Posted on 04/01/2020 6:38:04 AM PDT by Kaslin
As Coronavirus Deniers Katherine Stewart couldnt be bothered to find out, as a good journalist would, what the Cornwall Alliance or plenty of other conservative, evangelical Christians think about the coronavirus. Slander sufficed.
Stop denying science!! There is a special place in hell for you folks!! If any of your ilk get COVID-19 I hope you stick to your non-science beliefs and let someone else have a ventilator.
These are examples of messages the Cornwall Alliance for the Stewardship of Creation received recently. What could stir up such anger?
These and similar messages were prompted by Katherine Stewarts March 27 article The Religious Rights Hostility to Science Is Crippling Our Coronavirus Response in The New York Times, in which she targeted the Cornwall Alliance, the organization I founded.
Stewart begins, Donald Trump rose to power with the determined assistance of a movement that denies science, bashes government and prioritized loyalty over professional expertise. In the current [Coronavirus] crisis, we are all reaping what that movement has sown. She later describes the Trump administrations response to the pandemic as incompetent and in the hands of people who appear to be incapable of running it well. Tell that to Drs. Anthony Fauci and Deborah Birx.
But first she identifies the problem as religious nationalism, or Christian nationalism, which, she says, drives the hard core of climate deniers among religiously conservative Republicans. This denial of science and critical thinking among religious ultraconservatives now haunts the American response to the coronavirus crisis, she insists.
Stewarts hit piece uses all the standard tools of yellow journalism: caricature, guilt by association, hasty generalization, cherry-picking evidence, ignoring contrary evidence, and more. For instance, she quotes three pastors as examples of many of [Trumps] evangelical allies. One, on March 15, urged his congregants to show up for worship in person.
She fails to mention he later changed his mind, arranged for services to be live-streamed, and referred to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s website for preventative measures. Another said he would stop in-person worship services only when the rapture is taking place. The third said he would pass out anointed handkerchiefs to protect his followers.
What Stewart doesnt tell her readers is that all three are on the extreme fringe of American religion. They represent the name-it-and-claim-it, positive-confession, health-and-wealth-gospel movement condemned as heresy by orthodox Christianity. At least one is even anti-Trinitarian, putting him outside the bounds of historic Christianity Eastern Orthodox, Roman Catholic, and Protestant defined by the ecumenical creeds of the fourth and fifth centuries.
As Jerry Newcombe of D. James Kennedy Ministries points out in a response to Stewart:
It does not help that there are reports of a few mega-churches in the country that are defying the orders to not meet together in large groups lest we infect one another. But those irresponsible ministers are the exception, not the rule. Shame on those pastors who are disobeying the governments commonsense orders during the pandemic. They are putting other peoples lives at risk. But the vast majority of churches in the country are using the tools available to us to ‘meet’ and ‘hold service’ in virtual ways, through the internet.
Stewart also ignored conservative evangelicals who said very different things. Dr. Frank Wright, president of D. James Kennedy Ministries and former president of National Religious Broadcasters, said love of neighbor requires us to give our best effort in stopping the spread of the virus by avoiding large gatherings.
Joshua Arnold, media coordinator for the Family Research Council, wrote in The Christian Post of the need for strong measures and urged churches to follow government instructions to suspend in-person worship services. Jay Sekulow of the American Center for Law and Justice, an outspoken Trump supporter, on March 24 urged people to follow the shelter-in-place protocols for everyones protection.
National Institutes of Health Director Francis Collins, one of the worlds top medical scientists, appeared on Focus on the Family’s flagship program on March 19 to warn of the danger and explain the need for widespread quarantines and shelter-in-place orders. Southern Baptist Theological Seminary President Dr. Albert Mohler discussed the disease and its dangers on eight episodes of his daily podcast “The Briefing” March 13-24, while strongly objecting on March 23 to arguments that the near-shutdown of the economy was necessary to curtail the virus.
Stewart reserves special contempt for people who hold to biblical creationism. But Ken Ham, president of Answers in Genesis, announced March 16 before most shelter-in-place or avoid-large-gathering orders went out from government officials that his ministry was closing its Creation Museum and Ark Encounter and canceling conferences to aid in curbing COVID-19s spread.
Stewart also misrepresents the Cornwall Alliance. In a March 2 article in The New Republic, she claims we produced a declaration asserting, as a matter of theology, that there is no convincing scientific evidence that human contribution to greenhouse gases is causing dangerous global warming. But that declaration didnt offer that judgment as a matter of theology.
Instead, we said we believed our 76-page Renewed Call to Truth, Prudence, and Protection of the Poor: An Evangelical Examination of the Theology, Science, and Economics of Global Warming justified that sentence. Its chapter on the science of climate change was written by NASA award-winning climatologist Dr. Roy W. Spencer, a principal research scientist in climatology at the University of Alabama, Huntsville, and author of many peer-reviewed scientific papers on climate change, and with the aid of nine other scientists.
Stewart misrepresents us in her New York Times article, too, saying we denounced environmental science as a Cult of the Green Dragon and cast environmentalism as an alternative and false theology. First, its not environmental science we criticize, although in the tradition of all good science, we reserve the right to point out errors in scientific studies. We criticize radical environmentalism masquerading as objective science to serve unscientific agendas.
Second, over and over in public documents, we distinguish radical environmentalism from environmentalism per se. We explain the difference between environmentalism and radical environmentalism showing that radical environmentalism is a false religion that, in contrast to Christianity degrades man, deifies nature, and disregards the poor and is the face of the anti-human, pro-death agenda … a philosophy that considers humans as the evil cancer of the earth.
What have we at the Cornwall Alliance said about the novel coronavirus? In What Is Prudent Prudence in Response to the Coronavirus? on March 18, I wrote to encourage simultaneously both prudent care and fearless confidence, avoiding the extremes of exaggerating while understating the pandemic’s danger. There I praised the government’s common-sense coronavirus responses, such as urging people to do the following:
Such actions, I said, can reduce the total spread of the virus [and] the speed at which it spreads reducing total cases and making it less likely that well run short of hospital beds, respirators, and other resources necessary to treat those infected.
While I raised the concern, shared by others, that extreme measures causing enormous economic losses could unintentionally result in even higher death tolls than the virus, I tentatively questioned the need for canceling all large gatherings, including religious services. I did recommend that those who continued such services should adopt careful measures to reduce virus transmission, linking to an article in Christianity Today by Dr. Daniel Chin, a physician trained in pulmonary and critical care medicine and epidemiology with 25 years of global public health experience who in 2003 led much of the World Health Organization’s support to China to contain the SARS epidemic. Chin advised different levels of action depending on local circumstances.
But Stewart wrote to support a predetermined conclusion. She couldnt be bothered to find out, as a good journalist would, what we or plenty of other conservative, evangelical Christians think about the coronavirus or anything else, for that matter.
What qualifies Stewart to conclude that those who disagree with her on climate change or the COVID-19 pandemic are science deniers?
The Note on the Author in “The Power Worshippers” identifies her as one of the leading authorities on the political aspects of the religious right and author of ‘The Good News Club: The Religious Rights Stealth Attack on Americas Children” who contributes to the New York Times, American Prospect, the Washington Post, the Nation, the Guardian, the Advocate, and the Atlantic” all left-leaning publications.
In 2014, she was named Person of the Year by Americans United for the Separation of Church and State. Her Wikipedia entry identifies her as a journalist, and its section on Early life and education lists no education. Ditto the About page of the website for her book “The Good News Club.”
In short, Stewart appears to be a hard-left, anti-religious, and especially anti-Christian campaigner writing in ignorance about both science and religion and bent on excluding religious voices from the public square.
Meanwhile, Muslims could be packing mosques around the corner from them and the NYT would totally ignore it.
We were not the ones dancing in NY and CA telling constituents to join the parades and not to worry. <<<<Looks like denial to me.
Left is projecting/deflecting again, because THEY are guilty
Or telling people it is “just the ‘flu.”
Interesting, the NY times that believes in 96 genders, global warming that will end the world in 10.2 years, mocking the Hydroxy-cocktail and so much more is calling Christians the “science deniers”?
Interesting...I see where this is headed. Stalin and Hitler blamed Christians and Jews too....
Cue the video of Nanzi Jezebel Pelosi nonchalantly walking down the sidewalk of San Fran’s Chinatown urging people to enjoy the atmosphere.
The is no left or right or religious or atheist broad brush you can use in this case. Many people on both sides of all aisles had varying opinions a month or two ago...and that still holds true.
So yes, bad on the NYT to lay all of this at the feet of God-fearing people. But nobody has a monopoly on perfect clarity in this saga.
There is something creepy about this ripple of far-left attempts to make some sort of grand comparison between climate change and COVID-19.
As a logical proposition, one could point out that any given person could be right about one and wrong about the other. There is no obvious linkage. Just because scientists say do this about climate change and do that about COVID-19, does not mean that they are right about both, or for that matter, right about either of them.
Who is really in a position to say whether the social distancing is that great an idea, when placed in a larger context of all of its effects? It may look okay now, but after a few months and a collapsed economy, then what? What will we accomplish and what could we have avoided?
But anyway, climate change is not so much wrong as over-stated. That seems to be a generalization one could make about both situations. The suggested cure is essentially to do enormous harm to the economy and then see if it makes much difference to the problem under consideration.
I’m a skeptic of anything that left-wingers think is a good idea, simply because, USSR + China = Mucho Mistakes on an epic scale. Leftists go on from their many huge blunders as though they have done nothing wrong and nobody noticed.
Well somebody did notice. Deal with it.
Indeed.
‘Who is really in a position to say whether the social distancing is that great an idea, when placed in a larger context of all of its effects?’
there are many on this website that toss out blithe statements like ‘social distancing will turn 2 million deaths into only 200,000,’ as if this is an incontrovertible, immutable truth...
What are the Freeper names of these NYT writers?
Anyone who thinks the NYT is not out to slander and kill Christians should look what the NYT did to the European Jews under Hitler. They have now simply, publicly added Christians to their hit list, which still includes Israeli Jews.
A virus wont be the end of the USA, people like Stewart and outlets like NYT will.
Fueled by hate, unable and unwilling to see an inch past their nose, they spread their lies with the ease of a hot knife through butter.
There is no good in her article. It is straight poison, plain and simple.
The US has more fake news media than anywhere in the world.
While Katherine Stewart likes to call religious people “anti-science”, I’m sure she believes that there are more than two genders.
Oh, look, another Rev.3:9 person. What a surprise.
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