Barna Update:
The "survey examined eight elements of religious behavior and discovered that
blacks were at the high end of religious activity for half...(reading the Bible,
praying to God, giving money to churches and watching Christian television). Blacks
were also notably less likely than others to be unchurched. The group... least
likely to be active in Christian-oriented behaviors was Asians, who generated
the lowest scores for all eight religious activities measured. Asians were least
involved in atten-ding church, reading the Bible, praying to God, attending Sunday
school, partici-pating in a small group for religi-ous purposes, watching Christian
television and gave the least average amount of money to churches."
Newsweek via MSNBC: "On the ground in Iraq the pillaging
is all but impossible to stop. ...With the future of Iraq so uncertain, the protection
of its buried past is not really a priority of the occupation troops or the newly
sovereign regime of Prime Minister Ayad Allawi. 'The reality is, we put Iraqi
guards on many of the most important sites with little training, and at first
they weren't armed,' says Bog-danos. "Four men pull up in a pickup truck, and
they are armed: What are you going to do? Is the guard going to lay down his life
for antiquities? Do you put an American platoon on every site?'"
Albert
Mohler: "The Great Divide: Retro vs. Metro America...is an all-out
assault on American conserva-tives and residents of the states that voted for
George W. Bush in 2000. Most pointedly, however, this book and its associated
$2-million advertising campaign are the project of a man who is fanatically determined
to reset America's political equationand to counter the influence of evangelical
Christians. ...The man behind all this is a case study in the intersection of
big money and crackpot politics. John Sperling, age 83, made billions in the business
world, founding the nation's largest for-profit educational enterprise, the University
of Phoenix....no longer under his control."
AP's
Richard Ostling: "Good as New is the wildest, wackiest and possibly worst
of those trendy attempts to update Holy Writ. Billed as 'women, gay and sinner
friendly,' it has stirred up a minor ruckus in Canada and Britain.... This project
might have slipped into obscurity if it weren't for the fond foreword from Archbishop
of Canterbury Rowan Williams, leader of...Anglicans worldwide....Good as New was
produced by the radical ONE Community for Christian Exploration, which next plans
to overhaul Christianity's creeds [one of which says] God is 'personal and passionate.
God seeks friends. God is active, creative, explorative; God is strong and tender
with a great sense of humour.'"
Daily
News Tribune: "In a discrimination lawsuit pend-ing in federal court,
machinist Mark A. Peterson con-tends supervisors at [MIT's] Lincoln Lab in Lexington
joined the harassment, 'openly telling jokes about God' and refusing to reprimand
workers who spit in his coffee and left a noose on his workbench. Peterson, who
be-gan work in the lab in 1982 and is now on disability leave, declined comment....
'Employees and/or super-visors at MIT Lincoln Lab have harassed Peterson be-cause
of his religious beliefs (Christian), including as-saulting him with a chemical,
vandalizing and stealing his property, tampering with machines he was working
on and making verbal threats,' the suit says."
Carolina
Morning News: "Pick up your Bible. 'Bible' comes from the Greek 'biblia,'
meaning books or library. The Hebrew Scriptures were translated into Greek in
285 B.C. when 70 rabbis were hired by the librarian in Alexandria, Egypt, to translate
the un-known, mysterious Hebrew into a language the world could understand. It
was called the 'Septuagint,' meaning "seventy." All of the New Testament was
written in Greek and much on Greek soil with an important part by a Greek physician,
Luke. The first part of the New Testament was Paul's letter to the Thessalonians
written from another Greek city, Corinth, in 49 A.D."
The
Economist: "The impression in Rome is that the pope is doing as much as
he can to repair relations with the east while his strength holds out. One of
the most warmly received visitors to Rome this summer was Patriarch Bartholomew,
the Istanbul-based prelate who by tradition is the 'first among equals' in the
eas-tern Orthodox hierarchy—and who has often risked the ire of his fellows by
keeping relations with Rome cordial. With an alacrity that impressed the patriarchal
party, the pope agreed to pay a return visit to Istanbul in November. This trip
to the see of 'Constantinople and New Rome'—to use its ecclesiastical title—is
one of the few journeys still left in the papal diary."
Washington
Times: "Rep. Walter B. Jones, North Carolina
Republican, requested the government inquiry on Monday after the university closed
a Christian fraternity that refused to accept non-Christian mem-bers. UNC Chancellor
James Moeser said the deci-sion to revoke the charter of the five-year-old Christian
fraternity, Alpha Iota Omega, was made on grounds that the group is violating
the school's nondiscrimin-ation policy by not allowing students to join regardless
of their religious beliefs.... Forty-two other recognized student religious groups
at the college with nearly 5,000 members—'the overwhelming majority of them being
Christian'—abide by the university's policy."
Christianity
Today: "Democratic Sen. John Kerry hardly evokes the typical 'I Vote Values'
crowd, but in July he explained his campaign this way: 'In the end, it's about
values.' He is using values to change his public image just as President Bush
used compassion in 2000. That both candidates are appealing to values should be
encouraging to evangelicals. With up to 40 percent of the American population,
evangelicals are in every region and both major parties. Granted, 80 percent of
evangelicals voted for Bush in 2000, but up to 4 million didn't bother to vote
at all. Values matter deeply to all Christians, but not just any values."
CNSNews via Townhall:
"According to the National Right to Life Committee, the email came 'out of the
blue' from Todd Eastham, a news editor for Reuters.
Eastham was responding to a press release that the [group] sent to news outlets
after a federal judge struck down a ban on partial birth abortion. Eastham's email
read as follows: 'What's your plan for parenting & educ-ating all the unwanted
children you people want to bring into the world? Who will pay for policing our
streets & maintaining the prisons needed to contain them when you, their parents
& the system fail them? Oh, sorry. All that money has been earmarked to pay off
the Bush deficit. Give me a frigging break, will you?'"
Amelia Gentleman, Guardian
Newspapers Ltd: "France's teaching community is braced for a wave of tension
as schools implement new and controversial legislation banning the wearing of
Islamic headscarves and other 'conspicuous' religious symbols. A hotline was launched
by Muslim pressure groups last Wed-nesday, advising students on how to circumvent
the legislation discreetly. Though officials claim that fewer than 100 pupils
plan to defy the law, the Government has warned that radical Islamist organisations
are using them as pawns, encouraging them to provoke confrontation.The Education
Minister, Francois Fillon, said the Government would be unflinching."
Mensnewsdaily:
"A substantial 39 percent of Ameri-cans agree 'my religious beliefs factor into
my sexual behavior,' while at the other extreme, a very meager 3 percent of French
respondents agree and an overwhel-ming 91 percent disagree. No other nation surveyed
comes close to the United States...the nearest being the U.K., with 16 percent
in agreement. In Germany, just 6 percent agree. ...Euro RSCG's Prosumer Pulse
2004 survey explores attitudes around the world on a broad array of topics, ranging
from technology, com-merce, and brands through to finance and sex. Find-ings reflect
samples of 1,982 Americans, 2,127 Brits, 2,000 French, 3,158 Germans, & 2,079
Chinese."
ProudParenting
[edited]: "After months of simmering[,] the dispute within the Episcopal Church
over the [role] of gays is threatening to boil over as the conser-vative former
Archbishop of Canterbury travels to the US to conduct services in breakaway churches.
Lord George Carey next month will confirm several hundred adults and children
from 11 conservative parishes in Virginia which have rejected the ministry of
their diocesan bishop...because of his support for Gene Robinson, Anglicanism's
first openly gay bishop. Carey's visit is expected to provide a major boost to
the conservative minority in America which is demanding protection from the liberal
majority."
AP
via MSNBC: "the former president, speaking
at Riverside Church in upper Manhattan, said, 'Politics and political involvement
dictated by faith is not the exclusive province of the right wing.' The Democrats,
Clinton argued, need to show their policies are also rooted in faith. 'The religious
right has tried to turn us all, in disagreeing with them, into two-dimensional
car-toons,' he said. Speaking of Bush’s religious beliefs, he said, 'I believe
President Bush is a good Christian. I believe that his faith in Jesus saved him.
I believe it gave him new purpose and direction to his life. But that doesn’t
mean that he doesn’t see through a glass darkly'..."
SBC Baptist Press: "'David Lynch used me in his film, "Mulholland Drive,"
a few years ago. I was a novice, a fish out of water. But he said to me, "Why
don't you do this for a living? You're an actor." But after finishing that movie,
I felt like I had made a deal with the devil. I felt like I'd done something dark.
It's a dark film. And as you know, there ain't a whole lotta light in Hollywood.
So I prayed, asking God what He wanted me to do. I prayed, "God, if you want me
to be an actor, send me the kind of work that You want me to do." Days later I
got the script for Doc. I read it and said, "Man, this is about faith and hope
and compassion." I loved it. I told myself, this is what God had intended for
me to do.'"
Albert Mohler in Crosswalk:
"a book now hitting the nation's bookstores argues that faith in God is not only
out of date, but dangerous. As a matter of fact, Sam Harris argues that belief
in God is the root cause of world terrorism and virtually every other problem
faced by humanity. In The End of Faith: Religion, Terror, and the Future of
Reason, Harris [charges] God-believers with murderous intentions, intolerance,
and intellectual repressionand that's just for starters. 'Religious faith
represents so uncompromising a misuse of the power of our minds that it forms
a kind of perverse, cultural singularitya vanishing point beyond which rational
discourse proves impossible,' Harris asserts. "
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