You might think that scientists and Evangelicals have nothing in common. But you'd be wrong. Large numbers of both agree on one thing: the end is near.
A few years back, Sir Martin Rees, Britain's Royal Astronomer, published a book titled Our Final Century, in which he put the odds of human survival through this century at no better than 50-50. Now, biologist Frank Fenner, who played a key role in ending the scourge of smallpox, says the end is certain.
Surveying the carnage humanity has inflicted on the ecosphere, the 95-year-old Australian scientist says nothing can change our fate now. "It's an irreversible situation," he's quoted as telling the press. "I think it's too late."
Many of the best-informed scientists agree that we have left it too late to prevent anthropogenic climate change from bringing on a global catastrophe. Whether this results in actual extinction or merely the ruin of civilization is a matter they are still debating.
Fundies entertain no such doubts. Preacher Tim LaHaye and his potboiler copilot Jerry Jenkins have made a vast fortune describing the gory biblical end they gleefully anticipate. Their Left Behind novels have been bestsellers, but don't get the idea they think this is mere fiction. In a recent Fox News interview with Governor (and former Republican presidential candidate) Mike Huckabee, LaHaye says the End Times are due to start, and that President Obama's "socialism" is speeding the day:
It would be nice to think that LaHaye is a lonely loon, spouting nonsense for fun and profit, but a Pew Center report finds that nearly 60 percent of white Evangelicals believe Jesus will be back in town any day now -- and most definitely within the first half of this century.
There are two major differences between these doomsday criers. First, scientists base their conclusions on a systematic review of evidence in the real world. Evangelicals rely on that hall of magic mirrors called biblical prophecy. Funny thing about the Bible: you can read whatever you want into it.
Take LaHaye, for example: He thinks that a) the Bible prophesies that four global empires will arise, and that b) four global empires have arisen. Bingo! It's Armageddon time! Never mind that the Bible authors thought the world was flat and had no idea that empires existed in China or Meso-America. LaHaye's got it all taped out. Never mind that there has never been a truly global empire. (The Brits came closest, but even they controlled only a fraction of humanity.) It's all in the interpretation!
Second, scientists generally deplore the extinction of megafauna (including us). ... Physicist Bob Park is a good example. In his weekly newsletter he cries out like a prophet in the wilderness about our failure to recognize the dangers of overpopulation.
Evangelical doomsayers, on the other hand, say "bring it on." They are elated by the thought that they will be snatched up to heaven while all those godless liberals and assorted heathens suffer torment below. They even welcome climate change as part of "God's plan." Check out the scorching sun and 100-pound hailstones in this slick video:
It would be bad enough if Evangelicals merely fantasized about the End Times. But they and their counterparts in the world's other major religions fan the flames. The QuiverFullers push for big families at a time when our resources are redlining, jihadists commit atrocities in hopes of sparking a global religious war, Jewish settlers claim God's backing for their abuse of Palestinians, Hindu radicals bomb mosques and churches, and on and on it goes.
Is it any wonder that some scientists believe the end is near and that religion is to blame?via Clay Farris Naff: The End of Times: Do Scientists and Fundamentalists Concur?.
The back up Blog of the real Xenophilius Lovegood, a slightly mad scientist.
Sunday, August 8, 2010
The End of Times: Do Scientists and Fundamentalists Concur?
Naff over at the Huffington Post had the article below I enjoyed reading. While I scoff at fundies, they may be right for the wrong reason. All it takes is one wayward comet, or one fatefully aimed gamma ray burst, or a super volcano, or World War III. History tells us that we are not immune to extinction. And the video... well, absurd because neither the Easter Bunny, nor the Tooth Fairy, nor Santa Clause nor Jesus Christ will show up to save us in the end ... I'm not so sure about the Aliens... they might just lend a hand. Still, the video below is powerful and Kelly Sweet's version of Dream On (2009) is amazing. I love her voice in this.
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That same Pew survey says that not only 60% (i.e. 58%) White Evangelicals expect Jesus, but also those with, at the most, a high school education (59%), most of whom live in the South (52%). All this stuff about End Times might just be expressions and the influences of southern cultural thing. But, there's nothing wrong with that.
If Jesus wants to stroll on his Father's creation, now a dying and over-heated planet, which is due to a large part from the handiwork of His followers, it's ok with me. He just might perform necessary number of miracles, a whole of them, to turn this place around and restore it to what it once was. And, He just might set His followers straight. After all, they sure didn't prescribe to " .. Thy kingdom come, Thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven ...".
The World has ended so many times already. Are prophecies even necessary?
Amazing that they can believe that stuff.
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