The Patriot Post® · Reclaiming Our Biblical Calling in the Age of Sensationalism

By Cornwall Alliance ·
https://patriotpost.us/opinion/122232-reclaiming-our-biblical-calling-in-the-age-of-sensationalism-2025-10-29

By Vijay Jayaraj

Who among us is not distracted? Our phones and screens keep us occupied with news from every corner of the earth. Distractions make us chase after what looks impressive but brings no fruit. The Book of Proverbs warn us against this: “The simple believes everything, but the prudent gives thought to his steps.” (Proverbs 14:15, ESV)

I learned this the hard way. As a young graduate student at the University of East Anglia, home of the Climatic Research Unit, I was convinced that climate change was the defining crisis of our century. I, like many, believed I was dedicating myself to the most urgent problem facing mankind. Years later, I realized I had been captured by hype.

False Prophets of Climate Catastrophe

The neo-environmentalism of the 1960s and ‘70s branded human population growth as the ultimate crisis. Five decades later, our world is healthier, wealthier, and better fed than ever before. Many of these environmental movements pit Christians against the foundational doctrines of our faith. God’s first command to humanity was to “be fruitful and multiply and fill the earth and subdue it and have dominion over … every living thing that moves on the earth.” (Genesis 1:28)

Besides, environmental movements also have a troubling track record of false alarms. The ozone depletion crisis of the 1980s and '90s generated massive concern about ultraviolet radiation destroying life on Earth. That fear fizzled out when observational data refused to comply.

The pattern repeats itself: environmental movements consistently overstate risks, generate fear, then move to the next crisis when their predictions fail to materialize.

Contrary to this doom-mongering, human civilization has achieved remarkable progress over the past century. Global life expectancy increased from approximately 46 years in 1950 to 73 in 2023, coinciding with the period when fossil fuel use expanded dramatically. From 1970 to 2008, the percentage of people with access to safe drinking water nearly doubled globally. Extreme poverty declined from 38% of the global population in 1990 to 8.5% in 2024. The U.S. and Europe reduced smog, cleaned rivers, and expanded protected lands, all while consuming coal, oil, and gas.

Biblical Stewardship Hijacked by Secular Crisis Narrative

For generations, the Church has largely considered science a subject to be taught in schools, effectively outsourcing a core component of discipleship to secular authorities.

Why does this matter for Christians? Because our faith calls us to discern between real stewardship and empty speculation. God has not called us to waste our short lives chasing after predictions that may or may not happen. “The wisdom of the prudent is to discern his way, but the folly of fools is deceiving.” (Proverbs 14:8)

The earth is in God’s hands, not in the balance of carbon dioxide molecules. Recent findings from the U.S. government report on climate make it clear that there is no endangerment to public health from CO2. On the contrary, the modest increase in atmospheric CO2 has contributed to a measurable “global greening,” boosting plant growth and significantly aiding agricultural food production worldwide.

The tragedy is that people often overlook the parts of Scripture that declare God’s sovereignty over the natural order. The Bible repeatedly speaks of the stability of God’s creation: “He established the earth upon its foundations, so that it should never be moved.” (Psalm 104:5) “While the earth remains, seedtime and harvest, cold and heat, summer and winter, day and night, shall not cease.” (Genesis 8:22) Climate is not man’s toy. It is God’s domain.

Environmental Religion Chokes Human Progress

All this transpired when the modern climate movement evolved into a quasi-religious ideology that demands faith-based acceptance of computer model predictions while ignoring real-world observations — the essence of true science. This skewed focus on a speculative future comes at a staggering present-day cost.

This diversion of precious capital is a disaster. It delays progress on clean water, sanitation, and industrial pollution. Worse, it pressures them to substitute time-tested, affordable energy systems with expensive and unreliable “green” technology that is wholly inadequate for lifting nations out of poverty.

The situation is unimaginably more dire in Africa. Across the continent, an effective embargo on funding for fossil fuel projects, all in the name of climate action, is strangling large-scale energy development. Even in the wealthy United States, a recent federal audit revealed that taxpayers are on the hook for more than $2.2 billion to cover losses from the government’s failed green energy loan guarantee programs, given out on the same premise of a world collapsing under a climate crisis.

What then can Christians do? First, we must recover a biblical theology of creation. Our stewardship is not optional. It is part of discipleship. Second, we must separate the real from the imagined. Believers must not waste their short lives chasing speculative crises. Ephesians 5:15-16 urges us, “Look carefully then how you walk, not as unwise but as wise, making the best use of the time, because the days are evil.”

You do not steward the sun, whose cycles have a profound impact on our climate. You do not steward the planet’s volcanoes or its cloud cover, two other major drivers of the climate system that lie far beyond human control. Instead, we steward the resources and the local systems that God has given us.

The church must choose its battles wisely. Christians called to environmental stewardship should focus on tangible problems with achievable solutions rather than chasing phantom crises that may never materialize. This approach honors both biblical principles and scientific evidence while producing measurable improvements in human welfare and environmental health.

Vijay Jayaraj is a Science and Research Associate at the CO2 Coalition in Arlington, Virginia, and a contributor to the Cornwall Alliance for the Stewardship of Creation. He holds a M.S. in environmental sciences from the University of East Anglia and a postgraduate degree in energy management from Robert Gordon University, both in the UK, as well as a B.S. in engineering from Anna University in India. He served as a research assistant at the University of British Columbia’s Changing Oceans Research Unit in Canada.