Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Is Belief in the Second Coming of Christ Bad for Creation?
Is Belief in the Second Coming of Christ Bad for Creation?
Dec 16, 2025 2:30 PM

Do you believe that Jesus will return to Earth someday? Then you probably don’t care about environmental devastation and the catastrophic loss of life of future generations.

That’s the absurd conclusion drawn in an academic paper published in the latest issue of Political Research Quarterly. In their article, “End-Times Theology, the Shadow of the Future, and Public Resistance to Addressing Global Climate Change,” David C. Barker of the University of Pittsburgh and David H. Bearce of the University of Colorado test the following hypothesis:

Citizens who believe in Christian end-times theology are less likely to see global warming as a policy problem that requires immediate government pared to citizens who do not hold end-times beliefs.

Initially, I thought by “Christian end-times theology” they might be referring to premillinial dispensationalism, a eschatological view held by many American Evangelicals, that was popularized in the Left Behind series of novels. But the authors make it clear that they are not just referring to dispensationalists but to all Christians who believe in the Second Coming.

To measure sociotropic [i.e., with an eye toward collective es, rather than strictly personal ones] time horizons in the form of end-times beliefs, we simply asked respondents to indicate whether or not they “believe in the Second Coming of Jesus Christ—that is, that Jesus will return to Earth someday?” Of respondents, 56 percent answered yes to this question, parable percentage to what has been observed in other surveys. Among Republican respondents, the number of believers jumps to 75 percent.

The Second Coming of Jesus Christ mon to all orthodox Christians and has been since at least 381 AD when “he e again” was included in the Nicene Creed. In other words, when the paper refers to “end times believers” it is talking about almost every Christian believer in the history of the church.

The researchers admit that “evangelicals and other traditionalistic Christians” are concerned with “environmental degradation” as other Americans. They even admit that our “doctrinal beliefs support a ‘stewardship’ ideology.” Yet for some reason, the researchers claim, “such Christians are particularly unlikely to support politically oriented environmental protection—especially when they hold inerrant views toward the Bible.” (That group would include, at a minimum, almost all Evangelicals and Catholics.)

So if we Christians are worried about the environmental problems what could possibly prevent us from wanting the government to take immediate action on climate change? The researchers say,

We argue that end-times believers often oppose costly policies to deal with global climate change because they have shorter sociotropic time horizons than do nonbelievers. . . . For most people, if munity in question is global humankind, then the sociotropic SOF would be infinite (absent worries about human-generated global devastation).

Stated differently, end-times believers might think a little bit like actuaries. But instead of calculating the life expectancy of individuals, they calculate it for the entire planet. And they calculate that the planetary life expectancy will be much shorter than do nonbelievers. To elaborate, while non-end-times believers have little reason to doubt humankind’s infinite persistence, all else being equal, end-times believers “know” that life on Earth has a preordained expiration date, no matter what—and that all Christians will be raptured before the going gets too tough. Accordingly, it stands to reason that most nonbelievers would support preserving the Earth for future generations, but that end-times believers would rationally perceive such efforts to be ultimately futile, and hence ill-advised. As journalist Glenn Scherer (2004) has written on this point, “Christian traditionalists feel that concern for the future of our planet is irrelevant, because it [the planet] has no future.”

Not only is this wrong, it gets it exactly backwards. Aside from a few techno-utopians, there are almost no materialists, atheists, and other secular non-believers that believe global humankind will live on for an infinite amount of time. Indeed, most believe that the future nonexistence of humankind—if not the entire universe—is almost a certainty. It is Christians, on the other hand, that believe that our existence will not only continue to exist for an infinite period, but will be a bodily existence on the Earth.

The entire paper could have been scrapped had anyone related to the process—from the authors, to the editors, to the peer reviewers—thought to have an thoughtful orthodox Christian point examine its premise. What the paper is claiming is that being an orthodox Christian is strongly correlated with rejecting government action on climate change. This e as quite a surprise to the many millions of Christians who do think the government should act on this issue.

But the assumption of the researchers is that almost everyone who believes in Second Coming watches Fox News, dismisses the secular media because of its bias, and votes Republican:

In fact, evangelicals often selectively expose themselves to news sources that they perceive to be friendly to their point of view (e.g., “new media” such as Fox News, religious broadcasting, and talk radio). . . .

It is well known that in the “culture wars” era, political ideology (and thus party ID) stems in part from Christian traditionalism (see especially Layman 2001). And as we discussed earlier, accusing the “secular” mainstream media of bias is mon talking point for traditionalistic Christians. . . .

The policy implications of our research remain and are perhaps even strengthened. This is true because the Republican base includes a large number of active white traditionalistic Christians, who by definition believe in the biblical end-times. Thus, Republican politicians (especially in the South) may get considerable mileage out of appealing to this base, thereby slowing and even blocking Democratic efforts to advance environmental public policy. . . .

The paper is essentially an attempt to demonize Christians in order to blame us for the failure to get the government to take immediate action (any action apparently will do) on climate change. They even directly insult the millions of Christians who consider themselves to be both believers and Democrats.

. . . even if the various survey instruments tend to overstate the actual number of genuine end-times believers, strong reasons remain to think that the Second Coming beliefs described in this article could nonetheless influence U.S. environmental policy. Specifically, the fact that such an overwhelming percentage of Republican citizens profess a belief in the Second Coming (76 percent in 2006, according to our sample) suggests that governmental attempts to curb greenhouse emissions would encounter stiff resistance even if every Democrat in the country wanted to curb them. [emphasis in original]

The paper makes it clear that it is believing in the Second Coming, not being a Republican, that causes a person to hold this view. So the “every Democrat in the country” quip is an erroneous assumption that few Democrats who are Christian hold to the orthodox believe in the Second Coming.

Simply because it was published in a reputable journal, this embarrassingly shoddy article will be cited for years e as evidence that holding Christian beliefs causes people to oppose public policy choices that rational and enlightened people (i.e., political progressives) subscribe to without question. Unfortunately, both the ignorance about Christian beliefs and the anti-Christian bias in this paper and not mon in social science research. This is a prime example of why we need more Christians in the academy. We don’t need to counter by promoting a pro-Christian bias, we merely need to produce quality work that provides an alternative to this substandard, politically and religiously biased, pseudo-scholarship.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Evangelical Leaders Discuss How to Enhance Human Flourishing
Last week in Washington, D.C., AEI’s Values and Capitalism initiative hosted their inaugural Evangelical Leadership Summit. The summit was a nonpartisan conversation among leading evangelical writers, pastors, parachurch leaders, business executives, artists, and policymakersthatfocused on “concrete paths to enhancing human flourishing.” Summit panels emphasized distinct contributions to human flourishing made by the church, universities, the arts, Christian relief-and-development organizations., local antipoverty initiatives, and more. Click each link below to watch a video of the panel sessions: What does a healthy...
Rule Of Law: Not Flashy, But Essential
It’s interesting to debate and share idea like freedom of speech, religious liberty or entrepreneurship. Helping folks in the developing world create and sustain businesses if exciting. Watching women who’ve been victimized by human trafficking or their own culture find ways to support themselves and their families is wonderful. But none of this happens without rule of law. Rule of law is not “sexy.” It doesn’t get the press of a brilliantly successful NGO. There are no great photo ops...
Boyhood, the Masculine Spirit, and the Formative Power of Work
The modern age has introducedmany blessings when es to child-rearing and child development, offering kids ever more opportunities for education, play, personal development, andsocial interaction. Yet as time, leisure, and wealth continue to increase, and as we move farther away from years ofexcessive andintensive child labor, we ought to be wary of falling into a different sort of lopsided lifestyle — one that over-elevates othergoods (e.g. study, practice, play) to the detriment of good old-fashioned labor. As I’ve written previously,...
The Famine Remembered: Lessons from Ukraine’s Holodomor and Soviet Communism
This November marks the 25th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall. This momentous occasion symbolizing the decline of Soviet Communism is sure to be met with joyous celebration, not only in Germany, but around the world. While November signifies Soviet Communism’s decline it memorates one of its darkest, most horrendous hours. Annually on the fourth Saturday of November, Ukrainians remember the brutal, man-made famine imposed on their country by Joseph Stalin and his Communist regime in the 1930s....
Dangerous To Be An American Woman? Not If We Take Responsibility For Ourselves, Each Other
Vox is telling us that it’s “dangerous to be a woman in America.” (The news is delivered in a creepy video where statistics are displayed via writing on a woman’s body. No objectification there…) They also want us to know that it may take a “nuclear option” to tackle sexual assault on college campuses. Enough. In the U.S., 1 out of 6 women will suffer some sort of sexual assault during her life. 73 percent of the time, she will...
Does the Bible Endorse Free Markets?
Most Christians recognize that the Bible has lot to say about economic topics, such as money and poverty. Yet there is a paradoxical assumption, whether stated or unspoken, that these passages don’t speak to larger economic issues. Occasionally this is true, but more often than not, we can find principles from Scripture that can help us discern how we should think about matters related to economics. Consider, for example, the issue of economic systems. The Bible doesn’t claim to favor...
5 Facts About the U.S. Constitution
Constitution Day is celebrated in America every year on September 17, the anniversary of the day the framers signed the document. Here are five facts you should know about the U.S. Constitution. 1. The Constitution contains 4,543 words, including the signatures and has four sheets, 28-3/4 inches by 23-5/8 inches each. It contains 7,591 words including the 27 amendments. It is the oldest and shortest written Constitution of any major government in the world. 2. Thomas Jefferson did not sign...
Coolidge and Reagan on the Constitution
This afternoon I delivered the Constitution Day lecture at Cooley Law School in Grand Rapids. The school did an excellent job promoting the event and I was thankful for an opportunity to speak about our founding documents and introduce Acton ideas and thought to law students. Much of my discussion centered upon Calvin Coolidge’s notion that there is a “finality” and rest within our founding principles. When we endeavor to move beyond the principles of our founding; we begin to...
Lecrae, Ferguson, and the Limits of Respectability
With Lecrae’s Anomaly album claiming number the one spot on Billboard’s Top 200, the rapper e under fire for his ments about the inconsistency of those who rightly protest police abuse yet do not protest forms of rap music that glorify violence in general. The es, in part, because some people believe that to call blacks living on the margins of society to moral virtue, in the midst of their protests about injustice, is “blaming the victim.” However, when we...
Mental Illness Is Not A Crime: L.A. County Pilots New Program
It is estimated that, at any time in the U.S., there are 1.2 million people with mental illness who are being held either in jail or prison. Some of them, without a doubt, truly belong there. For most, though, jail and prison has e a quasi-triage center/hospital/safety net. And it takes a huge toll. Take Cook County, Ill. for example. Sheriff Tom Dart keeps track of the mentally ill e under his jurisdiction. On average, at least 30% of the...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved