-Caveat Lector-

Al Gore can explain the gaia emphasis perhaps.

Nicky

-----Original Message-----
From: Scarecrow <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: Eagle List <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Sunday, 24 October 1999 8:37
Subject: [TheEagle-L] Al Gore: Planetary Visionary?


And here I thought it was George Bush that wanted the NWO. Oh, that's
right, they all do!

Illuminazi propaganda at its best:
http://www.crossroad.to/text/articles/Gore7-99.html



                      Al Gore’s Vision of Planetary Oneness

                               by Berit Kjos <www.crossroad.to>



     "Al Gore's celebrated new emphasis on ‘religious values’ is as
phony as a three-dollar bill," said WND
     editor Joseph Farah in his July 16 column. "… I truly believe Al
Gore is the point man in a campaign to
     set a fatal trap for America's churches and Christian charities."

     Mr. Farah is right. Vice President Gore’s "faith-friendly" campaign
hides beliefs that oppose
     Christianity and his Baptist roots on every point. The evidence is
in his book, Earth in the Balance -
     Ecology and the Human Spirit.1 It calls for a "panreligious
perspective" that would squeeze
     Christianity into a universalist mold. The old biblical absolutes
simply don’t fit the new global
     spirituality needed as a foundation for a global earth-centered
ethic. Whether Buddhist, Baha’i,
     Native American, or "Christian" (without the cross), each model for
this blended spirituality must
     be:

     · pantheistic: god is all, god is in everything
     · monistic: all are one, all are spiritually interconnected
     · evolving: always ready to adapt to the changing requirements of
our globalist leaders and of the
     Total Quality Management process used to "re-invent government."

     Hard to believe? Then ponder the quotations below. In his book,
Vice President Gore --

     1. Attempts to diagnose the root problem of our Western culture:

          "...we feel increasingly distant from our roots in the
earth... we lost our feeling of
          connectedness to the rest of nature." (page 1)

     2. Finds answers in pantheistic connectedness:

          "A modern prayer of the Onondaga tribe in upstate New York
offers another beautiful
          expression of our essential connection to the earth: 'O Great
Spirit, whose breath
          gives life to the world and whose voice is heard in the soft
breeze... make us wise so
          that we may understand what you have taught us...'" (page 259)

     3. Seeks wisdom from the world’s earth-centered religions:

          "The richness and diversity of our religious tradition
throughout history is a spiritual
          resource long ignored by people of faith, who are often afraid
to open their minds to
          teachings first offered outside their own system of belief.
But the emergence of a
          civilization in which knowledge moves freely and almost
instantaneously throughout the
          world has. . . spurred a renewed investigation of the wisdom
distilled by all faiths. This
          panreligious perspective may prove especially important where
our global civilization's
          responsibility for the earth is concerned." (pages 258-259)

     4. Points to Native Americans as spiritual models:

          "Native American religions, for instance, offer a rich
tapestry of ideas about our
          relationship to the earth. One of the most moving and
frequently quoted explanations
          was attributed to Chief Seattle in 1855. . . . [It was
actually written by Ted Perry for a
          1971 environmental movie]: ‘Will you teach your children what
we have taught our
          children? That the earth is our mother? . . . This we know:
the earth does not belong to
          man, man belongs to the earth. All things are connected like
the blood that unites us
          all.'" (page 259)

     5. Validates ancient goddess worship – which, according to Al Gore,
preceded our biblical
     heritage:

          "The spiritual sense of our place in nature . . . can be
traced to the origins of human
          civilization. A growing number of anthropologists and
archeo-mythologists. . . argue that
          the prevailing ideology of belief in prehistoric Europe and
much of the world was based
          on the worship of a single earth goddess, who was assumed to
be the fount of all life and
          who radiated harmony among all living things. . . .
[Ceremonial sites] seem to confirm the
          notion that a goddess religion was ubiquitous throughout much
of the world until the
          antecedents of today's religions--most of which still have a
distinctly masculine
          orientation--swept out of India and the Near East, almost
obliterating belief in the
          goddess. The last vestige of organized goddess worship was
eliminated by Christianity . .
          . . [I]t seems obvious that a better understanding of a
religious heritage preceding our
          own by so many thousands of years could offer us new insights
. . . ." (page 260)

     6. Endorses feminist substitutes for God:

          "One modern Hindu environmentalist, Dr. Karan Singh, regularly
cites the ancient Hindu
          dictum: "The Earth is our mother, and we are all her children.
. . . Guru Nanak [founder
          of Sikhism] said, ‘Air is the Vital Force, Water the
Progenitor, the Vast Earth the
          Mother of All.’" (page 261)

     7. Promotes a "new faith in the future" as essential to humanity,
religion, and the sanctity
     of the planet:

          "The religious ethic of stewardship is indeed harder to accept
if one believes the world
          is in danger of being destroyed -- by either God or humankind.
This point was made by
          the Catholic theologian, Teillard de Chardin when he said,
‘The fate of mankind , as well
          as of religion, depends upon the emergence of a new faith in
the future.’ Armed with
          such a faith, we might find it possible to resanctify the
earth." (page 263)


     8. Blends Christianity with pantheism:

          "My own faith is rooted in the unshakable belief in God as
creator and sustainer, a
          deeply personal interpretation of and relationship with
Christ, and an awareness of a
          constant and holy spiritual presence in all people, all life,
and all things." (page 265)

     9. Demands total commitment to do whatever it takes to involve
everyone in the
     earth-centered vision. Would "every tactic and strategy" include
compromise, lies, deception, and
     propaganda? Would "every law and institution" include
unconstitutional laws and regulations? His
     quote below, together with his words and actions during the last
few years, seem to indicate that
     any questionable means would be justified by the alarming end: to
establish a global management
     system that would execute the UN plan for sustainable development 2
and build "consensus for this
     new organizing principle:"

          "Adopting a central organizing principle – one agreed to
voluntarily – means embarking on
          an all-out effort to use every policy and program, every law
and institution, every
          treaty and alliance, every tactic and strategy, every plan and
course of action – to use,
          in short, every means to halt the destruction of the
environment . . . . Minor shifts in
          policy, moderate improvement in laws and regulations, rhetoric
offered in lieu of
          genuine change—these are all forms of appeasement, designed to
satisfy the public’s
          desire to believe that sacrifice, struggle and a wrenching
transformation of society will
          not be necessary." (page 274, Emphasis added)

     10. Calls for a global environmental education plan that would
change public consciousness and
     our understanding of reality:

          "The fifth major goal of the Global Marshall Plan should be .
. . to organize a worldwide
          education program to promote a more complete understanding of
the crisis. In the
          process, we should actively search for ways to promote a new
way of thinking about the
          current relationship between human civilization and the
earth." (page 355)

     This "new way of thinking" is the primary goal of UNESCO’s
worldwide program for "lifelong
     learning." No document summarizes it better than Our Creative
Diversity, the 1995 book-sized
     report from the UN Commission on Culture and Development. Published
by UNESCO, it tells us that
     --

          "The challenge to humanity is to adopt new ways of thinking,
new ways of acting, new
          ways of organizing itself in society, in short, new ways of
living."3

     The "new ways of thinking" about our relationship to the planet and
to our communities are essential
     to solidarity and sustainable development. Each person must be
assessed for their conformity to
     the new global values and spirituality. All must be trained and
managed in groups and show readiness
     to compromise for the sake of unity and peace.4

     These partnerships are central to the global management system.
They would link health care and
     schools, schools and workplace, business and community, community
and churches, churches and
     welfare. Each part of the massive network of partnerships would
function on the basis of Total
     Quality Management and the consensus process.5

     Already, compliant churches are embracing the new management system
which trades accountability
     to biblical truth for compliance with TQM guidelines.6 Most
mainline denominations have also signed
     the U.S. Department of Education’s contract titled "Statement of
Common Purpose of Religious
     Leaders." It commits churches across the country to participate in
the government program of
     "helping parents in the education of their children." Churches
learn from the state (or private
     partners to the state) how to "help parents" teach their children.
Parents are then persuaded to
     participate in the consensus process – thinking collectively rather
than individually -- both in church
     groups and at home. In church as well as in our global culture,
solidarity and compliance are in.
     Separateness and biblical accountability are out.

     Al Gore unveiled the heart of his political vision and education
program in 1991. "Seeing ourselves as
     separate is the central problem in our political thinking,"7 he
announced at a Communitarian
     conference in Washington.

     Five years later, at his 1997 White House Conference on
Hate-Crimes, President Clinton would
     repeat the battle cry against cultural separation: "There would
almost have to be some sort of club
     or organization at the school -- because if you think about it,
your parents are still pretty well
     separated. Most houses of worship are still fairly segregated. . .
. We [the government?] have to
     find a disciplined, organized way out of this."8

     Perhaps our two "Baptist" leaders in the White House don’t know
that the biblical God tells His
     people to separate from an immoral culture and other gods. Or
perhaps they fear identifying with a
     practice so politically incorrect that Clinton now equates it with
hate. One thing is certain, their
     political agenda and vision of oneness is totally incompatible with
biblical truth.

     As Joseph Farah said in his July editorial, "Al Gore has something
else in mind." Indeed, if he
     becomes president, he would not only continue to nurture the
partnerships between church and
     state which began under President Clinton. Gore would also have to
change the church to fit the
     state. The politically correct church would have to compromise, and
its eternal truths would be
     conformed to the new global ideology. The God of the Bible would be
replaced by the god of political
     expediency.

     Our cultural problem is separation from God, not from nature. While
God told us to care for the
     earth, He warned us against pagan religions. Contrary to the
revised and idealized myths now
     flooding the western world,9 nature-worship brings violence and
destruction, not peace and
     harmony.10

     God alone shows the way to genuine harmony and oneness. To those
who love Him, all of nature
     demonstrates the glory, wisdom, love and power of God – not because
He is one with all forms of
     life, but because only an all-wise, all-powerful Creator could make
such a beautiful planet.

     He who created all life also knows best how to educate our children
and build strong churches that
     honor Him. He has already shown us the steps. To the embarrassment
of politically correct
     churches, these steps include spiritual separation. His people must
be "in the world but not of the
     world," ready to love and care for the needy, but yoked to Christ,
not to government programs with
     their rules and restrictions. As He told us long ago:

          "Do not be unequally yoked together with unbelievers. For what
fellowship has
          righteousness with lawlessness? . . . And what agreement has
the temple of God with
          idols? For you are the temple of the living God. . . .
Therefore ‘Come out from among
          them and be separate," says the Lord. "Do not touch what is
unclean, and I will receive
          you. I will be a Father to you, and you shall be My sons and
daughters." 11

     ___________________________________________________________

     A personal postscript :

     Some readers have expressed their indignation at my personal
Christian bias and "religious
     intolerance." I so appreciate their honesty – and the right we
still share in America to freely
     express our beliefs and opinions. While writing the above report, I
was concerned that I might
     sound "intolerant" to those who didn't share my beliefs. But like
them, I must follow my convictions
     and conscience. So I wrote the article as a warning to everyone. It
is not an attempt to impose my
     faith on anyone else, since I believe that Al Gore as well as all
other Americans must be free to
     believe whatever they choose.

     Aside from Al Gore's political clout, the main reason for my
concern over his earth-centered
     spirituality is his hypocrisy. He still calls himself a Baptist and
poses to the Christian community as a
     practicing Christian. Therefore many still trust him and see him as
a brother. That makes him all the
     more dangerous.

     I'm sorry if I have offended you. But this is a public message, one
not directed at any individual
     person. In a nation like ours, any position will offend a sizeable
group of people. The consensus
     process, which is squeezing much of America into its new mold,
rules out any expression that would
     violate someone's comfort zone. As you can see, I don't follow
those rules. Nor do I believe that any
     true American should obey the consensus guidelines. Our nation was
founded on individualism and
     freedom. Let’s not give those up in the name of tolerance or
consensus.

     I thank those of you who have taken time to respond to my article
and share your disagreement. I
     appreciate you a lot -- and all the more because you don't share my
beliefs.

     Gratefully,
     Berit
     ___________________________________________________________

     Endnotes:

     1. Al Gore, Earth in the Balance; Ecology and the Human Spirit
(Houghton Mifflin, 1992)
     2. Sustainable development refers to the 3 E’s: Environment,
Economy, and Equity. Not only does it
     use the environmental crisis to establish unthinkable regulations
in order to control natural and
     human resources. It would also redistribute the world’s (mainly
America’s) resources under the
     noble banner of worldwide social equity. For practical answers to
the pseudo-scientific arguments
     used to validate global warming and other environmental crises, see
Chapter 5 of Brave New
     Schools.
     3. Our Creative Diversity (UNESCO, 1995), page 11.
     4. See The UN Plan for Your Mental Health
     5. See The UN Plan for Your Community.
     6. I hope to write a report on this topic in the near future.
     7. Corinne McLaughlin and Gordon Davidson, Spiritual Politics (New
York: Ballantine Books, 1994),
     147.
     8. For more information on President Clinton’s White House
Conference on Hate-Crimes (WHCHC),
     November 10, 1997, see Clinton’s War on Hate Bans Christian Values.

     9. See Brave New Schools, chapter 4 and 5.
     10. Documented by archeology and history. See warnings in
Deuternonomy chapters 8, 9, 18, 28.
     11. 2 Corinthians 6:14-18





--
SCARECROW
"Onward, thru the Fog..."
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