Tuesday, November 29, 2005
A Sermon With Some Real Punch
Billy Joe Daugherty preached a routine sermon on Nov. 20. Then a man socked the preacher in the face—and the gospel traveled at the speed of broadband.
Most preachers would love it if one of their sermons made national news. That’s what happened to Oklahoma pastor Billy Joe Daugherty—but he had to get punched in the face first.
When Daugherty was hit and bloodied on Nov. 20 during a Sunday morning service, the Christian kindness he showed his attacker made headlines on NBC, CNN, Fox and MSNBC. David Letterman even mentioned the unusual incident on his CBS Late Show.
A nondescript visitor named Steven Rogers delivered the unexpected blow to Daugherty’s clean-cut face at the close of the 11 a.m. service at Victory Christian Center in Tulsa, Okla. As music played during an altar call, Rogers approached Daugherty and hit him with his fist—leaving the 53-year-old pastor with blood steaming from a gash above his left eye.
Daugherty told one TV reporter: “The first time I was hit, what went through my mind was, Did he just hit me? I mean, it was bam, bam.”
A staff member and security guards subdued the assailant while Daugherty led the congregation in prayer to forgive the man.
“There was some humor in it all,” Daugherty told me in an interview on Monday, just days after two stitches had been removed from the cut below his eyebrow. “My wife kept singing. The piano player kept playing. I told the congregation, ‘It’s time to praise God.’ So we shouted and praised Him.”
After the assault, local station KTUL Channel 8 posted a news item about it on their Web site. As of early this week, the site had more than 2.6 million hits—breaking the station’s previous record of 400,000. And national TV networks began contacting Daugherty for interviews.
“What started out as a bad situation turned out to be an opportunity to share the gospel,” Daugherty says. Numerous television networks have done segments on the incident—as have Internet news giants AOL and Yahoo. The church has posted the video of the entire sermon—with the footage of the attack and subsequent apology—and many people are ordering copies.
Why did this happen? Rogers, who is 50, certainly had no obvious motive to attack Daugherty. Police records show that Rogers has a history of violent assaults.
Daugherty says God allowed the incident so more people could hear about Jesus, who suffered beatings, torture, humiliation and public execution yet still loved His enemies.
“I have been able to tell people that Jesus suffered a whole lot more than I did,” Daugherty says. “When Jesus was crucified, He said, ‘Father, forgive them.’”
Daugherty not only forgave Rogers from the pulpit but he also visited him last week at a Tulsa jail. He says Rogers has a troubled past, like many have among the underprivileged people who are part of Victory Christian Center’s weekly outreach programs.
Ironically, Daugherty has never been attacked during any of his numerous missionary trips to Haiti, Sierra Leone, Pakistan and other dangerous countries. He had just returned from a trip to Russia’s Ural Mountains when the Tulsa assault happened.
It all goes to show us that anything can happen anywhere, and that Tulsa sometimes can be as dangerous as Moscow, Beirut or Islamabad.
And, to Daugherty, it also shows that Americans are hungry to hear more about Christ’s love and forgiveness. Especially when it is not just preached in words but practiced—in spontaneous and unscripted fashion—in front of a live audience.
CHARISMA ONLINE :: Nov. 29, 2005A Sermon With Some Real Punch
Remarks Shed Light on China's Religious Persecution
Also, Evangelist Palau Regrets His Suggestion to Chinese House Churches
By Allie Martin and Fred Jackson
November 29, 2005
(AgapePress) - A spokesman with Voice of the Martyrs says it is encouraging that President George W. Bush spoke about religious freedom in China during his trip to the communist nation. At the same time, a well-known American evangelist has expressed regret for remarks he made after joining the president at a church service in Beijing.
During his recent visit to Communist China, President Bush encouraged that nation's leaders to allow more religious freedom for members of unregistered or "house" churches. Speaking outside one of only five state-sanctioned Protestant churches in the Chinese capital -- where he and the First Lady had just attended a service -- the president expressed hope that the government of China "will not fear Christians who gather to worship openly." He also stated that "a healthy society is a society that welcomes all faiths."
Critics have noted somewhat of a double standard in that Bush made his remarks in the shadow of a state-approved church while reports from groups like Voice of the Martyrs, a ministry that assists the persecuted Church worldwide, document harsh -- and sometimes fatal -- crackdowns on Chinese Christians who choose instead to worship in underground churches. But The Washington Post reports that White House aides decided Bush had to make his statements near a church permitted by the government "to avoid causing anyone trouble."
Still, Todd Nettleton with Voice of the Martyrs believes the president's remarks could have a big impact. "The Chinese government went out of their way to make sure that there would not be any kind of disturbance, any kind of protest, any kind of thing that could embarrass them while President Bush was there," Nettleton explains.
"But [the president] has made a priority to talk about and to bring up the topic of religious freedom in China -- and hopefully, at some point, that will start to have an influence and will change the way the Chinese government treats people of faith."
Christians around the world can only hope Nettleton's hopes become reality. According to the VOM spokesman, there are signs that persecution of Christians in China has actually increased in recent months. He says it is "interesting" to see how the Beijing regime prepared for Bush's visit.
"We know of one lawyer who has represented Christians in China who was asked to leave Beijing while the president was there," Nettleton notes. "And we know of another evangelist who was brought into custody while the president was there and [who] was released shortly after the president left."
In addition, a Christian leader in China was recently arrested for illegally printing and storing Bibles.
Palau's 'Faux Pas'?
At the same time the Bushes were in China, American evangelist Luis Palau also attended a worship service at an officially registered Chinese church where he shocked many people when he stated that China's much persecuted house churches should "register and receive greater freedom and blessings from the government." Groups that monitor religious persecution in China responded in almost unbelief that a Christian leader would even suggest such a thing.
One of those dismayed by Palau's remarks was Pastor Bob Fu, president of the China Aid Association. Fu says Palau seemed oblivious to the widespread religious persecution in China and obviously has no understanding about the cost of registering a church with the government.
"The government-sanctioned churches are not allowed to baptize students under 18 years old," Fu explains to Associated Press. "And even a preacher certified by the government is not allowed to preach outside of the four walls of the church building."
And in a press release, Fu offers this assessment: "Rev. Palau's China [comments] will be much more convincing if he is allowed to do an open evangelism in the Tian'an Men Square just like what he did at National Mall in Washington, DC, recently. ”
In a statement, Palau now concedes that it was wrong for him to make such a suggestion, and he hopes his remarks will not cause any trouble for the Chinese Christians in those house churches.
http://www.chinaaid.org/english_site/press_release_detail.php?id=84
News from Agape Press
By Allie Martin and Fred Jackson
November 29, 2005
(AgapePress) - A spokesman with Voice of the Martyrs says it is encouraging that President George W. Bush spoke about religious freedom in China during his trip to the communist nation. At the same time, a well-known American evangelist has expressed regret for remarks he made after joining the president at a church service in Beijing.
During his recent visit to Communist China, President Bush encouraged that nation's leaders to allow more religious freedom for members of unregistered or "house" churches. Speaking outside one of only five state-sanctioned Protestant churches in the Chinese capital -- where he and the First Lady had just attended a service -- the president expressed hope that the government of China "will not fear Christians who gather to worship openly." He also stated that "a healthy society is a society that welcomes all faiths."
Critics have noted somewhat of a double standard in that Bush made his remarks in the shadow of a state-approved church while reports from groups like Voice of the Martyrs, a ministry that assists the persecuted Church worldwide, document harsh -- and sometimes fatal -- crackdowns on Chinese Christians who choose instead to worship in underground churches. But The Washington Post reports that White House aides decided Bush had to make his statements near a church permitted by the government "to avoid causing anyone trouble."
Still, Todd Nettleton with Voice of the Martyrs believes the president's remarks could have a big impact. "The Chinese government went out of their way to make sure that there would not be any kind of disturbance, any kind of protest, any kind of thing that could embarrass them while President Bush was there," Nettleton explains.
"But [the president] has made a priority to talk about and to bring up the topic of religious freedom in China -- and hopefully, at some point, that will start to have an influence and will change the way the Chinese government treats people of faith."
Christians around the world can only hope Nettleton's hopes become reality. According to the VOM spokesman, there are signs that persecution of Christians in China has actually increased in recent months. He says it is "interesting" to see how the Beijing regime prepared for Bush's visit.
"We know of one lawyer who has represented Christians in China who was asked to leave Beijing while the president was there," Nettleton notes. "And we know of another evangelist who was brought into custody while the president was there and [who] was released shortly after the president left."
In addition, a Christian leader in China was recently arrested for illegally printing and storing Bibles.
Palau's 'Faux Pas'?
At the same time the Bushes were in China, American evangelist Luis Palau also attended a worship service at an officially registered Chinese church where he shocked many people when he stated that China's much persecuted house churches should "register and receive greater freedom and blessings from the government." Groups that monitor religious persecution in China responded in almost unbelief that a Christian leader would even suggest such a thing.
One of those dismayed by Palau's remarks was Pastor Bob Fu, president of the China Aid Association. Fu says Palau seemed oblivious to the widespread religious persecution in China and obviously has no understanding about the cost of registering a church with the government.
"The government-sanctioned churches are not allowed to baptize students under 18 years old," Fu explains to Associated Press. "And even a preacher certified by the government is not allowed to preach outside of the four walls of the church building."
And in a press release, Fu offers this assessment: "Rev. Palau's China [comments] will be much more convincing if he is allowed to do an open evangelism in the Tian'an Men Square just like what he did at National Mall in Washington, DC, recently. ”
In a statement, Palau now concedes that it was wrong for him to make such a suggestion, and he hopes his remarks will not cause any trouble for the Chinese Christians in those house churches.
http://www.chinaaid.org/english_site/press_release_detail.php?id=84
News from Agape Press
Dad Outraged Over ISU Policy Allowing Cohabiting Resident Staff
By Jim Brown and Jenni Parker
November 29, 2005
(AgapePress) - Some parents with students at Illinois State University want the school to reverse its policy permitting professional staff to engage in unmarried cohabitation in student dormitories.
One father, Greg Myers, says he was outraged to learn that the school's Student Affairs Office allowed his daughter's dorm supervisor to cohabitate with his girlfriend in ISU's Watterson Hall.
Myers' daughter, a senior at ISU, is a resident assistant in the dorm. Like her father, she objects to the staff cohabitation policy because of her Christian beliefs. The university's Housing Services office also permits staff members with same-sex romantic partners to live together in student dorms.
But while Vice President of Student Affairs Helen Mamarchev claims the school's staff cohabitation policy supports its "vision of appreciation of diversity," Myers insists the diversity argument does not apply in this case. "This is simply a lifestyle issue," he says.
"This hasn't got anything to do with whether or not a young man can get a position on campus, whether or not he can hold a job, whether or not he can do business with the university," the concerned parent continues. "It doesn't have anything to do with that. It's simply a lifestyle decision that these people make, and it's obviously not the right one."
While Myers' concerns are driven by faith and family values, many family health and social welfare researchers echo them. A growing body of research has demonstrated the increased risk of several problems for unmarried couples that choose to live together.
For instance, numerous studies indicate that domestic abuse and child abuse are more common and severe among cohabitating couples than among married couples, and that women are 62 times more likely to be assaulted by a live-in boyfriend than by a spouse. Furthermore, many studies have found cohabiting women tend to be more irritable, anxious, worried and unhappy, reporting rates of depression three times higher and suffering from 10 percent more neurotic disorders than married women.
Also, research suggests that cohabiting relationships are much less stable than marriages, and therefore present a poor environment for child-rearing. Studies have shown that only 44 percent of cohabitating couples actually marry and, of those that do, three quarters of the children in those homes will, before reaching age 16, see their parents divorce. That is opposed to a third of the children born to married couples who will see their parents break up.
Myers is asking Illinois State University to reverse its cohabitation policy, which currently permits unmarried heterosexual and homosexual staff members alike to have live-in romantic partners in student dormitories. "This is something that I think is just over the top as far as lack of character and lack of values in a policy decision," the father says, "and I just think it is detrimental to a balanced education by a university charged with the responsibility of our children."
Unmarried cohabitation was illegal in the U.S. up until 1970, and even today the Federal Equal Employment Opportunity Act does not prohibit marital status discrimination. In recent years, some courts have emphasized a distinction between marital status and cohabitation and ruled that marital status does not include, or protect, co-habitation.
News from Agape Press
November 29, 2005
(AgapePress) - Some parents with students at Illinois State University want the school to reverse its policy permitting professional staff to engage in unmarried cohabitation in student dormitories.
One father, Greg Myers, says he was outraged to learn that the school's Student Affairs Office allowed his daughter's dorm supervisor to cohabitate with his girlfriend in ISU's Watterson Hall.
Myers' daughter, a senior at ISU, is a resident assistant in the dorm. Like her father, she objects to the staff cohabitation policy because of her Christian beliefs. The university's Housing Services office also permits staff members with same-sex romantic partners to live together in student dorms.
But while Vice President of Student Affairs Helen Mamarchev claims the school's staff cohabitation policy supports its "vision of appreciation of diversity," Myers insists the diversity argument does not apply in this case. "This is simply a lifestyle issue," he says.
"This hasn't got anything to do with whether or not a young man can get a position on campus, whether or not he can hold a job, whether or not he can do business with the university," the concerned parent continues. "It doesn't have anything to do with that. It's simply a lifestyle decision that these people make, and it's obviously not the right one."
While Myers' concerns are driven by faith and family values, many family health and social welfare researchers echo them. A growing body of research has demonstrated the increased risk of several problems for unmarried couples that choose to live together.
For instance, numerous studies indicate that domestic abuse and child abuse are more common and severe among cohabitating couples than among married couples, and that women are 62 times more likely to be assaulted by a live-in boyfriend than by a spouse. Furthermore, many studies have found cohabiting women tend to be more irritable, anxious, worried and unhappy, reporting rates of depression three times higher and suffering from 10 percent more neurotic disorders than married women.
Also, research suggests that cohabiting relationships are much less stable than marriages, and therefore present a poor environment for child-rearing. Studies have shown that only 44 percent of cohabitating couples actually marry and, of those that do, three quarters of the children in those homes will, before reaching age 16, see their parents divorce. That is opposed to a third of the children born to married couples who will see their parents break up.
Myers is asking Illinois State University to reverse its cohabitation policy, which currently permits unmarried heterosexual and homosexual staff members alike to have live-in romantic partners in student dormitories. "This is something that I think is just over the top as far as lack of character and lack of values in a policy decision," the father says, "and I just think it is detrimental to a balanced education by a university charged with the responsibility of our children."
Unmarried cohabitation was illegal in the U.S. up until 1970, and even today the Federal Equal Employment Opportunity Act does not prohibit marital status discrimination. In recent years, some courts have emphasized a distinction between marital status and cohabitation and ruled that marital status does not include, or protect, co-habitation.
News from Agape Press
Monday, November 28, 2005
Veiled Threat
By Paul Sperry
www.frontpagemagazine.com
When a bewildered Iraqi woman named Sajida al-Rishawi confessed on Jordanian state television last week that she had been part of the team that tried to blow up the Radisson Hotel in Amman, she showed that Iraq has become a base from which al Qaeda launches attacks against its enemies and that suicide terrorism may be the one area in Mid-East culture where fundamentalist Muslim women are finally gaining equality with men.
Wearing her defused bomb belt, which failed to detonate when the three other members of her team blew themselves up along with members of a Jordanian wedding party, al-Rishawi called into question the idea that Muslim women are little more than veiled victims of a brutal misogynistic culture and that their only connection to terror is as bystanders. While no female Muslims here in the U.S. have blown up passenger jets as they have in Russia, or strapped on belts packed with TNT and ball bearings to blow up American hotels, as an older Iraqi woman has confessed to doing in Jordan, law enforcement has uncovered a disturbing number of cases in which they have helped Muslim men with terrorist plots or have planned to attack fellow Americans themselves.
Here are a few examples, some of which have never been revealed:
* Earlier this year, the FBI arrested two teenage Muslim girls in Manhattan on suspicion they planned to attack U.S. targets as suicide bombers. The 16-year-old girls wore veils and regularly attended mosques.
* Last year, a Pakistani woman who worked for years at EPA headquarters as a toxicologist was arrested after authorities learned she not only lied about being a U.S. citizen, but also ran a charitable front for al Qaeda back in Peshawar, Pakistan. A mother of four, Waheeda Tehseen lived comfortably in the same leafy neighborhood as U.S. Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas, according to law enforcement documents I’ve obtained. She was “very devout,” but fellow EPA scientists found her religious beliefs quaint and completely nonthreatening, and even unwittingly helped her raise money for Osama bin Laden.
* Authorities are still looking for another Pakistani woman who they believe to be a “fixer” for al-Qaida in the U.S. MIT-educated Aafia Siddiqui is said to have been involved in a plot to blow up underground gas tanks around Baltimore. The mother of three is known as a “good sister” who has memorized her Quran and is willing to help al Qaeda out when they need her. She was a hard-line Muslim activist on the MIT campus, where she wore head-to-toe traditional black gown and matching headscarf while raising money for jihadists around the world. The Bostonians she ran into outside that circle of hate, however, knew her only as a soft-spoken “philanthropist.”
* Two months ago, federal agents in Dallas accused three Muslim women of lying to the government to conceal their involvement in their husbands’ criminal support of outlawed terrorists. Fay Elashi, for one, allegedly tried to hide from investigators checks and financial records bearing the names of the terrorists.
* Last year, authorities in Baltimore spotted the wife of suspected Hamas operative Ismail Elbarasse videotaping the Chesapeake Bay Bridge from an SUV they were driving. The couple was taken into custody and their camcorder tape seized as evidence. On it, authorities found close-up shots of cables and supports “integral to the structural integrity of the bridge,” according to court documents. Six other tapes found in their car contained footage of four other bridges and other structures they believed to be targets. Authorities concluded Elbarasse’s wife was helping conduct “reconnaissance and surveillance” for a possible terrorist attack during rush hour.
* They are not the only potential targets Muslim women have been casing in the Washington area. Not long after it set up headquarters in Crystal City, Va., not far from the Pentagon, the Department of Homeland Security asked the Secret Service to conduct countersurveillance of suspicious Muslim women who were videotaping the building on a regular basis.
Prolonged static surveillance using operatives who look harmless and don’t attract police scrutiny is the hallmark of al Qaeda, which does painstaking pre-attack planning. Through its websites, al Qaeda regularly encourages the faithful who are “far from the fields of jihad” to research the soft spots and weaknesses “of the American infidel crusaders” and report back locations and images of vulnerable structures – from bridges and pipelines to military installations and financial buildings – which might be suitable for attack.
According to the Quran, jihad is not something a Muslim can opt out of. It demands able-bodied believers to join the fight. Those unable – largely women and the elderly – are not exempt; they must give “aid and asylum” to those who do fight the unbelievers in the cause of Allah. Such facilitators are promised the same reward of Paradise, although not the same status as jihadists who give their pound of flesh to Allah. And those who die in his cause – the shaheeds, or martyrs – are reserved the highest place in the Paradise hierarchy.
Increasingly, however, Muslim women are taking on the role of martyr, though no one is rethinking the profile just yet. To be sure, Muslim women are a long way from fitting the profile of the suicide bomber, which is still predominantly young, Muslim and male.
But the Department of Homeland Security issued warnings to law enforcement to be on the lookout for suspicious Muslim women after Chechen terrorists used young Muslim women as suicide bombers to attack Russian targets a couple of years ago. And they are on alert again after al Qaeda, in an effort to lower its male profile and bypass security, apparently enlisted an older Muslim woman to help carry out the recent bloody attacks on American hotels in Jordan.
According to Pakistani journalist Hamid Mir, who has interviewed bin Laden, there is a ready supply of female jihadists in his country alone who would be thrilled to help al Qaeda.
“Our women are more extremist than the men,” he said in a recent magazine interview. “There are hundreds here.”
Veiled Threat
www.frontpagemagazine.com
When a bewildered Iraqi woman named Sajida al-Rishawi confessed on Jordanian state television last week that she had been part of the team that tried to blow up the Radisson Hotel in Amman, she showed that Iraq has become a base from which al Qaeda launches attacks against its enemies and that suicide terrorism may be the one area in Mid-East culture where fundamentalist Muslim women are finally gaining equality with men.
Wearing her defused bomb belt, which failed to detonate when the three other members of her team blew themselves up along with members of a Jordanian wedding party, al-Rishawi called into question the idea that Muslim women are little more than veiled victims of a brutal misogynistic culture and that their only connection to terror is as bystanders. While no female Muslims here in the U.S. have blown up passenger jets as they have in Russia, or strapped on belts packed with TNT and ball bearings to blow up American hotels, as an older Iraqi woman has confessed to doing in Jordan, law enforcement has uncovered a disturbing number of cases in which they have helped Muslim men with terrorist plots or have planned to attack fellow Americans themselves.
Here are a few examples, some of which have never been revealed:
* Earlier this year, the FBI arrested two teenage Muslim girls in Manhattan on suspicion they planned to attack U.S. targets as suicide bombers. The 16-year-old girls wore veils and regularly attended mosques.
* Last year, a Pakistani woman who worked for years at EPA headquarters as a toxicologist was arrested after authorities learned she not only lied about being a U.S. citizen, but also ran a charitable front for al Qaeda back in Peshawar, Pakistan. A mother of four, Waheeda Tehseen lived comfortably in the same leafy neighborhood as U.S. Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas, according to law enforcement documents I’ve obtained. She was “very devout,” but fellow EPA scientists found her religious beliefs quaint and completely nonthreatening, and even unwittingly helped her raise money for Osama bin Laden.
* Authorities are still looking for another Pakistani woman who they believe to be a “fixer” for al-Qaida in the U.S. MIT-educated Aafia Siddiqui is said to have been involved in a plot to blow up underground gas tanks around Baltimore. The mother of three is known as a “good sister” who has memorized her Quran and is willing to help al Qaeda out when they need her. She was a hard-line Muslim activist on the MIT campus, where she wore head-to-toe traditional black gown and matching headscarf while raising money for jihadists around the world. The Bostonians she ran into outside that circle of hate, however, knew her only as a soft-spoken “philanthropist.”
* Two months ago, federal agents in Dallas accused three Muslim women of lying to the government to conceal their involvement in their husbands’ criminal support of outlawed terrorists. Fay Elashi, for one, allegedly tried to hide from investigators checks and financial records bearing the names of the terrorists.
* Last year, authorities in Baltimore spotted the wife of suspected Hamas operative Ismail Elbarasse videotaping the Chesapeake Bay Bridge from an SUV they were driving. The couple was taken into custody and their camcorder tape seized as evidence. On it, authorities found close-up shots of cables and supports “integral to the structural integrity of the bridge,” according to court documents. Six other tapes found in their car contained footage of four other bridges and other structures they believed to be targets. Authorities concluded Elbarasse’s wife was helping conduct “reconnaissance and surveillance” for a possible terrorist attack during rush hour.
* They are not the only potential targets Muslim women have been casing in the Washington area. Not long after it set up headquarters in Crystal City, Va., not far from the Pentagon, the Department of Homeland Security asked the Secret Service to conduct countersurveillance of suspicious Muslim women who were videotaping the building on a regular basis.
Prolonged static surveillance using operatives who look harmless and don’t attract police scrutiny is the hallmark of al Qaeda, which does painstaking pre-attack planning. Through its websites, al Qaeda regularly encourages the faithful who are “far from the fields of jihad” to research the soft spots and weaknesses “of the American infidel crusaders” and report back locations and images of vulnerable structures – from bridges and pipelines to military installations and financial buildings – which might be suitable for attack.
According to the Quran, jihad is not something a Muslim can opt out of. It demands able-bodied believers to join the fight. Those unable – largely women and the elderly – are not exempt; they must give “aid and asylum” to those who do fight the unbelievers in the cause of Allah. Such facilitators are promised the same reward of Paradise, although not the same status as jihadists who give their pound of flesh to Allah. And those who die in his cause – the shaheeds, or martyrs – are reserved the highest place in the Paradise hierarchy.
Increasingly, however, Muslim women are taking on the role of martyr, though no one is rethinking the profile just yet. To be sure, Muslim women are a long way from fitting the profile of the suicide bomber, which is still predominantly young, Muslim and male.
But the Department of Homeland Security issued warnings to law enforcement to be on the lookout for suspicious Muslim women after Chechen terrorists used young Muslim women as suicide bombers to attack Russian targets a couple of years ago. And they are on alert again after al Qaeda, in an effort to lower its male profile and bypass security, apparently enlisted an older Muslim woman to help carry out the recent bloody attacks on American hotels in Jordan.
According to Pakistani journalist Hamid Mir, who has interviewed bin Laden, there is a ready supply of female jihadists in his country alone who would be thrilled to help al Qaeda.
“Our women are more extremist than the men,” he said in a recent magazine interview. “There are hundreds here.”
Veiled Threat
U.S. 'Pandering' to Palestine With Nazi Appeasement
By Chad Groening
November 22, 2005
(AgapePress) - Esther Levens, founder and CEO of the Unity Coalition for Israel, says the recent Palestinian-Israeli "agreement" brokered by Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice is nothing but more appeasement of terrorists at Israel's expense.
Rice pushed the Israelis to allow the Palestinians in Gaza to have a direct border with Egypt as well as bus convoys between Gaza and the West Bank through Israeli territory. But Levens says it is unbelievable that the U.S. Secretary of State is giving credibility to a terrorist group and "that the U.S. would back off of denying Hamas the ability to run in the January election against [Mahmoud] Abbas."
The coalition spokeswoman says the Bush administration's "pandering" to the Palestinians is reminiscent of the way Adolph Hitler was appeased by the Western powers leading up to the Second World War. "Is it much different," she asks, "than what happened in World War II, when we waited and waited and then had to get hit at Pearl Harbor? It's every bit as dangerous -- this is a new Nazi movement."
The Bush administration would never concede U.S. territory to al-Qaeda, Levens asserts, yet she says the U.S. government appears perfectly willing to make Israel sacrifice its territory and security to the Palestinians. "One battle after another, they're winning," she contends, "and it's not really helpful when the president and his secretary of state just hand it over and force Israel to do that."
America is not giving its terrorist enemies New York, Levens says, "because they killed 3,000 people there." It would be a farce even to consider such a thing, she adds, "and yet we pressure Israel to do what we would never do."
Pro-Israel Advocate Compares U.S. 'Pandering' to Palestine With Nazi Appeasement
November 22, 2005
(AgapePress) - Esther Levens, founder and CEO of the Unity Coalition for Israel, says the recent Palestinian-Israeli "agreement" brokered by Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice is nothing but more appeasement of terrorists at Israel's expense.
Rice pushed the Israelis to allow the Palestinians in Gaza to have a direct border with Egypt as well as bus convoys between Gaza and the West Bank through Israeli territory. But Levens says it is unbelievable that the U.S. Secretary of State is giving credibility to a terrorist group and "that the U.S. would back off of denying Hamas the ability to run in the January election against [Mahmoud] Abbas."
The coalition spokeswoman says the Bush administration's "pandering" to the Palestinians is reminiscent of the way Adolph Hitler was appeased by the Western powers leading up to the Second World War. "Is it much different," she asks, "than what happened in World War II, when we waited and waited and then had to get hit at Pearl Harbor? It's every bit as dangerous -- this is a new Nazi movement."
The Bush administration would never concede U.S. territory to al-Qaeda, Levens asserts, yet she says the U.S. government appears perfectly willing to make Israel sacrifice its territory and security to the Palestinians. "One battle after another, they're winning," she contends, "and it's not really helpful when the president and his secretary of state just hand it over and force Israel to do that."
America is not giving its terrorist enemies New York, Levens says, "because they killed 3,000 people there." It would be a farce even to consider such a thing, she adds, "and yet we pressure Israel to do what we would never do."
Pro-Israel Advocate Compares U.S. 'Pandering' to Palestine With Nazi Appeasement
'Compromises' on Human Sexuality Undercut Biblical Standards
By Jody Brown
November 22, 2005
(AgapePress) - A coalition of denominational renewal groups is warning Christians in America that an "assault" on biblical standards regarding sexuality -- in the guise of supposed "compromises" -- is in reality subverting those standards so that church bodies and officials can disregard them whenever they wish.
For decades, it seems, several mainline Protestant denominations have wrestled with the issue of homosexuality among their clergy, their laity, and society at large -- and how to deal with it in their official denominational procedures and doctrine. Seemingly unwilling to simply declare the lifestyle as sinful, instead they have taken to adopting different strategies toward homosexuality. The Episcopal Church USA, for example, concluded in 1996 that traditional Christian teachings opposing homosexuality were not "core doctrine." Eventually ECUSA consecrated the first openly homosexual bishop, V. Gene Robinson, who now oversees the Diocese of New Hampshire.
Other examples include the United Methodist Church, which last year almost approved a resolution that would have added to the Book of Discipline a phrase "recogniz[ing] that Christians disagree" on the question of whether the practice of homosexuality is or is not compatible with Christian teaching. In a similar vein, the Churchwide Assembly of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America this year turned away a proposal that would have permitted exceptions to be granted even though ELCA ministers would be expected to "abstain from homosexual sexual relationships."
And next year, the Presbyterian Church (USA) is expected to consider a resolution that would permit local churches to deem as "non-essential" the constitutional requirement of "fidelity in the covenant of marriage between a man and a woman, or chastity in singleness."
While those who hold a liberal theology might consider such strategies as progressive, the Association for Church Renewal (ACR) -- a roundtable of conservative leaders from these denominations and others such as the American Baptist Churches, the United Church of Christ, the Church of the Brethren, and the United Church of Canada -- sees the moves as a "compromise" intended to win the Church's affirmation of homosexual acts. That, says the ACR, is an attempt to indirectly "subvert the [biblical] standards" and to invent "procedural devices permitting church bodies and officials to disregard the standards at will."
In an open letter to Christians in the United States, the ACR warns that this compromise evident in several Protestant denominations "would sever the church's practice from its doctrine," essentially setting a "terrible precedent" in which a church openly acknowledges a biblical command -- and then treats obedience to that command as "optional."
"If denominations start granting exemptions from church discipline in one area," states the letter, "it will be very difficult to maintain any kind of covenant of mutual accountability within the church."
According to the ACR, advocates of compromise -- or the "third way," as the ACR labels it -- claim their proposed solution would strike a balance between different interpretations of Bible passages and allow the church to "get beyond yes/no polarities" that force it to make painful choices. Such an approach, says the ACR letter, "is utter nonsense."
"The Bible is filled with unavoidable yes/no choices," the letter points out, citing Deuteronomy 30:19, Joshua 24:15, Matthew 25:33, and Revelation 3:20. "A church that systematically refuses to choose between truth and error has no place left to stand.
"To the extent that any church declines to distinguish the better from the worse biblical interpretations, it undercuts its own ability to teach clear doctrine from the scriptures," add the signers of the ACR letter.
The letter concludes with the ACR's reaffirmation that the standard of fidelity in marriage -- and abstinence in singleness -- remains "the most faithful interpretation of God's will for human sexuality" and an essential component in the Holy Spirit presenting sanctified believers as "holy and blameless" before God.
"We ask you [brothers and sisters in the Lord] to stand steadfast with us in rejecting any compromise that would shift Christ's church away from that godly endeavor," says the letter, which is signed by more than two dozen individuals from 21 different organizations.
News from Agape Press
November 22, 2005
(AgapePress) - A coalition of denominational renewal groups is warning Christians in America that an "assault" on biblical standards regarding sexuality -- in the guise of supposed "compromises" -- is in reality subverting those standards so that church bodies and officials can disregard them whenever they wish.
For decades, it seems, several mainline Protestant denominations have wrestled with the issue of homosexuality among their clergy, their laity, and society at large -- and how to deal with it in their official denominational procedures and doctrine. Seemingly unwilling to simply declare the lifestyle as sinful, instead they have taken to adopting different strategies toward homosexuality. The Episcopal Church USA, for example, concluded in 1996 that traditional Christian teachings opposing homosexuality were not "core doctrine." Eventually ECUSA consecrated the first openly homosexual bishop, V. Gene Robinson, who now oversees the Diocese of New Hampshire.
Other examples include the United Methodist Church, which last year almost approved a resolution that would have added to the Book of Discipline a phrase "recogniz[ing] that Christians disagree" on the question of whether the practice of homosexuality is or is not compatible with Christian teaching. In a similar vein, the Churchwide Assembly of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America this year turned away a proposal that would have permitted exceptions to be granted even though ELCA ministers would be expected to "abstain from homosexual sexual relationships."
And next year, the Presbyterian Church (USA) is expected to consider a resolution that would permit local churches to deem as "non-essential" the constitutional requirement of "fidelity in the covenant of marriage between a man and a woman, or chastity in singleness."
While those who hold a liberal theology might consider such strategies as progressive, the Association for Church Renewal (ACR) -- a roundtable of conservative leaders from these denominations and others such as the American Baptist Churches, the United Church of Christ, the Church of the Brethren, and the United Church of Canada -- sees the moves as a "compromise" intended to win the Church's affirmation of homosexual acts. That, says the ACR, is an attempt to indirectly "subvert the [biblical] standards" and to invent "procedural devices permitting church bodies and officials to disregard the standards at will."
In an open letter to Christians in the United States, the ACR warns that this compromise evident in several Protestant denominations "would sever the church's practice from its doctrine," essentially setting a "terrible precedent" in which a church openly acknowledges a biblical command -- and then treats obedience to that command as "optional."
"If denominations start granting exemptions from church discipline in one area," states the letter, "it will be very difficult to maintain any kind of covenant of mutual accountability within the church."
According to the ACR, advocates of compromise -- or the "third way," as the ACR labels it -- claim their proposed solution would strike a balance between different interpretations of Bible passages and allow the church to "get beyond yes/no polarities" that force it to make painful choices. Such an approach, says the ACR letter, "is utter nonsense."
"The Bible is filled with unavoidable yes/no choices," the letter points out, citing Deuteronomy 30:19, Joshua 24:15, Matthew 25:33, and Revelation 3:20. "A church that systematically refuses to choose between truth and error has no place left to stand.
"To the extent that any church declines to distinguish the better from the worse biblical interpretations, it undercuts its own ability to teach clear doctrine from the scriptures," add the signers of the ACR letter.
The letter concludes with the ACR's reaffirmation that the standard of fidelity in marriage -- and abstinence in singleness -- remains "the most faithful interpretation of God's will for human sexuality" and an essential component in the Holy Spirit presenting sanctified believers as "holy and blameless" before God.
"We ask you [brothers and sisters in the Lord] to stand steadfast with us in rejecting any compromise that would shift Christ's church away from that godly endeavor," says the letter, which is signed by more than two dozen individuals from 21 different organizations.
News from Agape Press
Bible denied to inmate at Guantanamo
Richard A. Serrano
Los Angeles Times
Nov. 27, 2005 12:00 AM
WASHINGTON - At the U.S. prison for suspected terrorists at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, everyone gets a Quran, but no one gets a Bible.
Saifullah Paracha, a 58-year-old former Pakistani businessmen with reputed ties to al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden, has been in U.S. custody since 2003. Like the other inmates at Guantanamo, he has a copy of the Quran. But he also wants an English translation of the King James Version of the Bible.
Paracha believes that because the Bible is one of the scriptures accepted in Islam, he is entitled to a copy to read in his small wire-mesh cell. But after his lawyer shipped him a Bible, along with two volumes of Shakespeare, prison officials confiscated the package.
Paracha's American lawyer filed suit in U.S. District Court in Washington, demanding that Paracha be given the Bible and copies of Hamlet and Julius Caesar. The government responded that certain books are kept from prisoners because they could "incite" them.
Whether Bible or Quran, prayer might seem appropriate for Paracha. The allegations against him are grave.
The government contends that through his international packaging company, Paracha conspired to ship chemical components to the United States to help set off an attack by al-Qaida terrorists. His son, Uzair Paracha, 25, is on trial in New York on charges that he tried to help an al-Qaida operative enter this country and plan the intended attack.
The son, if convicted, faces up to 75 years in prison. The father could receive a life sentence. Both men insist they are innocent.
At his status review hearing last year, Saifullah conceded that he had met bin Laden socially and that the terrorist leader gave him a Quran.
"He was a prophet," Paracha said.
The practice of religion has been a sore point for the Guantanamo detainees.
Earlier this year, tempers flared and hunger strikes were launched over allegations that copies of the Quran were desecrated at the prison by U.S. guards. One account alleged that a Quran was flushed down a toilet. The U.S. government denied the report, but it set off riots in Muslim countries.
Paracha's Washington lawyer, Gaillard Hunt, said he met with Paracha in September and learned that his client "has been in solitary confinement with very little communication with anyone for most of the last year."
"I learned that he has been requesting a Bible," he added. "From my general knowledge, I knew that the Bible (the Old and New testaments) is accepted in Islam as one of their holy texts, so I interpreted this as a religious request."
On Sept. 30, Hunt said, he purchased a Bible and mailed it, still in the publisher's shrink wrap cover, to a chaplain at the naval base. He included a cover letter explaining it was for Prisoner No. 1094, at Paracha's request. Also in the package were the two plays and an English dictionary.
When Hunt visited again in October, Paracha told him no Bible or anything else had arrived. Hunt said one of the military lawyers "explained to me that Paracha would not be allowed to have a Bible as that would violate prison policy."
A recent government lawsuit filed in response said none of the more than 500 prisoners is permitted any special treatment. And government lawyers said Paracha has not shown that the practice of his religion, Islam, has been "substantially burdened" because he does not have an accompanying copy of the Bible.
They also argued that letting Paracha have a Bible would set off a "chain reaction" among the other 170 detainees.
Bible denied to inmate at Guantanamo
Los Angeles Times
Nov. 27, 2005 12:00 AM
WASHINGTON - At the U.S. prison for suspected terrorists at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, everyone gets a Quran, but no one gets a Bible.
Saifullah Paracha, a 58-year-old former Pakistani businessmen with reputed ties to al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden, has been in U.S. custody since 2003. Like the other inmates at Guantanamo, he has a copy of the Quran. But he also wants an English translation of the King James Version of the Bible.
Paracha believes that because the Bible is one of the scriptures accepted in Islam, he is entitled to a copy to read in his small wire-mesh cell. But after his lawyer shipped him a Bible, along with two volumes of Shakespeare, prison officials confiscated the package.
Paracha's American lawyer filed suit in U.S. District Court in Washington, demanding that Paracha be given the Bible and copies of Hamlet and Julius Caesar. The government responded that certain books are kept from prisoners because they could "incite" them.
Whether Bible or Quran, prayer might seem appropriate for Paracha. The allegations against him are grave.
The government contends that through his international packaging company, Paracha conspired to ship chemical components to the United States to help set off an attack by al-Qaida terrorists. His son, Uzair Paracha, 25, is on trial in New York on charges that he tried to help an al-Qaida operative enter this country and plan the intended attack.
The son, if convicted, faces up to 75 years in prison. The father could receive a life sentence. Both men insist they are innocent.
At his status review hearing last year, Saifullah conceded that he had met bin Laden socially and that the terrorist leader gave him a Quran.
"He was a prophet," Paracha said.
The practice of religion has been a sore point for the Guantanamo detainees.
Earlier this year, tempers flared and hunger strikes were launched over allegations that copies of the Quran were desecrated at the prison by U.S. guards. One account alleged that a Quran was flushed down a toilet. The U.S. government denied the report, but it set off riots in Muslim countries.
Paracha's Washington lawyer, Gaillard Hunt, said he met with Paracha in September and learned that his client "has been in solitary confinement with very little communication with anyone for most of the last year."
"I learned that he has been requesting a Bible," he added. "From my general knowledge, I knew that the Bible (the Old and New testaments) is accepted in Islam as one of their holy texts, so I interpreted this as a religious request."
On Sept. 30, Hunt said, he purchased a Bible and mailed it, still in the publisher's shrink wrap cover, to a chaplain at the naval base. He included a cover letter explaining it was for Prisoner No. 1094, at Paracha's request. Also in the package were the two plays and an English dictionary.
When Hunt visited again in October, Paracha told him no Bible or anything else had arrived. Hunt said one of the military lawyers "explained to me that Paracha would not be allowed to have a Bible as that would violate prison policy."
A recent government lawsuit filed in response said none of the more than 500 prisoners is permitted any special treatment. And government lawyers said Paracha has not shown that the practice of his religion, Islam, has been "substantially burdened" because he does not have an accompanying copy of the Bible.
They also argued that letting Paracha have a Bible would set off a "chain reaction" among the other 170 detainees.
Bible denied to inmate at Guantanamo
Charity cash for Palestinian poor was siphoned to suicide bombers
By Eric Silver in Jerusalem
Published: 28 November 2005
Millions of pounds donated by British and other European charities to help the Palestinian poor were unwittingly diverted to fund terror and support the families of suicide bombers, Israeli prosecutors claimed yesterday.
Ahmed Salatna, 43, a Hamas activist from the West Bank town of Jenin, was remanded in custody by a military court charged with distributing €9m (£6.2m) for such purposes over the past nine years. The recipients are alleged to have included the family of a young man who blew himself up at the Sbarro pizza restaurant in Jerusalem in August 2001, killing 15 people and wounding 107. Hamas and Islamic Jihad acknowledged responsibility.
The charge sheet names two British charities, Human Appeal International and Interpal. Human Appeal is a broadly based fundraising organisation, currently helping victims of the Pakistani earthquake. Interpal describes itself as "a non-political, non-profit-making charity that focuses solely on the provision of relief and development aid to the poor and needy of Palestine". No one was available for comment at its London office yesterday. Other charities mentioned were the French CBST, the Italian ABSPT and the Al-Aqsa Foundation, which operates in Austria, Belgium, Denmark and Sweden.
Mr Salatna, who has directed an Islamic charity in Jenin since Israel released him in 1996 after serving three years for Hamas activity, was arrested in September. Micky Rosenfeld, a police spokesman, said Mr Salatna directly transferred the European funds to Hamas cells, suicide bombers and their families.
Mr Rosenfeld said: "Jenin is known as the capital of the suicide bombers. There is no doubt in police minds that Mr Salatna's arrest will be a major blow to those who rely on economic support from Hamas in order to carry out terrorist acts and to give their families financial backing."
Investigators were unable, at this stage, to link specific donations to specific attacks or other activities, the spokesman said. They were considering whether to seek the co-operation of Interpol and the British police.
In West Bank primaries for next January's Palestinian parliamentary elections, Marwan Barghouti, 46, a Tanzim militia commander serving five life sentences in an Israeli prison, won a resounding 96 per cent of Fatah votes in the Ramallah district. Other leading militants won in Jenin and Nablus.
Barghouti's success was hailed as a victory for Fatah's younger generation, which accuses the old guard that returned from exile with Yasser Arafat after the 1993 Oslo Accords of failing the Palestinian people.
Fadwa Barghouti, who visited her husband in jail last week, said: "This proves that Barghouti is a leader for his people and not a terrorist. It is a victory for democracy in Fatah. He told me if we succeed in democratising Fatah, we will succeed in democratising Palestinian society."
Yossi Beilin, architect of the Oslo breakthrough called for Israel to release him. President Moshe Katsav said there would be no early release: "Winning at the polling booth is no grounds for a pardon." he said.
Independent Online Edition > Middle East: "Charity cash for Palestinian poor was siphoned to suicide bombers"
Published: 28 November 2005
Millions of pounds donated by British and other European charities to help the Palestinian poor were unwittingly diverted to fund terror and support the families of suicide bombers, Israeli prosecutors claimed yesterday.
Ahmed Salatna, 43, a Hamas activist from the West Bank town of Jenin, was remanded in custody by a military court charged with distributing €9m (£6.2m) for such purposes over the past nine years. The recipients are alleged to have included the family of a young man who blew himself up at the Sbarro pizza restaurant in Jerusalem in August 2001, killing 15 people and wounding 107. Hamas and Islamic Jihad acknowledged responsibility.
The charge sheet names two British charities, Human Appeal International and Interpal. Human Appeal is a broadly based fundraising organisation, currently helping victims of the Pakistani earthquake. Interpal describes itself as "a non-political, non-profit-making charity that focuses solely on the provision of relief and development aid to the poor and needy of Palestine". No one was available for comment at its London office yesterday. Other charities mentioned were the French CBST, the Italian ABSPT and the Al-Aqsa Foundation, which operates in Austria, Belgium, Denmark and Sweden.
Mr Salatna, who has directed an Islamic charity in Jenin since Israel released him in 1996 after serving three years for Hamas activity, was arrested in September. Micky Rosenfeld, a police spokesman, said Mr Salatna directly transferred the European funds to Hamas cells, suicide bombers and their families.
Mr Rosenfeld said: "Jenin is known as the capital of the suicide bombers. There is no doubt in police minds that Mr Salatna's arrest will be a major blow to those who rely on economic support from Hamas in order to carry out terrorist acts and to give their families financial backing."
Investigators were unable, at this stage, to link specific donations to specific attacks or other activities, the spokesman said. They were considering whether to seek the co-operation of Interpol and the British police.
In West Bank primaries for next January's Palestinian parliamentary elections, Marwan Barghouti, 46, a Tanzim militia commander serving five life sentences in an Israeli prison, won a resounding 96 per cent of Fatah votes in the Ramallah district. Other leading militants won in Jenin and Nablus.
Barghouti's success was hailed as a victory for Fatah's younger generation, which accuses the old guard that returned from exile with Yasser Arafat after the 1993 Oslo Accords of failing the Palestinian people.
Fadwa Barghouti, who visited her husband in jail last week, said: "This proves that Barghouti is a leader for his people and not a terrorist. It is a victory for democracy in Fatah. He told me if we succeed in democratising Fatah, we will succeed in democratising Palestinian society."
Yossi Beilin, architect of the Oslo breakthrough called for Israel to release him. President Moshe Katsav said there would be no early release: "Winning at the polling booth is no grounds for a pardon." he said.
Independent Online Edition > Middle East: "Charity cash for Palestinian poor was siphoned to suicide bombers"
Intelligent design has scientific foundation
In the opinion section of the Nov. 18 issue, the Morning Sentinel ran a cartoon by Stuart Carlson that mocks the proponents of intelligent design and betrays the cartoonist's misconceptions about the debate on evolution. In a "Wizard of Oz" setting, Dorothy says, "Toto, I've got a feeling we're not in the 21st century anymore," while the Munchkins of intelligent design hold up placards with slogans such as "Science is for suckers."
Thus, the advocates for intelligent design are portrayed as ignorant people, blind to the evidence of modern science. On the contrary, the intelligent design movement invites the most thorough examination of the most modern scientific evidence. The theory of evolution was an invention of 19th-century scientists who had no access to the vast knowledge we now have of biochemistry and the cell.
Darwin thought that the cell was a more or less simple lump of matter. He provided the basis for the demise of his own theory in this passage from "The Origin of Species": "If it could be demonstrated that any complex organ system existed which could not possibly have been formed by numerous, successive, slight modifications, my theory would absolutely break down."
Twenty-first-century science has demonstrated just that in the irreducible complexity of the molecular "machines" within cells, the structure of cilia, flagella, and the intracellular transport system. I urge readers to read intelligent books on intelligent design, rather than heed bits and bytes in the media that take pot-shots at something they do not understand.
David Hoagland
Winslow
Intelligent design has scientific foundation
Thus, the advocates for intelligent design are portrayed as ignorant people, blind to the evidence of modern science. On the contrary, the intelligent design movement invites the most thorough examination of the most modern scientific evidence. The theory of evolution was an invention of 19th-century scientists who had no access to the vast knowledge we now have of biochemistry and the cell.
Darwin thought that the cell was a more or less simple lump of matter. He provided the basis for the demise of his own theory in this passage from "The Origin of Species": "If it could be demonstrated that any complex organ system existed which could not possibly have been formed by numerous, successive, slight modifications, my theory would absolutely break down."
Twenty-first-century science has demonstrated just that in the irreducible complexity of the molecular "machines" within cells, the structure of cilia, flagella, and the intracellular transport system. I urge readers to read intelligent books on intelligent design, rather than heed bits and bytes in the media that take pot-shots at something they do not understand.
David Hoagland
Winslow
Intelligent design has scientific foundation
Faribault teacher holds firm on his design belief
November 26, 2005
Rodney LeVake still teaches science in Faribault, Minn. And he still wishes he'd had a chance to tell the Supreme Court why he believes that students should be taught about alternatives to evolution.
"I never believed a person should teach a creation account in a public school situation," he said. But students "have got to know about the controversies in science," and he considers intelligent design one of those issues.
"The best way is to hit it head-on," and preferably in biology class, he said last week.
LeVake sued school officials after they learned of his feelings in 1998 and transferred him to a ninth-grade physical science class that does not include evolution.
LeVake, backed by the American Center for Law and Justice, a public-interest firm founded by evangelist Pat Robertson, contended that the school district's action infringed his freedom of speech and religion. The argument failed to convince a series of courts, including the Minnesota Court of Appeals. The Minnesota and U.S. Supreme Courts declined to hear it.
LeVake, 51, said he accepts two or three invitations a year to speak about his views.
For him, the variations among living creatures cannot be fully explained by evolution, he said.
"It's real hard to make a case that things come about by thoughtless mutation over time," he said.
But intelligent design, which holds that life is so complex that it had to spring from a conscious, intelligent source, is "kind of cool," he said. It offers a way for some people to account for those variations, he said.
"And for me it's a small step to recognize who that 'intelligence' is," he said.
He said that many colleagues give him "the cold shoulder" and that he misses the deeper conversations he used to have with them. But he said, "You have to kind of forgive and forget."
He said that even during the litigation he was struggling to reconcile his scientific knowledge and his religious beliefs. He concluded that "science can support the personal faith that I have." But he added: "My job is to teach science."
He said he still enjoys teaching ninth-grade science and coaching 10th-grade football.
"But the frosting on the cake would be if I were teaching biology."
Faribault teacher holds firm on his design belief
Rodney LeVake still teaches science in Faribault, Minn. And he still wishes he'd had a chance to tell the Supreme Court why he believes that students should be taught about alternatives to evolution.
"I never believed a person should teach a creation account in a public school situation," he said. But students "have got to know about the controversies in science," and he considers intelligent design one of those issues.
"The best way is to hit it head-on," and preferably in biology class, he said last week.
LeVake sued school officials after they learned of his feelings in 1998 and transferred him to a ninth-grade physical science class that does not include evolution.
LeVake, backed by the American Center for Law and Justice, a public-interest firm founded by evangelist Pat Robertson, contended that the school district's action infringed his freedom of speech and religion. The argument failed to convince a series of courts, including the Minnesota Court of Appeals. The Minnesota and U.S. Supreme Courts declined to hear it.
LeVake, 51, said he accepts two or three invitations a year to speak about his views.
For him, the variations among living creatures cannot be fully explained by evolution, he said.
"It's real hard to make a case that things come about by thoughtless mutation over time," he said.
But intelligent design, which holds that life is so complex that it had to spring from a conscious, intelligent source, is "kind of cool," he said. It offers a way for some people to account for those variations, he said.
"And for me it's a small step to recognize who that 'intelligence' is," he said.
He said that many colleagues give him "the cold shoulder" and that he misses the deeper conversations he used to have with them. But he said, "You have to kind of forgive and forget."
He said that even during the litigation he was struggling to reconcile his scientific knowledge and his religious beliefs. He concluded that "science can support the personal faith that I have." But he added: "My job is to teach science."
He said he still enjoys teaching ninth-grade science and coaching 10th-grade football.
"But the frosting on the cake would be if I were teaching biology."
Faribault teacher holds firm on his design belief
Narnia film catering to Christian market
Last Updated Fri, 25 Nov 2005 15:40:03 EST
CBC Arts
The makers of the first film in The Chronicles of Narnia are downplaying its Christian allegory, but that hasn't stopped churches in the U.S. and U.K. from seeing it as a chance to minister to their flock.
Disney's The Lion, The Witch and the Wardrobe, based on the book by British writer C.S. Lewis, will have its world premiere in London on Dec. 7.
Lucy gets more than she bargains for when she steps through the door of the wardrobe. (AP photo/Walt Disney Pictures)
Lewis, a Christian philosopher as well as an author, created a fantasy world that is full of religious imagery. The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, with its story of a lion who sacrifices himself so a child can live, is particularly heavy on the Jesus allegory.
Messianic images are common in science fiction, director Andrew Adamson told the BBC, citing The Matrix and Star Wars.
It is "open to the audience to interpret," said Adamson, who was co-director of the Shrek films.
But church groups are assuming that the values that Lewis wove into the story will remain in the film.
In the U.K., evangelical publishers have sent out special Narnia packs to churches. Some Methodists have prepared themed sermons and one Anglican church is giving out free tickets to single parents.
In the U.S., there are plans for group trips and screenings of The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, The Witch and the Wardrobe.
Disney is hoping the film gets the same level of following as The Passion of The Christ allowing it to help reverse the plunge Disney has suffered this year at the box office.
Christians are recognized by Hollywood as a valuable niche market after Mel Gibson's version of the crucifixion earned $600 million worldwide.
Churches see the Narnia movie as a golden opportunity to tap into mainstream culture and popularize religion, especially among children and youth.
St Luke's, an Anglican church in the southeast English town of Maidstone, distributed free tickets to Gibson's film. Now they are to repeat the offer with Narnia.
"We are giving away 10,000 British pounds ($20,000) worth of tickets to single-parent families in and around the area," said a spokesman for the church.
U.S. churches have similar plans, though most are waiting to determine whether the Christian message stays intact in the film.
The evangelical publishing company Christian Publishing and Outreach, which distributes material to 20,000 churches, has won permission from Disney to use two images from the film in its Narnia packs.
"We have a what-to-do guide, outlines that give ministers ideas on how to deliver sermons, material for Sunday schools," said Russ Bravo, CPO's development director. The company also sells Narnia-themed DVDs, posters and invitations.
The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe tells the tale of four children who step through a wardrobe into the magical world of Narnia. There they witness the evil witch Jadis, played by British actress Tilda Swinton, fighting the good lion Aslan.
"The Passion really surprised Hollywood. Everyone thought it would bomb. What they didn't realize was that there is an audience for a film with a Christian message," John Buckeridge, editor of Christianity Magazine, told Reuters.
"Disney recognizes the marketplace. In Hollywood, money talks," said Buckeridge. Christinity Magazine ran a cover story on how churches could link into Narnia's release to promote a Christian message.
CBC Arts - CBC Arts: Narnia film catering to Christian market
CBC Arts
The makers of the first film in The Chronicles of Narnia are downplaying its Christian allegory, but that hasn't stopped churches in the U.S. and U.K. from seeing it as a chance to minister to their flock.
Disney's The Lion, The Witch and the Wardrobe, based on the book by British writer C.S. Lewis, will have its world premiere in London on Dec. 7.
Lucy gets more than she bargains for when she steps through the door of the wardrobe. (AP photo/Walt Disney Pictures)
Lewis, a Christian philosopher as well as an author, created a fantasy world that is full of religious imagery. The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, with its story of a lion who sacrifices himself so a child can live, is particularly heavy on the Jesus allegory.
Messianic images are common in science fiction, director Andrew Adamson told the BBC, citing The Matrix and Star Wars.
It is "open to the audience to interpret," said Adamson, who was co-director of the Shrek films.
But church groups are assuming that the values that Lewis wove into the story will remain in the film.
In the U.K., evangelical publishers have sent out special Narnia packs to churches. Some Methodists have prepared themed sermons and one Anglican church is giving out free tickets to single parents.
In the U.S., there are plans for group trips and screenings of The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, The Witch and the Wardrobe.
Disney is hoping the film gets the same level of following as The Passion of The Christ allowing it to help reverse the plunge Disney has suffered this year at the box office.
Christians are recognized by Hollywood as a valuable niche market after Mel Gibson's version of the crucifixion earned $600 million worldwide.
Churches see the Narnia movie as a golden opportunity to tap into mainstream culture and popularize religion, especially among children and youth.
St Luke's, an Anglican church in the southeast English town of Maidstone, distributed free tickets to Gibson's film. Now they are to repeat the offer with Narnia.
"We are giving away 10,000 British pounds ($20,000) worth of tickets to single-parent families in and around the area," said a spokesman for the church.
U.S. churches have similar plans, though most are waiting to determine whether the Christian message stays intact in the film.
The evangelical publishing company Christian Publishing and Outreach, which distributes material to 20,000 churches, has won permission from Disney to use two images from the film in its Narnia packs.
"We have a what-to-do guide, outlines that give ministers ideas on how to deliver sermons, material for Sunday schools," said Russ Bravo, CPO's development director. The company also sells Narnia-themed DVDs, posters and invitations.
The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe tells the tale of four children who step through a wardrobe into the magical world of Narnia. There they witness the evil witch Jadis, played by British actress Tilda Swinton, fighting the good lion Aslan.
"The Passion really surprised Hollywood. Everyone thought it would bomb. What they didn't realize was that there is an audience for a film with a Christian message," John Buckeridge, editor of Christianity Magazine, told Reuters.
"Disney recognizes the marketplace. In Hollywood, money talks," said Buckeridge. Christinity Magazine ran a cover story on how churches could link into Narnia's release to promote a Christian message.
CBC Arts - CBC Arts: Narnia film catering to Christian market
Friday, November 25, 2005
Remarks on "Religious Freedom" in China
Christian persecution groups responded with strong objections to controversial statements made recently by evangelist Luis Palau regarding religious freedom
in China.
Wednesday, Nov. 23, 2005 Posted: 4:04:40PM EST
Christian persecution groups responded with strong objections to controversial statements made recently by evangelist Luis Palau, who claimed that there was greater religious freedom in China and urged churches to register with the government.
"[Palau's] position discounts the suffering of our brothers and sisters in China, and assumes the good will of a government that hasn't earned that assumption," wrote Todd Nettleton, director of news service for the Voice of the Martyrs (VOM), on the VOM Persecution Blog.
During his fifth trip to China, the highly respected evangelist said at a press conference in Beijing on Nov. 19 that he wanted to "make every effort to let
people know that there is more freedom in China than people have anticipated," and that he would "personally" encourage unregistered churches to register and "receive greater freedom and blessings from the government."
"I feel that registering is a positive thing for the followers of Jesus," Palau stated. "Believers should live in the open, especially when the Chinese government offers it. Jesus said that we are the light of the world, and that we should not be kept hidden or in the dark. Therefore, believers should share their faith openly."
"If I were Chinese, I would definitely register. Not registering only lends to misinterpretations and misunderstandings," he added.
Palau's statements concerning persecution in China came as a shock and a disappointment to much of the Christian community and drew the protests of
persecution watchdogs internationally.
"Luis Palau echoes common misinformed preconceptions about registration in China when he says that the government's urging of house churches to register is similar to the way churches must register in the U.S. and in his native country, Argentina and hence, he urges unregistered congregations to register," wrote Glenn Penner, Communication Director for the Voice of the Martyrs (VOM) in Canada, in a statement to The Christian Post.
Penner noted that rather than receiving "greater freedom and blessings" from the government, Chinese churches actually lose rights when they register with the government including: the absolute right to choose who will lead services; the right to choose location and time of services; the autonomy to appoint pastors and preach about the second coming of Christ; the ability to allow children under 18 to attend Church meetings; the right to perform evangelistic works outside of designated places of worship; the freedom by clergies to choose who and where to study; and the
headship of the church.
Registered churches in China must submit to the authority of the Communist Party-controlled government, yielding power to the government to approve basic Church decisions.
"Christians are under a biblical mandate to disobey laws that call for them to disobey scriptural principles or to give to Caesar that which belongs to God," Penner exclaimed.
"The whole idea of mandatory registration is a violation of religious liberty and basic human rights. Governments are not given the mandate to grant religious freedom; this is a God-given right. Governments can only acknowledge this right."
In addition, Nettleton noted that "the Communist Party, which controls these registered churches, has as one of its bedrock principles the idea that there
is no God. With that in mind, it is easy to understand why an estimated 80 percent of China's Christians refuse to come under government control."
"They know that our first loyalty, as Christians, is to Jesus Christ, not to government leaders," Nettleton continued. "Making a comparison between registering
for tax-exempt status in the U.S. and Chinese state restrictions on religion is like comparing a gentle spring rain with Hurricane Katrina."
Both Penner and Nettleton gave mention of well-known Chinese pastors that have been arrested, beaten, or jailed for their faith as evidence that religious freedom in China is not as Palau claims.
"I wonder how Mr. Palau would explain his comment to Christians like Li Ying, who is serving a 15-year prison sentence for publishing a Christian magazine. Or to Cai Zhuohua, sentenced this month to serve three years in a labor camp for printing Bibles and other Christian literature (the government only allows one printer to print Bibles, and those are not available except to the registered churches)," Penner
questioned.
"Or to Gong Shengliang, serving a life sentence for his Christian work with the South China Church. Or to Christian businessman Tong Qimiao, who suffered severe
injuries at the hands of police when he was arrested and then denied hospital treatment and whose business was forced to close when he demanded that those
responsible for his abuse to be punished."
Nettleton, also made mention of the family of Jiang Zongxiu, who was beaten to death in police custody in June, 2004 after being arrested for giving out Bibles and Christian literature in the marketplace.
"I suspect all of them would be surprised to hear that there is now more freedom in China," Nettleton wrote.
"How does Mr. Palau respond to documents smuggled out of China this year that provide concrete evidence that the persecution policies are being directed from the
Central Government in Beijing; not only from local or provincial authorities," Penner continued. "This directly contradicts Mr. Palau's assertion that 'It
could just be local authorities acting on their own accord.'"
Though Nettleton expressed strong disapproval of Palau's statements, the VOM spokesman also expressed appreciation for the work he's done through the years
to spread the gospel.
As one of the most respected evangelists in the Spanish-speaking world today Palau has taken the message of hope to an estimated 20 million people in 70 nations through the ministry that bears his name. Palau is well known for the evangelistic festivals he has held over the years. Recent festivals included Washington, D.C.; Madrid, Spain; and Mendoza, Argentina.
"Thank you, Mr. Palau, for your years of faithful service to the King," Nettleton concluded. "Please honor our suffering brothers and sisters in China by retracting your call for all Christians in China to register with the Communist government. Coming under control of an atheistic government is not the answer to Christian persecution in China."
[Editor's Note: Anthony Chiu contributed reporting from Beijing for this article, and Kenneth Chan from San Francisco.]
in China.
Wednesday, Nov. 23, 2005 Posted: 4:04:40PM EST
Christian persecution groups responded with strong objections to controversial statements made recently by evangelist Luis Palau, who claimed that there was greater religious freedom in China and urged churches to register with the government.
"[Palau's] position discounts the suffering of our brothers and sisters in China, and assumes the good will of a government that hasn't earned that assumption," wrote Todd Nettleton, director of news service for the Voice of the Martyrs (VOM), on the VOM Persecution Blog.
During his fifth trip to China, the highly respected evangelist said at a press conference in Beijing on Nov. 19 that he wanted to "make every effort to let
people know that there is more freedom in China than people have anticipated," and that he would "personally" encourage unregistered churches to register and "receive greater freedom and blessings from the government."
"I feel that registering is a positive thing for the followers of Jesus," Palau stated. "Believers should live in the open, especially when the Chinese government offers it. Jesus said that we are the light of the world, and that we should not be kept hidden or in the dark. Therefore, believers should share their faith openly."
"If I were Chinese, I would definitely register. Not registering only lends to misinterpretations and misunderstandings," he added.
Palau's statements concerning persecution in China came as a shock and a disappointment to much of the Christian community and drew the protests of
persecution watchdogs internationally.
"Luis Palau echoes common misinformed preconceptions about registration in China when he says that the government's urging of house churches to register is similar to the way churches must register in the U.S. and in his native country, Argentina and hence, he urges unregistered congregations to register," wrote Glenn Penner, Communication Director for the Voice of the Martyrs (VOM) in Canada, in a statement to The Christian Post.
Penner noted that rather than receiving "greater freedom and blessings" from the government, Chinese churches actually lose rights when they register with the government including: the absolute right to choose who will lead services; the right to choose location and time of services; the autonomy to appoint pastors and preach about the second coming of Christ; the ability to allow children under 18 to attend Church meetings; the right to perform evangelistic works outside of designated places of worship; the freedom by clergies to choose who and where to study; and the
headship of the church.
Registered churches in China must submit to the authority of the Communist Party-controlled government, yielding power to the government to approve basic Church decisions.
"Christians are under a biblical mandate to disobey laws that call for them to disobey scriptural principles or to give to Caesar that which belongs to God," Penner exclaimed.
"The whole idea of mandatory registration is a violation of religious liberty and basic human rights. Governments are not given the mandate to grant religious freedom; this is a God-given right. Governments can only acknowledge this right."
In addition, Nettleton noted that "the Communist Party, which controls these registered churches, has as one of its bedrock principles the idea that there
is no God. With that in mind, it is easy to understand why an estimated 80 percent of China's Christians refuse to come under government control."
"They know that our first loyalty, as Christians, is to Jesus Christ, not to government leaders," Nettleton continued. "Making a comparison between registering
for tax-exempt status in the U.S. and Chinese state restrictions on religion is like comparing a gentle spring rain with Hurricane Katrina."
Both Penner and Nettleton gave mention of well-known Chinese pastors that have been arrested, beaten, or jailed for their faith as evidence that religious freedom in China is not as Palau claims.
"I wonder how Mr. Palau would explain his comment to Christians like Li Ying, who is serving a 15-year prison sentence for publishing a Christian magazine. Or to Cai Zhuohua, sentenced this month to serve three years in a labor camp for printing Bibles and other Christian literature (the government only allows one printer to print Bibles, and those are not available except to the registered churches)," Penner
questioned.
"Or to Gong Shengliang, serving a life sentence for his Christian work with the South China Church. Or to Christian businessman Tong Qimiao, who suffered severe
injuries at the hands of police when he was arrested and then denied hospital treatment and whose business was forced to close when he demanded that those
responsible for his abuse to be punished."
Nettleton, also made mention of the family of Jiang Zongxiu, who was beaten to death in police custody in June, 2004 after being arrested for giving out Bibles and Christian literature in the marketplace.
"I suspect all of them would be surprised to hear that there is now more freedom in China," Nettleton wrote.
"How does Mr. Palau respond to documents smuggled out of China this year that provide concrete evidence that the persecution policies are being directed from the
Central Government in Beijing; not only from local or provincial authorities," Penner continued. "This directly contradicts Mr. Palau's assertion that 'It
could just be local authorities acting on their own accord.'"
Though Nettleton expressed strong disapproval of Palau's statements, the VOM spokesman also expressed appreciation for the work he's done through the years
to spread the gospel.
As one of the most respected evangelists in the Spanish-speaking world today Palau has taken the message of hope to an estimated 20 million people in 70 nations through the ministry that bears his name. Palau is well known for the evangelistic festivals he has held over the years. Recent festivals included Washington, D.C.; Madrid, Spain; and Mendoza, Argentina.
"Thank you, Mr. Palau, for your years of faithful service to the King," Nettleton concluded. "Please honor our suffering brothers and sisters in China by retracting your call for all Christians in China to register with the Communist government. Coming under control of an atheistic government is not the answer to Christian persecution in China."
[Editor's Note: Anthony Chiu contributed reporting from Beijing for this article, and Kenneth Chan from San Francisco.]
E! TV Using 'Girls Next Door' to Normalize Porn Industry
By James L. Lambert
November 23, 2005
(AgapePress) - Entertainment Television's show Girls Next Door is just another example of Hollywood's attempt to normalize the porn industry in today's culture, claims an internationally respected expert and justice consultant on the subject.
In an exclusive interview, Dr. Judith Reisman -- author of the soon-to-be-released book Kinsey's Attic: How One Man's Psychopathology Changed the World -- blasted the E! TV channel by saying, "the fact [that the network] states on its website that they are owned 49.9% by Disney says it all."
Continuing, Reisman asserts that "Disney now pimps the antique, surgically enhanced Hugh Hefner playboy. Hefner's 'innocent' pornography will seduce dad. Seduce dad and you will get his kids. Seduce kids and you control; you own an entire impotent male population of users and female wannabees -- forever."
Reisman, a prolific writer who is best known for her expose on sex researcher Alfred Kinsey, recalls that Hefner "actually drew the first 'sibling' incest cartoon for Playboy in 1954." She adds that the Playboy founder "personally selected the thousands of child sex abuse jokes and cartoons that were a Playboy staple."
The author is disturbed that the network is investing so much time glamorizing the 79-year-old purveyor of porn. The show, advertised as a reality show filmed exclusively from the Playboy mansion in Los Angeles, focuses on the mansion itself and the everyday lives of the three "twenty-something" live-in girlfriends of the aging publisher. In one episode, the three women are shown preparing for a nude layout in the famous magazine, all under the watchful eye of the magazine's patriarch. It is not uncommon for the Disney-owned network to fade the camera in
scenes when nudity is revealed.
Reisman is disappointed that E! Television would feature a person such as Hefner whose exploits have had such a negative influence on modern culture. "What non-consumers do not know -- and what many Playboy consumers overlook," she says, "is that Playboy has always been much more than a girlie or men's magazine. It has long been the bully pulpit for a worldview that judges men according to their tally of sexual conquests. The worldwide prototype for Playboy's male design was publisher Hugh Hefner's own allegedly outrageous sexual lifestyle."
Reisman also sees the E! TV program as promoting Playboy's endorsement of multi-partner sexual relationships. Hefner's live-in girlfriends illustrate that, she says. According to the author, "many male consumers are easily trained to believe they are being cheated if they have a love life with one woman. Sex merchants intend to displace woman-wife and love. Sex merchants intend to become the consumer's substitute lover!"
Judith Reisman: E! TV Using 'Girls Next Door' to Normalize Porn Industry
http://headlines.agapepress.org/archive/11/232005f.asp
November 23, 2005
(AgapePress) - Entertainment Television's show Girls Next Door is just another example of Hollywood's attempt to normalize the porn industry in today's culture, claims an internationally respected expert and justice consultant on the subject.
In an exclusive interview, Dr. Judith Reisman -- author of the soon-to-be-released book Kinsey's Attic: How One Man's Psychopathology Changed the World -- blasted the E! TV channel by saying, "the fact [that the network] states on its website that they are owned 49.9% by Disney says it all."
Continuing, Reisman asserts that "Disney now pimps the antique, surgically enhanced Hugh Hefner playboy. Hefner's 'innocent' pornography will seduce dad. Seduce dad and you will get his kids. Seduce kids and you control; you own an entire impotent male population of users and female wannabees -- forever."
Reisman, a prolific writer who is best known for her expose on sex researcher Alfred Kinsey, recalls that Hefner "actually drew the first 'sibling' incest cartoon for Playboy in 1954." She adds that the Playboy founder "personally selected the thousands of child sex abuse jokes and cartoons that were a Playboy staple."
The author is disturbed that the network is investing so much time glamorizing the 79-year-old purveyor of porn. The show, advertised as a reality show filmed exclusively from the Playboy mansion in Los Angeles, focuses on the mansion itself and the everyday lives of the three "twenty-something" live-in girlfriends of the aging publisher. In one episode, the three women are shown preparing for a nude layout in the famous magazine, all under the watchful eye of the magazine's patriarch. It is not uncommon for the Disney-owned network to fade the camera in
scenes when nudity is revealed.
Reisman is disappointed that E! Television would feature a person such as Hefner whose exploits have had such a negative influence on modern culture. "What non-consumers do not know -- and what many Playboy consumers overlook," she says, "is that Playboy has always been much more than a girlie or men's magazine. It has long been the bully pulpit for a worldview that judges men according to their tally of sexual conquests. The worldwide prototype for Playboy's male design was publisher Hugh Hefner's own allegedly outrageous sexual lifestyle."
Reisman also sees the E! TV program as promoting Playboy's endorsement of multi-partner sexual relationships. Hefner's live-in girlfriends illustrate that, she says. According to the author, "many male consumers are easily trained to believe they are being cheated if they have a love life with one woman. Sex merchants intend to displace woman-wife and love. Sex merchants intend to become the consumer's substitute lover!"
Judith Reisman: E! TV Using 'Girls Next Door' to Normalize Porn Industry
http://headlines.agapepress.org/archive/11/232005f.asp
Christian Activist Foresees Uphill Marriage Protection Battle in Maine
By Chad Groening
November 23, 2005
(AgapePress) - A spokesman for the Christian Civic League of Maine (CCLM) says the recent rejection of pro-family values by a majority of Maine voters indicates a spiritual void in the state. The voters there said no to a "people's veto" that would have nullified a bill passed by the legislature giving special rights to homosexuals.
Maine voters had rejected special rights for homosexuals in 1998. However, prohomosexual activists are celebrating across the state today, after citizens recently opted not to use a people's veto to repeal the bill pushed by the state's liberal governor and legislature -- a measure conferring special rights on gays and lesbians.
CCLM legislative liaison Tim Russell believes the voters in his state need to be made aware that "Pandora has been let out of the box." Concerned that this victory by the homosexual lobby will pave the way for the approval of same-sex marriage statewide, he asserts, "Clearly, we're going to have to address the officials that we elect. We're going to have to start to educate the Maine citizens."
One of the first issues to be addressed, Russell contends, is the spiritual climate in the New England state. "We have throughout this campaign spoken God's word, his truth, in love; and it's been turned around and spouted back that we are bigots," he says. "And clearly, scripture tells us that we can expect this." The anti-family opposition has been so vicious, he notes, that pro-family voters have been accused
of hate speech simply for wearing buttons supporting traditional marriage.
The CCLM spokesman concludes that, if there is to be any hope of shoring up traditional marriage against its attackers, pro-family forces are going to have to take political action. "We could never hope to pass a constitutional amendment defining marriage as a man and a woman in this state -- and it must be done through the legislature in the state of Maine -- until we change the House and the Senate here in the state -- and, actually, the governorship," he says.
Russell says Maine's voters must get mobilized to get rid of legislators who continue to support reckless agendas promoting unhealthy, anti-family lifestyles. "We've got to get men and women who subscribe to traditional family values," he asserts, "and clearly we have got to turn our attention back to scriptural values in God's word."
November 23, 2005
(AgapePress) - A spokesman for the Christian Civic League of Maine (CCLM) says the recent rejection of pro-family values by a majority of Maine voters indicates a spiritual void in the state. The voters there said no to a "people's veto" that would have nullified a bill passed by the legislature giving special rights to homosexuals.
Maine voters had rejected special rights for homosexuals in 1998. However, prohomosexual activists are celebrating across the state today, after citizens recently opted not to use a people's veto to repeal the bill pushed by the state's liberal governor and legislature -- a measure conferring special rights on gays and lesbians.
CCLM legislative liaison Tim Russell believes the voters in his state need to be made aware that "Pandora has been let out of the box." Concerned that this victory by the homosexual lobby will pave the way for the approval of same-sex marriage statewide, he asserts, "Clearly, we're going to have to address the officials that we elect. We're going to have to start to educate the Maine citizens."
One of the first issues to be addressed, Russell contends, is the spiritual climate in the New England state. "We have throughout this campaign spoken God's word, his truth, in love; and it's been turned around and spouted back that we are bigots," he says. "And clearly, scripture tells us that we can expect this." The anti-family opposition has been so vicious, he notes, that pro-family voters have been accused
of hate speech simply for wearing buttons supporting traditional marriage.
The CCLM spokesman concludes that, if there is to be any hope of shoring up traditional marriage against its attackers, pro-family forces are going to have to take political action. "We could never hope to pass a constitutional amendment defining marriage as a man and a woman in this state -- and it must be done through the legislature in the state of Maine -- until we change the House and the Senate here in the state -- and, actually, the governorship," he says.
Russell says Maine's voters must get mobilized to get rid of legislators who continue to support reckless agendas promoting unhealthy, anti-family lifestyles. "We've got to get men and women who subscribe to traditional family values," he asserts, "and clearly we have got to turn our attention back to scriptural values in God's word."
Parents mad over new math curriculum
Thursday, November 24 @ 00:00:30
They're not exactly counting on their fingers, but some parents in the Alpine School District are taking math into their own hands.
The district has implemented Investigations in Number, Data, and Space,
a math program officials say satisfies the state's requirements and
teaches students "basic number facts."
The curriculum uses a practice called "debriefing," during which students share their methods for solving math problems, and the class then discusses that method. Traditional methods for solving a problem are acceptable, but other methods are allowed, as well.
But parents say the curriculum does not teach children multiplication tables or long division and leaves students unprepared for higher education and careers. Some parents are turning to homeschool, charter schools and private schools for the math instruction they say their children need.
"Kids are going through the whole education process and not being able to do any math in their head whatsoever," said Kristine Hall of Pleasant Grove, whose children attend school in the district.
Oak Norton of American Fork, the father of four children, has gathered 810 signatures on a petition opposing Investigations math and supporting more traditional math instruction. The petition is available online at www.oaknorton.com.
He became alarmed about the math curriculum when he found out his daughter was not being taught multiplication tables in the third grade, he said.
"Everybody needs to know how to multiply."
He also was in disbelief when he saw his daughter drawing 120 circles on a piece of paper, and then crossing out 30 at a time to divide 120 by 30, he said. "Really what's happening is they're falling way behind where their peers are at who are learning the standard traditional math methods that we've learned as kids."
Of the 756 petition signers who live in the Alpine School District, 60 percent said they were considering removing their child from traditional public schools because of the math instruction, and planning to either home school their children or enroll them in charter or private schools.
Norton said he believes teachers are afraid of losing their jobs if they give traditional math instruction in their classrooms. At an October meeting, he asked the Board of Education to reassure teachers that was not the case. In November, the board released a statement saying traditional math instruction is welcome in Alpine School District classrooms, in an effort to achieve a "balanced approach."
The statement, which is posted on the district's Web site, says traditional math is being blended with Investigations. "The initial implementation of Investigations, a program grounded in promoting deeper, comprehensive student understanding of math concepts, was advocated broadly as a single math program," the statement reads.
"Subsequent to its implementation, adjustments have been made to move from using Investigations as the sole instructional program to a continuum that includes elements of a traditional system."
But Norton said that policy could create incongruity between teaching method used in different grades could leave a child confused.
Shannon Cannon of Eagle Mountain said Investigations math was the catalyst for her and her husband's decision to homeschool their five children. Her daughter, who was in the first grade, did well in math until Investigations was implemented, she said. "She just got more and more confused and just lost confidence in it."
After receiving traditional math instruction at home, her daughter is beginning to regain her enthusiasm for math, Cannon said. "She feels like she can do it again. She's not confused anymore. It took some time before she felt like it was something she was up for."
Hall said her disgust with the way her children were learning math led her to begin giving them traditional math instruction at home. Their homework under the Investigations curriculum was "stupid" and "inane," she said. "Every single day it was counting. They didn't learn really any addition."
So she began buying math books and doing her own instruction. "I had to because they weren't learning anything. They weren't learning the stuff they need to know. This math that they're doing is really wrong."
Anna Chang-Yen can be reached at 344-2549 or annac@heraldextra.com.
They're not exactly counting on their fingers, but some parents in the Alpine School District are taking math into their own hands.
The district has implemented Investigations in Number, Data, and Space,
a math program officials say satisfies the state's requirements and
teaches students "basic number facts."
The curriculum uses a practice called "debriefing," during which students share their methods for solving math problems, and the class then discusses that method. Traditional methods for solving a problem are acceptable, but other methods are allowed, as well.
But parents say the curriculum does not teach children multiplication tables or long division and leaves students unprepared for higher education and careers. Some parents are turning to homeschool, charter schools and private schools for the math instruction they say their children need.
"Kids are going through the whole education process and not being able to do any math in their head whatsoever," said Kristine Hall of Pleasant Grove, whose children attend school in the district.
Oak Norton of American Fork, the father of four children, has gathered 810 signatures on a petition opposing Investigations math and supporting more traditional math instruction. The petition is available online at www.oaknorton.com.
He became alarmed about the math curriculum when he found out his daughter was not being taught multiplication tables in the third grade, he said.
"Everybody needs to know how to multiply."
He also was in disbelief when he saw his daughter drawing 120 circles on a piece of paper, and then crossing out 30 at a time to divide 120 by 30, he said. "Really what's happening is they're falling way behind where their peers are at who are learning the standard traditional math methods that we've learned as kids."
Of the 756 petition signers who live in the Alpine School District, 60 percent said they were considering removing their child from traditional public schools because of the math instruction, and planning to either home school their children or enroll them in charter or private schools.
Norton said he believes teachers are afraid of losing their jobs if they give traditional math instruction in their classrooms. At an October meeting, he asked the Board of Education to reassure teachers that was not the case. In November, the board released a statement saying traditional math instruction is welcome in Alpine School District classrooms, in an effort to achieve a "balanced approach."
The statement, which is posted on the district's Web site, says traditional math is being blended with Investigations. "The initial implementation of Investigations, a program grounded in promoting deeper, comprehensive student understanding of math concepts, was advocated broadly as a single math program," the statement reads.
"Subsequent to its implementation, adjustments have been made to move from using Investigations as the sole instructional program to a continuum that includes elements of a traditional system."
But Norton said that policy could create incongruity between teaching method used in different grades could leave a child confused.
Shannon Cannon of Eagle Mountain said Investigations math was the catalyst for her and her husband's decision to homeschool their five children. Her daughter, who was in the first grade, did well in math until Investigations was implemented, she said. "She just got more and more confused and just lost confidence in it."
After receiving traditional math instruction at home, her daughter is beginning to regain her enthusiasm for math, Cannon said. "She feels like she can do it again. She's not confused anymore. It took some time before she felt like it was something she was up for."
Hall said her disgust with the way her children were learning math led her to begin giving them traditional math instruction at home. Their homework under the Investigations curriculum was "stupid" and "inane," she said. "Every single day it was counting. They didn't learn really any addition."
So she began buying math books and doing her own instruction. "I had to because they weren't learning anything. They weren't learning the stuff they need to know. This math that they're doing is really wrong."
Anna Chang-Yen can be reached at 344-2549 or annac@heraldextra.com.
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