
Randy Brinson, a conservative political consultant in Alabama, has been  fielding anxious calls for weeks from business interests across the  South.
Their concern is massive ad blitz on Christian and country-music  stations across 10 states. The ads, funded by a left-leaning coalition, urge  support for congressional legislation to curb greenhouse-gas emissions -- by  framing the issue as an urgent matter of Biblical morality.
"As our seas  rise, crops wither and rivers run dry, God's creation cries out for relief,"  begins one ad, narrated by an evangelical megachurch pastor. Another opens with  a reference to the Gospel of John, slams energy interests for fighting the bill,  and concludes: "Please join the faithful in speaking out against the  powerful."
Dr. Brinson tells his clients they are right to be worried.  Such an aggressive political campaign by the religious left is unexpected, he  says, and could prove powerful. "This is the first time I've seen a moderate  group of evangelicals come together and do a coordinated campaign," said Dr.  Brinson. He is warning clients: "You're going to hear a lot more of  this."
Emboldened by what they see as a kindred spirit in the White  House, progressive and liberal Christians are stepping up their political  activism in a big way.
A religious coalition called the American Values  Network spent nearly $200,000 placing the global warming ads. Some political  analysts credit the campaign with boosting support for the Waxman-Markey climate  bill, which narrowly passed the House last week.
The coalition plans to  spend an additional $150,000 in the coming months to enlist pastors in Nevada,  Arizona and Colorado to rally support in the pews as climate-change legislation  moves through the Senate.
Another left-leaning religious coalition will  begin airing scripture-citing radio ads in key congressional districts this  weekend, calling for legislation to make health insurance more affordable. The  coalition -- which includes Faith in Public Life, Sojourners and Catholics in  Alliance for the Common Good -- also is distributing an eight-page guide, full  of Biblical quotes and health-care statistics, to encourage pastors to raise the  issue in sermons.
Democratic lawmakers representing conservative  districts say such efforts help them make the case to skeptical constituents  that they aren't simply toeing the party line -- or turning into bleeding-heart  liberals -- when they support President Barack Obama's calls for health-care and  climate-change legislation.
"It's important for people to see that it's  not just [Democrats] saying this is important, but people who are coming at it  from a moral background," said Rep. Tom Perriello, a freshman Democrat who has  come under fire in his rural Virginia district for supporting the climate  bill.
The religious right and secular conservatives are taking notice. In  recent weeks, key religious-right groups such as Focus on the Family and the  Family Research Council have heavily promoted the work of a group called the  Cornwall Alliance for the Stewardship of Creation. The Cornwall Alliance  dismisses global-warming alarms as hype and argues that forceful action to cut  greenhouse-gas emissions could cripple the economy and harm the poor. It is  organizing conservative pastors to carry this message to the pews.
The  religious left has a long tradition of activism on social issues, including the  civil-rights movement. But for the past quarter century, faith-based politicking  has been dominated by the religious right, which built a powerful army of  activists -- and a formidable fund-raising machine -- on the strength of leaders  such as the Rev. Jerry Falwell of the Moral Majority and radio host James Dobson  of Focus on the Family.
The religious left's re-emergence as a strong  voice -- with the financial backing to make aggressive media buys -- is a  "seismic shift," said D. Michael Lindsay, a sociologist at Rice University who  studies evangelical politics.
"The religious left is experiencing today  what the religious right had in 1981," Mr. Lindsay said. "They've finally found  a White House that's not just tolerating but welcoming, affirming, of their  involvement."
Left-leaning Christian groups also have started to attract  funding from secular donors who share their political goals -- and who see  Biblical appeals as a promising way to broaden public support.
Oxfam  America has worked with churches for years, but on relatively non-controversial  campaigns such as staging fasts to call attention to world hunger. Now, the  group is teaming up with the religious left to push for congressional action to  cut greenhouse-gas emissions.
E. Calvin Beisner, a spokesman for the  conservative Cornwall Alliance, says the right has to respond forcefully to the  well-funded campaigns from the religious left, because "they're certainly not  being silent."
Editors Note.....The apostasy of the Evangelical Church continues to grow.