Daily Breeze,
Los Angeles: "After a three-hour disci-plinary council meeting on Sunday in
Canberra, Austra-lia, Simon Southerton, author of Losing a Lost Tribe: Native
Americans, DNA and the Book of Mormon, was informed his relationship with
his religion of 30 years would be officially severed, Southerton said in an e-mail
to The Associated Press. Southerton was charged by church authorities with adultery
but finally excommuni-cated for 'having an inappropriate relationship with a wo-man,'
he said....The Southertons have since reconciled, and Jane Southerton testified
on behalf of her husband. Southerton said he refused to discuss his personal life
with church leaders...instead asking them why he was not answering to charges
of apostasy for having widely published on the Internet and in his book his doubts
about the church and his beliefs about DNA science."
RNS via Beliefnet: "Back when Jack Kenny was a good Catholic boy,
he was taught to develop a personal relationship with Jesus Christ. So when he
wrote a TV show about a troubled Episcopal priest, he made Jesus his main character's
best friend. In Kenny's 'The Book of Daniel,' which NBC just picked up for midseason,
Aidan Quinn plays Connecticut-bred Daniel Webster. Daniel is a good minister and
a good man, but that's not always enough to deal with his life. He's addicted
to Vicodin. His wife, Judith, has frozen inside since one of their sons died of
leukemia. His son, Peter, is gay. His daughter, Grace, is dealing marijuana to
raise extra cash. And
in moments of great stress, Jesus (played by "Deadwood" alum Garret Dillahunt)
turns up ...to offer his counsel.”
Salt
Lake City Tribune: "In the lawsuit, Summum al-leges the denial of its
request to put up the Seven Aph-orisms in the park at 100 North and 100 East counters
previous rulings. In two of them, handed down in 1997 and 2002, the 10th U.S.
Circuit Court of Appeals in Denver agreed that Salt Lake County and Ogden City
had created a forum for free expression by allowing the erection of a Ten Commandments
monument on govern-ment property. The same standard applies to Pleasant Grove,
Summum contends in its suit....'The rights of plaintiff Summum are violated when
the defendants give preference and endorsement to one particular set of reli-gious
beliefs by allowing the Ten Commandments mon-ument to remain in a public park...and
disallow a similar display of the religious tenets of Summum,' the suit says."
Associated
Press via CTV: Pope Benedict "was re-cently visited by bishops from Africa
and Sri Lanka, where the number of priests is skyrocketing. In Europe and elsewhere,
the number of priests has fallen sharp-ly. Benedict said the 'joy' at the growing
numbers of churchmen in the developing world is accompanied by 'a certain bitterness'
because some would-be priests were only looking for a better life. 'Becoming a
priest, they become almost like a head of a tribe, they are naturally privileged
and have another type of life,' he said. 'So the wheat and the chaff go together
in this beautiful growth of vocations. 'Bishops have to be very attentive to discern
(among the candidates) and not just be happy to have many future priests, but
to see which ones really are the true vocations—discern between the wheat and
the chaff,' he said."
Alan Wolfe in Slate: “Feldman proposes that...[r]eligion has always
played a symbolic role in our public life. It did, for example, in the generic
Christianity that once uni-ted Catholics and Protestants and then again in the
in-vented Judeo-Christian tradition that brought in those who followed the Hebrew
Bible. Let it do so once more, Feld-man concludes. No one is really harmed when
Ameri-cans wish each other 'Merry Christmas' instead of ‘Hap-py Holidays.’ At
the same time...we ought to revitalize separation of church and state as the Framers
under-stood it. To guarantee freedom of conscience, no one should be compelled
to pay for a quasi-establishment of religion, such as public funding for a faith-based
charity or subsidies to religious schools. Legal secularists win on questions
of money, while values evangelicals win on questions of symbols.”
By
Rob Moll: "Feminists for Life sees itself as an exten-sion of the first wave
of American feminists who sought voting rights for women to, among other things,
protect their children and pass anti-abortion legislation. 'Without known exception,
the early American feminists condemn-ed abortion in the strongest possible terms,'
Foster says in her anthologized speech, 'The Feminist Case Against Abortion.'
'The early feminists understood that, much like today, women resorted to abortion
because they were abandoned or pressured by boyfriends, husbands, and parents
and lacked financial resources to have a baby on their own. 'Ironically, the anti-abortion
laws that early fem-inists worked so hard to enact to protect women and chil-dren
were the very ones destroyed by the Roe v. Wade decision 100 years later...hailed
by the National Organi-zation for Women as [emancipating] women.'"
In
Town Hall: "a transgendered individual is a person of one sex who dresses
(or otherwise behaves) as a mem-ber of the other sexactions that directly
conflict with core Judeo-Christian values. It is remarkable that activists on
behalf of gay and lesbian acceptance always include the transgendered. What, after
all, do the transgendered, who are usually heterosexual men, have to do with gays
and lesbians? The answer is that activists understand that their primary goalequating
same-sex sexual beha-vior with man-woman sexcan only be accomplished if
other Judeo-Christian and Western sexual norms are also rejected. That is why
the very word 'sex,' when referring to male or female, has been changed to 'gender.'...society...
has accepted this linguistic change as if it were insignifi-cant. The change on
application forms, for example, from 'Sex: M or F' to 'Gender: M or F' has gone
unnoticed.”
Dr.
Scott H. Moore interviewed in The Christian Post: "The basic theme
of the books is one of the con-flict between good and evil. In every book, there
is a story of Harry both growing older and coming to under-stand his unique destiny
to fight the evil wizard Volde-mort (whose name means “willing death”). We are
told over and over again that Harry represents the power of love, a power which
Voldemort cannot understand.... The books abound with examples of Christ symbols....
Parents must decide what is appropriate for their chil-dren. Not every book is
appropriate for every child. Some children may find the stories a bit scary, and
others will simply be interested in other things. Christian parents should not,
however, worry that these books foster and promote the occult. They are wonderful
books built on the well-formed Christian imagination."
In
the New York Daily News: "In our time of hysterical conservatism, it
is hard to think objectively about what a faith-based institution can provide
in a time when Chris-tianity and morality are often used as no more than tools
to either push us back into a less informed past, or to support a political agenda
that has little to do with religion. Eugene Rivers is not about the politics.
He is a serious minister who heads up the Azusa Christian Community in Boston.
'Part of the trouble with the black church,' he says, 'is that it can be at least
partially blamed for unintentionally fostering this irrespon-sible atmosphere.'
Why does Rivers think this? 'Because once the church gave up its moral standards
and accepted irresponsible sexual behavior and single-mother households as normal,
it was saying that the fight had been lost.'”
Catholic World News:
"A Christian employee of the American Red Cross was fired last month after express-ing
his concerns to senior staff about an e-mail from the diversity office notifying
him that June was 'Gay and Lesbian Pride Month.' Michael Hartman, who had work-ed
at the Red Cross for eight months...reported to Con-cerned Women for America (CWFA)
that his immediate supervisor did not care that, as a Christian, Hartman was concerned;
thereafter he voiced his consternation to senior officials. Hartman's e-mail to
senior manage-ment stated, '...I am a Christian not willing to compro-mise my
beliefs to promote the agenda of the homosex-ual community. I would also like
to say that I think it's disgraceful that while most of us [at the Red Cross]
are trying to save lives, a few are using this organization to promote their own
lifestyles....'"
SFGate: "The top
legislative body of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America is set to take
key votes this week on ordaining gays and blessing same-sex unions. Conflicts
over what the Bible says about homo-sexuality have been tearing at Protestant
denominations for years. Here is a description of how the debate is playing out
in major American churches: UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST: The liberal, 1.3 million-member
denomination passed a resolution July 4 endorsing same-sex marriage, making it
the largest Christian de-nomination to do so. The church has been ordaining gays
for decades. EPISCOPAL CHURCH: This U.S. branch of Anglicanism sparked a crisis
in the global Anglican Communion by confirming its first openly gay bishop, V.
Gene Robinson of New Hampshire.... "
Terry
Mattingly via Scripps Howard: "So what's the bottom line? Faith is not a niche-market
trend. It's true that the look and feel of 'mainstream' American religion is changing,
in part due to people searching on the World Wide Web. 'Organized religion' may
be in a re-cession, but the rest of the "spirituality" numbers con-tinue to add
up, up, up. 'Wall Street considers a trend that lasts 10 years to be significant.
This one has last-ed 10 millennia,' argues Waldman, in a research paper he calls
'The Faithful Consumer & The Spiritual Market-place.' He recently cranked out
a 13th draft, trying to keep up with the latest data. 'While philosophers have
studied the faithful soul and politicians have courted the faithful voter, the
marketing and business communities have so far ignored The Faithful Consumer.
This is a big mistake.'"
Kevin
Little in the Toronto Star: "while I may support same-sex marriage
and the cause of feminism in the church, I think those who share my views but
still insist on a strict separation of Church and state make no sense at all.
Surely one thing that post-modernism has taught us is that the world can handle
a variety of world-views at one time, religious and secular. I think the prob-lem
we religious people have isn't that we are mixing our politics with our faith,
it is that we have so selectively done so as to discredit our witness entirely.
Perhaps if Christians and Muslims focused more energy on fighting the economic,
environmental and social narcissism of our age we'd have more credibility with
the... public. And until we do correct the way we use our prophetic voice, we...silence
the very voice inside us that makes our world real."
Via
Scripps-Howard Syndicate: "Last week's 47th convention of the Antiochian Orthodox
Christian Arch-diocese of North America adopted a resolution that ad-dressed both
sexuality and the Iraqi war. But this time the lofty words led to an historic
change....the dele-gates cheered as Metropolitan Philip Saliba announced his decision
to withdraw from the National Council of Churches USA. ...The archdiocese joined
the old Fed-erated Council of Churches in the 1940s and had been active in the
ecumenical movement ever since.... But recent decades have been tough. The Orthodox
believe 'we're getting further and further away from the primary goal of looking
to bring Christianity back into a unified fold,' he told AncientFaithRadio.com.
Now the 'church-es of the mainline Protestant world really don't want to hear
our message.'"
Drudge Report: "'Workers...in the old city of Jerusalem have discovered
the biblical Pool of Siloam, a freshwater reservoir that was ...the reputed site
where Jesus cured a man blind from birth....Scholars have said that there wasn't
a Pool of Siloam and that John was using a reli-gious conceit' to illustrate a
point, said New Testament scholar James H. Charlesworth of the Princeton Theol-ogical
Seminary. 'Now we have found the Pool of Siloam ... exactly where John said it
was.' A gospel that was thought to be 'pure theology is now shown to be ground-ed
in history,' he said. The discovery puts a new spot-light on what is called the
pilgrimage to Jerusalem, a trip that religious law required ancient Jews to make
at least once a year, said archeologist Ronny Reich of the University of Haifa,
who excavated the pool. 'Jesus was just another pilgrim coming to Jerusalem,'
he said.'"
Bono quoted in World
Magazine by Gene Edward Veith: "'At the center of all religions is the idea
of Kar-ma...what you put out comes back to you: an eye for an eye, a tooth for
a tooth, or in physics—in physical laws —every action is met by an equal or an
opposite one.... And yet, along comes this idea called Grace to upend all that....Love
interrupts, if you like, the consequences of your actions, which in my case is
very good news in-deed, because I've done a lot of stupid stuff.' The inter-viewer
asks, Like what? 'That's between me and God. But I'd be in big trouble if Karma
was going to finally be my judge....It doesn't excuse my mistakes, but I'm holding
out for Grace. I'm holding out that Jesus took my sins onto the Cross, because
I know who I am, and I hope I don't have to depend on my own religiosity.'"
A Christmas gift from XnmpThe "gift"
is a tip. Add the Google toolbar to your computer's
Internet Explorer browser. It zaps popup ads on news websites, which is great,
but even better, its search option to "search this site" is awesome.
It's virtually an index of any site, including this one. Try itgo to the
web address below, click "download," and it automatically installs itself
if your computer is WIndows XP. And Merry Christmas! (This
endorsement was not paid or solicited.) webmaster