Archive for April, 2010

The Bishop of Durham, Tom Wright is quitting to take up an academic appointment at the University of St Andrews in Fife.

Wednesday, April 28th, 2010

The announcement yesterday of The Bishop of Durham, Tom Wright, quitting his position to take up an academic appointment at the University of St Andrews in Fife, is BIG news and is everywhere.

From all I’ve read, I think the most interesting commentary comes from Clayboy, as he takes the approach of looking at the compatibility for being both a bishop and scholar simultaneously.

Clayboy – Bishop’s Move: a Wright regretful thing

UPDATE: I’m gonna add Bishop Nick Baines’s commentary also, note that he picks up the same point as Clayboy:

Bishop Nick Baines – Wright Right

The Church and Corporate Sponsorship.

Wednesday, April 28th, 2010

Last week David over at Anglican Samizdat blogged regarding The Anglican Church of Canada inviting corporate sponsorship of its national convention this year, selling space for brand logos on delegate documents, advertising signs in its meeting spaces and a private lunch for executives with the church’s senior archbishop. Here is a copy of the letter from Fred Hiltz asking for corporate sponsors.

I didn’t give this too much thought as I presumed this was an unusual move, however, today a church has been forced to defend a decision to allow one of its confession boxes to be sponsored by a betting firm in a £10,000 deal.

EADT24

It is understood the confession box at Our Lady and St Etheldreda church, in Newmarket, is the first globally to be sponsored by a business.

Irish bookmakers Paddy Power paid £10,000 for the privilege of having its name on the new box – now called a sin bin – at the Catholic church. Top jockey Frankie Dettori, who was married there, performed the official opening.

Last night, gambling support charity GamCare said it would be speaking with the priest in charge to find out more about the deal and said it would be concerned if the sponsored name plate did not also carry information about the support available for addicted gamblers.

Paddy Power – which has 200 betting offices in Ireland and almost 100 in the UK and a turnover of £2billion – only became involved after it was contacted by the priest at the church.

Father Michael Griffin said: “It was suggested by a parishioner that we asked Paddy Power for help because of their horseracing connections and we were very pleased when they generously agreed.

“We were happy to put a plaque up on the side of the box – which we refer to as a reconciliation room – and I have mentioned Paddy Power in a sermon.

“There has been no adverse reaction from anyone to the fact that the sponsorship has come from a bookmakers.”

Catholic diocesan spokesman Father Mark Hackson said: “There is nothing morally wrong with gambling unless it deprives people of what is necessary to provide for their needs and that of their dependants.

“We regularly raise funds through raffles and that is also a form of gambling. This money was freely given for a specific purpose and had been earned legally.”

Eileen Kinghan, Gamcare spokeswoman, said they would be trying to find out more about the deal.

She said: “We would be concerned if there were no signs for GamCare to raise awareness of the support available. We do provide counselling services in Newmarket.”

A Paddy Power spokesman said they were delighted to get involved due to their links with the racing industry.

He said: “We see it as a way of bringing the church to the people and forging stronger links between the church and local people.

“We hope that people might pop in to the church on their way to a race meeting here and perhaps their prayers will help them pick a winner.

“It’s a great fit and perhaps over time confessing your sins in a Paddy Power confession box will become a tradition for race-goers.”

Mr Dettori, who is riding the Guineas meeting in Newmarket this weekend, said: ”I was married in this church 13 years ago and all five of my children were baptised here. I am pleased that they are being helped by sponsorship.”

I also came across a website today dedicated to renting your church for corporate events and conferences.

Personally I’m not at all comfortable with this new development, are others uncomfortable with this, or is this an expected and welcome development?

Christian Party candidate for Vale of Glamorgan John Harrold: “Shouldn’t these people just go home?”

Tuesday, April 27th, 2010

Firstly criticism was levelled against Rev. George Hargreaves (leader of the Christian Party) for recently providing a platform for a televised debate with Nick Griffin.

Then George Hargreaves recently insinuated in a Guardian piece that Labour is in fact ‘worse’ than the BNP.

Then Pastor James Gitau, who was happily campaigning for Revd West of the BNP a couple of weeks ago, suddenly defected to the Christian Party.

And now this from the Guardian:

Comments from candidates standing for election in Cardiff for the Christian Party of Wales had led members of the public to condemn the remarks as “racist”.

At last night’s hustings event held at Highfields Church in Cathays, candidates for the Cardiff Central seat debated the big issues put forward as questions from the audience – one of the topics was immigration in Britain.

The comments were made by the Christian Party candidate for Vale of Glamorgan John Harrold – who took part in the Cardiff North hustings last week – who was with Cardiff South and Penarth candidate Clive Bate in the audience.

Bate questioned the panel on their stance on number of illegal immigrants entering the country. John Harrold added a comment. He said:

“I have heard that there are more white British people leaving this country to live elsewhere and more people coming in who do not actually want to integrate themselves – especially the Pakistani community. Shouldn’t these people just go home?”

The comments caused unrest among audience members – a mixture of students and churchgoers from the area – who were audibly shocked by the remark. One young women, a nurse at University Hospital Wales, Heath, stood up in outrage and said we should not stand such blatant “racism”. “There’s no place for racism in society and I think it’s people like you who should leave,” she said.

Plaid Cymru candidate for Cardiff Central Chris Williams cut the tense atmosphere in the room by adding: “If there are racists about, get them out,” – met by applause from the audience.

Continue Reading

Come on, it doesn’t look good does it?

ps Can’t say any more on this (Goy will be pleased) as I’m being pushed out the door on an enforced overnight camping trip, so will be incommunicado till tomorrow noontime.

On the plus side, at least I won’t have to endure anymore of Steve Davis being quickly roasted over the snooker table by Neil Robertson.

There have been 968 reports of demonic activity in Britain during the past quarter-century

Tuesday, April 27th, 2010

I tell you what, the new British Religion in Numbers website is proving to be a fascinating little resource. I love facts like these:

BRIN – Demonic Britain

This link is to a Telegraph article yesterday based on the report:

Telegraph – Spooky sightings of ghouls, ghosts and evil spirits are higher than they have been in the past 25 years, according to a new report on haunted Britain.

Jehovah’s Witness who quit job over birthday celebrations is denied benefits

Tuesday, April 27th, 2010

The FreeThinker blog is reporting on a US case involving a Jehovah Witness Jeweler being denied unemployment benefits for quitting her job after being asked to print messages on promotional birthday cards. JW’s don’t like celebrating birthdays as they identify pagan roots in the dastardly celebration and view it as generally non-Scriptural.

EthicsDaily – Court Rejects Unemployment Pay for Jehovah’s Witness

I originally began my faith journey through interaction with Jehovah Witnesses (God can use a crooked stick to draw a straight line) and at the time one of the guys was denied employment benefit. The Job Centre turned down his benefit application because as a Publisher, he could not in all good conscience state that he was always available for work, as he had an obligation to fulfill a certain amount of hours door-knocking every week.

Also, as he described himself as a part time “minister” the job centre refused to believe that he was not in receipt of a stipend of some sort.

I remember a JW knocking my door on Christmas day some years back with his two little children and thinking what an inappropriate day to interrupt me with talk of God. Ironic when I think back.

So there you go, some pointless facts to crowd your mind further.

The Stoxx Europe Christian Index, the first European Christian equity index was launched on Monday

Tuesday, April 27th, 2010

Interesting….

New York Times:

Onward, Christian Investors: Church Index is Born

The Stoxx Europe Christian Index, the first European Christian equity index was launched on Monday, The Financial Times reported. The launch came as a response to increasing investor demand for so-called ethical stocks in the wake of the financial crisis, the newspaper said.

The Stoxx Index is made up of 533 European companies, including BP, Vodafone and GlaxoSmithKline, whose revenues come only from approved sources in line with the values and principles of the Christian religion.

Groups that make money from pornography, weapons, tobacco, birth control and gambling are not permitted for listing.

The index does not take into account the environmental damages caused by major corporations, as many secular ethical funds do, but rather judges them based on an interpretation of scripture, much like funds that attempt to operate within the bounds of Islamic finance.

Continue

Check out this beautiful piccy of the Icelandic Eyjafjallajokull volcanic eruption

Tuesday, April 27th, 2010

This comes courtesy of CyberBrethren who has another piccy to see on his website:

I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again…..what an awesome God!

Pope Benedict XVI: Inhabit the digital universe with a believing heart and help give a soul to the endless flow of communications on the Internet.

Tuesday, April 27th, 2010

He’s a savvy pope and I do enjoy it when he turns his attention to all things Interweb.

Vatican Press Release:

INHABITING THE DIGITAL UNIVERSE WITH A BELIEVING HEART

VATICAN CITY, 24 APR 2010 (VIS) – This morning the Holy Father addressed participants in the congress: “Digital Witnesses. Faces and languages in the multi-media age”. The congress was organised by the Italian Episcopal Conference, the president of which is Cardinal Angelo Bagnasco, archbishop of Genoa.

“The time in which we are living is seeing an enormous expansion of the frontiers of communication”, said the Pope. “The Internet is by nature open, tendentiously egalitarian and pluralist, but at the same time it also represents a new gulf. Indeed, we talk of the ‘digital divide’, which separates the included from the excluded, and this must be added to other separations which already divide nations, both from one another and within themselves”.

Benedict XVI also noted “the dangers of conformity and control, of intellectual and moral relativism, which are already evident in the diminution of the spirit of criticism, in the truth reduced to an interplay of opinions, in the many forms of degradation and humiliation of individual intimacy. We are witnessing a ‘pollution of the spirit which clouds our faces and makes them less prone to smile’.

“And yet”, he added, “the aim of this congress is precisely to recognise faces, and therefore to overcome those collective dynamics that can lead us to lose a sense of the depths people have, to remain on the surface. When this happens those people become bodies without a soul, objects to be exchanged and consumed”.

“And how is it possible to return to people’s faces today?” the Pope asked. In this context, quoting from his own Encyclical “Caritas in veritate”, he explained how the media can have a civilising effect “not only when, thanks to technological development, they increase the possibilities of communicating information, but above all when they are geared towards a vision of the person and the common good that reflects truly universal values.

“To achieve goals of this kind, they need to focus on promoting the dignity of persons and peoples, they need to be clearly inspired by charity and placed at the service of truth, of the good, and of natural and supernatural fraternity”.

“Only in these conditions can the epoch-making change we are experiencing be rich and fruitful in new opportunities. … More than by our technical resources, necessary though they are, we wish to identify ourselves by inhabiting the [digital] universe with a believing heart which helps to give a soul to the endless flow of communications on the Internet”.

And the Holy Father concluded: “This is our mission, the indispensable mission of the Church. The task of all believers who work in the media is that of ‘opening the door to new forms of encounter, maintaining the quality of human interaction, and showing concern for individuals and their genuine spiritual needs. They can thus help the men and women of our digital age to sense the Lord’s presence’”.

Messianic Jews in Israel Seek Public Apology for Attack

Tuesday, April 27th, 2010

For background reading on this case, see here and here.

ASSIST News Service

By Jeremy Reynalds
Correspondent for ASSIST News Service

ISTANBUL (ANS) — After a final court hearing in Israel last week, a church of Messianic Jews awaits a judge’s decision that could force an ultra-orthodox Jewish organization to publicly apologize to them for starting a riot and ransacking a baptismal service.

According to a report by Compass Direct News, a ruling in favor of the Christian group would mark the first time an organization opposing Messianic Jews in Israel has had to apologize to its victims for religious persecution.

In 2006 Howard Bass, pastor of Yeshua’s Inheritance church, filed suit against Yehuda Deri, chief Sephardic rabbi in the city of Beer Sheva, and Yad L’Achim, an organization that fights against Messianic Jews, for allegedly inciting a riot at a Dec. 2005 service that Bass was leading.

Compass reported that Bass has demanded either a public apology for the attack or 1.5 million shekels (US$401,040) from the rabbi and Yad L’Achim.

Compass reported that Bass said the case was ultimately about “defending the name of Yeshua (Jesus) and making sure that Deri, the leadership of Yad L’Achim and those who support them know they have to obey the law and respect the right of people to worship.

“They are trying to get away from having any responsibility,” Compass reported Bass said.

Compass said on Dec. 24, 2005, during a baptismal service in Beer Sheva, a group of about 200 men pushed their way into a small, covered structure being used to baptize two believers. They tried to stop the service. Police were called to the scene but could not control the crowd.

Once inside the building, the perpetrators tossed patio chairs, damaged audiovisual equipment, threw a grill and other items into a baptismal pool, and then pushed Bass into the pool and broke his glasses.

“Their actions were violent actions without regard (for injury),” Compass reported Bass said.

Compass said prior to the riot, Yad L’Achim had issued notices to people about a “mass baptism” scheduled to take place at the facility in the sprawling city of 531,000 people 51 miles (83 kilometers) southwest of Jerusalem. In the days after the riot, Deri bragged about the incident on a radio talk show, including a boast that Bass had been “baptized” at the gathering.

Compass said the 2005 incident wasn’t the first time the church had to deal with a riotous attack after Yad L’Achim disseminated false information about their activities. On Nov. 28, 1998, a crowd of about 1,000 protestors broke up a Yeshua’s Inheritance service after the anti-Christian group spread a rumor that three busloads of kidnaped Jewish juveniles were being brought in for baptism. The attackers threw rocks, spit on parishioners and attempted to seize some of their children, Bass said.

In response to the 1998 attack and to what Bass described as a public, cavalier attitude about the 2005 attack, Bass and others in the Messianic community agreed that he needed to take legal action.

“What is happening here has happened to Jews throughout the centuries,” Compass reported Bass said about persecution of Messianic Jews in Israel, adding that many in movements opposed to Messianic Jews in Israel are “arrogant.” He compared their attitudes to the attitudes that those in Hamas, a Palestinian group dedicated to the destruction of the State of Israel, have toward Israelis in general.

“They say, ‘Recognize us, but we will never recognize you,’” Compass reported Bass said.

Long Battle

Bass has fought against the leadership of Yad L’Achim and Deri for four years through his attorneys, Marvin Kramer and Kevork Nalbandian. But throughout the process, Compass reported Kramer said, the two defendants have refused to offer a genuine apology for the misinformation that led to the 2005 riot or for the riot itself.

Kramer said Bass’s legal team would offer language for an acceptable public apology, and attorneys for the defendants in turn would offer language that amounted to no real apology at all.

“We made several attempts to make a compromise, but we couldn’t do it,” Compass reported Kramer said. “What we were really looking for was a public apology, and they weren’t ready to give a public apology. If we would have gotten the public apology, we would have dropped the lawsuit at any point.”

Despite several attempts by Compass to reach Yad L’Achim officials at both their U.S. and Israeli offices, no one would comment.

The hearing on April 15 was the final chance the parties had to come to an agreement; the judge has 30 days to give a ruling. His decision will be issued by mail.

Compass said Kramer declined to speculate on what the outcome of the case will be, but he said he had “proved what we needed to prove to be successful.”

Belief in Israel

Bass said he is a strong supporter of Israel but is critical of the way Messianic Jews are treated in the country.

“Israel opposes the gospel, and these events show this to be true,” Compass reported he said. Referring to Israel, Bass paraphrased Stephen, one of Christianity’s early martyrs, “‘You always resist the Spirit of God.’ What Stephen said was true.”

Compass reported Kramer said that the lawsuit is not against the State of Israel or the Jewish people, but rather for freedom of religion.

“It has to do with a violation of rights of individuals to worship in accordance with the basic tenants of their faith and to practice their faith in accordance with their beliefs in accordance with law,” Compass reported he said.

Terrorist Organization?

Compass said Bass’ lawsuit is just one of many legal troubles Yad L’Achim is facing. In February, the Jerusalem Institute of Justice (JIJ), a civil rights advocacy group, filed a petition asking Attorney General Yehuda Weinstein to declare Yad L’Achim a terrorist organization and order that it be disbanded.

In the 24-page document Caleb Myers, an attorney for JIJ, outlined numerous incidences in which Yad L’Achim or those linked with it had “incited hatred, racism, violence and terror.” The document cited instances of persecution against Christians, as well as kidnappings of Jewish women from their Arab partners.

“Israel is a ‘Jewish and democratic’ state, while the actions of Yad L’Achim are not consistent with either the noble values of Judaism or the values of democracy,” Compass reported the petition read. “Not to mention the fact that it is a country that arose on the ashes of a people that was persecuted for its religion, and has resolved since its establishment to bear the standard of full equality, without discrimination on the basis of gender, race, religion or nationality.”

Compass said according to the document, Yad L’Achim went after people it viewed as enemies of ultra-orthodox Judaism. The group particularly targeted Messianic Jews and other Christians.

“Yad L’Achim refers to ‘missionary activity’ as if it was the worst of criminal offenses and often arouses fear of this activity,” the document read.

Compass said the document continued, “It should be noted that in the State of Israel there is no prohibition against ‘missionary activity’ as the dissemination of religion and/or faith among members of other religions/faiths, unless such activity solicits religious conversion, as stated in various sections of the Penal Code, which bans the solicitation of religious conversion among minors, or among adults by offering bribes. Furthermore, the organization often presents anyone belonging to the Christian religion, in all its forms, as a ‘missionary,’ even if he does not work to spread his religion.”

Particularly damaging in the document was reported testimony gathered from Jack Teitel. Accused of planting a bomb on March 20, 2008 that almost killed the teenage son of a Messianic Jewish pastor, Teitel told authorities that he worked with Yad L’Achim.

“He was asked to talk about his activity in Yad L’Achim and related that for some five years he was active in the organization, and on average he helped to rescue about five women each year,” Compass said the document read, using the Yad L’Achim term “rescue” to refer to kidnapping.

Compass said the 2008 bombing severely injured Ami Ortiz, then 15, but after 20 months he had largely recovered.

Teitel, who said Ortiz family members were “missionaries trying to capture weak Jews,” has been indicted on two cases of pre-meditated murder, three cases of attempted murder, carrying a weapon, manufacturing a weapon, possession of illegal weapons and incitement to commit violence.

Compass said in interviews with the Israeli media, Yad L’Achim Chairman Rabbi Shalom Dov Lifshitz said his organization wasn’t connected with the attacks of the Ortiz family or with Teitel.

Election 2010: Volcano ‘shows leaders must repent’

Monday, April 26th, 2010

What do you reckon on this one from the BBC:

The UK’s political leaders need to “do some repenting” and give greater recognition to religion, a Christian Peoples Alliance candidate has said.

“Our whole political system has hardened itself against God in rampant secularism,” said John Manwell.

“This has to change,” he said, calling for a fresh approach to politics.

Ash “is a clear Biblical sign of repentance” and the Iceland volcano was a reminder that “the human race is powerless compared to God”, he added.

“As a sign from God, it was gracious; no-one was killed.”

Mr Manwell called for “a fresh approach to politics” in the UK, urging people to their faith in God, rather than political parties.

“Surely it is time to call on God and seek His help in healing the brokenness of Britain.”

The Christian Peoples Alliance is fielding 17 parliamentary candidates in the general election, and has 130 candidates standing for council seats across England.

It also has three councillors in the east London borough of Newham, including its leader, Alan Craig.

Was the Icelandic volcanic eruption a clear sign from God on the spiritual condition of our nation as John Hagee also suggested? Or was it simply a random geological event?

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