Bush Meets With Clergy to Discuss Faith-Based Initiatives

Plus more stories from mainstream media sources around the world.

Christianity Today December 1, 2000

Bush highlights “faith-based” initiative at meeting with religious leaders President-elect George Bush met with about 30 religious leaders and academics at the First Baptist Church in Austin yesterday. “This is not a political meeting,” he told a press conference, “This is a meeting to begin a dialogue about how best to help faith-based programs change people’s lives, how best government can encourage as opposed to discourage faith-based programs from performing their commonplace miracles of renewal.” There were other topics, too. The largest group represented at the meeting, which included Muslim and Jewish clergy as well as Christians, were African-American pastors. And almost every news organization covering the meeting noted that Bush only received about 10 percent of the African-American vote. It wasn’t lost on Bush, either. “Not everybody here voted for me,” he said. “I’m hoping to find one or two who did.” Among the Christian leaders attending were Eugene Rivers, Tony Evans, Cheryl Sanders, Jesse Miranda, Jim Wallis, Floyd Flake, Dean Trulear, and Marvin Olasky. (T.D. Jakes was invited but could not attend.) Of those, it’s somewhat safe to say that only Olasky voted for Bush (most are on the record as voting for or endorsing Gore). At the meeting, conversation touched on AIDS in Africa and other topics, but most were on Bush’s plan to involve churches and religious groups in government antipoverty programs. He reiterated his plan to create an Office of Faith-Based Action and to end regulations prohibiting religious groups from receiving federal funds. Most of the invitees seemed to come away cautiously optimistic. Meanwhile, people who weren’t invited to the meeting criticized it. Rep. Robert C. “Bobby” Scott (D-Va.) called Bush’s plans “a substitute for racial discrimination” and Jesse Jackson told The Washington Post, “I know the subplot: This is an attempt to play one group against the other.” Whatever. See coverage of the meeting from CNN, The New York Times, and the Associated Press. The transcript of Eugene Rivers’s appearance on CNN’s Inside Politics is also available.

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Turkmenistan Police Evict Christians

Families punished after four men are arrested for owning Christian videos.

Christianity Today December 1, 2000

Two more Turkmen Christian families were forcibly evicted from their Ashgabad homes by secret police agents, just 10 days after their pastor’s home was also confiscated.

Batir Nurov, who turned 24 yesterday, was thrown out of his home Tuesday with his wife, Hasanowa Enejan, and their four-month-old son, Daniel.

Nurov was reportedly given a one-hour ultimatum to evacuate his home when he was picked up by the officers of the National Security Committee (KNB) yesterday afternoon.

The police stood by while he packed and removed his things and then sealed the door. Nurov was told by officials that after his propiska (residence permit) in Ashgabad was canceled, his passport would be returned, and he would then be given copies of the formal confiscation documents.

Nurov was questioned yesterday by KNB officials as to the whereabouts of Pastor Shokhrat Piriyev and his family, who were evicted from their private home in Bagyr village near Ashgabad on December 9.

Last night a KNB agent from the Ahal district visited the home of Umit Koshkarov, ordering him and his family to be prepared to move out this morning at 8 a.m. To ensure they followed his orders, the policeman locked the house from the outside to prevent their escape and pocketed the keys.

At 11 o’clock this morning, Koshkarov’s wife Germezy confirmed by telephone that their possessions were at that moment being removed from the house. Although the flat was registered in her name, she said, the officials had never obtained her written agreement to surrender the house to the government.

According to Piriyev, the last two police evictions are a direct contradiction of Turkmen law, which requires the signature of both husband and wife for such a resolution to be validated.

Before Piriyev and his wife were evicted, she was forced to put her signature on the document her husband had already signed while under interrogation, deeding over their property to the government. Compass has obtained copies of the formal confiscation documents issued and signed by Ashgabad officials and later presented to Piriyev.

The Koshkarovs were still repaying a loan they obtained two years ago to buy the apartment, a friend of the family told Compass. As they were being put out on the street today with their 15-month-old son Suleyman, the couple said they had no place to store their household effects, and they did not know where they would find a place to stay.

The heavy-handed evictions were the latest government reprisals since late November against Piriyev and his small Protestant house church congregation, which cannot obtain legal registration under Turkmenistan’s repressive religious laws.

Together with Babamurat Gaebov, an unmarried member of their church, Piriyev, Nurov and Koshkarov were all implicated in the discovery of “contraband” Christian videos in the Turkmen language. The multiple copies of the documentary Jesus film were found in a wrecked car Nurov had been driving on November 21. The Protestant men were subjected to brutal physical torture and threats during three days of intense interrogation after the car accident.

One of the officers torturing the Christians reportedly told them at one point, “We do not need people like you in our country. You should be crushed and thrown out.” The men were beaten, given electric shocks and suffocated until they passed out.

For the past month, the KNB has subjected the men and their families to ongoing intimidation, fulfilling their threat to mete out “harsher treatment in the future.”

“They keep a psychological warfare going against us,” one of the Turkmen converts noted in December, after being hauled in again for KNB questioning. “I am learning to live with hope for only one day at a time. We need to live this day and hope we can manage it. Then we will take the next day when it comes.”

“We don’t know what to do, where to go,” Piriyev told Compass. “Our situation is getting very difficult.”

Copyright © 2000 Compass Direct.

Related Elsewhere

Read more about the four men who were arrested in early December in Christianity Today‘s “Turkmenistan Police Torture Four Christians.”

Previous Christianity Today stories about religious persecution in Turkmenistan include:

Turkmenistan Refuses To Register Bible Society | Government confiscating Turkmen, Russian Scriptures. (March 16, 2000)

Turkmen Secret Police Deports Baptist Couple | More expulsions expected as efforts continue to stop ‘illegal’ religious activity. (March 15, 2000)

Turkmen Baptist Pastor Threatened with Prison | Two church members in Turkmenabad fired from jobs

Turkmenistan Deports Two Baptist Pastors | Christians arrested last week sent to Ukraine (Dec. 29, 1999)

Two Baptist Pastors Arrested by Secret Police in Turkmenistan | Crackdown on Unregistered Minority Communities Continues (Dec. 28, 1999)

Pastor Faces Thursday Trial In Turkmenistan | Baptist minister accused of teaching children religion without parental consent. (Dec. 10, 1999)

Christians Use the Internet Too? I Thought It Was Only for the Enlightened.

Plus: Filtering out obscenity in schools and libraries, and other stories from media around the world.

Christianity Today December 1, 2000

Religion more popular than auctions, banking, and other activities online Churches and religious folk use the Web. Shocking, isn’t it? That people that believe in such backward concepts as an omniscient, omnipresent God, a Virgin Birth, and the resurrection of Jesus would use computers? You’d think so from the way some media have been reporting a recent study by the Pew Internet and American Life Project. It shouldn’t come as a surprise that churches—like everything else in America—are creating Web sites and using e-mail to make their presence known and to communicate with members. But there are still some interesting findings: 21 percent of Web users have looked for spiritual or religious information online, which is more than the 18 percent that have banked online or the 15 percent who’ve bought, sold, or bid in an online auction. But the latter two have received a lot more press than e-religion. One interesting note is how project director Lee Rainie explained the simplicity of church sites to various media—duplicating as few words as possible and tailoring each to the tone of the publication. To the Associated Press, he’s short, sweet and to the point: “It’s pretty simple stuff. It’s not real fancy, but it helps them stay connected with each other and extend their good works into the world.” To the San Francisco Chronicle, whose Silicon Valley readership is going to be snootier than most, he sticks his nose a little higher in the air: “These are pretty elementary sites for the most part. They’re not fancy and full of graphics, but in their simple way, they seem to matter to these faith institutions.” And to the populist USA Today, he speaks the language of the people: “These aren’t whiz-bang, Star Wars-type extravaganzas. They’re real meat-and-potatoes sites.” Actually, it’s USA Today that probably does the best follow-up reporting. Reporter Leslie Miller also talked to the folks over at Internet ratings site Media Metrix, who note that if people are visiting religion sites, they’re not all going to the same place. “These are still very much niche resources,” measurement analyst Anne Rickert says. “None of these sites approach the visitor numbers you’ll see on major portals, search engines, retail or Web service sites. That isn’t to say they aren’t important for a number of people.” She notes that the most-visited religion site is still only the 1,565th most popular online. USA Today dutifully runs a list of Media Metrix’s most popular religion sites, but it’s a strange list. The Christian Science Monitor? Wouldn’t that be better considered a newspaper site? Geneology site Familysearch.org is run by the Mormons, but it’s pretty religion-free in itself. And amateurish wolf-centric Ishaah.com really gets more unique visitors than ChristianityToday.com? Something’s awfully fishy about those numbers …

Filtering is now mandatory for libraries and schools, but fight is far from over Congress passed—and Clinton signed—a bill requiring all schools and libraries receiving federal funding to install and maintain filtering software on Internet terminals. Institutions that don’t install porn filters will lose the government money. As you can imagine, it’s pretty controversial. “This is a mandated censorship system by the federal government,” said Chris Hansen, a lawyer for the American Civil Liberties Union. “No adult anymore can read what they want at the library.” (He doesn’t have a very high view of adults, does he? Weblog thought all those adults in the library were actually reading legitimate books and magazines, but apparently all that’s a cover for pornhounds.) The ACLU plans to sue. The ACLJ tells them to go ahead and try. Conservative religious groups pretty much applauded. Liberal free speech groups pretty much complained. The New York Times noted that filtering software companies can expect a windfall, but also a lot of controversy. But one of the more interesting pieces came from BostonGlobe columnist Hiawatha Bray, who was going to write a column denouncing the new law, but ended up not so sure. “I can repeat the usual cliches about narrow-minded prudes and the sacred right of free expression,” he writes. “My problem is, I can’t help thinking. I imagine my two young daughters waiting to use the Internet computer at the library, while some guy in a raincoat amuses himself at the notorious www.whitehouse.com. … I’m dismayed that the federal government wants to dictate policy to every public library in the land. But I’m equally dismayed by the idea that every public library computer must become a free-fire zone for flesh-peddlers.”

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Theology

Whose Child Is This?

The early church’s opponents claimed Jesus was illegitimate. Its heretical fringe said he wasn’t human. The doctrine of the Virgin Birth set them both straight.

Christianity Today December 1, 2000
Pearl / Lightstock

Even without taking high-school biology, Joseph knew where babies come from. Yet he believed Mary's story. Should we?

The answer is yes, for anyone who believes in the full authority of the Bible. But because many today don't take Mary's word for it, we asked Richard Longenecker to sketch the shape of the debate for CT's readers.

When they tell their stories of Jesus' birth, Matthew and Luke have little in common. Matthew dwells on the fulfillment of prophecy, the visit of foreign astrologers, and the slaughter of the innocents. Luke, by contrast, reports the poetic utterances of Zechariah, Mary, and Simeon, and focuses on Mary's relatives and the visit of the shepherds.

Matthew 1:18-2:23 and Luke 1:5-2:52 are quite different. Neither writer seems to have known the other's account. Yet Matthew and Luke make one major point in common—that Jesus was born of a virgin through the power of the Holy Spirit. This agreement, amidst otherwise diverse presentations, suggests that a common tradition regarding the Virgin Birth existed before either writer recorded his story.

How did a divine mystery, agreed on by the Gospel writers, become the subject of debate?

The contemporary debate

From at least Ignatius of Antioch (writing about A.D. 110) to the nineteenth century, almost all Christians accepted the Virgin Birth as both a fact of history and a datum of theology. Believers expected marvelous events to accompany God's actions, and so the miraculous served to support faith. In addition, the Virgin Birth fit nicely with church teaching about Jesus' being the Son of God and having a sinless nature.

After the eighteenth-century intellectual revolution we call the Enlightenment, however, the miraculous created suspicion rather than faith-even among Christians. This stemmed from more than mere rationalism or the association of miracles with credulity. It also arose from the conviction that God works in and through a history like our own-and a history studded with miracles is not the kind of history we know. So in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries many scholars refused to believe that Jesus was conceived any differently from anyone else. Furthermore, the doctrine of the Virgin Birth seemed impossible to reconcile with the true humanity of Jesus.

Today, scholars are sharply divided regarding the Virgin Birth. Is it a fact of history—that is, that Jesus was conceived in the womb of a virgin without the aid of a human father? Or should it be considered an attempt of the early church to translate the mystery of God becoming a human being into terms intelligible to unsophisticated people, and so to be taken as a symbol of the truth that Jesus' birth was God's gift to humanity given entirely by grace, but without any necessary reference to the mechanics of procreation?

The hole in the sermon

If the Virgin Birth is so clearly taught by Matthew and Luke, why would some Christians question it? One answer is that the earliest Christian preachers fail to mention it, and the earliest confessions of faith omit it.

To judge by the book of Acts, the apostles' sermons did not refer to Jesus' virgin birth, but began with his adult ministry and focused on his death, resurrection, and ascension (see, for example, Peter's Pentecost sermon of 2:14-36). But that is to be expected. In choosing a replacement for Judas, the apostles stated his successor must be one who had "been with us the whole time the Lord Jesus went in and out among us, beginning from John's baptism to the time when Jesus was taken up from us" (1:21-22, NIV). And it is the redemptive events that transpired during the time the apostles were eyewitnesses that the early Christian preachers proclaimed.

Likewise, the early forms of confessions of faith, incorporated by New Testament writers into their letters, do not mention the Virgin Birth. However, two expressions in confessional portions have sometimes been claimed to allude to Jesus' virgin birth. First, some have taken born of a woman in Galatians 4:4 to imply a virgin birth, since it refers only to "a woman" without mentioning her husband. But born of a woman is simply a Jewish idiom for being human (as, for example, in Job 14:1 and Matt. 11:11/Luke 7:28. See also Josephus, Antiquities 7.21 and 16.382). The phrase itself gives no information about the biology of Jesus' birth. Rather, it tells us Jesus was truly one with us, and that he came as "the Man" to stand in our place.

Second, some take an expression found in Romans 1:3-4 to allude to Jesus' virgin birth. In speaking of our Lord's human credentials, Paul says he was "the seed [or, descendant] of David according to the flesh." Some have claimed the word seed (sperma) means male sperm from David's line, and that royal sperma, according to Luke's geneology (as it is argued), came through Mary's line, not Joseph's. But seed here means no more than it does elsewhere in Scripture: simply a descendant (cf. 2 Sam. 7:12; Ps. 89:3-4; John 7:42; Gal. 3:16, 29; 2 Tim. 2:8). What Romans 1:3-11 sets out is a two-stage Christology: that humanly, Jesus was a descendant of David; that because of the resurrection, he is legitimately declared God's Son and Lord of the human race.

Nothing is said here about a virginal conception.

Philippians 2:6-11 is a particularly significant case. Here is a Christological hymn or confession that seems to come from the heart of earliest Christian conviction and that runs the gamut from pre-existence to exaltation. Yet this "Christ-hymn" does not mention Jesus' virgin birth. Though fully human ("born of a woman") and with Davidic blood in his veins ("seed of David"), Jesus the Christ was also pre-existent and divine ("the divine nature was his from the first," NEB; "being in very nature God," NIV) and has become the Lord over all ("every knee should bow … and every tongue confess that Jesus Christ is Lord," NIV). Yet there is no reference to Jesus' virginal conception. Early Christians, evidently, did not see the Virgin Birth as a necessary part of speaking about our Lord's taking "the very nature of a servant, being made in human likeness" (v. 7, NIV).

The silence of Paul, Mark, and John

If the Virgin Birth is missing from the apostles' sermons and the earliest confessions of faith, we still might expect to find it elsewhere in the New Testament. But apart from Matthew's and Luke's infancy narratives, the New Testament has no direct statement about Jesus' virginal conception.

Paul's letters, probably the first materials of the New Testament written, speak nowhere of the Virgin Birth. And he makes no attempt to improve on the confessional statements he incorporates by adding a virginal conception.

Mark's gospel, probably the earliest canonical Gospel, is likewise silent on Jesus' virgin birth. For Mark, "the beginning of the gospel about Jesus Christ, the Son of God" (1:1, NIV) has to do with John the Baptist's preparation for Jesus, Jesus' own baptism, his temptation, his announcement of the kingdom, and Jesus' call to four fishermen to follow him (1:2-20). Mark's gospel essentially agrees with the scope of the apostles' sermons in Acts, beginning with the baptism of John and concluding with the resurrection of Jesus.

The only possible hint of a virgin birth in Mark is to be found in 6:3, where it is reported that people of Jesus' hometown called him "the carpenter, … Mary's son." In a patriarchal society, to identify someone by reference to his mother and not his father would have been unusual. But the statement is cryptic. It probably originated as a taunt by the local townsfolk suggesting that Jesus' birth was illegitimate, and so witnesses indirectly to rumors. The fact that Mark included their taunt probably signals his own consciousness of unusual circumstances associated with Jesus' birth. But it may be that the people's statement and Mark's inclusion of it are innocuous. At any rate, when both Matthew and Luke (who seem to depend here on Mark) rephrase the question, it seems that neither writer understood Mark as conveying a suggestion of illegitimacy. "Isn't this the carpenter's son? Isn't his mother's name Mary?" writes Matthew (13:55, NIV). "Isn't this Joseph's son?" writes Luke (4:22, NIV).

Apart from their infancy narratives, the virgin birth of Jesus receives no attention at all in either Matthew or Luke, the two Gospels that appear to be built on the structure of Mark. In fact, even though Matthew and Luke present Jesus' birth as coming about without a human father, they elsewhere recast Mark 6:3 so that the townsfolk of Nazareth call Jesus "the carpenter's son" or "Joseph's son" (Luke 4:22).

Likewise, there is no teaching about Jesus' virgin birth in John, which may have been the last canonical Gospel written, but which preserves material about Jesus that circulated among the earliest Christian believers. For John himself, Jesus is pre-existent, "the Word," who was divine, the Creator, the source of life, but one who "became flesh and made his dwelling among us" (1:1-14). For others portrayed by the evangelist, Jesus was "the son of Joseph" (1:45; 6:42). From neither John nor those he presents, however, is there any direct statement regarding the Virgin Birth. The only possible allusion to such an occurrence is the retort of the people in 8:41, "We are not illegitimate children." Like Mark 6:3, this retort may be a veiled insinuation that Jesus was illegitimate.

One minor variant of the text of John 1:13 is sometimes introduced into the discussion. All our Greek manuscripts, virtually all the early translations, and most of the Fathers read this verse as "[those] born not [hoi oukegennethesan] of natural descent, nor of human decision or a husband's will, but born of God" (NIV). Those is understood to mean "those who believe" to whom God has given the right to become "children of God."

One Old Latin manuscript of the third century, however, changes the plural those to the singular he. This reading was accepted by Tertullian and some of the Latin Fathers, who charged their opponents with altering the text in order to deny the Virgin Birth. But though a few modern critics and exegetes have argued for the originality of the singular, such a reading has little textual warrant and has been rightly rejected by almost all New Testament scholars.

"Nothing is impossible"

Despite the lack of explicit references to the Virgin Birth elsewhere in the New Testament, Matthew's and Luke's infancy narratives clearly present Jesus' virginal conception in the womb of Mary without the involvement of a man.

In Matthew, Mary is discovered to be already pregnant before having marital relations with her betrothed husband Joseph; Joseph contemplates divorcing her so as not to put her to "public disgrace"; but "an angel of the Lord" assures Joseph that Mary's pregnancy is the result of God's design through the action of the Holy Spirit; and so Joseph "took Mary home as his wife, but had no union with her until she gave birth to a son," whom he named Jesus.

In Luke 1:26-38 the angel announces to Mary the conception of a son in her womb through the intervention of God's Holy Spirit; calms her fears regarding the unnaturalness of such a conception by assuring her of divine providence; and points to her aged relative Elizabeth's pregnancy as a sign that "nothing is impossible with God."

Matthew's and Luke's infancy narratives have, of course, a number of features in common: (1) the principal characters are Jesus, Mary, and Joseph; (2) Jesus' birth occurred during the reign of Herod the Great; (3) Mary was betrothed to Joseph; (4) Joseph was of Davidic descent; (5) Jesus was born in Bethlehem; (6) Jesus was given his name by heavenly direction; (7) Jesus as (reputedly) Joseph's son was also of Davidic descent; and (8) the family finally settled in Nazareth.

In matters of perspective, organization, and almost every other detail, however, the two accounts are decidedly different. Neither writer, it seems, was dependent on the other's account; nor, in all probability, did either of the evangelists even know of the other's work.

Yet the one major item that both evangelists, despite their diverse presentations, include—an item which goes far beyond the expected matters in the story line—is Jesus' virginal conception by the action of the Holy Spirit. Despite the lack of reference to the Virgin Birth elsewhere, its appearance in these two independent accounts (as well as the prominence it holds in both) suggests that a common tradition regarding the virginal conception of Jesus circulated within the early church prior to the writing of both Matthew's gospel and Luke's.

A number of questions, of course, immediately arise: Historically, it must be asked, Where did this tradition of Jesus' virgin birth come from? Why is it absent from what we know of the earliest confessions and preaching of the early church, in the earliest letters we have from the early church, and in our earliest canonical Gospel? Why does it appear in the infancy narratives of Matthew and Luke, with attention being focused on it in both?

Doctrinally it must be asked: Of what significance was the Virgin Birth for first-century Christians? And of what significance should it be for Christians today?

Some suggest that Matthew's and Luke's accounts of the Virgin Birth are seen as having been motivated by their desire to counter a rising heresy in the early church, the mistaken belief that Jesus was not really human, but only appeared to be flesh and blood. A later form of this heresy, called Docetism, prompted Christians to include phrases such as "born of the Virgin Mary" and "suffered under Pontius Pilate" in their creeds.

This suggestion would explain, to some extent, why there is no reference to the Virgin Birth in the earlier New Testament materials, and why the idea appeared only later when the docetic heresy arose. Yet while such an explanation is a possible rationale for the inclusion of infancy narratives in both Matthew and Luke, it does not adequately answer the question of why there is an emphasis on Jesus' virgin birth in these two narratives, for a virgin birth would seem to separate Jesus from the rest of humanity rather than simply identify him as being truly human.

A more likely explanation for the stress on the Virgin Birth in Matthew and Luke has to do with the need of first-century Christians to counter the suggestions of irregularity and the rumors of illegitimacy that were probably then circulating about Jesus' birth-hints of which may appear in the Gospels themselves. Reports that Jesus' birth was illegitimate were widespread among both pagans and Jews in the second and third centuries (see, for example, Origen, Contra Celsus 1.28, 32, 69; Tertullian, De Spectaculis 30.3; Mish. Yebamoth 4.13; Tos. Hullin 2.22-23; JerT. Abodah Zarah 40d; JerT. Sabbath 14d; BabT. Sabbath 104b; BabT. Sanhedrin 67a). And it is highly probable that such rumors had their origins in Jesus' own day.

It seems that the early Christians had only two choices when opponents used such rumors to deny their proclamation: They could either accede to such a charge (which, of course, they couldn't) or they could affirm the supernatural character of Jesus' birth in a way that accounted for the unusual circumstances. And Christians today, when they stop to think about it, are faced with the same alternatives.

Yet though apologetic interests may have motivated Matthew and Luke to lay stress on the Virgin Birth, it is equally important to recognize distinctions between early Christian proclamation and early Christian teaching that was given in support of that proclamation. The earliest Christian confessions and preaching, so far as the New Testament itself tells us, did not include the Virgin Birth. Nor did Mark's gospel, which shares the flavor of the early proclamation; nor John's gospel, which is evangelistic; nor Paul's letters, which deal with specific pastoral problems.

Matthew's gospel and Luke's gospel, however, have more distinctly teaching functions and were written to serve in support of the basic Christian proclamation, with each writer suiting his portrayal of the life and ministry of Jesus to the particular mindset of his respective audience. Each in his own way has reorganized Mark's proclamation to serve his own instructional purposes, has added to Mark more narrative material, and has inserted many more sayings of Jesus than Mark has given. And so both Matthew and Luke have set out the basic Christian proclamation about Jesus ("beginning from John's baptism to the time when Jesus was taken up from us") with introductory material that focuses on Jesus as having been born of a virgin—a focus understandable when seen as part of their teaching purpose, but especially understandable in light of probable rumors of illegitimacy that were then current.

The Virgin Birth today

Martin Luther once remarked, somewhat lightly, that the Incarnation consists of three miracles: "The first, that God became man; the second, that a virgin was a mother; and the third, that the heart of man should believe this." The way people think about miracles, however, has always been plagued by predispositions, presuppositions, and prejudices. And thinking about the Virgin Birth has suffered the same fate—there are signs today of a changing attitude toward the miraculous among many New Testament scholars and theologians.

Indeed, Christians must always affirm that "born of the virgin Mary" is a theological statement signaling that Jesus is, in a unique sense, God's Son. Yet we may also affirm that the God of the miraculous has accomplished his purpose in the Incarnation in the manner stated by both Matthew and Luke. The Incarnation itself, of course, is the greater miracle and the primary focus of Christian proclamation. The Virgin Birth, while an important facet of Christian teaching, has to do only with the means God used in the Incarnation. No doubt God could have brought about a true union of divinity with humanity in a number of ways, some quite natural and others extraordinary. In a theology that is biblically based, the Virgin Birth is neither the basis for nor the evidence of the Incarnation. Nevertheless, Jesus' virginal conception is a further sign in the whole story of Christmas signaling that God's great gift to humanity is given entirely by grace. That sign seems to have been brought to the fore only to counter specific attacks on the Christian proclamation, but it continues today, apart from that apologetic interest, as a sign of divine grace.

At Christmas, it is the Incarnation we celebrate. In our proclamation and pastoral care, it is that Incarnation we proclaim and build upon. In our fuller understanding of the message of the gospel, however, the Virgin Birth has its place. It may be an offense to those who consider themselves "too modern to believe such nonsense." But it is hardly as offensive to the modern world as the Incarnation itself, "the preaching of the Cross," belief in the resurrection of Jesus, or trust in Christ's promised return—matters that form the basis of Christian belief. So at Christmas we celebrate what God has done to incarnate his Son, understanding something of how the proclamation of the Incarnation was clarified by the early Christians and accepting the Virgin Birth as one gleaming facet of that shining story.

"Whose Child Is This?" originally appeared in Christianity Today on December 17, 1990. At the time, Richard N. Longenecker was a senior editor of Christianity Today. He is now distinguished professor of New Testament at McMaster University in Hamilton, Ontario.

Copyright © 2000 Christianity Today. Click for reprint information.

My Meeting With the President-Elect

An inside view of Bush’s meeting with religious leaders.

Christianity Today December 1, 2000

On Wednesday, December 20, I sat down with a small circle of American religious leaders to talk with President-elect George W. Bush. He flew us into Austin, Texas, to talk with him for about one and a half hours about how his administration can strengthen the contribution of faith-based organizations (FBOs) in overcoming poverty in America. In light of all we have been doing in Evangelicals for Social Action and all I said in Just Generosity: A New Vision for Overcoming Poverty in America to promote an expanded role for FBOs, I was obviously delighted to be present.

The group included folk as diverse as Marvin Olasky and Jim Wallis, the president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, and a Muslim Imam. The Washington Post wrongly announced the day before that the meeting was only for African-American pastors and was designed as an end run around the older “civil-rights” leaders. There were a large number of African-American leaders there (Floyd Flake, John Perkins, Tony Evans, Bishop Charles Blake), but almost two-thirds of the group were white or Latino. President Bush brought his chief of staff Andrew Card, a key domestic policy advisor, former Indianapolis mayor Stephen Goldsmith, and his top speech writer, Michael Gerson.

Often, during the campaign, Bush promised to place great emphasis on FBOs if he became President. The fact that he decided to devote the first of a series of policy-focused meetings with key leaders on different topics to the issue of FBOs’ overcoming poverty demonstrates that Bush intends to make this a high priority early in his new administration. Even after his chief of staff announced that the President-elect needed to leave for another meeting to announce a cabinet appointee, Bush stayed another fifteen minutes to continue the conversation.

I came away from the meeting strengthened in my sense that the next President genuinely understands the power of the spiritual transformation that FBOs can nurture. He talked about “poverty of the wallet and poverty of the soul,” noting that government can and should work at education and health care, but that it cannot heal people’s hearts. With a passion that was striking, he asked us what he needs to do to show that he listens to other voices than just “white guy Republicans.”

In the one-page briefing paper that I handed him (along with a copy of Just Generosity), I listed a couple basic assumptions. To reduce poverty, (a) we need both moral/spiritual renewal and greater economic opportunity, and (b) we must simultaneously work for stronger, wholesome two-parent families and make sure those who do work full time responsibly get well out of poverty and can afford health insurance.

Then I offered several specific suggestions, including tax credits for donations to non-profits working to overcome poverty; major expansion of Charitable Choice; and several legislative items that would both expand the income of the working poor and also include a marriage incentiveラi.e., the specific things I outlined in my last E-Pistle (which conveniently appeared as an Op.Ed. in The Dallas Morning News the day before the meeting with Bush). And of course I asked him to use his Presidential “pulpit” to tell everyone that expanding the role of FBOs does not eliminate the crucial need for effective government anti-poverty programs.

Does all of this make any difference? Only the future will tell. Every President faces so many contradictory pressures. Libertarians will push Bush to use the talk about FBOs as mere window dressing. But we did have a brief opportunity to share some good ideas. Speaking for Call to Renewal (there were six Call leaders at the meeting), Jim Wallis urged the President-elect to promise in his Inaugural Address to announce the goal of reducing child poverty by 50 percent in the next four years. Bush’s chief of staff, Andrew Card, was sitting next to me, so I handed him a copy of my proposals. Bush told several of us to talk to his speech writer, Mike Gerson (a Wheaton College grad) who indicated he would be glad to stay in touch.

I am grateful for the meeting and the possibility of future input, but it would be silly to suppose that our meeting significantly changed the next President’s agenda. Fortunately, the U.S. treasury, not ESA, paid for my plane ticket.

One person told Mr. Bush that he is the most prayed-for person in the world right now. Let’s all pray that the next President learns to listen to the voices of the poor as much as God wants him to.

Ronald J. Sider is president of Evangelicals for Social Action.

Related Elsewhere

Visit the Evangelicals for Social Action homepage.

Read Ron Sider’s editorial on FBOs that appeared in The Dallas Morning News.

Read Sider’s bio or read what Religion & Liberty had to say about Sider’s “continued influence.”

Christianity Today also profiled Sider in “Ron Sider’s Unsettling Crusade,” and reviewed his book in “Putting the Poor on the National Agenda.”

Other media coverage includes The Houston Chronicle‘s “Bush Meets with Religious Leaders On Welfare Reform’s Next Step.”

Previous Christianity Today coverage of Bush, his faith, and his thought on FBOs includes:

The Bush Agenda | Will the White House be user-friendly for religious organizations? (Dec. 15, 2000)

Bush’s Call to Prayer | After Al Gore’s concession, evangelical leaders unify around faith-based initiatives, morality, and prayer as the incoming Bush administration gears up. (Dec. 14, 2000)

Anniversary of Church Shootings Serves as Reminder for Bush | Presidential candidate promises to battle religious bigotry in wake of Texas tragedy. (Sept. 15, 2000)

A Presidential Hopeful’s Progress | The spiritual journey of George W. Bush starts in hardscrabble west Texas. Will the White House be his next stop? (Sept. 5, 2000)

Bush and Gore Size Up Prolife Running Mates | Will abortion stances play an influential role in Vice Presidential selection? (July 17, 2000)

Might for Right? | As presidential primaries get under way, Christian conservatives aim to win. (Feb. 3, 2000)

God Bless America’s Candidates | What the religious and mainstream presses are saying about religion on the campaign trail and other issues. (Dec. 10, 1999)

Bush’s Faith-Based Plans | Bush argues that private religious organizations can partner successfully with government. (October 25, 1999)

Can I Get a Witness? | Candidate testimonies must move beyond piety to policy. (August 9, 1999)

Reconnecting with the Poor | If people are hurting, it’s our business. (Jan. 11, 1999)

Christians Hammered by Pre-Christmas Violence

200 Christians driven from a small town in Gujarat, India, and their church converted into a Hindu temple.

Christianity Today December 1, 2000

In a renewed round of pre-Christmas violence, Hindu extremists in India assaulted priests and nuns and ransacked Christian churches and schools. Christian leaders fear the worst is yet to come amid the country’s growing atmosphere of intolerance and communalism.

Christian organizations have repeatedly sought protection from the authorities in the largely Hindu country, but to no avail. Fanatical Hindu organizations such as the Rashtiriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), the Sangh Parivar (SP), and the Vishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP) receive support from the ruling Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP).

In November about 400 VHP activists desecrated and forcibly took over a church belonging to the Evangelical Church of India in Surat District, Gujarat state. The church’s cross was removed from the altar and replaced by Hindu idols. In addition, a saffron flag, symbolizing that the church was now a place of Hindu worship, was hoisted.

A five-member fact-finding team headed by John Dayal, secretary general of the All-India Christian Council (AICC), alleged that Hindu fundamentalist organizations were trying to convert the church into a temple. The matter, now a national controversy, is pending in court.

In the incident, about 80 Christian families, some 200 tribal Christians in all, were driven out of the village, taking refuge in a nearby forest. VHP activists have warned that the Christians will only be allowed back if they embrace Hinduism. Area Christians blame the district police for aiding the VHP.

“The situation in Gujarat has deteriorated,” stated Joseph D’Souza, president of the AICC. “We feel that the government is conniving with the Sangh Parivar outfits. We take very strong objection [to] the government’s claim that the church land is disputed–and [to] the forcible takeover of the church.”

Dayal says, “We have ample proof that the government is conniving with the Hindu fundamentalists and is putting pressure on the police and judiciary.”

In Gwalior, several men forced their way into the home of a 64-year-old priest, C. Alphonse. They beat him with sticks and iron rods, leaving him with a head injury and fractured arms, legs, and teeth in the 1 a.m. attack. Meanwhile, thugs with the radical Bajrang Dal group and the VHP assaulted a pastor, Amulya Pegu, in Majuli, Assam, apparently to curtail the growing Christian influence in the area.

In Uttar Pradesh state, armed men held captive nuns of St. Mary’s Convent in Haridwar District while looting cash and other valuables. In Kolar District of Karnataka state, a mob of about 100 threw stones at Christians and a church, alleging that conversionist pamphlets and books were being distributed.

In in Bokaro village, near Ranchi, in Bihar state, more than a dozen armed men assaulted the St. Anna High School’s principal and three nuns. After raping the cook, they fled with cash and other valuables. School officials accuse local authorities of failure to take action against the culprits.

In northeastern Manipur state, gunmen abducted and murdered a 32-year-old priest, Shajan Jacob Chittinapilly. He was taken to a field and shot in the forehead, at point-blank range.

Condemning the attacks, the AICC has urged Prime Minster A.B. Vajpayee to take action. The United Christian Forum for Human Rights (UCFHR), meanwhile, has urged the government to act firmly against the continuing violence and is seeking protection for Christian workers in northeastern Indian states.

“Churches and Christians have become more and more vulnerable, particularly in the states where the Sang Parivar has strong influence,” D’Souza notes. “Minority bashing is going on as the [government refuses] to enforce the rule of law. I am sure the situation is going to deteriorate further [since] the VHP is conniving with the authorities.”

“We are broadening our campaign against violence and seeking the support of other communities, [such as] Buddhists and even moderate Muslims,” D’Souza adds.” In solidarity with even secular Hindus and civil society, we will continue to put moral and political pressure on the government.”

Meanwhile, Richard Howell, general secretary of the Evangelical Fellowship of India, sees the pre-Christmas violence, particularly in Gujarat, as part of a continuing three- to four-year trend.” It is part of the Hindu fundamentalists’ communal strategy,” Howell says. “Hatred and humiliation of minorities is their agenda. The violence against Christians has long been there, but now it is backed up by communal forces, unashamedly. And the silence of the government is a new dimension.”

Delhi’s archbishop, Vincent Michael Concessao, views the renewed violence in the light of a rightist propaganda campaign against evangelism. “The literature ascribing wrong motives over conversions and Christianity is being spread, now even in the remote villages,” Concessao says. “And the authorities are unable to catch the culprits.”

The archbishop says the violence is linked to Christian efforts to serve the downtrodden in India, such as the Dalits (formerly known as untouchables).

“I am not a prophet, but I am sure that things are going to worsen,” Concessao says. “The more we work for the poor and Dalits, and the more they are going to demand their rights, the [more the] violence will escalate. But that’s the price we have to pay to fight for equality and justice. And we should be prepared to face this.”

Ronald J. Sider is president of Evangelicals for Social Action.

Related Elsewhere

Read more about how you can pray for India from Operation World.

Previous Christianity Today articles about religious tensions in India include:

Indian Christian Youth Form Protection Group | Non-violent group aims to counter attacks on Christians through peaceful solidarity. (Nov. 12, 2000)

A Chinese Model for India’s Churches? | No thank you, say Indian Christians to Hindu proposal for government church regulation. (Oct. 12, 2000)

Study of Indian Clergy Exposes Inequalities in Church Leadership | Many low-caste and rural Indians are Christians, but few have positions of influence within the church. (Oct. 9, 2000)

U.S. Religious Freedom Commission Criticized | Indian churches reject U.S. inquiry, but Pakistani Christians welcome it. (Oct. 3, 2000)

Plans to Resolve India’s Interfaith Tensions Face Delays and Accusations | Did India’s National Commission for Minorities plan a meeting to discredit Christians? (July 20, 2000)

India’s First Dalit Archbishop Holds ‘No Grudge’ Over Predecessor’s Attack | Once “untouchable” Dalits make up bulk of country’s Christians. (May 11, 2000)

India’s Christians Resist Move to Register Conversions | State’s legislation unconstitutional, says leaders. (May 2, 2000)

Build Bridges, but Fight Fanaticism, India’s Churches Told | National Council of churches in India will work against strengthening of caste system. (Mar. 9, 2000)

Festive Flora

Deck the halls with boughs of pagan signifigance, falalalala, lalalala.

Christianity Today December 1, 2000
Ekaterina Kondratova / Shutterstock

A few weeks ago, a reader asked about the origin of the wreath. She had heard that it was meant to be a symbol of Christ's crown of thorns. That connection is a stretch, but the wreath and other Christmastime foliage have symbolized many things over the centuries, some of them Christian.

The wreath seems to represent a convergence of two lines of tradition. On one side, it's probably related to circlets worn on the head. In cultures of the ancient Persian Empire, nobles wore diadems of fabric and sometimes jewels, and Greeks rewarded Olympic victors and other high achievers with laurel crowns. It's unclear how such headgear was transformed into wall decor, but perhaps people just hung their crowns up as souvenirs. Neither Christmas nor Advent wreaths are worn as headbands, though for the Swedish festival of St. Lucia, on December 13, the family's eldest daughter wears a headpiece decorated with greenery and nine lighted candles.

Though early Roman Christians used laurel in their Christmas decorations because it symbolized victory, glory, and cleansing from guilt, Europeans largely favored evergreens. This shows the modern wreath's other heritage: German and Celtic solstice festivities. In cold, northern climates, people latched onto anything that represented light and life against darkness and despair. As a result, their favorite winter symbols included torches (analagous to Advent candles) and plants that stayed green all year. A wreath with burning candles, then, is related to the Yule logラa good-luck charm held over from the 12-day Norse winter festival of Jol. Christmas candles may also be related to Hanukkah candles, as both of the nearly concurrent observances celebrate holy light.

Though wreaths have no direct connection to Christ's crown, holly does. European Christians in the Middle Ages said that its prickly leaves and red berries represented thorns and drops of blood. Some also believed that the cross was made of holly, though others believed it was made of oak. Holly used in Christmas decorations was often kept after the holiday for protectionラagainst witchcraft in England and against lightning in Germany.

Decorative mistletoe, too, usually lasted beyond the Christmas season, until Candlemas (February 2) or even until the next year, when a new sprig took its place. The kissing tradition stems from an old Scandinavian custom whereby enemies who met under mistletoe in the forest would lay down their weapons and maintain a truce until the next day. Mistletoe is usually excluded from church decorations, for the obvious reason, but also because the plant was worshiped by Druids, who believed it could cure all diseases.

Perhaps the only Christmas plant without pagan superstitions attached to is the poinsettia. Dr. Joel Roberts Poinsett, the American ambassador to Mexico, brought the flower to this country in 1829. Mexicans call it the "flower of Holy Night" because its red bracts (they're not petals) make a shape like the Star of Bethlehem. According to a Mexican legend, long ago a poor boy was afraid to enter the church on Christmas Eve because he had no gift to bring the baby Jesus. In prayer, the boy told God that he really wanted to bring a gift but could not afford one. When the boy opened his eyes, a poinsettia bloomed at his feet. He joyfully brought the plant inside, an act that might relate to the practice in many churches of decking the altar with poinsettias.

Christian History Corner will be taking next week off, so Merry Christmas, Happy New Year, and we'll see you in the real new millennium.

Elesha Coffman is associate editor of Christian History.

Related Elsewhere

Information for this article was found in Holiday Symbols, edited by Sue Ellen Thompson (Omnigraphics, 1998), and at www.neiu.edu/~history/wei3.htm

Read about the significance of Christmas Trees.

Learn more about holiday symbols like holly, mistletoe, and laurel.

This article from The Corpus Christi Caller-Times discusses the symbolism of evergreens.

More about pointsettas.

Christian History Corner appears every Friday at ChristianityToday.com. Previous Christian History Corners include:

Peace on Earth? | Christmas Carols and the Civil War (Dec. 15, 2000)

Why December 25? | The month and day of Christ's birth have been hotly disputed for centuries. (Dec. 8, 2000)

The Book Everyone Should Buy | Or at least know about, anyway. (Dec. 1, 2000)

The Saga of St. Chad | A tale of political maneuvers and positioning. Sound familiar? (Nov. 22, 2000)

Accidental Radical | Jan Hus's ideas seem normal now, but in his age they were revolutionary enough to merit death. (November 17, 2000)

Top 10 Reasons to Read This Book | A list of Christian books that changed the century introduces authors and their impact on evangelicalism. (Nov. 10, 2000)

The Un-Denomination | The Southern Baptist Convention has been historically Un-Conventional. (Nov. 3, 2000)

Soul Crisis at the Conference on Faith and History | Academics gather asking questions like, "What does 'Christian history' actually mean?" (Oct. 27, 2000)

Case of the Missing Relic | A piece of Jesus' cross is stolen from a Toronto cathedralラor is it? (Oct. 20, 2000)

The Politicians' Patron | Is Thomas More a saintly model? (Oct. 13, 2000)

General Revelations | Reconsidering Robert E. Lee and Ulysses S. Grant. (Oct. 6, 2000)

Olympia Revisited | Christianity and the Olympic Games were once competitors, but at other times have been on the same team. (Sept. 29, 2000)

Weighty Matters | Gwen Shamblin's teachings sound an awful lot like some in the early churchラand not in a good way. (Sept. 22, 2000)

In Errancy | Want to know what's wrong with the Western church? Start with a list. (Sept. 15, 2000)

"Kill Them All" | The medieval church was deadly serious about eliminating 'heretical' Cathars. (Sept. 11, 2000)

All Together Now | What qualifies as an ecumenical council anyway? (Sept. 1, 2000)

Family-Friendly Internet Service Provider Allegedly Fraudulent

Plus: Destroying churches both legally (in California) and violently (in Indonesia), and other stories from around the world.

Christianity Today December 1, 2000

Families On Line founder investigated for fraud Mark Thurman, CEO and founder of filtered Internet service provider Families On Line is being investigated by the FBI for mail fraud, wire fraud, and money laundering. “A convicted thief with a lengthy rap sheet, the Fort Lauderdale resident and his associates may have made off with more than $1 million of investors’ money—spending it on everything from car financing to $5,000 worth of sex toys,” reports The Miami Herald. The Internet company got into trouble earlier this year when it promised its customers Playstation 2 consoles—then claimed it was duped by its supplier. “It is absolutely 100 percent evident that we were scammed,” Thurman told the media. But prosecutors now say it was Thurman who masterminded the Playstation 2 scam as part of a larger scheme to defraud investors. “The problem is that the Internet has … become a haven for those who prey on society,” Thurman says in his site’s “Message from the Founder.” Apparently he might know all too well what he’s talking about.

Churches can destroy historic buildings, says California Supreme Court In a 4-3 decision last week, the California Supreme Court upheld a 1994 state law exempting churches from landmark preservation laws. The law had come after many churches—especially the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Los Angeles—sought to overhaul or close buildings. Churches, the law said, could now declare their buildings (including schools, hospitals, and other structures) exempt from preservation laws. “By providing the exemption, the state simply stepped out of the way of the religious property owner,” wrote Justice Marvin Baxter. Without the law, Baxter said, preservation concerns “could affect the ability of many owners to carry out their religious missions.” In one of the two dissenting opinions, Justice Kathryn Mickle Werdegar argued that landmark protection should overrule religious concerns: “Particularly in California, with its relative paucity of historic buildings and its population perpetually rich in newcomers, preserving what landmarks we have is all the more vital to creating and continuing a sense of community.” The new regulations apparently won’t make a difference to those churches that are already historic landmarks (like Aimee Semple McPherson’s Angelus Temple in Los Angeles, which is also fighting for renovations). See also the Associated Press‘s story, and the court’s decision in PDF format.

Christmas eve bombing campaign against Christians takes 15 lives Churches in nine Indonesian cities were bombed Christmas Eve, killing 15 and injuring about 100. The bombs exploded within minutes of each other—just before midnight Mass and prayer services were beginning. “Most were left in cars outside churches, including the Roman Catholic cathedral in the capital, Jakarta,” reports the British Independent newspaper. “Clergymen received others at their homes, wrapped as gifts. One bomb went off in Mataram, on the tourist island of Lombok. Police defused another 13 devices at various locations.” Last night, the end of Ramadan, officials feared retaliation. But Indonesia stayed relatively calm.

More articles of interest:

Related Elsewhere

See our past Weblog updates:

December 22 | 21 | 20 | 19 | 18

December 15 | 14 | 13 | 12

December 8 | 7 | 6 | 5 | 4

December 1 | November 30 | 29 | 28 | 27

November 22 | 21 | 20

November 17 | 16 | 15 | 14 | 13

November 10 | 9 | 8 | 7 | 6

November | 3 | 2 | 1 October 31 | 30

Film Form: A Two-Hour Tour

What Christian film critics are saying about Cast Away, The Family Man, Miss Congeniality, Quills, and other holiday releases.

Christianity Today December 1, 2000

Christmas weekend brought three films with characters who become new people—a Fed Ex manager becomes an isolated islander in Cast Away, a wealthy businessman becomes a suburban father in The Family Man, and a tomboy FBI agent becomes a beauty-pageant contestant in Miss Congeniality. Christian critics mostly approved of the transformations, but questioned the manner in which they were achieved.

What’s Hot Christian reviewers were divided on the spiritual conclusions in Cast Away, which finds harried Federal Express manager Chuck Noland (Tom Hanks) stranded on a desert island where his only goal becomes survival—which involves not just food and water but hope. “A very important message is revealed in the film,” says Movie Reporter Phil Boatwright. “No matter how futile our existence may seem, life has the remarkable ability of suddenly bringing design to light, giving us not just hope, but purpose.” Boatwright also praises the film for it’s “commanding photography, a compassionate script and an inspiring performance by the film’s star. And with only one profanity and two obscenities, it prefers to tell its story without bombarding us with objectionable content.” The U.S. Catholic Conference calls it a “finely crafted drama,” and says that “with Hanks’ superb performance at its center, director Robert Zemeckis movingly probes what matters most when someone is stripped of his everyday life and possessions.” Preview also lauds Hanks, who “turns in another strong performance in this largely one-man show,” and found it reassuring that “Chuck draws spiritual strength from a package painted with angel wings.”

However, other critics believed that Chuck’s spiritual survival was more humanistic in nature. Jim Mhoon, a contributing analyst to Focus on the Family, says “the story suggests that Chuck’s near death and isolated struggle leads him to an epiphany of what is truly important. Unfortunately, the movie doesn’t reveal what those important things are.” Where Robinson Crusoe “turned to a Bible and found God in the midst of nothingness … Chuck Noland befriends a volleyball.” Michael Elliott of Crosswalk.com wonders if the corporate work ethic isn’t lifted up as Chuck’s savior. “The FedEx mystique of ‘absolutely positively’ getting the job done is an unspoken, but observable, element to the film. The mindset and habits Chuck developed in his role as a Fed Ex employee become his tools to survival.” Holly McClure of Crosswalk.com says, “I would have expected [director Robert] Zemeckis to take us through sort of a spiritual journey of a man who washes on shore and has no hope of ever escaping other than a miracle. … Even if his character doesn’t believe in God, then let’s see him get angry, rationalize, cry out, grow with a deeper insight about himself and what his life was.” Screenwriter William Boyles Jr. says in an interview at Beliefnet that “We wanted this thing to be a message of hope, ultimately. That you don’t live by coconuts alone.” But Movieguide didn’t find much hope in the film, saying it has “an existential fatalistic” tone.

What’s NewThe Family Man is riff on It’s a Wonderful Life and A Christmas Carol formula; ruthless businessman Jack Campbell (Nicolas Cage) is shown what his life would have been like had he married his college sweetheart and settled in the suburbs. “This movie embraces and elevates marriage, family and true love, placing everything of importance in perspective,” raves Holly McClure of Crosswalk.com. “This is one of those movies that has hilarious, touching, poignant moments … all are woven into a story full of humanity and hope.” Movieguide agrees: “Very well written, it makes you laugh and cry. Better yet, it’s an intentionally moral movie. It wants to prove that everyone needs love, marriage, children, and that these things are much more important than fame or fortune.” However, other Christian critics found a few chinks in the armor. Movie Reporter Phil Boatwright calls the film “the season’s best holiday treat,” but laments that it’s “dominated by a humanistic view [that’s] bent on separating God from entertainment. … The film’s angel seems more a representative of Rod Serling than the Lord Jehovah.” Focus on the Family‘s Bob Smithouser says, “This could’ve been a wonderful family film if not for profanity, sexual situations, alcohol use and fairly explicit nudity.” Peter T. Chattaway, a freelance Christian reviewer, writes at Beliefnet that “movies about the evils of greed should always be taken with a grain of salt, not least when they are produced by major studios owned by multinational corporations.” He adds that the movie is too unrealistic to be taking seriously: “The audience is given the impression that Married Jack has led a basically blissful life, while Single Jack is a smug, hollow fellow who desperately needs a spiritual tune-up. Married Jack, in other words, feels too good to be true.” The U.S. Catholic Conference flat-out didn’t like it, calling the film a “flawed romantic comedy … with its routine plot, obvious jokes and cliched characters.” Michael Elliott of Crosswalk.com acknowledges that “director Brett Ratner lets the schmaltz run a bit thickly at times, but as this is a holiday story about love and second chances, he can be forgiven. Overall, it is a warm and funny romantic comedy, which leaves the audience glowing in appreciation.”

Miss Congeniality is a lightweight comedy about an unkempt FBI agent (Sandra Bullock) who must transform into a beauty queen in order to catch a pageant-haunting terrorist. Christian critics didn’t find much substance here, so most disagreements came over how funny it was. Holly McClure of Crosswalk.com says it’s great for anyone “looking for a funny, lighthearted comedy with a touch of romance,” and admires Bullock for being “one of the few actresses who can reel off deprecating remarks about herself and get away with it. She’s confident in this role because she gets to be the clown and the beauty, but the clown’s still underneath.” Preview agrees that it’s a “hilarious, slapstick comedy,” and Crosswalk.com‘s Michael Elliott says Bullock is able to transcend the weak script: “Bullock’s slapstick performance is game enough to keep us from totally dismissing the film as pure nonsense. She’s simply fun to watch, even in a film as slight as this one.” Other Christian critics felt the story was too much of a millstone. “The script is clunky and obvious,” writes Bob Smithouser of Focus on the Family. “For one thing, the ‘mad bomber’ whodunit creates no real mystery or tension. We know how it will end because we’ve seen it all before. … The characters are as thin as the plot.” The U.S. Catholic Conference calls it a “dull-witted comedy [with] pedestrian writing and strained humor,” and Movie Reporter Phil Boatwright says “it’s not original, suspenseful, or even all that funny. The best that can be said for this 110-minute film is that it is diverting.” Movieguide chides it for treating its subject too lightly: “Things brought to the surface, such as one character’s abrasive treatment of another and Gracie’s personal struggles, are never explored. Even though the movie is a comedy, these defects seem to keep things on a level that is more silly than funny.”

Christian critics held no such ambivalence about Quills, a fictionalized drama about the last days of sexual provocateur Marquis De Sade (Geoffrey Rush). Movieguide says the films seems “to side with De Sade’s blasphemous attacks on God and Jesus Christ in the story. … Quills slanders the reputation of the real-life clergyman who always treated the Marquis with Christian kindness, despite his rebellion against Christianity. The movie also favors complete artistic freedom and contends that one must know the horrors of vice in order to know the wonders of virtue.” Preview also doubts its treatment of the artistic spirit: “Designed to show the complex issues of censorship and the potential corrupting influence of art, the film becomes a witness for rather than against censorship.” The U.S. Catholic Conference says the film “repulses the sensibilities with explicit images … including a menage a trois, intermittent violence, [and] base sexual dialogue.” ChildCare Action Project‘s Thomas A. Carder says he “was morally and ethically offended [by the] sexual immorality, perverse speech and vile imagery,” and wrestled with whether to spend “precious slivers of my life” completing his reporting on the film.

What’s Noteworthy In Finding Forrester, a high-school jock (newcomer Rob Brown) with a hidden talent for writing befriends reclusive Pulitzer-Prize winner William Forrester (Sean Connery). Movieguide says it’s “a sometimes dramatic, sometimes hilarious movie that takes the audience to an uplifting end without being sickeningly sweet.” The review also calls it a “gem of a movie” with “lessons on friendship, honor and trust.” Michael Elliott of Crosswalk.com agrees, saying it’s “a wonderful film about an unusual friendship. Two strong performances and an intelligent script make for an enjoyable and inspiring movie.” Elliott praises Connery for allowing “us to see the frailties, weaknesses and insecurities of a man who purposely withdrew from the world and its criticisms,” and Brown for “a quiet, subtle strength of character and will.” He also admires “how difficult it is to effectively convey [a love of the written word] without it becoming boring or pompous. Finding Forrester is neither. It succeeds magnificently.” Preview is also complimentary, saying it “features superb, Oscar-worthy acting and an inspiring story,” but does note that “unnecessary vulgar language detracts significantly” from the film.

Steve Lansingh is editor of TheFilmForum.com, an Internet magazine devoted to Christian conversation about the movies.

Related Elsewhere

See earlier Film Forum postings for these movies in the box-office top ten:What Women Want, How The Grinch Stole Christmas, The Emperor’s New Groove,Dude, Where’s My Car?, Vertical Limit, and Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon.

Schism Threatens Brownsville Assembly of God as School Head Fired

Plus: Jordan archaeologists think they might have found John the Baptist, and other articles from mainstream media sources around the world.

Christianity Today December 1, 2000

Founder of Brownsville Revival School of Ministry fired by board Michael L. Brown, founder and president of the Pensacola, Florida, Brownsville Revival School of Ministry (BRSM), was voted out by the school’s board of directors last week, apparently because he would not join the Assemblies of God. According to a statement by the school’s board, the denomination “made a multimillion-dollar loan to BRSM at the request of Pastor [John] Kilpatrick [head pastor of the Brownsville Assembly of God] to purchase the current campus, and requested some form of simple accountability for Dr. Brown to represent their interests. It was suggested that Dr. Brown hold credentials with the Assemblies of God during the time of his duties as President of the school.” Brown’s version corroborates the story, for the most part: “After much prayer, God dealt with me that I was not to be Assemblies. It was contrary to his calling for my own life. I was to reflect something different from that. I shared that with Pastor and he then gave me an ultimatum.” The ensuing controversy is largely being played out online. Brown, the board, and the church have been busy posting updates on their Web sites, with most of the statements posted on Christmas Eve. “It has ruined our Christmas,” Kilpatrick told his congregation. Brown says he’s starting a new school, with much of the same faculty and students. “You can fire me as being president, but you can’t fire me as being father,” he said last Thursday. (See Christianity Today‘s earlier coverage of the Brownsville revival here.)

For Toronto’s Muslims, mosque is a cathedral Since there’s no mosque in Toronto, 400 or so Muslim men travel every Friday to Toronto’s St. James Cathedral (Anglican) for congregational prayer. “I suppose it is unusual, a new part of the religious reality in Toronto,” Douglas Stoute, dean of Toronto and rector of St. James Cathedral, tells The Toronto Star. “But it’s not unusual for us as a place of hospitality and generosity for all faiths. This is also part of a re-evaluation of ourselves—we are a place of prayer for all people. It is an inclusive community.”

John the Baptist’s grave reported found Last year, archaeologists discovered a cave beneath the remains of a fourth-century Byzantine church on the east bank of the Jordan River. Now they’re trying to figure out if a skull found there belonged to John the Baptist. “Research has determined that the cave belonged to St John the Baptist, but experts … are still examining the skull,” said project director Mohammad Waheeb. “Until now, testing on the skull has not been completed, so we can only say it belonged to a hermit, because the region of Wadi Kharrar was inhabited by many hermits,” he said. Expect the results to be controversial—Israel claims that John the Baptist wasn’t at Wadi Kharrar, but instead baptized on the western bank of the river in a spot called Qasr Al Yahud (The Jewish Palace). Still, it won’t be as controversial as a Japanese town that claims to have the body of Jesus Christ.

Mel Gibson on God “I go to an all-pre-Vatican II Latin Mass,” the star of What Women Want and The Patriot tells USA Today. “There’s no modernism, and the changes that accompanied Vatican II just don’t accompany this. There was a lot of talk, particularly in the ’60s, of ‘Wow, we’ve got to change with the times.’ But the creator instituted something very specific, and we can’t just go change it. God doesn’t have to keep time with us. He doesn’t have to change for us. So it’s kind of presumptuous to think that we can just change something.”

More articles of interest:

Related Elsewhere

See our past Weblog updates:

December 27
December 22 | 21 | 20 | 19 | 18
December 15 | 14 | 13 | 12
December 8 | 7 | 6 | 5 | 4
December 1 | November 30 | 29 | 28 | 27
November 22 | 21 | 20
November 17 | 16 | 15 | 14 | 13
November 10 | 9 | 8 | 7 | 6
November | 3 | 2 | 1 October 31 | 30

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