Religious people look for miracles everywhere, for if God remained an illusory promise and nothing more, then faith would certainly disappear.
The Catholic Church has always been on top of this issue, and every decade or so the Pope canonizes someone, granting him sainthood and a place at the banquet of heavenly hosts. This honor is not conferred willy-nilly - the candidate must have performed a miracle, not necessarily changing water into wine or multiplying a few loaves and fishes into more food than a hundred Jews at a banquet could consume, but more likely ones.
The Vatican archives are filled with magical cures - the blind can see, the lame can walk, etc.; but the prelates in the Office Of Holy Miracles, the wing of the Church responsible for finding, vetting, and approving sainthood, are no fools and have picked low-hanging fruit. There are enough cases of hysterical blindness, psycho-motor paralysis, and tomfoolery to keep the ball rolling.
Long-hidden records discovered by reformist cardinals exposed the 1374 collusion between a priest of Notre Dame and an Ile de la Cite mendicant. The canny beggar feigned blindness and recovery after the laying on of hands by Father Aloysius, a dying man and former philanderer who had been refused absolution, but hoped to see Jesus however oddly stamped his ticket of admission.
At the priest's death, the beggar came forward and hopeful of repaying the priest who had given him 50 gold sovereigns for his collusion and later testimony, told the Parisian envoy to the Holy See of the miracle, and until 1994 when the scandal was exposed, the Catholic faithful had prayed to Saint Aloysius de Paul.
Mysterious, apparently unexplainable events are all fodder for secular belief. So, without much ado, Chicken Littles believed the world was in the throes of self-destruction.
The climate, they said, was warming rapidly, and in a few short decades, warned former Vice President Al Gore turned climate Cassandra, coastal cities would be inundated, Iowa soybean crops would be burned to a crisp, and mortality from malaria, dengue, and schistosomiasis would outstrip cancer.
Climate change was the issue that political progressives had been looking for, one that was all encompassing, universal, and inescapable. Capitalism their bugaboo was at the heart of the crisis. Without Wall Street robber barons seducing Americans into an energy free-for-all - big cars and trucks, gelid air conditioning and toasty winters - profits would be stagnant.
Wrapped in patriotism and Wild West individualism, the message was that no Washington bureaucrat was ever going to abrogate rights of free choice, and the oil business boomed, the Pyrrhic promise that would doom the nation.
Knowing they were on to a good thing, progressives turned the issue into a holy crusade - climate change denial was apostasy, worse than Holocaust denial, automatically and absolutely called out and apostates guillotined.
Words, threats, and intimidation were not enough - something visible and substantive had to be done - so billions were spent on wind farms, solar panels, and bike lanes.
The folly continued and j'accuse fingers were pointed at every neighbor who defied reason and filled up at the pump. The hysteria and vigilantism was worse than the early days of COVID where neighborhoods were turned into gulags, infiltrated by informers and secret police.
However, the dire predictions of Al Gore and other climate change believers never came to pass. The seas did not engulf South Beach, Manhattan, or San Francisco; the Antarctic gained ice, and average annual temperatures hovered, dipped, slid, and recovered just as they always had. The winter of 2025-26 was bitch and even temperate Washington, DC suffered weeks of unseasonably frigid temperatures, ice and snow.
More immediate concerns dominated the news - wars in the Caribbean, Europe, and the Middle East, dealing with the flood of unwanted illegal aliens crossing the southern border, the impact of AI on the labor market, and Donald Trump's unmitigated roll through the bureaucracy all put climate change, already discredited, on the back pages.
Bob Muzelle, a lifelong progressive and on the climate bandwagon since the beginning of the affair, was disconsolate as he scoured the Washington Post for some record of the climate change which, despite naysayers and faux, invented evidence to the contrary, was more than ever real and existential. Nada. The catastrophe of the millennium was being ignored, dismissed, and forgotten.
Bob, although schooled thoroughly in Methodism as a boy, had become thoroughly secular during his progressive journey. Religion was more than just the opiate of the people - it was an obstacle standing in the way of progress. As long as Americans continued to believe in the Second Coming, a fatalist, inane, hopelessly ignorant idea, the road to a better world would be narrow and difficult.
Yet for the first time in decades, his eyes turned upward. If only there were a sign, some indication of the imminent disaster facing mankind.
The recent hurricane season had been a complete bust. Despite his earnest wishes and dutiful tracking of Atlantic storms, nothing but fair weather. Despite the promise of continued drought in the West, pictures of a dry Grand Coulee Dam had been replaced by emergency sluice gates open to relieve water pressure. Reservoirs in California were overflowing, and crops in the Midwest had never been more productive.
Bob remembered the derecho of a few years back. The skies over Washington turned as black as midnight and then out of the darkness came a violent shearing wind that tore the tops off all the trees along Wisconsin and Massachusetts Avenues, downed power lines, and blocked streets with debris. A climate change event if there ever was one, but that kind of violent atmospheric disruption hadn't happened since, especially now that we needed it.
Of course Bob was not so callous and self-centered to wish disaster upon anyone, but still what was religion without bolts of lightning?
Never once did he question the received wisdom of Al Gore or any of his fellow climate activists. He was as much of a true believer as ever. It was just that his job of prophet and advocate was becoming harder and harder without the kind of lowbrow physical proof that the unwashed needed to jolt them awake. A derecho, a hurricane, a line of tornadoes tearing up the Midwest one after another.
He never actually prayed for climate-induced disaster - that would deny both his spiritual center and his belief in secularism (God has no part in all this) - but he came close one brilliant May day, the air redolent of apple blossoms and lilac, the sky blue and a light breeze ruffling the new Spring leaves. This was the kind of day that set back the movement by years if not decades.
Almost hysterical with an inchoate anger, he started pounding his feet and waving his arms in wild frustration, until he realized that he was quite unintentionally doing a rain dance, the very image of Run-With-Wolves, a Comanche chief immortalized by Frederic Remington in a painting hanging in the Renwick Gallery.
A little girl, hand in hand with her mother walking in Lafayette Park, pulled away and pointed at Bob. 'Mommy, what's that crazy man doing?', and it was then that Bob had his epiphany. Time to hang 'em up and retire to Florida.





