As the universeÕs fastest-growing religion, ÒGoing GreenÓ is already positioned to go the dirtiest oceans and driest desserts toward brainwashing the masses into endorsing the AntichristÕs Mission Tower of Babel II.

 

The undeniable aim of our New Age Dewey-Darwin American public school system, for one, is to instill a duty-mindset of justified persecution against any who donÕt bow down to nature and the teensy-weensiest of its creatures and flora.

 

For its pre-coverage of next weekÕs all-important worldwide Earth Day celebrations, the Wall Street Journal carried an alarm-bell story today about Òfrighteningly pushy eco-lessons that now fill childrenÕs books.Ó

 

The article began with the warning, ÒContemporary children are so drenched with eco-propaganda that itÕs almost a waste of resources. Like acid rain, but more persistent and corrosive, it dribbles down on them all day long. They get it at school, where recycling now competes with tolerance as manÕs highest virtue. The get it in the peppy Ôgo greenÕ messages online, on television and in magazines.Ó

 

Susceptible children, says the news story, Òare left in no doubt that weÕre all headed for a despoiled, immiserated future unless they start planting pansies in their old shoes, using dryer lint as mulch, and practicing periodic vegetarianism. Not surprisingly, many young people are anxious. The more impressionable among them are coming to believe that their smallest decisions could have catastrophic effects on the globe.Ó

 

Fueling their panic is an eco-message Òseeping into the pages of novels that donÕt, on their face, necessarily seem to be about environmentalism at all,Ó reports WSJ.

 

For example, the patriarch of green-themed childrenÕs books, novelist and Miami Herald columnist Carl Hiaasen, has just released his latest effort, ÒScat,Ó a story about three kids Òwho band together with an eccentric biology teacher and an armed ecoterrorist to stop a buffoonish Texas oilman from illegally extracting petroleum from the habitat of an endangered Florida panther.Ó

 

The WSJ article continues, ÒIn all Mr. HiaasenÕs books for children, young readers are asked to sympathize with environmentalists who thwart businessmen, even when the good guys take destructive measures such as sinking boats and torching billboards. And the eco-tropes that have worked so well for Mr. Hiaasen—Good nature! Bad capitalist!—are steadily creeping into books across the age range.Ó

 

*****

 

Just the other night I came across a bookmarked web page from Dial-The-Truth-Ministries (www.av1611.org) detailing the thousands of New Age perversions in Eugene PetersonÕs incredibly successful 2002 bible paraphrase (consistently ranked among the top-five bestselling bibles) called ÒThe Message,Ó endorsed by such Christian ÒheavyweightsÓ as Billy Graham, Chuck Swindoll, Rick Warren, Max Lucado, etc., etc.

 

 Under the heading, ÒThe Green Hope,Ó author Dr. Terry Watkins notes that Romans 15:13 in ÒThe MessageÓ contains Òthe most bizarre statement ever in a mainstream Bible.Ó

 

The verse reads, ÒOh! May the God of green hope fill you up with joy, fill you up with peace, so that your believing lives, filled with the life-giving energy of the Holy Spirit, will brim over with hope!Ó

 

This compares to the King James Bible: ÒNow the God of hope fill you with all joy and peace in believing, that ye may abound in hope, through the power of the Holy Ghost.Ó

 

Watkins writes, ÒWho is the ÔGod of green hopeÕ? The Ôgreen hopeÕ originated with the hellish, human sacrificing, Druids. The publication Talks on Freemasonry states, ÔGreen was, with the Druids, a symbol of hope and the virtue of hope with a Freemason illustrates the hope of immortality.Õ (Kenneth Tuckwood, Talks on Freemasonry).

ÒThe Ôgreen hopeÕ mantra is a popular rallying cry in the new age Mother-Earth environmental movement. In the New Age Movement, ÔgreenÕ signifies ÔOneness with the Earth,Õ hence the title of William AndersonÕs book, ÔGreen Man: The Archetype of Our Oneness with the Earth.Õ Ó

Watkins references page 159 of the ÒDictionary of Symbolism,Ó considered the most comprehensive one-volume work on the language of symbols ever published, in which author Hans Biedermann notes:  Ò. . . the devil appears as Ôthe green oneÕ. . .Ó