political and the scientific. One could hope that when a full scientific
analysis of an environmental problem is completed the proper course of remediation
would be obvious to all concerned. Experience shows this is not so.
Consider the issue of a diminishing ozone layer in the stratosphere, a problem
Wright dealt with. Most likely due to CFCs diffusing into the ozone region
from below, the depressed ozone levels might result in a higher ground-level
flux of UV(B) radiation and thus a rise in skin cancer rates. In response
to this possibility, an international meeting was held in Montreal in 1987.
Out of the deliberations, there came the so-called Montreal Protocol. This
agreement with subsequent actions led to the decision to stop worldwide
production of CFCs at the end of 1995 and require a switch to new refrigerants
of uncertain effectiveness and safety.
What went on at Montreal is the subject of a book by Karen T. Litfin entitled
Ozone Discourses. She described her initiation into reality as follows:
Superficially, this landmark ozone regime appears to have been the result
of a rigorous process of risk analysis and adroit diplomacy with sophisticated
atmospheric models serving as the scientific basis of the negotiations Like
others, I was beguiled by a faith in the ability of science to make politics
more rational and cooperative As I interviewed the participants and read
the source documents from the international negotiating process, however,
I began to suspect that more complicated dynamics than epistemic cooperation
were involved. It became increasingly evident that "knowledge"
was not deeply implicated in questions of framing and interpretation and
that these were related to perceived interests. Although the range of uncertainty
was narrow, atmospheric science did not provide a body of objective and
value-free facts from which international cooperation emerged. Rather, knowledge
was framed in light of specific interests and preexisting discourses so
that questions of value were rendered as questions of fact, with exogenous
factors shaping the political salience of various modes of interpreting
that knowledge. In particular the discourse of precautionary action, not
itself mandated by atmospheric science, moved from a subordinate to a dominant
position.4
Litfin later describes the two main groups making up the U.S. delegation
to the Montreal negotiations. Of course, there were the scientists. But
ultimately of greater importance were people she calls "a group of
ecologically minded knowledge brokers," mostly employed by the EPA.
It was they who were "instrumental both in translating the available
knowledge into terms understandable to decision-makers and in pushing forward
specific policy proposals. This group was more inclined than were the scientists
to employ knowledge on behalf of far-reaching policy recommendations."5
In fact, says Litfin, almost no scientists "advocated the virtual ban
on CFCs that was promoted by the U.S. delegation."6
What happened in Montreal in relation to ozone provides us with a prototypical
scenario for handling alleged or real environmental problems once they reach
the hands of political knowledge brokers, people with a "we-must-save-the-earth"
mentality. With such a mind-set, extreme political options will always be
the most favored ones. It is clear, then, to use Litfin's words, that "while
[scientific] knowledge [is] indispensable, it [is] always open to interpretation,
and it [is] never apolitical" (was changed to is).7
My second difference with Wright has to do with the government's regulatory
role in environmental matters. Without calling for a laissez-faire approach,
I believe that regulations have gotten out of hand. John Stossel, investigative
reporter for the 20/20 television program, expresses my judgment. Admitting
that he has spent much of his career exposing a problem and calling for
a government agency to correct it, Stossel now says:
I'm embarrassed to admit that it took me two decades of reporting to see
that governmental action has side effects like dependency. I now realize
that the government controls which consumer reporters rave about do more
harm than good and that unregulated free markets solve problems much better
than government [Lawmakers] should adopt the Stossel Rule, which is that
every time they pass a law they have to repeal two old ones making the regulatory
monster just a little bit smaller.8
As Stossel calls for less governmental regulation, vice-president Al Gore
calls for more -- much more. Wright sees Gore as a very concerned man "who
speaks the language of environmentalism [and] understands the scientific
literature" (p. 82). From my perspective, however, he comes across
as frightening. Consider this passage from his book, Earth in the Balance:
It is essential that we refuse to wait for the obvious signs of impending
catastrophe, that we begin immediately to catalyze a consensus for this
new organizing principle. Adopting a central organizing principle means
embarking on an all-out effort to use every policy and program, every law
and institution, every treaty and alliance, every tactic and strategy, every
plan and course of action -- to use, in short, every means to halt the destruction
of the environment and to preserve and nurture our ecological system. Minor
shifts in policy, marginal adjustments in ongoing programs, moderate improvements
in laws and regulations, rhetoric offered in lieu of genuine change -- these
are all forms of appeasement, designed to satisfy the public's desire to
believe that sacrifice, struggle and a wrenching transformation of society
will not be necessary.9
Of course, says Gore, "this wrenching transformation of society [will
be] agreed to voluntarily." That judgment, in my view, is a sure sign
that Gore is ignorant of both history and human nature.
When Science Has Trouble Being Heard
The litany of environmental problems seems to grow larger almost daily.
At least it does in the minds of some who have already concluded that environmentally
the world is on the road to destruction. Unfortunately, that general conclusion
is infecting more and more people, almost certainly because of constant
doom-and-gloom bombardment. If those influenced happen to be in education
or the media, the rippling effect becomes an avalanche of opinion. What
has developed as a result is a societal milieu in which everybody knows
that there's an environmental crisis. To question that generalization or
any of its component judgments is to receive looks of incredulity.
Since politicians respond more to opinion then to sober analysis, the societal
costs resulting from certain political decisions about the environment can
be very significant. Alar, asbestos, dioxin, low-frequency electric fields,
certain pesticides, and radon -- all have been called serious environmental
threats based on scientific arguments. Unfortunately, all have generated
unnecessary anxiety, and some have led to laws that mandate great expenditures
of money for little or no gain.
The acid rain story is an example of science put to the service of an environmental
problem and rebuffed when the findings contradicted what everyone knew to
be true. Sulfur dioxide released at coal-fired power plants and base-metal
smelters has long been recognized as a contributor to the acidity of rain.
Seeking a quantitative evaluation of the acid rain problem, Congress in
the late 1970s authorized a ten-year research effort that spanned the 1980s.
Called the National Acid Precipitation Assessment Program (NAPAP), it was
ultimately to employ three thousand scientists and spend in excess of half
a billion dollars.
J. Laurence Kulp, NAPAP's research director for several years and chief
editor for the 1987 interim report, summarized the NAPAP effort as follows:
At the beginning of the [NAPAP] program, acid rain was suspected to have
negative effects on surface waters, crops, forests, building materials,
visibility and human health. Fortunately, the research has shown that the
damage from current and historical levels of acid rain has ranged from negligible
(for example, on crops) to modest (for example, on some lakes and streams).
It is also clear that at current levels of acid rain deposition there will
be no significant increase in these measured effects over the next half
century. The causes and the distribution of acid rain over the United States
through the seasons are now fairly well-defined, and rapid technological
advances to control the emissions of the precursors of acid rain are occurring.10
When the interim report of 1987 came out, EPA officials and many environmentalists
scoffed at the results because they failed to match what was expected. Kulp
resigned shortly afterward and was succeeded by Dr. James Mahoney, who steered
the program to completion and oversaw the final report of 5,000 pages. Like
Kulp, Mahoney stood firm against the pressure from certain people in the
environmental community to distort the interpretation of masses of data
and make them say that acid rain was a disaster. Failing to get the report
changed, these environmentalists and their political allies pushed through
the Clean-Air Act of 1990 before the final NAPAP report was issued. Senator
John Glenn chided his colleagues in the Senate when he said: "We spend
over 500 million dollars on the most definitive study of acid precipitation
that has ever been done in the history of the world, and then we do not
want to listen to what [the experts] say."11 According to Kulp, "The
cost to society of the acid rain portion of the Clean-Air Act of 1990 will
total at least forty billion dollars, but the benefits will be hardly perceptible."12
The moral of the story is: Don't carry out expensive scientific evaluations
if they will have no influence in shaping final policy.
Getting the Facts -- Whom Can You Trust?
Wright traces environmental disagreements to their informational source.
He writes: "The uninformed public -- indeed, most of us -- is dependent
on whatever media source they encounter and can easily be misled into believing
exaggerations and untruths" (p. 87). He is right. Then he asks how
people can avoid being misled. His answer: "Look carefully into both
sides of an issue and get in touch with the basic scientific work underlying
the issue" (p. 87). Although generally valid, this approach neglects
two facts: first, data often speak ambiguously, and second, bias is a part
of every individual, even the most prestigious scientists. Environmental
issues in particular seem fraught with both ambiguity and bias.
As a realist, Wright understands that the vast majority of people will not
have access to the appropriate refereed literature, nor the interest to
read it, nor the specialized understanding to evaluate it. So his recommendation
is that people "search for media with no obvious ties to a political
agenda." Fine! But then he recommends Time, Newsweek, Discover, Scientific
American, and the Nature Conservancy Magazine. I subscribe to all but Newsweek,
and it is not at all obvious to me that these publications (except Scientific
American) lack a political agenda. Perhaps Wright is unaware that he himself
has an agenda, one which matches that of the publications he recommends.
To him their reporting probably reflects the perspective that he thinks
all right-thinking people ought to have. On the other hand, I read environmental
articles by Time's Eugene Linden and almost without exception detect a bias,
one that is definitely not my own. Apparently, bias -- or lack of same --
is in the eye of the beholder.
One is not required to read between the lines in the case of Charles Alexander
of Time magazine. During a global warming conference several years ago,
he said: "As the science editor of Time, I would freely admit that
on [the global warming] issue we have crossed the boundary from news reporting
to advocacy."13 Alexander's admission is only the tip of the iceberg.
Everette E. Dennis, Executive Director of The Freedom Forum Media Studies
Center, says that "U.S. newspapers and television (news magazines have
been interpretive vehicles for years) have begun to leave behind their search
for impartiality, however flawed that quest might have been."14 Even
Time magazine's Anastasia Toufexis wrote: "Much of today's political
and social agenda is built around flagrantly flimsy figures Too often exaggerated
figures are used to mislead, raise money or advance an agenda Environmental
organizations tend to present the most alarming scenarios to pump up the
threat of global warming."15 She could easily have pointed an accusatory
finger at her own organization.
Another area where Wright and I differ is in his faith that certain environmental
organizations simply go where the science leads them. Of the EPA, Wright
says the group "makes a strong effort to base their regulatory rules
on scientific research" (p. 87). Why, then, did the EPA oppose NAPAP
results on acid rain? Why did the EPA require gasoline producers to use
a minimum of 30% ethanol in their wintertime additives when cheaper and
equally effective oxygenated compounds were available? (The Supreme Court
has recently ruled that the EPA overstepped its authority.) When EPA administrator
William K. Reilly asked a panel of experts to evaluate the science at EPA,
he got back a fifty-page report that included these findings:
The agency often fails to consider appropriate scientific information early
or often enough in its decision making; fails to enlist routinely the best
scientists -- especially those at universities -- to provide it with data;
and fails to evaluate the impact of its regulations, thereby losing an opportunity
to learn from past decisions.16
Wright also sees the environmental non-governmental organizations (NGOs)
in a light different from mine. The specific NGOs he mentions are the Sierra
Club, the Audubon Society, the Wilderness Society, the League of Conservation
Voters, Greenpeace, Zero Population Growth, The Union of Concerned Scientists,
the World Resources Institute, and the World Watch Institute. He says they
all "hire scientifically trained staff and call on the findings of
scientists for support" (p. 87). But my reading of literature from
these NGOs leads me to conclude that science sometimes becomes a handmaiden
for a political agenda. This is not to say that each group listed above
is out to deceive through scientific deck-stacking. But common sense tells
us that advocates for a position can be careless with the truth -- generally
the more zealous, the more careless. The constant internal prod for discernment
is an absolute necessity for those who claim to be seeking the truth --
myself included.
Environmental Education
To the extent that adults are educated about environmental matters, what
they know is generally from print and TV journalism. Since journalists are
overwhelmingly liberal in their political outlook, this bias comes through
to the public when environmental issues are discussed. Under the heading
"Environmentalist World View," Wright articulates well what the
media present as environmental orthodoxy. While he offers a third way --
what he calls the "Christian world view" -- I sense that on the
specific issues addressed in his summary of the "environmentalist world
view" he is in substantial agreement. So insofar as the media curriculum
in adult environmental education is mastered by the public, Wright is probably
pleased. In 1994, a Louis Harris poll showed that it has been mastered.
Asked to name "the greatest threat to human life," more chose
"destruction of environment" than any other perceived danger.17
Earlier, a 1989 poll by CBS News and the New York Times found 80 percent
of the respondents agreed with this statement: "Protecting the environment
is so important that requirements and standards cannot be too tight and
continuing environmental improvements must be made regardless of the cost."18
Wright may be pleased as well with what is happening in the public schools
-- both primary and secondary. The crisis mentality is firmly in place.
Thomas Harvey Holt investigated some of what happens under the rubric of
environmental "education" and described his findings in an essay
entitled: "Growing up green: are schools turning out eco-activists?"19
What Holt found in curricula and in textbooks was a heavy dose of politics
to the detriment of scientific background. Industry and the free-market
economy were often denigrated and governmental solutions promoted. Students
were even instructed in environmental activism. For example, second-graders
in a New York City public school founded Kids-STOP (Save the Ozone Project)
in order to "save the planet from the deadly effects of ozone depletion
caused by continuing release of chlorofluorocarbons into the atmosphere."20
Upon hearing this, Jack Padolino, president of the Pocono Environmental
Education Center said: "Now what does a second-grader know about chlorofluorocarbons?"
The answer, of course, is: "Not much." Such youngsters are reading
a script, not expressing a judgment.
Holt went on to say that "many of those who shape the environmental
education curriculum believe that their purpose is not to weigh conflicting
facts, values and theories but to instill a sense of crisis."21 Ed
Clark of the Wildlife Center of Virginia is quoted as having said, "Understanding
that the world is going to hell in a handbasket is half of environmental
education."22 I suggest that the other half is to create pliant, frightened
students who later will endorse drastic solutions to overblown problems.
Peggy Noonan, former Reagan speechwriter, provides an illustration of the
environmental indoctrination that reaches down to the lowest levels of our
educational system. She describes the day when
my son came home from school and ran up the stairs with his backpack in
his hand and announced with grave concern, like a perfect little Soviet
child, that the air is so dirty now that it makes buildings fall down. It
erodes them, he told me, and makes them crumble My son is afraid of capitalist
polluters who are making the air unsafe to breathe and making buildings
fall down He said, "We had a movie in class, a Green movie" When
[our society goes] into one of these seizures of fashion, we turn a good
thing, protecting the environment, into a bad thing, environmental paranoia.
We do not educate our children. We traumatize them.23
If the bleak picture presented to Noonan's son were accurate and the world
really were on a fast road to destruction, one might argue that in the name
of truth the chips must be allowed to fall where they may. There is, however,
a contingent of unknown size, including me, who say it isn't so. Yes, there
are environmental problems, and, yes, they need to be addressed. But an
essential part of the story is the significant accomplishment in environmental
remediation. The crisis approach is neither necessary to handle the situations
we face nor helpful to our society's psychic well-being.
A Christian Approach to the Environment
With all sorts of religious spins being put on environmental matters, it
was inevitable that eventually a manifesto by evangelical Christians would
come out. That day occurred in late 1994 when Ron Sider as chief author,
using scientific input from ecologist Calvin DeWitt, composed the 1600-word
position paper entitled "Evangelical Declaration on the Care of Creation."24
Other than one sentence listing seven "degradations of creation,"
the document links humans to their material environment with a number of
verbs. One set is in the past tense and bemoans what has happened to planet
earth; humans are said to have degraded, polluted, distorted, destroyed,
devalued, used, forgotten to take care of, and failed in their stewardship
of the environment. A second set of verbs urges certain wise actions --
cherish, care for, protect, heal, sustain, preserve, nurture, respect, and
extend Christ's healing to the environment (generally called creation).
Helped by vagueness, this Evangelical Declaration has drawn almost universal
approval from a host of well-known evangelical leaders, among them Richard
Wright.25 Almost the only negative note was sounded by E. Calvin Beisner
in World magazine.26 Focusing on the seven degradations of creation -- the
contribution of Calvin DeWitt -- Beisner presented another side of the story.
A subsequent issue of World carried an exchange between Sider and Beisner.27
Is Beisner a fool rushing in where angels fear to tread? After all, the
list of eminent endorsers of the Declaration constitutes a formidable deterrent
for an evangelical like Beisner to speak out. My opinion is that Beisner's
intent was "pinpoint bombing" -- aiming at specific environmental
issues on which he has some expertise. Certainly no one in his right mind
would oppose all the good verbs listed in the Declaration. But the problem
with words such as cherish and nurture is that they must be defined by specific
concrete acts, both individual and corporate. It is my judgment that Beisner,
through his critique of the Declaration is really saying, "Let the
rubber meet the road; let us wrestle with what it means specifically to
be a good steward of God's world." I echo that view and hope that discussions
where this occurs find their way into future issues of PSCF.
Although giving most attention to differences in outlook between himself
and the "evangelical backlash," Wright understands as well that
there are "fringe" groups entering environmental discussions with
non-Christian religious convictions. He discusses them in a section headed
"Gaia, New Age, Eco-feminism and Deep Ecology." I share his concerns
and applaud his position. At the same time, I fear that there are deviations
from orthodoxy closer to mainstream Christianity than Wright and I would
like.
Orthodox Christians risk straying from the fundamentals of the faith, when
their embrace of "mainstream environmentalism" leads them to conclude
that human activities have brought the earth to the brink of disaster. For
immature Christians, often young, it may be only a short step from an earth
presumed to be in mortal danger to the conclusion that "saving the
earth" must take priority over saving souls. In struggling to be witnesses
for Christ, they may be tempted to take an easier path -- namely, to jump
on the popular environmental bandwagon as a substitute for the more difficult
witness to a transcendent reality.
What might be called mid-course theological adjustments make the environmental
option increasingly attractive. These elevate environmental activism beyond
its proper place in a full-orbed Christian world view. They are rationalizations
which often take the form of downgrading the supremacy of the transcendent
realm with its emphasis on reconciliation with God and eternal life in his
presence. Or they may elevate material reality to almost a unity with the
spiritual domain and so encourage utopian hopes for planet Earth, subtly
suggesting that environmental cleanliness is next to godliness.
Even more subtle is the implication that the condition of the earth in the
last days somehow influences the quality of the supernatural realm that
will one day become "all in all." It is as if God has set up a
covenant with the human race on a quid pro quo basis. How his people treat
their planetary abode will ostensibly influence him as he prepares his heavenly
house for their future occupancy. On that view, earth-keeping takes on the
motivation of self-interest -- not a bad reason but usually not the one
trumpeted by Christian environmentalists.
There are, however, occasions on which theological orthodoxy is totally
shunted aside to make way for an environmental agenda. This is the case
with Philip Hefner, Lutheran theologian and editor of Zygon, a journal relating
science and Christian faith. Hefner has gone far beyond the looseness of
speech that sometimes accompanies exuberance. Instead, he has discarded
a Christian world view for an entirely new metaphysical outlook. Here is
how he described it:
In order to best serve our self-understandings, we must recognize (1) our
intrinsic kinship with the rest of nature; (2) that our purpose as humans
is to serve nature; (3) that we are preparers for nature's future; (4) that
our highest calling as humans is to discern the dimensions of ultimacy in
nature and to conceptualize them. In this we follow God's own pattern of
investing in nature as the greatest project.28
With Hefner, there is no way one can legitimately suggest that beneath ambiguous
language there really lies an orthodox world view. Hefner writes clearly
and what he writes is not historical Christianity. Instead, it is a radical
exaltation of current concerns about environmental problems and a clear
demonstration that designing religious systems around an environmental core
is not the exclusive province of the avant-garde groups which Wright describes
in his paper.
Conclusion
Richard Wright is to be commended for his comprehensive overview of environmental
controversy. I hope that his paper, Beisner's response, and my critique
stimulate further discussion of this important subject. From my standpoint,
that discussion should emphasize papers which focus on a single environmental
issue and are multidimensional -- including scientific, economic, political
and theological dimensions. It would also help to lower the emotional pitch.
Notes
1Richard T. Wright, "Tearing Down the Green: Environmental Backlash
in the Evangelical Sub-culture," Perspectives on Science and Christian
Faith, June 1995, 80-91.
2E. Calvin Beisner, Prospects for Growth, (Westchester, IL: Crossway, 1990).
3Letter by E. Calvin Beisner and response by Richard T. Wright, Perspectives
on Science and the Christian Faith, Dec. 1995, 285-288.
4Karen T. Litfin, Ozone Discourses, (New York: Columbia University, 1994),
5, 6.
5Ibid, 79.
6Ibid, 81.
7Ibid, 81.
8Ileane Rudolph, "Consumer Reporter John Stossel: TV's Truth Sleuth,"
TV Guide, 28 January 1995, 43, 44, 46, 48.
9Al Gore, Earth in the Balance: Ecology and the Human Spirit, (Boston: Houghton
Mifflin, 1992), 274.
10J. Laurence Kulp, "Acid Rain: Causes, Effects and Control,"
Regulation (The Cato Review of Business and Government), Winter 1990, 41.
11Quoted in Eco-Sanity by Bast, Hill, and Rue, (Lanham, MD: Madison Books,
1994), 81.
12Laurence Kulp, personal communication, 1995.
13L. Brent Bozell and Brent H. Baker: And That's the Way it Isn't, (Alexandria,
VA: Media Research Center, 1990), 109.
14Everette E. Dennis, "The Re-Europeanization of the U.S. Media,"
Communique 9 (The Freedom Forum Media Studies Center, an affiliate of Columbia
University), no. 2, (Oct. 1994): 2.
15Anastasia Toufexis,"Damned Lies and Statistics," Time, 26 April
1993.
16Janet Raloff, "Revamping EPA's Science," Science News, 11 April
1992, 234.
17Constance Holden,"Science: What the Public Thinks," Science
264, 13 May 1994, 902.
18P. J. O'Rourke, All the Trouble in the World, (New York: The Atlantic
Monthly Press, 1994), 143.
19Thomas Harvey Holt, "Growing Up Green: Are Schools Turning Out Eco-Activists?"
Reason, Oct. 1991, 38-40.
20Ibid, 40.
21Ibid, 39.
22Ibid, 39.
23Peggy Noonan, Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness, (New York: Random
House, 1994), 51-53.
24"Evangelical Declaration on the Care of Creation," Prism, Dec./Jan.
1994 (This Declaration was reprinted in Perspectives on Science and Christian
Faith, June 1995, 110-111).
25Randy Frame, "150 Sign `Care of Creation,'" Christianity Today,
4 April 1994, 76.
26E. Calvin Beisner, "Are God's Resources Finite?" World, 27 Nov.
1993, 10-13.
27Ron Sider, "Another View," World, 8 Jan. 1994, 22.
28Philip Hefner, "Nature: God's Great Project," Zygon 27, no.
3 (Sept. 1992): 327.