Fear is raised by Alabama Justice’s connections to the far-right Christian movement.
On April 5, 2006, in Montgomery, Alabama, Justice Tom Parker of the Alabama Supreme Court addressed the crowd from the state court building’s steps.
The top justice of the Alabama Supreme Court’s affiliation with the once-peripheral Christian Nationalist movement has come under increasing investigation in the days following the court’s decision to declare frozen embryos to be extrauterine children.
In his concurring opinion, Republican Tom Parker, who was appointed to the court in 2005, cited numerous passages from ancient Christian philosophers, including Thomas Aquinas, as well as the Ten Commandments and the Book of Genesis.
However, remarks he has made in other media have sparked concerns about his apparent endorsement of the Seven Mountains doctrine, which some experts view as extreme Christianity.
God established the government. For those of us who comprehend, it is devastating that we allowed it to become the property of others. Parker stated as much on a recent podcast featuring Christian activist Johnny Enlow.
And we know it is for Him. And for that reason, He is calling and preparing individuals to return to these mountains at this very moment.
Parker’s podcast comments were made available on the same day as the Alabama Supreme Court ruled regarding IVF embryos.
The liberal media watchdog group Media Matters for America was the first to report about his presence on the program.