Ideas

Lebanon Bus Bombs Target Christians

Columnist

Plus: Rumor prompts Egyptian Muslims to attack Copts; Anglicans and Presbyterians prepare for splits; TV station criticized after pastor’s suicide; and other stories from online sources around the world.

Christianity Today February 14, 2007

Today’s Top Five

1. Lebanon gets worse as Christians targeted Two commuter buses were bombed Tuesday in the small Christian village of Ain Alak (photos). “Many residents simply shrugged over the culprit’s identity, a seeming gesture of weariness over a crisis that has brought Lebanon perilously close to civil war,” The Washington Post reports. But everyone agrees that the target was Lebanon’s Christian community, and the victims were among the poorer members of that community.

“The buses were packed with students, blue-collar workers, Sri Lankan maids and women making their way to Christian theology lessons,” the Los Angeles Times notes.

“The attacks, spaced 10 minutes apart … appeared to mark a new chapter in Lebanon’s months-old crisis, with the aim shorn of any apparent political objective beyond killing civilians,” says the Post.

If you haven’t read our recent coverage of the Lebanon crisis from the perspective of two Lebanese evangelicals, be sure to read Martin Accad’s “The ‘Jesus Manifesto’ for Lebanon” and Riad Kassis’ “The Colors of Lebanon.”

2. Coptic Christians attacked again in Egypt It seems not to take much for Muslims in southern Egypt to attack Christians in the area. Reuters reports that “rumors of a love affair between a Muslim woman and a Coptic Christian man” set off a riot in Armant, with Muslims attacking Christian shops and a minivan. Eight Muslim men (who are permitted to marry Christian women, but whose daughters are not allowed to marry Christian men) were arrested.

3. Anglicans, Presbyterians face splits The big Anglican primates’ meeting is underway in Tanzania. Despite truckloads of predictions and analysis (the Anglicanblogosphere seems both ablaze and weary), there’s very little to report so far. We’ll let you know when something actually happens.

Meanwhile, it looks like 130 or so of the 151 Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) congregations in the New Wineskins Association of Churches are taking steps to leave the denomination, likely for the Evangelical Presbyterian Church. The EPC may create a new, non-geographic presbytery for the New Wineskins group. Will it really happen? We’ll see. But we’ve learned to be cautious about these realignment / breakaway / exodus stories.

4. ELCA disciplinary committee criticizes but follows policy on gay pastor In another of these almost-a-real-decision stories, a disciplinary committee of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America voted to remove Bradley Schmeling from the ministry because he engages in homosexual behavior. But the committee also said that the rules barring gay ministers “are at least bad policy, and may very well violate the constitution and bylaws of this church” and urged the denomination to “initiate a process” at its August assembly to remove the prohibitions against gay clergy. Hoping to see such changes made, the committee didn’t make Schmeling’s removal effective until after the assembly.

5. Is KDKA to blame in pastor’s suicide The story of the Rev. Brent Dugan, pastor of Community Presbyterian Church of Ben Avon, Pennsylvania, is a tragic one. After a lifelong struggle with homosexual desires, the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette reported last year, in 2002 Dugan “became close friends with a man who claimed to love him, and with whom he had occasional sexual encounters. That man cajoled him into leaving specific kinds of sexual fantasies on his answering machine, and then betrayed him by setting up a meeting at an adult bookstore, where KDKA-TV recorded him.”

In November, a sweeps month, KDKA repeatedly aired promotions for its expose of Dugan, but didn’t mention him by name. Reporter Marty Griffin said his investigation “uncovered illicit, possibly illegal, activity by a local minister, activities which, at the very least, violated the rules of his denomination.”

KDKA never aired the report. It canceled its broadcast plans when it heard that Dugan was “considering doing harm to himself.” The next day, Dugan committed suicide by overdosing on aspirin and alcohol. That set off a wave of criticism of the station.

“It’s the use of key words — possibly illegal, at the very least — that call into question whether the report was worth doing in the first place,” Post-Gazette TV columnist Rob Owen said. “If the best Griffin could dig up was a trip to an adult bookstore (not illegal) and violation of church rules, then there’s not much in it to serve the public interest. It comes off looking like another ‘gotcha’-style story designed for no benefit except the TV station’s ratings.”

“What kind of culture (individual+church+politics+press+commercialism) sets the stage for this sort of pain after a lifetime of service, sacrifice and silent struggling? What kind of people patiently plan and then wait for such a person’s failure?” Grove City College psychology professor Warren Throckmorton asked on his blog. “Brent Dugan apparently led an honorable, commendable and generous life. He deserved much better than treachery for the sake of commercialism.”

James Mead, pastor to Pittsburgh Presbytery, told members in December, “It is the view of many, including me, that KDKA may well be said to have crossed boundaries of acceptable journalistic practices in its development and treatment of this story, and its treatment of our pastor who was its subject.”

This week, Pittsburgh’s main ecumenical body filed an official complaint with the FCC as the station seeks renewal of its broadcast license. While Christian Associates of Southwest Pennsylvania says it doesn’t want KDKA’s license revoked, it does want an apology “for the misleading promos and unfortunate lapse in journalistic reporting that led to the Rev. Brent Dugan’s unfortunate death.”

The Post-Gazette‘s Ann Rogers reports:

[The letter to the FCC] says the promos “sentenced” the Rev. Dugan before the presbytery had time to look into the situation, which could have produced a church process that “provided for repentance, rehabilitation and forgiveness.” It says that the promos violated the Code of Broadcast News Ethics, and the letter deplores “the exploitation of religious leaders and issues for increased ratings at the expense of journalistic integrity and the truth.” Mr. Mead said they were not asking to stop coverage of clergy who commit crimes, but to refrain from sensationalistic stories that would not be considered news if they were about someone in a different profession.

You might wonder why Weblog is covering this now, instead of on November 3, when Dugan committed suicide. We probably would have given this more attention, but we were busy. On November 2, Ted Haggard resigned as president of the National Association of Evangelicals amid news reports that he had been involved with a male prostitute. So far, Weblog has seen no comparisons of media coverage of those two cases. But one wonders: What made the Haggard case such an acceptable story that we’re still seeing articles and commentaries about it (Haggards to leave Colorado Springs! Mike Jones to auction his massage table on eBay!), while the Dugan case is a sensationalistic “gotcha” story “with no benefit” that “would not be considered news if it was about someone in a different profession”?

Quote of the day “When you’re a Christian and a middle linebacker for the Colts, you still hit people when they come over the middle. You just make sure it isn’t a cheap shot.” —Political strategist Ralph Reed, on why he uses negative campaign ads. He added, “In politics, you try to make sure it’s not personal. I’ve never felt comfortable with a family situation, even a divorce. … You also have to make sure that the negative information is true. … We’re all going to make a mistake. I think about Peter and the ear of Malchus, how after he severs his ear Christ heals it. … If we’re willing to say, I went too far, I think we have to trust Christ to heal it.” He was speaking at a symposium at Yale Divinity School and quoted by Huffington Post blogger Chris Meserole.

Special note We had trouble getting the Weblog put together last week, but we’ve compiled stories under the “better late than never” principle. Unfortunately, some of the stories from last week are a bit outdated, and some of the links may be broken. To help you find the most recent and relevant stories, then, we’ve split the links below into two sections. The first are articles that have been published since last Friday. The second are older articles published last week. Sorry for the delay.

More articles

Anglican meeting in Tanzania | More Anglicanism | ELCA verdict | Ted Haggard and New Life Church | Homosexuality | Sexual ethics | Church life | Presbyterians | Catholicism | Abuse | Lebanon attacks | Crime | Remnant Fellowship murder trial | Funding prison ministry | Church and state | Politics | Mitt Romney | Other Republican candidates | Democratic candidates | Environment | Life ethics | Death penalty | Religious freedom | India | Fiji | Sudan | Israel and Judaism | Blood libel | History | Evolution | Education | Sexual education | Higher education | Research | Books | Media | Entertainment | People | Money and business | Missions & ministry | Islam | Other stories of interest

Last Week’s Articles

Ted Haggard | Homosexuality | Marriage | Spring Arbor’s transgender prof | Evolution | Education | University of Sydney | Life ethics | Parental notification | HPV | Healthcare | Adoption | Church and state | China | Malaysia | Religious freedom | Religious displays | Property disputes | Anglicanism | Baptists | Eastern Orthodox | Catholicism | Robert Drinan | People | Dungy and Smith | NFL vs. churches | More on Super Bowl and churches | Media, art, and entertainment | Books | John Edwards’s bloggers | Barack Obama | John McCain | Mitt Romney | Other 2008 candidates | Politics | Environment | Fiji | War and terrorism | Crime | Abuse | Remnant Fellowship murder case | Arson | Theft | Money and business | Church life | Florida tornadoes | Judaism | Islam | Other stories of interest

Anglican meeting in Tanzania:

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More Anglicanism:

  • Controversial priest weighing legal options | Diocese refuses to lift restrictions on parish contact (Rocky Mountain News, Denver)
  • National church backs diocese vs. breakaways | The Episcopal Church on Friday filed a lawsuit in Fairfax County similar to ones filed last month by the Episcopal Diocese of Virginia (The Washington Times)
  • Judge says Episcopal Diocese can’t amend lawsuit | A Superior Court judge Wednesday denied a request from the Episcopal Diocese of San Diego to raise new legal claims in a lawsuit against a Fallbrook church that already had been decided in the church’s favor, an attorney for the church said (North County Times, San Diego, Ca.)
  • Lodi church rejects Episcopal schism | Issue of whether gays can join the clergy splitting the world Anglican Communion (San Francisco Chronicle)
  • Christians want Bishop Onono out | The continued row at the Gulu Anglican Church has taken another twist with Christians of Christ Church demanding that Bishop Nelson Onono Onweng, the northern Anglican bishop leave the diocese (The Monitor, Uganda)
  • Earlier: Gulu church row deepens | The troubles in the Gulu municipality Church of Uganda seem to deepen by the day. On Sunday, Christians were treated to free drama when Ray Otim, a catechist, grabbed a microphone from Martin Okulluyere, a former parish council member (The Monitor, Uganda, Feb. 7)
  • Cohabitation, church style | Two signs can be found outside a modern church building in Oak Harbor: One announces “St. Stephen’s Anglican Church,” the other “St. Stephen Episcopal Church.” (Joel Connelly, Seattle Post-Intelligencer)
  • Episcopal Church will survive latest strife | As has happened before, the Episcopal Church will survive its passionate divisions (Ed Jones, The Free Lance-Star, Fredericksburg, Va.)
  • One holy catholic | Anglican dioceses should be more expressive of their catholic identity (Martyn Percy, The Guardian, London)

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ELCA verdict:

  • Lutherans hedge in verdict on gay pastor | A detailed reading of the decision —- and even the timing of Schmeling’s removal —- convinces the 44-year-old pastor and his supporters that he eventually may be vindicated (The Atlanta Journal-Constitution)
  • Lutheran panel votes to expel gay minister | A disciplinary committee of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America ruled Thursday that a gay pastor in Atlanta must give up his pulpit, saying it was reluctantly enforcing a “bad policy.” (The Washington Post)
  • Gay Lutheran pastor removed over partner | The delay in Schmeling’s removal gives the ELCA a chance to nullify it by changing the document at an August meeting (Associated Press)

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Ted Haggard and New Life Church:

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Homosexuality:

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Sexual ethics:

  • Church at logger-heads with priest | The Catholic Church is embroiled in a legal conflict with a priest who has been accused of fathering a child with a poor young woman, having several girlfriends and failing to account for church funds. (Cape Times, South Africa)
  • Catholic Church slams free Brazil Carnival condoms | Catholic bishops criticized on Friday Brazil’s plan to hand out millions of free condoms in the world’s largest Catholic country when its famously bacchanalian Carnival begins next week (Reuters)
  • After so many deaths, too many births | Though Rwanda is predominantly Catholic, the church’s leaders here are not expected to oppose a campaign for population control. A number of priests, nuns and lay workers participated in the 1994 genocide, which weakened the church’s moral authority, and has led it to avoid politics (The New York Times)
  • Bill to require HPV vaccine stirs concern | Some believe making California schoolgirls get inoculated against the sexually transmitted virus would violate parental rights (Los Angeles Times)
  • Also: HPV vaccine for girls promoted in Maine | Proposal sidesteps controversy by focusing on education and funding, leaving it up to families to decide whether their daughters should be vaccinated (Bangor Daily News, Me.)
  • AIDS and abstinence | Governments starting to realize that promoting condoms has left things worse, not better (National Catholic Register)
  • Abstinence saves lives | The Catholic Church is often pilloried, or worse, for opposing condoms (Editorial, National Catholic Register)

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Church life:

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Presbyterians:

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Catholicism:

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Abuse:

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Lebanon attacks:

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Crime:

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Remnant Fellowship murder trial:

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Funding prison ministry:

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Church and state:

  • HK cardinal hits out at China over “acts of war” | The top Catholic official on Chinese soil has lashed out at Beijing, saying the ordinations last year of three bishops without Vatican approval were illegitimate and “acts of war” (Reuters)
  • Baptist church will move | Town residents vote to accept ownership (Concord Monitor, N.H.)
  • Camps’ tax tussle may ripple | Ruling on whether YMCA of the Rockies is exempt may affect other religious groups (The Denver Post)
  • Pastors: Christian government not Jesus’ cause | Local ministers and religious experts are concerned about Christian Exodus (Independent Mail, Anderson, S.C.)
  • Churches, signs clash with city | Mayor, planners look to ease sign ordinance (The Noblesville Enquirer, Ind., link via Religion Clause)
  • Christian legal group enters debate over GJ library exhibit | Though no one is threatening a lawsuit, Carol Anderson, who created the religious anti-gay, anti-adultery and anti-divorce display in the library’s rear stairwell, has the Scottsdale, Ariz.-based Alliance Defense Fund going to bat for her against the American Civil Liberties Union (The Daily Sentinel, Grand Junction, Co.)
  • S.Africa expropriates first farm in reform drive | The farm in the Northern Cape province had belonged to the South African Evangelical Lutheran Church, which has been ordered to sell it for 35.5 million rand, the commission said (Reuters)
  • Redmond church risks big fines as it hosts homeless camp | Defying an order from the city of Redmond, St. Jude Catholic Church welcomed Tent City 4, the Eastside’s traveling homeless encampment, to its grounds Saturday (The Seattle Times)
  • God help needy Christian charities | It is perfectly reasonable for the public authorities to say that they do not want to spend taxpayers’ money on the work of conversion. But it is another matter to attack religious beliefs, and to try to keep the people who hold them away from all public money, and from the drunk and homeless and poor and handicapped and old, and from children, all of whom need so much more help than a society without belief can give them (Charles Moore, The Telegraph, London)

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Politics:

  • Congressman’s imam is taking a lead in interfaith efforts | Makram El-Amin has become Representative Keith Ellison’s imam putting an Islamic imprint on the role of spiritual adviser in American politics (The New York Times)
  • Baptist group fights Texas coal plants | Texas’ largest Baptist group is taking a rare step into environmental advocacy, working to block Gov. Rick Perry’s plan to speed the approval process for 18 new coal-fired power plants. (Associated Press)
  • Policy on asylum-seekers faulted | Report criticizes detentions by U.S. immigration officials (The Washington Post)
  • Punishing the persecuted | A twisted interpretation of U.S. law has turned thousands of victims of global oppression, who sympathize with America, into terrorists ineligible for asylum (Doug Bandow, The American Spectator)
  • Keeping the faith | The House of Lords should not be subjected to a risky electoral process, nor should it lose its bishops (Anil Bhanot, The Guardian, London)
  • Rudd a cafeteria Christian | If the Leader of the Opposition wants to pursue the Catholic vote — something the ALP has taken for granted far too long — he’s perfectly entitled to do so. However he can’t pretend that sometimes, when it suits him, deep down he’s still a member of the tribe (Christopher Pearson, The Australian)

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Mitt Romney:

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Other Republican candidates:

  • McCain, Romney vying for support of conservatives | But they both face hurdles with conservative Christians (The Washington Post)
  • McCain courting Christian conservatives | To forgive is divine. To forget may be asking too much of religious conservatives when it comes to Sen. John McCain (Associated Press)
  • Evangelical vote: down to two | But Huckabee still has the edge over Romney (U.S. News & World Report)
  • The pastor populist | Southern governor + folksy flare + ability to connect = proven presidential prospect. Mike Huckabee puts a new twist on an old formula (World)
  • Huckabee defends traditional marriages | “People have a right to decide how they live their lives. But they have to respect not changing the definition of marriage,” said Huckabee, who served as a pastor in Baptist churches before becoming governor in 1996 (Associated Press)
  • Searching for Mr. Right | Wanted: A candidate who truly opposes abortion and gay marriage — and who can win (The New York Times)
  • Litmus test for hypocrisy | Why is it that abortion, a subject on which political candidates often claim to be expressing their most deeply held moral convictions, is often the issue on which they seem especially opportunistic and unprincipled? (E. J. Dionne Jr., The Washington Post)
  • Giuliani’s faces uphill fight in GOP presidential race | He is pro-choice and in favor of civil unions for same-sex couples. He also has been married three times and was involved with his future third wife while still married to his second (The Journal News, White Plains, N.Y.)
  • Giuliani shifts abortion speech gently to right | Rudolph W. Giuliani has directed questions on abortion toward discussion about judges, saying he would appoint “strict constructionist” jurists (The New York Times)
  • Culture warrior | Don’t write off Giuliani’s appeal to social conservatives (Brendan Miniter, The Wall Street Journal)

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Democratic candidates:

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Environment

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Life ethics:

  • Low turnout undercuts Portugal vote on abortion | A referendum to liberalize the abortion law was approved, but turnout was too low for the result to be deemed valid (The New York Times)
  • Portugal fails to overturn abortion law | Portugal’s prime minister said he will enact more liberal abortion laws in the conservative Roman Catholic country even though his proposal to relax restrictions failed to win complete endorsement in a referendum (Associated Press)
  • Analysis: Portugal’s abortion rethink | With abortion legal in all but three other European countries, Portugal can draw on experience elsewhere in dealing with this sensitive issue (BBC)
  • Strict abortion bill revisited in S.D. | But none of the Legislature’s leaders, notably some sponsors of last year’s bill, are joining the effort this year because waging last year’s fight was so exhausting (Associated Press)
  • States fund antiabortion advice | Public grants surge for the crisis centers. Some ban contraception talk (Los Angeles Times)
  • Lynch backs notification repeal bill | House panel takes up abortion proposal (Concord Monitor, N.H.)
  • Diocese, abortion foes are at odds | Who’s more pro-life, the Roman Catholic Diocese of Covington or Northern Kentucky Right to Life? (The Cincinnati Enquirer)
  • Code of silence | Another source of useful stem cells has been found–and the media and the cloning crowd are trying keep it quiet (Michael Fumento, The Weekly Standard)
  • Anything goes | The International Society for Stem Cell Research issues its “ethical guidelines.” (Wesley J. Smith, The Weekly Standard)

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Death penalty:

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Religious freedom:

  • Uzbek authorities arrest Protestant pastor on illegal proselytizing charges | Dmitry Shestakov led an underground Charismatic Pentecostals church in the eastern city of Andijan and was converting Muslims to Christianity, the State Religious Affairs Committee said Tuesday, without specifying the date of his arrest (Associated Press)
  • Residents demand local church closes | Dozens of residents of Warung Satangkal kampong in Majalaya, Bandung, rallied in front of a house belonging to a Christian family Sunday in reaction to the use of the house as a venue for religious rituals (The Jakarta Post, Indonesia)
  • Religious freedom in America | If we value religious liberty, we should value the Christian faith as its guarantee. (Roger Scruton, The American Spectator)

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India:

  • Police register case against Orthodox Church members | Nearly 3,000 people mentioned as accused in the case (The Hindu, India)
  • Mob attacks family over conversion | The family has been facing social boycott for converting to Christianity, police sources in Kokrajhar PS said (The Assam Tribune, India)
  • Priests expel Indian Catholics over child marriages | The Catholic Church in an eastern Indian state is excommunicating Christians under its fold who are found to be forcing minors into marriage, senior diocese officials said on Wednesday (Reuters)
  • Law aims at dividing Church: Archbishop | Archbishop Susaipakiam, head of the Thiruvananthapuram Archdiocese of the Catholic Church (Latin rite), admitted that the issue of reservation vs. minority rights was an area of `friction,’ but held that the Church was not ready to give up one for the other (The Hindu, India)
  • Activists chastise India on untouchables | Indians at the bottom of India’s Hindu caste system are attacked, raped and killed daily due to their status, even though the rigid social hierarchy has been outlawed for decades, an international human rights group said Tuesday (Associated Press)

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Fiji:

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Sudan:

  • U.S. evangelist, a critic of Islam, reaches out to Sudan’s president | In a meeting between Franklin Graham and Omar Hassan al-Bashir, the semi-serious proselytizing continued (The Washington Post)
  • Frist joins evangelist Graham on trip to south Sudan | A U.S.-backed peace agreement between the southern Sudanese and the government in Khartoum is faltering badly as world attention has shifted to Darfur, the western region of the country where the government is accused of waging a campaign of violence that the United States and others have labeled genocide (The Washington Post)
  • Killing fields | It’s becoming obvious: No one is going to save Darfur (Editorial, The New Republic)

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Israel and Judaism:

  • Conditional approval | Government’s precondition for Greek Orthodox patriarch’s appointment: ‘Sell church property only to Israelis’ (Haaretz, Tel Aviv)
  • Ousted Republican senator criticizes Bush on Israel | “The religious thing is driving the foreign policy here,” Chafee said following a speech at Brown University (Associated Press)
  • Some work delayed near Jerusalem holy site | Jerusalem’s mayor decided on Sunday night to postpone plans for the construction of a controversial new footbridge near the religious compound in the Old City (The New York Times)
  • Monday: Israel approves work at religious site, scene of clashes | Despite Muslim protests, the Israeli government on Sunday approved the continuation of construction work near a sensitive religious compound (The New York Times)
  • Lack of 2nd Temple period rabbinic control may have caused assimilation | Into the vacuum left by the lack of rabbinic oral tradition stepped the Christians, says a study in The Journal for the Study of the Pseudepigrapha (The Jerusalem Post)
  • Divided loyalties | Harry Bernstein grew up in a Lancashire street with Jews on one side and Christians on the other. Now, at the age of 96, he has written a memoir recalling the tensions that the split created (The Guardian, London)
  • The danger of a ‘chosen’ nation | Israel holds a sacred place in the words of the Old Testament. But does Christian doctrine give that country a free pass at the expense of peace in the Middle East? (Oliver “Buzz” Thomas, USA Today)

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Blood libel:

  • Bar-Ilan prof. defiant on blood libel book ‘even if crucified’ | Professor Ariel Toaff said he stood behind the contention of his book, “Pasque di Sangue,” just published in Italy, that there is a factual basis for some of the medieval blood libels against the Jews. However, he said he was sorry his arguments had been twisted (Haaretz, Tel Aviv)
  • Bar-Ilan turning aside pressure to fire author of blood libel book | Bar-Ilan University is resisting pressure to fire history professor Ariel Toaff for writing a book arguing that there is a factual basis to some of the blood libels against the Jews in Europe in the Middle Ages, university president Moshe Kaveh’s media consultant said Monday (Haaretz, Tel Aviv)
  • Author admits blood-libel claim was meant as provocation | Ariel Toaff, the author of Bloody Passovers: The Jews of Europe and Ritual Murders said Monday his previous statement that some ritual murders of Christian children by Jews “might have taken place” had been an ironic academic provocation (The Jerusalem Post)

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History:

  • Polish bishop seeks special court probe | The former Warsaw archbishop who resigned after admitting he agreed to cooperate with the communist-era secret police has asked a special court to investigate the case against him, a court spokesman said (Associated Press)
  • Also: Slovak church plans to review its past 50 years | The Roman Catholic Church in Slovakia said Tuesday that it would create a council to review its history over the last 50 years, including the period of fascist state rule during World War II and the subsequent Communist era (AFP)
  • Revealed: secret of the lodger living inside St Peter’s | Michelangelo had a secret bedroom inside St Peter’s Basilica in Rome where he lived for the last 17 years of his life, it emerged yesterday (The Telegraph, London)
  • Bill to honor Paine stalls in Arkansas | Legislation designating Jan. 29 as Thomas Paine Day failed after a member of the state House of Representatives protested Paine’s criticism of religion (The New York Times)
  • Teacher’s dad exiled from church | Paula Barkley remembers being about 7 years old when her father was voted out as pastor of Louisville, Ky.’s Weaver Memorial Baptist Church in 1956 for wanting to open its doors to African-Americans (The Tennessean, Nashville)
  • The hypocrisy hunter’s guide | Sex, politics and religion have been bedfellows since 1804 (Debby Applegate, The Wall Street Journal)

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Evolution:

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Education:

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Sexual education:

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Higher education:

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Research:

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Books:

  • Jurist passes positive judgment on radio host’s book | Pennsylvania judge sentences sex offender to read a volume about addiction written by Laguna Beach Christian broadcaster (Dana Parsons, Los Angeles Times)
  • A familiar and prescient voice, brought to life | Carl Sagan has rejoined the cosmic debate from the grave, with “new” words on the boundary between science and religion (The New York Times)
  • In the beginning was the Word, and it was so cool | Some pastors say “amen” to the so-called Biblezine, which wraps articles around a modern-text New Testament. It may put the Bible in the hands of youths who might otherwise not read it, they say. Others say the trendy mag trivializes the Good Book (Contra Costa Times, CA.)
  • Trust them, it’s a hit | Unlike its movie and TV kin, the publishing industry keeps book sales figures to itself (Los Angeles Times)

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Media:

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Entertainment:

  • Was missing Grammy winner in bathroom? | “I wasn’t literally in the bathroom,” said Third Day guitarist Mark Lee. “It happens every year. There’s just somebody that gets caught. This year it happened to me.” (Associated Press)
  • Relient K draws fans in Christian, mainstream markets | After toiling away for seven years and building a rabid fan base in the Christian market, Relient K broke through to mainstream success with the 2004 release “Mmhmm.” The band’s career illustrates that sometimes the least calculated of efforts reap the most rewards (Reuters)
  • Bluegrass duo revisits gospel roots on new album | “Tell Someone,” the new Rebel Records release from the Kenny & Amanda Smith Band, is a musical feast not only for the group’s bluegrass base but for country and Southern gospel music fans as well (Reuters)
  • Charles, Maher film to take potshots at religion | The prospects of an untitled movie from “Borat” director Larry Charles, narrated and presented by comedian Bill Maher, which takes potshots at major religions from Judaism and Islam to Christianity, has buyers salivating (The Hollywood Reporter)
  • Eastern Nazarene College mounts play banned in China | It might seem a bit unusual for a Christian college in New England to put on a little-known avant-garde Chinese play with Buddhist themes (The Boston Globe)
  • Irreverent? Oh, heavens! | Blend Christian pop and boy bands. The result: The cheeky stage musical ‘Altar Boyz,’ which draws its own congregation of faithful (Los Angeles Times)
  • Who critiques the critics? | The makers of The Last Sin Eater seem to be a rather touchy lot. (Peter Chattaway, FilmChatBlog)

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People:

  • Prayers for Nowak but few answers | For those who don’t know her, Lisa Nowak might be just the centerpiece of a salacious media scandal that makes for a great Saturday Night Live skit, but to her church, she’s a fellow parishioner who could really use some prayers right now (Houston Chronicle)
  • Also: Nowak’s Houston church offers prayers of support | The astronaut’s parish priest describes his congregation as a ‘real tight NASA family.’ (The Orlando Sentinel)
  • Bodybuilder says Robertson threatened to kill him and his family | Phillip Busch, in a federal lawsuit against Pat Robertson, says the televangelist threatened his life and that of his family at a legal proceeding Wednesday in the Norfolk federal courthouse (Reuters)
  • Watchdog group: Church violated federal tax law | A complaint alleges that the Living Word Christian Center arranged sweetheart deals for its senior pastor, helping him buy a plane and home (Minneapolis Star-Tribune)
  • Also: The kingdom and power of Mac Hammond | The leader of a Brooklyn Park megachurch sees no conflict among his faith, wealth and politics. Others believe he crosses lines that should be more sharply drawn (Minneapolis Star-Tribune)
  • Pastor remaining quiet about life insurance plan | Lawyer maintains that everything is as it should be (Rocky Mountain News, Denver)
  • Also: A man with friends | Bishop Acen Phillips has a record of service to the underdog in Denver that goes back to the 1950s, but his reputation, while unquestioned by his supporters, has not gone unsullied (Rocky Mountain News, Denver)
  • Minister plans ’07 convention to fill MegaFest void | Bishop Paul Morton, one of the nation’s most popular preachers and gospel singers, announced Monday that he will bring a convention to Atlanta this summer that he claims will fill the void left by MegaFest (The Atlanta Journal-Constitution)
  • Bishop Wanjiru bars media from her church | The Bishop’s wedding failed to take place Saturday as the court has issued a temporary injunction filed by one James Kamangu who claims to be Wanjiru’s customary husband (KBC, Kenya)
  • Also: Bishop Wanjiru celebrates love without a wedding | The controversial preacher obeyed a court order barring any such celebration as her fiancé stayed away from the Jesus is Alive Ministries Church on Saturday (The East African Standard, Kenya)
  • Bill Donohue vs. the world (especially women) | Frances Kissling, head of Catholics for a Free Choice, talks about the right-wing activist who forced the John Edwards campaign to part with one of its bloggers (Salon.com)
  • Sports, religion strange bedfellows | There is a part of Dungy’s philosophy that troubles me — and, I believe, many others — and that is his insistence upon making proper coaching not just a matter of good heart but of religious zeal, even dogma (Rick Telander, Chicago Sun-Times)

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Money and business:

  • Religious tension in workplace on the rise | Complaints alleging religious discrimination are up dramatically, with confrontations arising over how people publicly observe their faith, when and where they pray, how they dress, what hours they work — and generally what they believe (The Seattle Times)
  • New tax laws alter face of donations | A new set of IRS rules that toughens the tax laws for charitable donations could change the way many Americans donate to houses of worship (The Gainesville Sun, Fla.)
  • NHS ‘cutting chaplain services’ | Hundreds of hospital chaplains face the sack or a reduction in their hours as a result of the NHS cash crisis (The Telegraph, London)

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Missions & ministry:

  • City proposing new law, fee for volunteer workers | Mayor of Lynch, Ky., says he’s worried about residents getting bad repair work and the city being liable for it. But local ministry leaders say the plan could drive volunteers who just want to help away (WYMT, Hazard, Ky.)
  • A ministry in the cold, with a gospel of propane | In Ocean County, N.J., the homeless hunker down in scattered tent encampments. Connecting them is a minister who delivers the gift of survival (The New York Times)
  • Churches grieve for members who died in Honduras | “They were doing the work of God when death came,” the Rev. Don Hattaway told the congregation at Tabernacle Baptist in Cartersville (The Atlanta Journal-Constitution)
  • Mayor looks to churches to help end homelessness | Already 122 congregations have signed on, each pledging to raise $1,200 to help pay first month’s rent and deposit on an apartment and establishing a “mentor team” of two to six people who agree to work with the family or senior to help them leave homelessness behind (Rocky Mountain News, Denver)
  • Christian leaders commit to tackling poverty | Christian leaders from the country’s broadest-ever ecumenical group have issued a statement condemning the “scandal of widespread poverty” and calling for action by the public and private sectors to combat it (Religion News Service)

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Islam:

  • A split after Muhammad’s death that still resonates | Who is Sunni, and who is Shiite, and what is the difference between the two? All this week NPR’s “Morning Edition” presents a five-part primer (The New York Times)
  • The partisans of Ali | A history of Shia faith and politics (Morning Edition, NPR)
  • Nigerian Muslim convicts in legal limbo | In Nigeria’s Muslim north, sentences of amputation and death by stoning are routinely imposed under Shariah, or Islamic law. But no stonings have ever been carried out, and no amputations since 2001 (Associated Press)

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Other stories of interest:

  • Christianity in Africa: Jesus in the morning, voodoo in the evening | The old natural religions continue to thrive in Africa. While Christianity and Islam vie for supremacy in many countries, they have failed to banish the rain gods and spirits south of the Sahara. Frequently the pagan rites have fused with a faith in Jesus Christ (Der Speigel, Germany)
  • Minority report | Christians in Jordan (Jason Byassee, The Christian Century)
  • Pray for a special Valentine, says Church | Forget speed-dating and lonely-hearts columns. The Roman Catholic Church has come up with a more reliable way of finding love on Valentine’s Day: pray to St Raphael, the little-known patron saint of “happy meetings” (The Telegraph, London)
  • Groovin with God | Many Jesus People still follow faith (The Gazette, Colorado Springs)
  • Thou shalt not bloat | Many Christians spurn nutrition and exercise (The Columbus Dispatch, Oh.)
  • Darien church owns half of Fay’s condo | A Darien church and its former pastor’s boyfriend are now co-owners of a luxury condominium in Florida (Stamford Advocate, Ct.)
  • Crowds flock to ‘miracle’ statue | A statue of Jesus Christ is causing a sensation at an art gallery after witnesses said they saw sparks shooting from its eyes (Metro, U.K.)
  • Forgive us their trespass | Western evangelicals are plotting an apology to China for 150-year-old imperialist abuses. Critics wonder, how do you make up for the past? (World)
  • Doctors who fail their patients | A new survey has revealed that a disturbing number of doctors feel no responsibility to inform patients of treatments that they deem immoral or to refer them to other doctors for care. (Editorial, The New York Times)
  • Black churches must address HIV/AIDS | Of the more than 85,000 black churches in the United States, only a handful, primarily in major cities, are actively involved in this important work. The others have descended into denial, ignorance and homophobia, and they focus on the so-called Great Beyond (Bill Maxwell, St. Petersburg Times, Fla.)

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Last Week’s Articles

Ted Haggard | Homosexuality | Marriage | Spring Arbor’s transgender prof | Evolution | Education | University of Sydney | Life ethics | Parental notification | HPV | Healthcare | Adoption | Church and state | China | Malaysia | Religious freedom | Religious displays | Property disputes | Anglicanism | Baptists | Eastern Orthodox | Catholicism | Robert Drinan | People | Dungy and Smith | NFL vs. churches | More on Super Bowl and churches | Media, art, and entertainment | Books | John Edwards’s bloggers | Barack Obama | John McCain | Mitt Romney | Other 2008 candidates | Politics | Environment | Fiji | War and terrorism | Crime | Abuse | Remnant Fellowship murder case | Arson | Theft | Money and business | Church life | Florida tornadoes | Judaism | Islam | Other stories of interest

Ted Haggard:

  • Haggards will leave Colo. Springs | Three months after being ousted in a drugs and gay-sex scandal, the Rev. Ted Haggard is telling friends that counseling has given him hope, and he and his wife plan to leave Colorado Springs and pursue psychology degrees (The Denver Post)
  • Haggard says he’s not gay | The Rev. Tim Ralph of Larkspur, part of Haggard’s team of overseers, also said the four-man oversight board strongly urged Haggard to go into secular work instead of Christian ministry if Haggard and his wife follow through on plans to earn master’s degrees in psychology (The Denver Post)
  • Haggard, Colo. Springs church he founded reach a settlement | Ex-pastor agrees to financial deal, continued therapy (Rocky Mountain News. Denver)
  • Ted Haggard says he’s leaving the Springs | Haggard’s family has been “offered two places” in the Midwestern states, Haggard wrote (The Gazette, Colorado Springs)
  • Ousted pastor ‘completely heterosexual’ | The Rev. Ted Haggard broke a three-month silence over the weekend when he contacted members of the New Life Church by e-mail to tell them that he was healing (The New York Times)
  • Pastor: Haggard is heterosexual | Gay relationship was ‘acting out’ (The Gazette, Colorado Springs)
  • Jones doubts Haggard’s restoration | Was surprised by reports former pastor now straight (The Gazette, Colorado Springs)

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Homosexuality:

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Marriage:

  • University to ban gay marriages on campus | Academics and students are shocked by ruling at institution with close links to Anglican church (The Guardian, London)
  • Ministers say ‘I do’ to policy | Fifteen area pastors affirm traditional marriage and sign the Greater Raymond Area Community Marriage Policy (Union Leader, Manchester, N.H.)
  • Initiative ties marriage, procreation | A group of gay-marriage supporters could begin collecting signatures today for a November ballot initiative that would limit marriage in Washington to couples willing and able to have children. The measure would also dissolve the union of those who remain childless three years after marrying (The Seattle Times)
  • And the bride and groom were smelly pigs | Two Musk hogs were married in a lavish ceremony in Taiwan, with the blessings of a Catholic priest (Reuters)
  • Focusing on virginity also sexualizes girls | Something like a “purity ball” essentially minimizes a young woman’s very humanity (Betsy Hart, Chicago Sun-Times)

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Spring Arbor’s transgender prof:

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Evolution:

  • Debate rages in Kenya as evangelicals try to keep ancient skeleton in the closet | The display of the most complete skeleton of a prehistoric human ever found is at the heart of a growing storm—one pitting scientists against Kenya’s powerful and popular evangelical Christian movement (SAPA/AP)
  • Christian faith in the other good book | Flocks of Christians in the US are to hold special services celebrating Charles Darwin’s theory of evolution (New Scientist)
  • Cardinal: Schools quiet evolution debate | An influential Roman Catholic cardinal whose comments on evolution are closely followed condemned a court decision Wednesday that barred a Pennsylvania school district from teaching “intelligent design” in biology class (Associated Press)
  • Darwin Day puts spotlight on intelligent design | ‘Flock of Dodos’ sparks debate (Seattle Post-Intelligencer)
  • The Bible vs. science | Some creationists have decided to pick a fight that is neither necessary nor wise. Let science be science, and let religion be religion. The two need not be reconciled. After all, shouldn’t faith be enough? (Tom Krattenmaker, USA Today)

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Education:

  • Cross removal stirs Va. college campus | More than 10,000 supporters have signed an online petition since last fall asking for the cross to be placed back on the altar permanently (Associated Press)
  • Also: W&M board to consider cross issue | But the Wren Chapel matter is not expected to come up for vote (Richmond Times-Dispatch, Va.)
  • Public school students getting abstinence lessons from church | New Hope Baptist last fall received a federal grant of $3 million—$600,000 annually over five years—for its Outreach Ministries program to teach abstinence to students from middle school through high school in Birmingham city schools (The Birmingham News, Ala.)
  • Seattle Pacific University embraces a new global awareness | Many students, faculty and administrators are taking seriously the spirit of president Philip Eaton’s motto — “engaging the culture, changing the world” — even if the ubiquitous slogan sometimes engenders good-natured eye-rolling (The Seattle Times)
  • Real-world studies proposed at Harvard | The task force earlier jettisoned a preliminary recommendation that every student be required to take a religion class after some professors objected last fall. However, members of the task force said that religion is covered by several of the eight broad categories, including one called culture and belief (The Boston Globe)
  • Atascadero school board to rethink religion class | The Atascadero school board voted Tuesday night to reconsider a controversial resolution allowing students to attend a church class during school hours (The Tribune, San Luis Obispo, Ca.)
  • Potter’s House faces expulsion | Basketball team is ousted from playoffs; school put on brink of severe penalty (The Times-Union, Jacksonville, Fla.)
  • Public schools: Why we don’t fight more | Some say public schools create war zones of clashing values — but more and more they’re proving to be places where students learn to find common ground amid their differences. (Charles C. Haynes, First Amendment Center)
  • Can we really let students skip drama classes on religious grounds? It’s time liberals fought back | A truce has been reached in some areas of US society, whereby the liberals can have their culture so long as anyone could opt out on the grounds of conscience or religious belief. It’s a truce I am uneasy with. (Mark Ravenhill, The Guardian, London)
  • Taking kids spiritual hostage | Under the pretense of wanting kids to engage in healthy activities, religious youth groups are infiltrating schools and neighborhoods and working through churches in an attempt to convert children (Dennis & Sandy Sasso, The Indianapolis Star)

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University of Sydney:

  • Uni caveat: no stem cell research | The University of Sydney has paid one if its residential colleges $600,000 for land to build a medical research centre, but only on the condition it is never used to carry out fetal stem cell research (The Sydney Morning Herald)
  • Academics disturbed by university’s deal to limit research | Academics at the University of Sydney are disturbed by its decision to restrict the research that can be conducted at a new medical institute and will meet today to discuss the decision (The Sydney Morning Herald)
  • Church land offer worries stem cell researchers | There are concerns about what the deal could mean for future medical work and academic freedom (PM, Australian Broadcasting Corp)
  • Sydney university stem cell ban sparks academic row | An Australian university has agreed not to conduct stem cell research in a new medical center to be built on land bought from a Catholic college, sparking criticism the deal undermines the freedom of academic research (Reuters)

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Life ethics:

  • Wider death penalty sought | At least a half-dozen states are considering broadening the death penalty, countering a national trend toward scaling back its use (USA Today)
  • Miss. looks to restrict abortions | The Mississippi Senate passed a bill Wednesday that would ban most abortions and charge those who perform the procedures with a misdemeanor (Associated Press)
  • Pope says compassion no excuse for euthanasia | Pope Benedict on Sunday renewed his appeal to Catholics to reject abortion and euthanasia, saying life was God-given and could not be cut short under “the guise of human compassion.” (Reuters)
  • Portugal abortion vote to test modernity | Even though campaigners on both sides say the issue goes beyond a woman’s right to choose, almost half the Portuguese may ignore the referendum (Reuters)
  • New law urged on assaults involving an unborn child | The Catholic Church and right-to-life advocates yesterday urged a House committee to pass a bill allowing murder charges to be filed in assault cases where a pregnant woman loses her unborn child (Union Leader, Manchester, N.H.)
  • Va. House advances bill to punish forced miscarriages | But rejects a proposal to give fertilized eggs and fetuses the “right to enjoyment of life.” (The Washington Post)
  • Man places abortion pills in girlfriend’s food | A 26-year-old man in western Sweden faces criminal charges after placing abortion pills in his girlfriend’s food (The Local, Sweden)
  • Boozy festive parties led to high abortion rate | Alcohol-fuelled Christmas parties, which led to unprotected sex, are believed to be the reason behind a record number of abortions carried out by a charity last month (Reuters)
  • Risky business | What does a woman’s weight have to do with birth control? According to FDA experts, a recent rise in pregnancies among women on the pill may be linked to obesity (Newsweek)
  • Compassion for rape victims | Connecticut apparently needs a state law to force hospitals to provide rape victims with emergency contraception (Editorial, The New York Times)
  • Are you sure enough to kill? | You may have thought that legislating for killing people under carefully controlled conditions was a long way away from anything to do with the political platform of the Greens. If so, your view is not shared by Greens Senator Bob Brown, who plans to introduce a private member’s bill in Federal Parliament entitled “Euthanasia for Death with Dignity” (Gordon Cheng, The Daily Telegraph, Australia)
  • The biotech bubble | Why stem-cell research won’t make states rich (David Hamilton, Slate)
  • Dissatisfaction on the marches | Several readers complained that the story on the Jan. 22 antiabortion march was underplayed and that the Jan. 27 antiwar march was overplayed (Deborah Howell, The Washington Post)
  • Lucy is learning. Are the doctors? | People fear what they don’t know. And people, doctors included, don’t know enough about Down syndrome (Beverly Beckham, The Boston Globe)

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Parental notification:

  • Parental abortion notice has new snag | A federal judge ruled Tuesday that Illinois officials must put proper courthouse procedures in place before he will consider their request to revive a much-debated abortion law. (Chicago Tribune)
  • Notification law challenge halted | A federal judge has put a temporary halt to a legal challenge of the state’s parental notification law, giving New Hampshire lawmakers time to rewrite the law or gut it all together (Union Leader, Manchester, N.H.)
  • Also: Abortion law repeal on table | Lawmakers weigh partial or full rollback (Concord Monitor, N.H.)
  • Protecting the helpless: Not in NH anymore | Pro-life legislators in New Hampshire are in hostile territory in the State House this session. Yet they strive on, attempting in vain to protect the weakest and most defenseless among us (Editorial, Union Leader, Manchester, N.H.)
  • Judge gives Legislature a graceful way out | Seize the opportunity the judge has given you, Representatives and Senators. Repeal this law (Editorial, Concord Monitor, N.H.)

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HPV:

  • HPV vaccine: Who chooses? | Because immunization can prevent cervical cancer, bills seek to mandate shots. Some say such measures are ethically suspect (Los Angeles Times)
  • Texas is first to require cancer shots for schoolgirls | The requirement was praised by health advocates but caught many by surprise in a largely conservative state where sexual politics is often a battleground (The New York Times)
  • Opposition mounts, but Perry stands by HPV vaccine order | Despite growing pressure from lawmakers, Gov. Rick Perry firmly defended his order requiring anti-cancer vaccines for all Texas schoolgirls and said he’d rather “err on the side of protecting life” (Associated Press)
  • Florida may require vaccine for girls | Some key state lawmakers want to require Florida girls to be vaccinated against a sexually transmitted disease that causes cervical cancer (The Miami Herald)
  • Wash. state offers free HPV vaccine | There are no plans to make it mandatory (Associated Press)
  • Va. House OKs measures boosting parental say in health matters | Parents would have more say in how their seriously ill children are medically treated and whether their daughters would be required to receive a vaccine against a virus that causes cervical cancer under legislation passed by a hurried House of Delegates yesterday (Associated Press)
  • A vaccine to save women’s lives | Congratulations to Texas for becoming the first state to require vaccinating young schoolgirls against a sexually transmitted virus that causes cervical cancer and genital warts (Editorial, The New York Times)

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Healthcare:

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Adoption:

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Church and state:

  • Ugandan govt to regulate churches | According to the draft concept paper on the proposed policy on religion that Daily Monitor has seen, the autonomous body would regulate all religious institutions in the country (The Monitor, Uganda)
  • Oconee County to open meetings with silence | Council Chairman Marion Lyles said he hoped the moment of silence would end what he called Oconee County being used as a Ping-Pong ball by those wanting the council to keep its opening prayers in the name of Jesus and the American Civil Liberties Union, which opposes sectarian prayers (Independent-Mail, Anderson, S.C.)
  • Pastors, laymen discuss prayer in government, homosexuality | “We need to get Christians running (for government offices),” says Councilman Dwight Cornelison. “The unsaved will run the country different than a saved person.” (The Dispatch, Lexington, N.C.)
  • Call for Texas flag pledge to include ‘one nation, under God’ | “Our nation and our state was founded on Judeo-Christian ethics, Judeo-Christian values and I think it’s a good thing to recognized that,” says Houston representative Debbie Riddle (WFAA, Dallas)
  • Amish facing passport dilemma | Medical trips to Mexico, Canada in jeopardy (Lancaster New Era, Pa.)
  • Inmate pushes to end ban on his prison preaching | A new warden prohibited Wesley Spratt from preaching in the fall of 2003, with prison officials saying it was dangerous to give an inmate such a position of authority (Associated Press)
  • Appeals judge to rule on Christian prison program | A federal appeals court panel of three judges including former U.S. Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O’Connor will hear arguments next week in the Prison Fellowship case (Associated Press)
  • City to church: Turn away homeless | In a letter delivered by hand Wednesday afternoon, Redmond officials warned St. Jude Catholic Church that if the church welcomed a homeless encampment this weekend, it would be breaking city code and subject to code enforcement (The Seattle Times)
  • Also: Orlando’s homeless laws spark debate | Advocates for the homeless feared it wouldn’t be long before other cities passed similar laws. As it happens, they were right (Associated Press)
  • Church drop-in to stay open | All Saints will continue to receive funds from city, at least until end of summer (The Globe and Mail, Toronto)
  • At Regent, scholars discuss religion in democracy | Scholars at a Regent University symposium on Friday cited the Founding Fathers in asserting that American democracy and religion are indivisible, regardless of the public debate around mixing religion and politics (The Virginian-Pilot)
  • Euless tries to block Santeria lawsuit | Judge asked to dismiss priest’s challenge to longtime ban on killing 1animals (The Dallas Morning News)
  • Proposal to bar religion challenges is dangerous | Legislator’s plan shows disregard for basic principle of church-state separation (Editorial, Arizona Daily Star)
  • A witches’ brew of religious discrimination | When he was alive, the U.S. government had no trouble finding a place for Patrick Stewart, never mind his unconventional beliefs. It was only later that Uncle Sam had second thoughts (Steve Chapman, Chicago Tribune)

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China:

  • Religious believers thrice the estimate | The number of people who describe themselves as religious is a startling three times more than the official estimate, according to the country’s first major survey on religious beliefs (China Daily, official govt. media outlet)
  • Also: Survey finds 300m China believers | A poll of 4,500 people by Shanghai university professors found 31.4% of people above the age of 16 considered themselves as religious (BBC)
  • Poll finds surge of religion among Chinese | “More Chinese feel unstable and harassed by the rootless lives they lead now,” Liu Zhongyu, a philosophy professor who helped organize the survey, said in a telephone interview (The Washington Post)

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Malaysia:

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Religious freedom:

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Religious displays:

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Property disputes:

  • Parishioners look to SJC to set policy on use of church assets | Although the arguments made by St. James parishioners focus on the limited issues of the land sale and cash gift, the case is being closely watched by parishioners at other closed churches (Associated Press)
  • St. Jeremiah parishioners await ruling | Framingham Catholics fighting the Boston Archdiocese’s closing of St. Jeremiah Church are closely watching a similar legal battle waged by Wellesley parishioners that the state’s highest court will hear Thursday (MetroWest Daily News, Framingham, Mass.)
  • Church, neighbors at odds | Congregation faces choice: move, sue or alter expansion plan (Rocky Mountain News, Denver)
  • Historic Corinth church begins process to leave denomination | Some other PCUSA congregations in Mississippi are reportedly considering severing denominational ties (Northeast Mississippi Daily Journal)
  • Also: Presbyterian Church (USA) confident it will retain Corinth property | The presbytery will seek a declaratory judgment as to whether the Mississippi courts will recognize and uphold the PCUSA constitution’s property trust clause (Northeast Mississippi Daily Journal)
  • Remodeling the churches | As European worship steadily declines, many grand old buildings have fallen into disuse. What should become of them? (Newsweek)
  • The end is nigh for most of our chapels | Paul Chambers has warned this stereotypical slice of religious Welsh life is now in near-terminal decline, with only 2% of chapels built a century ago likely to last another 20 years (Western Mail, Wales)
  • Couple must pay £200k church bill | A couple have been ordered to pay more than £200,000 for repairs to a church, which falls within land they inherited after the death of an elderly relative (BBC)
  • Right to build not an inviolate religious freedom | One of the most basic rights of cities and counties is the right to decide what types of buildings should go where within their borders to maintain some sort of order and to protect public health and safety (Editorial, The Californian, Temecula, Ca.)
  • Federal law smites those in way of churches | Group will, quite literally, put the fear of God in anyone who dares stand in the way of anything a church wants. How Christian (Phil Strickland, The Californian, Temecula, Ca.)

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Anglicanism:

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Baptists:

  • 2 Baptist churches leaving N.C. group | St. John’s, Park Road vote to exit convention rather than be tossed out (The Charlotte Observer, N.C.)
  • New effort aims for Baptist unity | Coalition would take on social issues (The News & Observer, Raleigh, N.C.)
  • Baptist leader calls for unity | Southern Baptists must work collectively through the Cooperative Program, the denomination’s program for national and international missions and ministries, as well through their local churches, Southern Baptist Convention President Frank Page told more than 700 people Tuesday at an evangelism luncheon (Ft. Worth Star-Telegram, Tex.)
  • Ex-Rep. Bill Gray departs family pulpit | The pastor whose family has led the Bright Hope Baptist Church for three generations plans to give his last sermon on Sunday, when he will turn over his ministry to an outsider (Associated Press)
  • Also: Passing along his Bright Hope | Rev. Gray gives farewell sermon at Baptist bastion of social good (The Philadelphia Inquirer)

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Eastern Orthodox:

  • Church painting of Lenin sparks Greek row | A half-finished painting in a Greek Orthodox church of Russian communist leader Vladimir Lenin cutting off the beard of a Christian saint has offended traditionalists who want the revolutionary painted over (Reuters)
  • ‘Holy relic’ ad angers Russians | The Russian Orthodox Church has expressed indignation at an attempt to sell a skull and bone allegedly belonging to Saint Philipp (BBC)

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Catholicism:

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Robert Drinan:

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People:

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Dungy and Smith:

  • Dungy looks ahead while savoring win | There had been conjecture he might step down, perhaps to pursue a Christian ministry, after reaching the NFL mountaintop (Los Angeles Times)
  • All-class Dungy may heed greater calling | For Dungy, his faith is the impetus for trying to live a life with meaning. But you don’t need religion to grasp that this is bigger than anyone one person (USA Today)
  • Christian values guide Dungy and the Colts | After Tony Dungy led the Indianapolis Colts to a Super Bowl victory on Sunday, he made it clear that his success had not affected his strong attachment to Christianity (The Jerusalem Post)
  • Super Bowl coaches buoyed by shared faith | For all the hoopla about Smith and Dungy being the first African-American head coaches to reach the Super Bowl, there’s also a common bond in the friends’ spirituality (Religion News Service)
  • At top of game, Dungy, Smith still feel higher calling | Not that other coaches who came before Dungy and Smith weren’t religious. But their coaching demeanors were fiery, steel-fisted and frequently profane (Bill Ordine, The Baltimore Sun)
  • Dungy reaches summit without sacrificing values | He is a man who repeatedly talks about his Christian faith without seeming overly preachy, nor hypocritical (J.A. Adande, Los Angeles Times)
  • Dungy well aware of what he said | Dungy had to know when he told the biggest audience of his life that promoting his Christian identity meant more than achieving a racial milestone, he was poking a hornets’ nest (Kevin Modesti, Seattle Post-Intelligencer)
  • Super Bowl is a super pulpit | Anyone who’s a fan of football, and many who aren’t, know that Dungy is a religious man. Amidst the celebration after winning the Super Bowl on Sunday, he never let anyone forget. Neither did his friend and losing Chicago Bears coach Lovie Smith (Waveney Ann Moore, St. Petersburg Times, Fla.)
  • Coaches of faith | Public professions of faith by NFL coaches Tony Dungy and Lovie Smith before and after Sunday’s Super Bowl surprised and pleased Inland clergy, who said the two men are the kind of role models American youth need (The Press-Enterprise, Riverside, Ca.)

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NFL vs. churches:

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More on Super Bowl and churches:

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Media, art, and entertainment:

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Books:

  • Prison for MySpace perv | He’s also sentenced to read Arterburn’s Every Man’s Battle (The Express-Times, Easton, Pa.)
  • Blame Satan! | Chris Hedges sees hypocrisy, violence on Christian Right (Bloomberg)
  • Hip puritan sex | In his latest book, Rob Bell gives a slick makeover to some old truisms and prejudices about sex (Astrid Storm, Soma Review)
  • Whose God is it anyway? | The renewed debate about the role of religion in Australian political and cultural life turns on a series of untested assumptions. David Burchell reviews Australian Soul by Gary Bouma (The Australian)

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John Edwards’s bloggers:

  • Unholy hire | The anti-Catholic rants of John Edwards’s blogospherically famous staffer (Kathryn Jean Lopez, National Review Online)
  • Catholics slam bloggers hired by Edwards | Catholic League cites posts that the women made on blogs in the past several months in which they criticized the pope and the church for its opposition to homosexuality, abortion and contraception, sometimes using profanity (Associated Press)
  • Edwards’s bloggers cross the line, critic says | The Catholic League is demanding that John Edwards dismiss two bloggers for expressing anti-Catholic opinions (The New York Times)
  • Edwards’ bloggers regret critical posts | “I’ve talked to Amanda and Melissa; they have both assured me that it was never their intention to malign anyone’s faith, and I take them at their word,” Edwards said (Associated Press)

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Barack Obama:

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John McCain:

  • McCain recruits social conservative operative | Guy Rodgers, a former national field director for the Christian Coalition, will serve as deputy director of McCain’s “Americans of Faith Coalition,” the Arizonan’s exploratory committee announced Monday (CNN)
  • McCain touts ties with the right | In Dallas, senator says he’s reached out to many evangelicals (The Dallas Morning News)

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Mitt Romney:

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Other 2008 candidates:

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Politics:

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Environment:

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Fiji:

  • Earlier: Church blasts ‘treasonous’ coup as police arrested | Fiji’s Methodist Church, the country’s largest religious denomination, issued a statement condemning the December 5 coup as illegal and “treasonous” (The Age, Melbourne, Australia)
  • Church silent on politics | The Methodist Church in Fiji does not want to comment on any issue concerning politics at the moment (Fiji Times)
  • Earlier: Church backs statement | The president of the Methodist Church in Fiji, Reverend Laisiasa Ratabacaca, had sighted and approved a press statement before it was released to the media, says church spokesman Rev Iliesa Naivalu (Fiji Times)
  • Fiji Methodists retract coup criticism | Fiji’s influential Methodist Church has withdrawn a statement issued in its name last week attacking the military takeover and President Iloilo (Radio New Zealand)
  • Methodist Church withdraws 20 point resolution | The Methodist Church of Fiji has withdrawn the 20 point resolution released last week regarding the interim administration and the armed takeover on December 5th. Church General Secretary, Reverend Ame Tugawe said the decision was made yesterday after senior church executives said that the resolutions were not endorsed by the church standing committee (FijiVillage.com)

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War and terrorism:

  • Bishop Sentamu slams UK over detention of terror suspects | In a twist of political and moral irony, a Ugandan-born priest has blamed Britain’s anti terror laws for turning the country into a “police state” not different from the dark days of the late dictator Idi Amin’s government (The Monitor, Uganda)
  • Bali bomber taught Poso militants from jail — police | An Indonesian convicted of plotting the 2002 Bali bombings was able to give guidance from jail to Muslim militants in the troubled Poso region, a police statement submitted to parliament showed on Monday (Reuters)
  • Jesus loves Bali victims | Theologically, the newly installed Archbishop of Melbourne, Dr Philip Freier, is correct. As Christ proclaimed in the Sermon on the Mount, Christians should pray for those who persecute them. But Dr Freier’s judgment in supporting churches who have put up signs saying, “Jesus Loves Osama”, is seriously flawed (Christopher Bantick, Melbourne Herald Sun, Australia)

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Crime:

  • Brazilians’ arrest focuses scrutiny on evangelical groups | Estevam Hernandes-Filho and his wife, Sonia — who oversee more than 1,000 churches in Brazil and several in Florida–were under house arrest in Miami, accused of carrying more than $56,000 in undeclared cash (The Washington Post)
  • Also: Brazil church leaders plead not guilty | A Brazilian couple accused of plundering millions of dollars from their evangelical church pleaded not guilty Tuesday to federal charges that they illegally smuggled $56,000 in cash into the United States (Associated Press)
  • Also: Couple pleads not guilty to currency smuggling | Megachurch leaders’ supporters, including two men wearing hooded sweatshirts and jackets, linked arms around the couple as they hurried out of the courthouse. The group rushed the pair into a gold Chevrolet SUV that bore a sticker saying ”God is Faithful” across its dark tinted windows (The Miami Herald)
  • In Kenya’s capital, a sense that danger is ever stronger | A missionary’s slaying illustrates that Nairobi, once a favorite playground for Westerners in Africa, is spinning out of control (The New York Times)
  • Ruling: Man arrested for cursing at meeting should get day in court | The Ohio-based 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals overturned a 2005 U.S. District Court decision that held Montrose Township police officer Stephen Robinson had probable cause to arrest Thomas Leonard, who used the word “goddamn” while addressing the township board in 2002 (Associated Press)
  • FBI agents go to Haiti in kidnapping | Nathan Jean-Dieudonne, 58, a U.S. citizen of Haitian descent, was abducted Sunday afternoon as he and three others drove home from church in Croix-de-Bouquets, a suburb of Port-au-Prince (Associated Press)
  • Suicidal monk has wrestled with past | The Catholic monk who stepped in front of a train Tuesday in Elkhorn had joined the Benedictine order partly to atone for a dark past: He murdered his 3-year-old daughter in 1976 (Omaha World-Herald, Neb.)
  • Church assault 911 call | The 911 call from the night Father George Chaanine allegedly attacked a choir singer (KVBC, Las Vegas)
  • Church of convicted pastor owes thousands in tax bills | Agape could lose half of its land if debts aren’t paid (The Dallas Morning News)
  • Cutting Edge: Godless in America | This part-detective story revolves around America’s No.1 atheist Madalyn Murray O’Hair (Sydney Morning Herald)
  • Why my lovesick son shot his pastor | Mvusi Dondolo, 30, was so desperately in love with a woman at his church that when she spurned him he decided to kill himself. But after four failed attempts the tormented young man found a gun and went on the rampage, killing the very pastor he had earlier turned to for help (Helen Bamford, Cape Argus, South Africa)
  • Ministers asks community to unite at shooting victim’s funeral | Boston ministers and family members of a youth slain in Dorchester today urged the city’s black community to embrace and support its young men (The Boston Globe)
  • Sheriff enlists faith groups to help curb crime in Avery | Inmates in the 20-bed jail could get counseling from clergy or simply a promise of help for their families, as they wait for trial (Asheville Citizen-Times, N.C.)

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Abuse:

  • Ex-pastor gets death | Jurors sentenced Adrian Estrada to die in what’s believed to be the first death penalty handed down under Texas’ 2003 fetal protection law (San Antonio Express-News, Tex.)
  • Also: Texas man gets death for killing fetus | A former youth pastor was sentenced to death Wednesday for killing a teenager and her fetus in what is believed to be the first such order in Texas, the nation’s busiest death penalty state (Associated Press)
  • Legal legacy | There’s an unsung hero in the story of bringing clergy abuse to light: the plaintiff’s lawyer (The Boston Globe)
  • Judge says priest files must be released | A judge Tuesday ordered the Roman Catholic Church to release insurance records and confidential files related to a priest who had been convicted of molestation before being transferred to California (Associated Press)
  • Ex-Norwich pastor receives 10 years | Charles Johnson Jr., the former head of the Norwich Assembly of God, was convicted of first-degree sexual assault and risk of injury to a minor for having inappropriate contact with a former church member who was 9 or 10 years old (Norwich Bulletin, Ct.)
  • Man arrested here in Pennsylvania sex assault case | Gerald Klever was the assistant pastor of the First Presbyterian Church in Springfield, on the outskirts of Philadelphia, from 1977 to 1983 (Tucson Citizen, Az.)
  • Also: Ex-Delco pastor arrested in Arizona | Gerald L. Klever, formerly of Springfield’s First Presbyterian, faces 1970s sex-abuse charges (The Philadelphia Inquirer)
  • Defendant requests second DNA test | Pastor accused in girl’s pregnancy (Hartford Courant, Ct.)
  • Ex-student accuses Jesuit of misconduct | Priest censured (The Washington Post)
  • Judge orders release of church files on molester priest | Though agreeing to release material as part of a settlement with eight Orange County victims of Siegfried Widera, the Milwaukee archdiocese had sought to withhold some records (Los Angeles Times)
  • Retreat facilitator’s past as sex abuser resurfaces | A victims’ advocacy group says the adult participants in an Episcopal center’s retreat should be told that the facilitator is registered with the Texas Department of Corrections. The former priest says he is reformed (Minneapolis Star-Tribune)
  • More clergy abuse files turn up in Ft. Worth | Lawyer in civil case outraged over diocese’s failure to admit papers (The Dallas Morning News)
  • Also: More allegations against priest (Ft. Worth Star-Telegram, Tex.)

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Remnant Fellowship murder case:

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Arson

  • Church arson suspect held in jail | Evan Walgren, the woman charged with burning a Gulf Road house that has been serving as a pagan church, will be in jail until a Feb. 12 hearing on whether she is dangerous (The Republican, Springfield, Mass.)
  • Christians’ tour bus set on fire | The caravan was parked by Franche Evangelical Church in Kidderminster at the time of the attack on Sunday. Luggage belonging to the Canadian Life-Force group was also destroyed (BBC)
  • Pastor wants plea deal for arsonists | The Rev. Jim Parker doesn’t think the three former college students responsible for destroying his church a year ago should serve time in an Alabama state prison (Tuscaloosa News, Ala.)

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Theft:

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Money and business:

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Church life:

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Florida tornadoes:

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Judaism:

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Islam:

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Other stories of interest:

  • Morality play | A Harvard researcher believes that humans have an innate sense of right and wrong, but others say morality is mostly learned (The Boston Globe)
  • Religious billboards along I-65 pulled after protests | Catholic League protested signs about Sabbath (News and Tribune, Jeffersonville, Ind.)
  • 3 on mission trip die in Honduras crash | About 10 other people were also hurt near the village of Mal Pais, seven hours from the capital city of Tegucigalpa, says Honduras Outreach (The Atlanta Journal-Constitution)
  • Also: Missionaries killed in Honduras bound by passion to help | Honduras Outreach organized the trip that included 28 people from four churches in Newnan and Cartersville (The Atlanta Journal-Constitution)
  • Will Pope Benedict become a Mormon after he dies? | The Church says it cannot stem the tide of dead baptized in its own temples (Reuters)
  • In Damascus, religions, cultures, and worlds collide | The ‘Eternal City’ is the original crossroads of commerce, culture, and religion (Good Morning America, ABC)
  • As church shows its age, bard is still the rage | It is a familiar story in England, where hundreds of centuries-old churches, left largely devoid of worshipers by a modern trend toward secularism, need hundreds of millions of dollars’ worth of repairs (The Washington Post)
  • Ugandan warrior priestess laid to rest | Alice Lakwena, a Ugandan warrior priestess who led an insurgency in the 1980s and claimed to have spiritual powers to protect her fighters from bullets by anointing them with oil, was laid to rest at a funeral attended by several hundred followers (Associated Press)
  • Bless this church | Welcome to the Universal Life Church. You are to be ordained at our Modesto world headquarters. Congratulations. And remember: do only that which is right (Los Angeles Times)
  • Shuttered windows to the soul | We can know what people are prepared to say as a result of their religious beliefs, but what they understand by their words is another question (Andrew Brown, The Guardian, London)
  • The benefit of doubt | Doubt is not paralysis. Certainty is. Doubt keeps the doors and windows open. Belief is one room with no way out. Don’t look to have life explained to you, presented to you. Live the life that emanates from your interior greatness (John Patrick Shanley, The Boston Globe)
  • With God on their team | A child growing up in 1940s Ireland soon learned that there were Catholic sports and Protestant sports. Play croquet and you were forever doomed (Frank McCourt, The Age, Melbourne, Australia)

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