AP via KGO
News: "Stevens Creek [School] has recei-ved hun-dreds of angry phone
calls and more than 3,000 e-mailssome vulgar, others threateningsince
Nov. 22, when one of its teachers, Stephen Williams, filed a federal lawsuit against
the school. The fifth-grade teacher alleges his civil rights were violated when
school principal Patricia Vidmar ordered him to stop distributing documents to
his students 'because of their religious content.' Among the banned documents,
the suit says, were religious excerpts from the Declaration of Indepen-dence,
various state constitutions and writings by George Washington, John Adams and
William Penn. Vidmar also banned a document Williams created call-ed 'What Great
Leaders Have Said About The Bible.'"
Grand Rapids Press: "It takes advertisements for booze, hangover
medication, fast cars and cigarettes, but Rolling Stone magazine won't print one
hawking the Bible. The influential music magazine with 1.2 million readers rejected
Zondervan's advertisement for its 'Today's New International Version' Bible, a
decision that deals a blow to the company's plans to market to young, hip readers.
The ad campaign is the largest ever for the Cascade Township publisher as it rolls
out the newly translated version of the Bible. And the ad it wanted to place in
February's Rolling Stone was an important piece in its $1 million ad blitz before
the launch in two weeks. ...Officials at Zondervan said Rolling Stone was concerned
about a line in the ad about finding 'real truth' in the Bible."
Yahoo
News: Steven "Bochco, the man behind such hits as Hill Street Blues
and L.A. Law, prevailed and got his gritty cop show on the air, but he
thinks that wouldn't be possible in today's politically charged media landscape.
'The medium has become increas-ingly conservative,' he told reporters....The Emmy-winning
police drama, co-created by Bochco and David Milch, will conclude its 12-season
run March 1. 'I don't think today we could launch or sell a show like NYPD
Blue,' Bochco said. He had hoped the series would pave the way for more sophisticated
drama, but said the pendulum has swung in the opposite direction in the past five
years.... [But] 'you're never going to put the genie back in the bottle,' Bochco
said."
Ann
Oldenburg: "Now, an episode of Postcards From Buster, which combines animation
with live action to highlight multiculturalism, includes a real girl introduc-ing
her lesbian parents to the bunny. That episode has struck a nerve in a nation
already split over the question of same-sex marriage. Buster is produced by WBGH
in Boston, where same-sex marriages are legal; the ser-ies is aimed at ages 6
to 8. It's not so much a toler-ance question as it is a question of age-appropriate-ness,
says Stephen Bennett, executive director of Stephen Bennett Ministries and special
issues editor on homosexuality for the American Family Association. 'When you
get down to the nuts and bolts of it, it's about teaching kids about some kind
of sexuality,' he says."
In
Christianity Today: "When, in Tom Wolfe's most recent novel, I Am
Charlotte Simmons, Charlotte's mother asks her during Christmas break where
students go on dates at Dupont University, Charlotte responds: 'Nobody goes out
on a date. The girls go out in groups and the boys go out in groups, and they
hope they find somebody they like.' This is Charlotte Simmons's description of
'hooking up.' 'Hooking up' has replaced traditional courtship and dating among
today's college students. 'Hooking up' is dating sans courtship or expectations
of a future relationship or commitment. It is strictly about user sex. I use you
and you use me for mutual pleasure. And liquor is more often than not the lubricant
that makes things go."
AP's
Richard Ostling: "The postelection phone survey of 2,730 people, conducted
by the University of Akron and sponsored by the Pew Forum on Religion and Public
Life, is a close study of voting behavior and religious faith. Among non-Hispanic
Catholics, Kerry won the support of 69 percent with those with liberal or 'modernist'
beliefs, while 72 percent of 'traditionalists' favored Bush. But im-portantly,
55 percent of the key swing group of 'centrists' picked Bush over Kerry, who was
criticized by bishops for his support of abortion rights. The upshot: A one-time
Democratic mainstay, Catholics gave Bush an overall edge of 53 percent to Kerry's
47 percent. Overall, the mainline Protestant vote split evenly, the poll found,
with a Bush decline of 10 percent from 2000 and the best showing for a Democrat
since the 1960s...."
Reuters:
"Christian Conservative groups have issued a gay alert warning over a children's
video starring SpongeBob SquarePants, Barney and a host of other cartoon favorites.
The wacky square yellow SpongeBob is one of the stars of a music video due to
be sent to 61,000 U.S. schools in March. The makersthe nonprofit We Are
Family Foundationsay the video is designed to encourage tolerance and diversity.
But at least two Christian activist groups say the innocent cartoon characters
are being exploited to promote the acceptance of homosexuality. 'A short step
beneath the surface reveals that one of the differences being celebrated is homosexuality,'
wrote Ed Vitagliano in an article for the American Family Association. "
John
Micklethwait, Adrian Wooldridge: "Ever since 1945, European elites have preferred
their politics to be technocratic—mainly managing capitalism for the com-mon good,
rather than tackling private issues of faith and morality. This is partly because
Europeans are less passionate about religion. Only one in 10 French people says
religion plays an important role in his or her life. But lately, cultural issues
have begun to force their way back into the mainstream of European politics, stoked
by three things. The first is the willingness of politicians to ride roughshod
over ancient traditions—and the grow-ing willingness of what Edmund Burke called
the 'little platoons' to fight back. The Labor government's bill banning fox hunting
in England and Wales...has created a furor in rural England—and not just among
toffs."
DrudgeReport: "Proposing new political language about abortion rights for
an increasingly skittish Democratic Party, Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton said Monday
that friends and foes on the issue should come together on "common ground" to
reduce the number of "unwanted pregnancies" and ultimately abortions, which she
called a "sad, even tragic choice to many, many women." Clinton, in a speech to
about 1,000 abortion rights supporters at the state Capitol, firmly restated her
support for Roe v. Wade. But then she offered warm words to opponents of abortion
and said that faith and organized religion were the "primary" reasons teenagers
abstained from sexual relations. The NEW YORK TIMES is set to splash the Hillary
speech."
Beliefnet: "In
many developing countries, only the persecutors themselves deny that that they
are perse-cuting Christian minorities. In Pakistan or Sudan, for example, Christians
have been physically attacked by the Muslim majority and have little or no legal
protec-tion. Hindu nationalists in India have passed laws bar-ring conversion
to Christianity in some states and pres-sured Christians to "reconvert" to Hinduism.
Saudi Ara-bia bans churches and public Christian worship. In Iraq, one of the
oldest Christian communities in the world is rapidly disappearing as many frightened
members emigrate to escape church bombings, kidnappings, and attacks by Islamist
militants. These and more cases are amply documented in UN human rights reports."
Mark Moring and Jeffrey
Overstreet: "Seems like there were saviors—and a Savior—all over the
big screen in 2004. They came in all shapes and sizes— from a comic-book superhero
to a kind-hearted music teacher, from a courageous soul trying to save over 1,000
of his fellow men to the King of Kings dying to save all of mankind. The films
depicting these char-acters were all stories of redemption. They certainly weren't
all "feel-good" movies which left you bouncing out of the theater with a smile
on your face (though a few of them certainly did just that). But they were all
stories that communicated truth, love, grace and redemption—and they're the movies
that make up our first annual list of The 10 Most Redeeming Films of the year."
Peter
Steinfels: "don't suppose that the fixation on Christian fundamentalists
is limited to giddy holiday revelers in Manhattan. Here is Bill Moyers, liberal
sage par excellence...: 'One of the biggest changes in poli-tics in my lifetime
is that the delusional is no longer marginal. It has come in from the fringe,
to sit in the seat of power in the Oval Office and in Congress. For the first
time in our history, ideology and theology hold a monopoly of power in Washington.'
....does it really serve critics of the administration to convince them-selves
they are dealing with some alien species that holds Washington in the grip of
a 'fantastical' religious vision, rather than with adversaries who [represent
a] mix of political and economic ideology, self-interest, good intentions and
stubborn blindness...?"
Boston
Globe: "In a speech at a fund-raising dinner for a[n]...organization
that promotes faith-based solutions to social problems, [Senator Hillary] Clinton
said there has been a 'false division' between faith-based approaches to social
problems and respect for the separation of church of state. 'There is no contradiction
be-tween support for faith-based initiatives and upholding our constitutional
principles,' said Clinton....Clinton invoked God more than half a dozen times,
at one point declaring, 'I've always been a praying person.' She said there must
be room for religious people to 'live out their faith in the public square.' The
issue of faith in politics has been at the center of debate...with some arguing
that Bush's strong identification with religious values was a key to his victory
over Senator John F. Kerry."
BBC
News : The Shroud of Turin is much older than suggested by radiocarbon
dating carried out in the 1980s, according to a new study in a peer-reviewed journal.
A research paper published in Thermochimica Acta suggests the shroud is between
1,300 and 3,000 years old. The author dismisses 1988 carbon dating tests which
concluded that the linen sheet was a med-ieval fake. The shroud, which bears the
faint image of a blood-covered man, is believed by some to be Christ's burial
cloth. Raymond Rogers says that his research and chemical tests show the sample
used in the 1988 radiocarbon analysis was cut from a medi-eval patch woven into
the shroud to repair fire damage. This was responsible for an erroneous date being
assigned to the original shroud cloth. "
National Geographic News: "at Stanford University in California an
experiment might be done later this year to create mice with human brains. Scientists
feel that, the more humanlike the animal, the better research model it makes for
testing drugs or possibly growing "spare parts"....A chimera is a mixture of two
or more species in one body. Not all are considered troubling, though. For example,
faulty human heart valves are routinely replaced with ones taken from cows and
pigs. The surgery—which makes the recipient a human-animal chimera—is widely accepted.
And for years scientists have added human genes to bacteria and farm animals.
What's caused the uproar is the mixing of human stem cells with embryonic animals
to create new species."
Variety: "Artistic
currents run in unpredictable ways that may not always directly correlate with
what is actually happening in society... The incidence of teen-age pregnancies
is notably lower than the levels of the '90s and, according to at least some polls,
teen sex... may be slightly down as well. But you wouldn't know it from the movies
onscreen at Sundance. Independent filmmakers are forever looking for ways to push
the envelope, to give their work that extra edge that will attract buyers and
viewers hungry for something new. Some may also feel compelled, even unconsciously,
to become bolder in what they perceive as conservative cultural times. Or perhaps
it's the influence of the numerous sexually explicit European films that have
been on the fest circuit...over the past few years."
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