Washington
Times:"Nationwide, public school teachers are almost twice as likely
as other parents to choose private schools for their own children, the study by
the Thomas B. Fordham Institute found. More than 1 in 5 public school teachers
said their children attend private schools. In Washington (28 percent), Baltimore
(35 percent) and 16 other major cities, the figure is more than 1 in 4. In some
cities, nearly half of the children of public school teachers have abandoned public
schools. ...Public school teachers told the Fordham Institute's surveyors that
private and religious schools impose greater discipline, achieve higher academic
achievement and offer overall a better atmosphere."
Guardian, UK: "The Rev Ian Bradley from the [St. Andrews University]
school of divinity believes musi-cals like Les Miserables and The Lion
King provide their audiences a distinct philosophy of life, as well as entertainment.
Churches have a great deal to learn from modern musicals and could usefully incor-porate
their spiritual and theological values, and the pastoral care they offer, into
their services, he argues in a book published next week. In You've Got to Have
a Dream: the Message of the Musical Dr Bradley reveals that musicals have focused
on serious and social issues as far back as Showboat in the 1920s, which dealt
with racial prejudice and family breakdown."
"In
fundamental terms, in other words, the president’s faith divides the world into
two camps: good and evil. There is no gray. There is only right and wrong. In
Plan of Attack, his examination of the Bush administra-tion’s buildup to
the war in Iraq, Bob Woodward por-trays Bush as unwavering in his belief that
his cause was righteous, not merely right. 'I haven’t suffered any doubt,' Bush
said in an interview with Woodward. The president’s religious conviction is the
defining measure of his life, and of his administration. Lest there be any doubt,
Bush said in that book: 'I was praying for strength to do the Lord’s will....
I pray that I will be as good a messenger of His will as possible.'"
Matt
Abbott: Catholics For Free Choice news release: “evidence shows that [Catholic
Answers' voter's] guide targets at least one specific candidate: Democratic presidential
nominee Sen. John Kerry. Karl Keating's E-Letter of April 13, states Kerry ‘flunks
the test given in Catholic Answers' Voter's Guide for Serious Catholics: He is
wrong on all five 'non-negotiable' issues listed there.’ This egregious violation
of US tax laws, which prohibit charitable organizations from endorsing or op-posing
candidates for public office, is the latest exam-ple of a vicious campaign by
various tax-exempt organi-zations opposed to abortion rights and, by extension,
candidates who support these rights.'"
Newsday:
"In one segment, two religious scholars clash over whether Hell exists. In a different
segment, Madonna's kabbalah teacher squares off against an-other rabbi, with [Lee]
Strobel as referee. Strobel also discusses issues of faith with unlikely celebrities
like [Hugh] Hefner and singer Moby. Strobel said he came up with the idea two
years ago 'for [a]... "Hardball"-style format devoted to questions of morality
and spirituality. He found few TV executives willing to take the chance on...religious
debates. 'We spent last year trying to sell it.... We tried the networks, cable
television, syndica-tion, Fox News, MSNBC and CNBC. One executive told me it sounded
interesting, but "We can't do God."' Finally, Pax TV...decided to take the show."
Mark
Stricherz: "Recently American Catholic bishops ...have publicly crossed
swords with pro-choice Cath-olic [politicians like] Kerry, the first Catholic
presiden-tial nominee since John F. Kennedy.... And Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger,
head of the Catholic Church's Con-gregation for the Doctrine of the Faith...this
summer advised American bishops to refuse Communion to all pro-choice Catholic
office-holders. But Kerry continues to receive Communion at Boston's Paulist Center,
which is quasi-independent of the local hierarchy.... Father John Ardis, the center's
director, prayed at the opening and closing of the Democratic National Con-vention
in Boston, signaling Kerry's shaky ties to the Catholic hierarchy."
BBC
News: "Nancy Coulter-Parker, a young mother in Boulder, Colorado, said she
was not anti-religious, but did not want policy made on the basis of faith. She
cited a range of issues where she felt religion had intruded improperly into the
political sphere, including abortion, stem cell research, education, and the Iraq
war. 'Everyone is entitled to have their belief and I am completely supportive
of that but I don't believe it has a place in the US in the way the country is
run or deci-sions are made,' she said....Two-thirds of Americans say churches
should not endorse political candidates, but a slim majority say they should express
views on political issues."
David
Gates, Newsweek: "Critics may complain
that the book doesn't include the back pages they want most: his famous 1966 motorcycle
accident gets a single sentence, and there's nothing about his 1977 divorce, his
1978 conversion to evangelical Christianity or the origin and the making of such
masterworks as 'Blood on the Tracks' (1975), 'Slow Train Coming' (1979), 'Infidels'
(1983) or 'Time Out of Mind.'... [Ob-session with Dylan] went past ordinary adulation.
At its worst, in the late 1960s and early '70s, Dylan experienced a disorienting,
terrifying and downright infuriating combination of stalking and deification.
As he writes...'It would have driven anybody mad.'"
San Diego Channel: "The federal suit said sopho-more Chase Harper, 16, was
suspended for express-ing his 'sincerely held religious beliefs,' 10News reported.
Harper wore the shirt during and after the April 21 'Day of Silence,' a national
event held on high school and college campuses to protest discrimination against
gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender students. The T-shirt had the words, 'I
Will Not Accept What God Has Condemned' hand-written on the front and 'Homosexuality
is Shameful' on the back. When Harper wore a similar shirt the next day, a teacher
told him he was violating the school dress code and must remove the shirt or go
to the office."
Haaretz: "With the
help of Jewish actors and come-dians like Richard Belzer, Sarah Silverman and
David Cross, Soloway and her codirector, Maggie Rowe, are parodying the phenomenon,
using the actual scripts provided in Hell House how-to kits created by Pastor
Keenan Roberts of the Destiny Church of the Assem-blies of God, located in Broomfield,
Colo. In using evangelicals' own words to lampoon the evangelical Christians,
Soloway and Rowe hope to give a much-needed kick in the rear to a phenomenon they
see as narrow-minded and moralistic."
Alan Cooperman: "Bush
[has] not actually said that abortion is tantamount to murder. Nor, according
to aides, has he ever said that all abortions should be illegal. When asked by
reporters during the 2000 pres-idential campaign and again last fall whether abortion
should be banned, Bush said the nation was not ready for that step, without indicating
his position. George W. Bush is among the most openly religious presi-dents in
U.S. history. A daily Bible reader, he often talks about how Jesus changed his
heart. He has spoken...of hearing God's call to run for the presidency and of
praying for God's help since.... But despite the centrality of Bush's faith to
his presidency, he has revealed only the barest outline of his beliefs...."
Scotsman:
"...the [Catholic] church has called for a comprehensive review of what
children are being taught in the classroom about sex. Books and videos on rec-ommended
teaching lists for primary schools show images of sexual organs and couples having
sex, fea-ture videos of real childbirth, and include such topics as the clitoris.
The decisions on which of these teaching materials to use is up to individual
headteachers. John Deighan, the Church’s parliamentary officer, branded some of
the material pornographic and said the content and context of most of it was unsuitable
for the age group for which it was intended, lacking in any social or moral context,
and unnecessary for the classroom."
Indiana,
Pa., Gazette: "A Center Township couple has filed a lawsuit charging
that Pennsylvania's homeschool-ing law infringes on their God-given authority
to decide how to educate their children....'the Religious Freedom Protection Act...has
given folks who have religious ob-jections to general laws...an avenue to seek
exemptions from laws that impose a substantial burden on their reli-gious beliefs,'
attorney James Mason said....Mason said the RFPA defines a 'substantial burden'
as a regulation that compels conduct or expression that violates a spec-ific tenet
of a person's religious faith. 'It is a specific ten-et of Mr. and Mrs. Combs'
religious faith...that it would be sinful for them to...seek approval from the
secular civil government for...education [of] their children.'"
Paul
Kengor in SF Chronicle: "I hear the question so often that I'm
tired of responding to it: 'What about Bush's fundamentalism?' When I'm not providing
an answer, I'm reading statements to that effect, like the recent remark from
former Vice President Al Gore... who...described the current president's faith
as 'the American version of the same fundamentalist impulse that we see in Saudi
Arabia,' a nation where people of minority faiths are executed. This assessment
of Bush comes mainly from foes on the political left, and from secularists. It
does not come from conservatives and certainly not from, of all people, Christian
fundamenta-lists. Fundamentalists find the claim laughable."
Bill Tammeus via KRT Wire, Fort Wayne News-Sentinel: "Almost certainly
all of us have used inade-quate and misleading labels for people - conservative,
evangelical, liberal, reactionary and on and on. We need to stop. We'd be much
better off if everyone including mewould avoid using such broad labels
whenever possible....Radio talk-show hosts make a living tossing around labels
and pretending they mean something. Oh, sometimes labels can help define broad
categories in useful ways, but, like all words, they are mainly metaphor. And
because they usually are too abstract and too broad, their primary use is not
to describe but to demonize."
Jackson Sun:
"Pinsky found...an ideology he calls 'secular toonism,' a 'gospel without
God' that helps to shape moral sensibilities in children through quasi-religious
values. 'Good is always rewarded; evil is always punished,' Pinsky writes. 'Faith
is an essential elementfaith in yourself and, even more, faith in something
greater than yourself, some higher power. Optimism and hard work complete the
basic canon.'... Walt Disney saw overt religion as 'box office poison' that would
not appeal to wide audiences...himself am-bivalent toward organized religion after
a strict funda-mentalist childhood. ...the one building you won't see on Main
Street USA at Disney World is a church."
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