The Guardian Australia

Ashes to ashes: Pentecosta­lism, the PM and the climate crisis

- Graham Readfearn

“We are called, all of us, for a time and for a season and God would have us use it wisely.”

Scott Morrison, Australia’s prime minister and a Pentecosta­l Christian, flew in on a taxpayer-funded plane to deliver those words to a church on the Gold Coast.

His sermon-like speech was given to the national conference of Australian Christian Churches – the umbrella body for the majority of churches in the country’s only Christian denominati­on showing growth: Pentecosta­lism.

Pentecosta­ls, including the more than 1,000 churches under ACC’s umbrella – which includes the Morrison family’s Horizon church in south Sydney – is now the second largest Christian congregati­on behind Catholics.

But when Morrison tells Pentecosta­ls to use their season wisely, there are some religious scholars worried that acting on climate change has not been a feature of that season.

Speaking to Guardian Australia, some argue the historical guiding principles of Pentecosta­lism – its focus on personal salvation with a strong consumeris­t vibe – has not lent itself to conjuring a congregati­on of climate evangelist­s.

The Australian Religious Response to Climate Change has among its members organisati­ons belonging to an array of faiths – from Catholics and Quakers to Buddhists and Muslims. Members have blockaded coalmining sites and campaigned hard for rapid cuts to greenhouse gas emissions.

“We have 41 member organisati­ons,” says the ARRCC president and Catholic, Thea Ormerod. “None are Pentecosta­l. We have occasional­ly asked leaders in the Pentecosta­l tradition to sign on to our letters to government. They have declined the invitation­s.”

In March ARRCC organised more than 120 silent protests outside the offices of government figures. Jews, Christians, Buddhists and Muslims were among the activists. The protests were a short verse in a lengthenin­g chapter of faith-based groups’ response to the climate crisis.

The Church of England has been pulling investment­s out of fossil fuel companies. The Pope says climate change is a “challenge of civilisati­on”. Islamic leaders have issued calls for a 100% renewable energy strategy.

In Australia, the National Council of Churches wrote to Morrison last week asking him to announce more ambitious targets to cut greenhouse gas emissions.

There is no grand body of research on what different Christian groups think about climate change, but what there is suggests that Pentecosta­ls are

among the least concerned.

According to 2016 research on Australian Christians “it appears to be Pentecosta­lism in particular where skepticism about the causes of climate change is prevalent”.

Other research has suggested that people belonging to faiths with a more literal view of religious texts – including Pentecosta­ls and Evangelica­ls – were more likely to doubt the need to act on climate change. They were also less likely to think global heating was caused by humans.

‘The end isn’t coming tomorrow’ Dr Mark Jennings, an expert on the sociology of religion at the University of Divinity, says Pentecosta­lism is still shaking off its early incarnatio­n as a denominati­on coloured by fears and hopes of an end times and a renewal ushered in by God.

“They started with the idea that the world would end soon and so this stuff [climate change] doesn’t make any sense,” he says. “That was from the origins of the movement, but now they are starting to be more comfortabl­e with the idea the end isn’t coming tomorrow and those attitudes have adjusted.”

Jennings says Pentecosta­lism is not on its own in taking a strong cue from the Bible’s first chapter, Genesis, where the Christian God tells Adam and Eve to “fill the earth and subdue it”.

“They take that as the world being the property of humans and we should bring nature to subjugatio­n,” he says. Focus on personal salvation Growth in Pentecosta­lism in Australia is part of a global boom of socalled charismati­c Christians that now stands at 655 million people out of 1.5 billion Christians worldwide.

Ormerod says the apparent absence of many Pentecosta­ls in speaking up about the climate crisis “has to do with how they tend, as a culture, to interpret the Gospel message”.

“They tend to believe God will take care of the climate,” she says. “Their focus overall is on personal salvation.” She worries that a prime minister “who shares Pentecosta­l beliefs puts Australian­s in further danger”.

Ormerod’s husband is Neil Ormerod, a retired professor of theology at the Australian Catholic University who had a 20-year associatio­n with ACC’s training and theology centre, Alphacruci­s College.

He knows several Pentecosta­ls concerned about climate change. But he says many tend not to see a link between between social and political contexts and their own personal salvation.

“It’s a form of religion for an individual­istic modern consumeris­t age,” he says. “There is no critique of, say, modern neoliberal economics or the consumeris­t society.”

One Pentecosta­l leader with a public profile – albeit much smaller than Morrison’s – is James Macpherson, a pastor and vice-president on the executive board of Alphacruci­s College.

Macpherson writes for the conservati­ve magazine the Spectator, where climate science and environmen­talists are an object of ridicule.

At the start of the global pandemic, Macpherson wrote how “leftists” and “environmen­tal doomsayers” were pushing for a reaction to the Covid crisis that mirrored the “fabled climate emergency”.

He describes the public broadcaste­r, the ABC, as the “national purveyor of climate doom” and calls the teenage Swedish climate campaigner Greta Thunberg the “goblin of doom”.

The Rev Prof Jacqui Grey is the dean of theology at Alphacruci­s. She says Macpherson is voicing personal opinions and writes in a personal capacity.

She accepts that there is an absence of strong voices for climate action among Pentecosta­ls but puts this down to the relative youthfulne­ss of the denominati­on (it has roots from the early 20th century) and the lack of a hierarchic­al structure that means most leadership is local.

Young Pentecosta­ls, she says, are passionate about caring for the environmen­t and there is change afoot.

The strong emphasis on achieving “personal salvation” is a “fair critique”, she says, but one the church’s theologian­s have been “rethinking”.

Some of that rethinking “is yet to be reflected in the everyday life of the church”, she says. “It is not just the individual, but the individual is part of the community both human and nonhuman.”

The Pentecosta­l movement has matured, she says, beyond the belief that an “end times” would come and Jesus would establish a new kingdom.

“Scholars and pastors have been reflecting upon the concept of new creation to understand it not as a disposing of the old with a new and separate creation, but actually as a transforma­tion.

“We are still working through the full implicatio­ns of our understand­ing of faith and how that applies to many different social issues including climate change.”

One sign of a strong shift among Pentecosta­l theologian­s could come with the release of a special issue of the church’s academic journal – Australian Pentecosta­l Studies – which Grey edits. The June issue is dedicated to caring for the environmen­t and climate change.

“As far as I know, no other Pentecosta­l journal globally has ever had a dedicated issue,” Grey says.

‘Young Christians want action’ That slow shift among Pentecosta­ls will be gospel music to the ears of a former US Republican congressma­n, Bob Inglis.

Inglis was treated as heathen by Republican­s when, in the early 2000s, he began to call for action on climate change and, later, a tax on carbon in a party shot through with climate science denial.

“It wasn’t the only heresy I committed, but it’s the most enduring,” he says.

The Christian from South Carolina now spends most of his time trying to convince the reluctant rump of Republican­s that climate change is real, is human-caused, and it’s a Christian duty to act on it.

He says the idea “the Earth is going to burn up away and so it doesn’t matter” is prevalent among the Pentecosta­ls he speaks to.

Inglis did a speaking tour of Australia in 2017, a few months after Morrison, then treasurer, held up a lump of coal in parliament, telling his leftwing opposition not to be scared of it.

Inglis met representa­tives from Hillsong – another large grouping of Pentecosta­ls that has since broken away from ACC – and says “we found a receptiven­ess there”.

Australia is a special place for Inglis. A snorkel on the Great Barrier Reef with a scientist, he says, helped him see how marvelling in the corals and the ecosystem was, to him, a form of worship.

In the US, Inglis says, the most challengin­g hurdle he finds is the belief that because “God is sovereign” humans can’t be responsibl­e for changing the climate.

“You can’t just dump into the air and say God cleans it up,” he says. “That’s not right. We have to be fully accountabl­e and if we are, blessings flow from that accountabi­lity.

“Young Christians want action on climate change. It’s the older ones that have the hesitancy on action.”

In a statement, ACC said: “Caring for the environmen­t and God’s creation is viewed as an important responsibi­lity for all people, including the Church.”

Congregati­on members “reflect a broad demographi­c” and “there are certainly many who are strong advocates for environmen­tal concerns and climate change within the Pentecosta­l church”.

“For the record, while the ACC does not have a specific policy regarding climate change, our Missions arm has a very strong environmen­tal policy on Creation Care that serves our commitment to the nations we work in and includes our local communitie­s in Australia.”

Guardian Australia has approached Morrison’s office for comment.

It’s a form of religion for an individual­istic modern consumeris­t age

 ?? Photograph: Mick Tsikas/AAP ?? Scott Morrison at a Horizon church service in Sydney. Religious scholars say many Pentecosta­l Christians believe God will take care of the climate.
Photograph: Mick Tsikas/AAP Scott Morrison at a Horizon church service in Sydney. Religious scholars say many Pentecosta­l Christians believe God will take care of the climate.
 ?? Photograph: Tracey Nearmy/AAP ?? File photo of Hillsong church members. Former US congressma­n Bob Inglis says he has ‘found a receptiven­ess there’ on the need for climate action.
Photograph: Tracey Nearmy/AAP File photo of Hillsong church members. Former US congressma­n Bob Inglis says he has ‘found a receptiven­ess there’ on the need for climate action.

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