New York Daily
News: "Magnificat!, a nationally touring Christian ballet company, has
a thriving teenage training program with 400 students. Christian pop music is
7% of the pop-music market, and Christian video games are in the works. ...[A]spiring
Christian catwalkers can at-tend monthly meetings of Models for Christ, a New
York -based organization created to protect fashion industry Christians from the
wages of sin city. And fashionistas religious or notcan sport the
newly introduced Wait Wear undies, with slogans like 'I'm Saving It,' 'No Over
Nite Parking,' 'Virginity Lane: Exit When Mar-ried'....And next month you will
be able to head to a swimsuit fash-ion show at Macy's Herald Square sponsored
by year-old Justine magazine, a girls' bimonthly that encourages 12-to-14-year-olds
to walk the straight-and-narrow...."
Jeff M. Sellers: "As for a livable wage, it's hard to show that markets,
governments, or Christian ethics obligate businesses to pay shelf stockers enough
to support a family of four. If this be evil, then it is the free market that
is evil. Wal-Mart is merely the touchstone for the unwelcome macro-trend of low-paying
service jobs re-placing manufacturing work. As the ranks of the working poor swell,
though, we do well to contemplate our com-plicity in the global drive toward offering—and
getting— the lowest prices. In the matter of unpaid overtime...the number of lawsuits
in process suggests that Wal-Mart is struggling to follow its own policies against
off-the-clock work. Finally, the company shares responsibility with the foreign
factories that supply it with dirt-cheap goods...."
Daily
Breeze, Los Angeles: Wilfred McClay, senior fellow of the Ethics and Public
Policy Center in Wash-ington, D.C. "lists the energizing discontents of Pres-ident
Bush. 'His "compassionate conservatism," his re-latively favorable view of many
federal social and educa-tional programs, his sensitivity to issues of racial
injus-tice and reconciliation, his softness on immigration is-sues, his promotion
of the faith-based initiative, his con-cern with issues of international religious
liberty, his African AIDS initiative, and above all, his enormously ambitious,
even seemingly utopian, foreign-policy ob-jectives(these) are positions
that are best explained by the effects of his evangelical Christian convictions,
and by his willingness to allow those convictions to trump more conventional conservative
positions.'"
AP
via San Diego Union-Tribune: U.S. District Judge Alexander "Williams
agreed with two groups that filed a lawsuit claiming the curriculum's discussion
of homo-sexuality amounted to preferential treatment for relig-ions that preach
tolerance of homosexuality over those that reject it. For example, the curriculum
juxtaposes faiths such as Quakers and Unitarians that support full rights for
homosexuals with groups such as Baptists, who are painted as 'intolerant and biblically
misguided,' the judge wrote in his opinion. 'The court is extremely troubled by
the willingness of the defendants to venture, or perhaps more correctly, bound,
into the crossroads of controversy where religion, morality and homosex-uality
converge," Williams wrote.'"
Syndicated
columnist Terry Mattingly: "Truth is, Klinghoffer believes Judaism is 'true,'
in every sense of that unpopular word. But he has discovered that many modern
Jews get mad when someone has the chutzpah to openly proclaim that Judaism is
rational and built on a binding covenant with God that is linked to eternal salvation.
'The Sinai covenant and its commandments, you see, are not compatible with every
lifestyle,' he said. 'So if you try to tell many Jews that the covenant is still
in effect they're going to bristle. They see those com-mandments as a judgment
on their lives....'If you say that one way of living is right, then that implies
that another way of living must be wrong. ... If our beliefs clash, then we can't
both be right. People don't like to talk about things alike that.'"
Quentin
Peel in gulfnews, UAE: "Ever since the En-lightenment in the 18th century,
Europe has been a battle ground between secular humanism and the established church.
It is a contest that secularism seems to have been winning decisively. Today fewer
than one in five Europeans goes to church and about the same number regard religion
as 'very important,' according to the Pew Global Attitudes survey. There is no
mention of God in the draft constitu-tion of the European Union nor any of the
continent's 'Christian heritage.' There was a stormy debate on the issue in the
constitutional convention, but the language of the treaty is strictly secular.
It simply refers in the preamble to 'the cultural, religious and humanist inheritance
of Europe.'"
World
magazine: "One
of the fundamental lies Chris-tians have absorbed from our surrounding individualistic
society is that 'what I do with my body is none of your concern.' Paul instructs
the Galatians to hold one anoth-er accountable for sin: 'Brothers, if someone
is caught in a sin, you who are spiritual should restore him gently. ...Carry
each other's burdens.' That verse, if we construe it uncharitably, can lead us
to envision a community that functions primarily as a police force [but] the more
im-portant task of the community is to make sense of the ethical codes that are
being enforced. Here the com-munity is not so much cop as storyteller, sustaining
the stories that make sense of the community's norms. This storytelling is part
of the working out of God's grace in the Church."
Parents
Television Council: "parents need to be worried about MTV...because of its
tremendous influ-ence [on] America’s teens and pre-teens. MTV is the most recognized
network among young adults ages 12 to 34...watched by 73% of boys and 78% of girls
ages 12 to 19. Boys watch for an average of 6.6 hours per week and girls watch
for an average of 6.2 hours per week. MTV is owned by Viacom, the same corporate
giant that owns CBS (which aired the Super Bowl [with Janet Jackson's 'wardrobe
malfunction']) and Nickel-odeon, and that corporate synergy ensures that even
the youngest TV viewers are getting acclimated to the MTV brand. As one TV critic
put it: 'Nickelodeon isn't just SpongeBob Squarepants: It's a gateway station
to crotch-grabbing MTV.'”
SacUnion.com:
"The war against Christians has inten-sified with the recent controversy over
ending the Demo-crats’ (nearly) unprecedented filibustering of judicial nominees.
....Before the judicial filibuster flap, it was the Terri Schiavo case. During
that acrimonious, national debate, [the New York Times’ Maureen] Dowd accused
Christian conservatives of trying to establish a theo-cracy. Actually, she said,
'Oh, my God, we really are in a theocracy.' She also paid homage to the 'credo'
that 'a person’s relationship with God should remain a private matter.' And she
compared Christian conservatives to Muslim 'religious fundamentalists' in Iraq.
[Paul] Krug-man, similarly, compared Christian 'extremists' in Amer-ica to 'religious
extremists' in Israel who 'have already killed one prime minister....' '”
Dr. R. Albert Mohler,
Jr., in Crosswalk: "Secularism rests on three myths. The first is the myth
of the secu-lar state. Secularism is not a positive construct. By its very nature,
something is secular only when it denies the existence of God. Here is where Professor
Audi's definition begins to break down. One cannot be genu-inely secular and be
indifferent to the existence of God, because if God did exist, that would bring
immediate demands upon societyobligations and prohibitions which society
would not be able simply to ignore with-out admitting that it is only tacitly
or operationally secu-lar. A truly secular state must altogether deny the exis-tence
of God. In other words, this is a call for an abso-lutely secular statethe
existence of which is a myth."
Seattle Times:
"These noble principles have broad appeal in America—after all, who doesn't
support the ideas of freedom and liberty?—while at the same time occupying a sacrosanct
position in the worldview of many Christian conservatives. In the eyes of evangel-icals
and fundamentalists, the desire to live out the 'Great Commission' of Christ,
in the book of Matthew, to 'go therefore and make disciples of all the nations'
has become intertwined with support for the principles of political freedom and
liberty. In particular, the indiv-idualized religious liberty present in the United
States (particularly available historically for European-Amer-ican Protestants)
is something that religious conserva-tives long to extend to other cultures and
nations."
AP
via YahooNews: "The 25 students in jeans and T-shirts could have been in any
career that requires hus-tle. The classes, covering topics such as effective mar-keting,
stress reduction and legal issues, could have been part of any professional development
seminar. But this was 'Whore College,' and any illusion it was just another corporate
how-to for young go-getters abruptly ended at the sex toy display and was stripped
away for good during a graphic demonstration that put a whole new twist on the
concept of hands-on training. 'We are still illegal,' instructor Kimberlee Cline
said before her 20-minute demonstration. 'If we want to be treated as business
professionals, we need to act ethically within the industry.' [It was] Presented
in conjunction with the San Francisco Sex Worker Film and Arts Festival..."
Ithaca
Times: Sen. Ken "Salazar issued a statement Wednesday backing down
from a remark he made Tues-day during an audio interview aired on KKTV of Colorado
Springs. In that interview, Salazar said of Focus on the Family: "From my point
of view, they are the Antichrist of the world." The remark and Salazar's retraction
repre-sent the latest development in a bitter fight over Presi-dent Bush's judicial
nominees.... 'After being relentless-ly attacked in telephone calls, e-mails,
newspapers and radio stations all across Colorado, having my faith ques-tioned...I
spoke about Jim Dobson and his efforts and used the term "the Antichrist,"'
Salazar said in a written statement. 'I regret having used that term. I meant
to say this approach was unchristian, meaning self-serving and selfish.'"
phillyBurbs.com:
"why, in the eye-blink of 44 years, did the left become so hostile to religion
and people of faith? How did it arc from championing the first Catholic president...to
tearing out displays of the Ten Com-mandments, declaring unconstitutional the
Pledge of Allegiance because it mentions God and making war on the Boy Scouts
of America because the Scout oath states that members are honor-bound 'to do my
duty to God and my country?' Tony Campolo, ex-Penn profes-sor, answers: 'Liberals
all went to the universities and they became pseudo-sophisticates. 'Somewhere
in the university, they heard professors who made fun of the Bible, made fun of
religious faith and they thought that was cool and thought they would come across
as erudite and intelligent members of academia."
WorldNetDaily: "Citizens for a Responsible Curriculum and Parents and Friends
of Ex-Gays and Gays, or PFOX, complain the pilot program for 8th through 10th
grade in six Montgomery County Public Schools, sche-duled to begin Thursday, presents
sexual variations and behaviors, including homosexuality, as morally equiva-lent
to traditionally accepted norms. The curriculum never refers to husband and wife,
but, instead, redefines family as 'two or more people who are joined together
by emotional feelings or who are related to one another.' Mathew D. Staver [who]
represents PFOX and Citizens, said the school board 'has been captured by radical
homosexual advocacy groups whose only agenda is to promote their political goals
without respect to the consequences.'"
WorldNetDaily: "'This
paradigm shift is not only taking place in the Bible Belt but in school districts
in Alaska, Califor-nia, across the board to Pennsylvania and down to Flor-ida,'
the organization says. Elizabeth Ridenour, the [National Council On Bible Curriculum
In Public Schools] president, explained to WND that people have been duped into
believing that when the Bible was 'removed' from public schools in 1963, that
meant it couldn't be used in any form. But the U.S. Supreme Court consis-tently
has upheld the teaching of the Bible as literature, as long as it is not employed
for devotional purposes or indoctrination. Mike Johnson of the Alliance Defense
Fund told WND that, nevertheless, the ACLU is trying to intervene when any district
considers the curriculum."
A Christmas gift from XnmpThe "gift"
is a tip. Add the Google toolbar to your computer's
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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