Daily Review
Online: "Such is the new life of G.P. Taylor, 46, a motorbiking
Anglican vicar, former punk rocker, police officer and social workerand
the next J.K. Rowling, as some have dubbed him. "Hotter Than Potter," screamed
headlines in Britain last year. The phrase, a publicist's dream, referred to Shadowmancer,
Taylor's first book, a dark, 18th-century-era fantasy novel for ages 12 and older
featuring boggles, witches, smugglers, heroic teens and an evil vicar's plot to
over-throw the Almighty, no less. Since its publication, Tay-lor has written a
second faith-based novel, Wormwood, just out in hardback, and has sold
the rights for future books to publishers on both sides of the Atlantic. No longer
reliant on his modest church stipend...."
Albert Mohler on Crosswalk: "We are now witness-ing a massive closing of
hearts and minds, fueled by a radical divorce of morality and law. Behind all
this stands the totalitarian aspirations of a new secular elite. Senator Kerry
has given voice to their argument, and Rocco Buttiglione [rejected as Italy's
commission-er on the Civil Liberties Committee of the European Parliament] has
felt the crushing weight of their hatred. Think it can't happen where you live?
Just ask the members of Southeast Christian Church who wanted to remind their
neighbors that marriage is to be a union of one man and one woman marked by honor
and cherish-ing love. They can tell you what it is like to be on the receiving
end of the secular onslaught."
Biographer
George Weigel interviewed by Zenit: "I think the Pope's suffering has underscored
the evangelical character of his pontificate. Perhaps the wisest single line ever
written about John Paul II was penned on the day of his inauguration by the French
journalist, Andre Frossard, who told his Paris news-paper, 'This isn't a pope
from Poland; this is a pope from Galilee.' The world is now witnessing this 'pope
from Galilee' leading the Church, not from a throne, but from the way of the cross,
from Calvary. By inviting the Church and the world to walk the 'via crucis' with
him, Karol Wojtyla continues to preach Jesus Christ to the very end."
Lee
Strobel in Beliefnet: "The scientific materialism that is at the root of evolutionary
theory is a worldview that has broad and sweeping implications. If evolution-ary
theory is true, there are five inescapable conclu-sions. ...one, there is no evidence
for God.... two, there is no life after death....three, there is no absolute found-ation
for right and wrong....four, there is no ultimate meaning for life. And...five,
people don’t really have free will. That’s why this is a very spirited battle
between two world views. It comes down to the issue...should science limit itself
only to naturalistic processes?...if it does, Darwinism wins by default. Or, should
science open itself to going wherever the evidence points, even if it points in
the direction of an intelligent designer?"
News-Journal:
"They aren't 'traditionalists,' as Green calls the old-fashioned faithful in any
religion, such as ultra-conservative Catholics like Mel Gibson. And they aren't
'modernists'—the liberals constantly working for change in any religion, such
as Catholics pushing to ordain women. They're everybody else—faithful believ-ers
seeking spiritual comfort, religious guidance and a supportive community. 'Their
religion isn't political,' he says. For example, Green says, 'Most Catholics are
just kind of regular Catholics. . . . They take the teach-ings of the church seriously.
For them, the church is not about political things at all. It's about living a
good life.' ...They love Jesus, try to be good people...[but] don't look to the
pulpit for political direction."
Paul
Strand, CBN: "Many accuse the Republican Party of being captive to the
Religious Right or what some would call the Radical Right....But what the media
rarely cover is how much the other side, secular humanism, now dominates the Democratic
Party. It is a change that began to show up in 1972. By the time the 1992 Democratic
Convention rolled around, the largest religious bloc of delegates was not religious
at all. Social scientist Gerald De Maio said they were, '...Secularists, self-identified
secularists, defined as atheists, agnostics and those with no religious pref-erence.'
...[De Maio says] secularists have become as important to the Democratic Party
today as organized labor is."
AP
via Yahoo News: "Patti Davis, daughter of the late President Ronald Reagan,
has filed a lawsuit charging that the Salvation Army canceled her speech planned
for one of their events because she supports stem cell re-search. Davis was scheduled
through her booking agent ...to speak at a Salvation Army event in Santa Rosa,
Calif., on Nov. 19 for a fee of $15,000, said her lawyer, Lawrence Fabian. Fabian
said officials at the religious charity recently told his clients they no longer
wanted Davis as a speaker, and they would pay neither the $15,000 speaking fee
nor the $7,500 cancellation fee called for by the contract... the Salvation Army
cited Davis' support for stem cell research and said the sci-ence is against its
beliefs.... [A]n attorney for the Salva-tion Army said the lawsuit was 'totally
without merit.'"
AP
via My Way: "The Supreme Court said Tuesday it will take up the constitutionality
of Ten Command-ments displays on government land and buildings, a surprise announcement
that puts justices in the middle of a politically sensitive issue. Justices have
repeatedly refused to revisit issues raised by their 1980 decision that banned
the posting of copies of the Ten Commandments in public school classrooms. In
the meantime, lower courts have reached a hodge-podge of conflicting rulings that
allow displays in some instances but not in others. The high court will hear appeals
early next year involving displays in Kentucky and Texas."
A forum of 71 evangelical pastors and college and seminary educators, via 'Christian
Link': "Many Americans seek guidance from the Bible for important issues of
life, while we recognize that many others do not. With thankfulness for the freedom
of all Americans to believe whatever they think best regard-ing matters of religion
and ethics, we offer this state-ment of our personal understanding of the teachings
of the Bible for the thoughtful consideration of all who are interested in how
the Bible might speak to ethical issues in the current election." Their "open
letter" speaks to seven ethical issues they believe are critical in the current
United States presidential election campaign.
San Mateo, CA., Daily
Journal: "A Christian student group sued Hastings College of the Law in
federal court in San Francisco Friday, accusing the school of viola-ting its free
speech rights by imposing a nondiscrimina-tion policy. The San Francisco-based
law school, which is part of the University of California, bars registered student
groups from discriminating on the basis of reli-gion or sexual orientation. The
Hastings chapter of the Christian Legal Society, a nationwide group headquar-tered
in Virginia, says...that policy conflicts with its orthodox Christian beliefs.
The chapter...says that all students are welcome to its meetings, but that its
mem-bers and officers must adhere to orthodox Christian beliefs and may not engage
in homosexual conduct."
The Omaha Channel:
"Jennings said that everyone even journalistshave points of view through
which they filter their perception of the news. It could be race, sex or income.
But, he said, reporters are ideally trained to be as objective as possible. 'And
when we don't think we can be fully objective, to be fair,' the anchorman said.
Does the public think network news is fair? There are a number of opinion polls
that show news consumers feel that the media does have a slant. Jennings maintains
those polls may be driven by groups with an agenda. 'There's a whole industry
of conservatives saying, "Ah, it's those damn liberals," and a whole
group of liberals saying, "It's all those damn conservatives,"' Jennings
said."
San
Francisco Chronicle: "Tom Allio, the director of social action for
the Catholic Diocese of Cleveland, was involved in the antipoverty bus tour several
weeks ago, and he would seem to have an easy sell, given that Cleveland has the
highest poverty rate of any big city in the country and a punishing unemployment
rate.... Not so. For at least some on the religious right, antipoverty efforts
are seen as a diversion from the more urgent tasks of preventing same-sex marriages
and abortions. 'I think we're clearly playing catch-up,' said Allio. 'The right-wing
groups are so well funded and mobilized. But I don't take the position it's too
little too late. The P-word (poverty) has barely been mentioned in this cam-paign,
and I think we have to get it on the agenda.'"
AP
via Daily Press: "A
federal judge has ruled that Lou-doun County school officials discriminated against
some families by removing bricks engraved with crosses from a walkway in front
of Potomac Falls High School. The families bought the bricks as part of a fund-raiser
for the school's parent group. For $50, parents could buy a brick engraved with
their child's name and class year and have it installed as part of a "walk of
fame" surround-ing the school's flagpole. For an additional $5, they could add
a symbol to the brick. An order form gave parents choices of 24 symbols.... The
only religious symbol offered was a cross. In February 2003, Loudoun officials
removed six bricks inscribed with crosses after receiving a complaint about the
religious icon."
Report
to U.S. Senate Subcommittee on the Constitution: "We do not agree with the
few in the hearing who suggested that hostility to religious free-dom is not an
issue in this country. Hostility to religi-ous expression is real and much too
frequent, to an extent that would be shocking to most Americans. Exhibit A (attached)
is a long list of cases, over 50 pages...reflecting religious hostility across
America. These cases just scratch the surface of what is hap-pening across the
country. ...the American Civil Liber-ties Union, People for the American way,
and Amer-icans United for Separation of Church and State con-stantly batt[le]
against expression of a relitious view-point in the public square."
Jos. Loconte, Philadelphia Inquirer via Heritage Foundation: "Politicians
who invoke religion are always in for a rough ride. In his debates with Stephen
Douglas over slavery, Abraham Lincoln was pilloried for his 'proneness for quoting
Scripture.' Yet today a Methodist president who admits he prays for God's guidance
is accused of 'faith-based extremism' not unlike that of Osama bin Laden. Columnist
Bruce Bartlett, quoted in this week's New York Times Magazine, claims that
George W. Bush understands the dark vision of Islamic terrorists 'because he's
just like them.' Bush-bashing, it seems, has morphed into antireligious bigotry.
It's doubtful any occupant of the White House has been so vilified for his attachment
to traditional Christianity."
AP via Philly.com: "'Civil
unions are a government endorsement of homosexuality,' said Robert Knight, director
of the Culture and Family Institute, an affiliate of Concerned Women For America.
'But I don't think President Bush has thought about it in that way. He seems to
be striving for neutrality while defending marriage itself.' Knight said 'counterfeits'
of marriage, such as civil unions, 'hurt the real thing.' The head of another
group, the Campaign for California Families, said it, too, wants a sweeping constitutional
amend-ment that bars civil unions and same-sex marriage. 'Here's the truth, civil
unions are homosexual marriage by another name,' said Randy Thomasson, the group's
executive director."
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