Al Gore embraces the mystical spiritual evolution teaching of Eastern religions, the same ones from which Adolph Hitler
followed in building the Third Reich. He seeks his wisdom from the world's pagan religious where its basic premise is that
man exists for nature. He endorses feminine substitutes for God. He commends Bahaism, the religion of Maurice Strong,
head of the recent United Nations Earth Summit, as well as Islam, Hinduism and Sikhism. He affirms the New Age (spiritual
evolution) teaching of Teillard De Chardin, the excommunicated Catholic archaeologist. He points to what de Chardin said,
'The fate of mankind, as well as of religion, depends upon the emergence of a new faith in the future.'
Gore identifies the root problem of Western culture in that "we lost our feeling of connectedness to the rest of nature"
and finds answers in pantheism. He attempts to blend Christianity and pantheism where the source of all life, instead of
God has become Mother God, (Mother Earth/Mother Nature also frequently referred to as Gaia). He, like the radical
eco-feminists who support him, see the earth as the pagan goddess Gaia who "has been seriously 'wounded' by the
expansion of human civilization, and now there must come a universal atonement for these many millennia of grief on 'her'
part" through an event or process they call 'cleansing.'
2007-11-05
22:10:56
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Any better candidate out there ?
2007-11-05
22:11:50 ·
update #1