P Thomas (Letters, 26, Feb) wrote: Have some faith
I LOVE to read the Faith Matter column, so imagine my disappointment when I read last week's; if I wanted a lesson in botany I would have consulted a library book, oh I'm sorry I meant looked it up on the web.
When God created the earth, he looked at it and saw that it was good. It was only when he made man that everything went pear shaped.
[...(blah blah blah)...]
So is it too late? Well we all have our own ideas. Don't panic - the Bible does tell us that there will be a new heaven and earth, [Rev 21] and verse one. Also we don't need any lesson in biology - the light we need to see is Jesus, the light of the world.


So, I fired off a quick reply:
P Thomas (Letters, 26, February) implies that we don’t need to panic about the damage we cause to the environment because, according the Biblical promises, everything will turn out well in the end, with a new heaven and earth provided for everyone to pollute afresh. Hopefully, few readers will indulge this complacent woolly thinking; perhaps, as an alternative, we could think about trying to limit the harm we cause.
P Thomas further insults the intelligence of every reader by preaching his belief in Creationism, a philosophy so loopy that most major churches have repudiated it. According to Mr. Thomas, we can do without biology, since all we need is Jesus, “the light of the world”. Like many non-religious people, I am struck instead by the constant stream of “white noise” streaming from the lips of Creationists who treat empirical evidence with airy indifference and science as a triviality. Why, indeed, would fact-based reality concern us if we could all inhabit a fantasy-world of magic and miracles, basing our opinions about the world on a particular book of self-contradictory myths? Some of us, however, opt to grow up.