“While the earth remaineth, seedtime and harvest, and cold and heat, and summer and winter, and day and night shall not cease.” Genesis 8:22
One should note the origin of those sounding the doomsday alarm concerning global warming, as well as consider that there is a political agenda that is at work here. The political tactic, called “fear-mongering”, is to keep the populace alarmed about so-called situations, that require the people to look to and follow the dictates of political leaders in order to be led to safety. This allows for greater taxation and more government regulations, giving more power to politics.
In light of Bible teaching and prophecy, the global warming that the “experts” are crying about is one thing man will not face. Nowhere does God’s Word teach that global warming is an imminent threat to mankind, nor does it teach that man has the ability to control global climate, either to keep it as it is, or to change it for better or for worse.
A study of the prophecies of the book of Revelation reveal there are coming catastrophic events to occur in nature. But these events will all originate by Divine decrees that supersede the range of natural occurrences. They will supersede anything known by man, or that is possible through natural degeneration. Consider the plagues upon the land of Egypt in the book of Exodus as a foretaste, but even these are no comparison to the events to occur during the Great Tribulation.
Besides this, there are many climatologists who to not share the view that we are headed down the path of catastrophic global warming. Dr. Tim Ball, chairman of the Natural Resources Stewardship Project, and former climatology professor at The University of Winnipeg, Manitoba, wrote: “Global warming, as we think we know it, doesn’t exist.” The proposed conclusions: (1) Climate changes are well within the bounds of natural variability, in which the earth’s climate has warmed and cooled cyclically throughout its history; (2) These changes are largely natural in origin; (3) These changes are unlikely to be catastrophic to humanity or the biosphere; (4) These changes are not susceptible to significant reduction by any actions we take; (5) These changes are far from the most serious threat to humanity and the rest of our environment.
SHARING