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Saturday, April 17th

Pot harangues kettle, sounds foolish


Princeton philosophy professor Peter Singer, the world's foremost advocate of infanticide, bestiality, and the elimination of inconvenient people, has heaved forth with a moral judgment on the world's most powerful man:

President George Bush wants to be seen as a good Christian leader but, according to a new book by Australian professor Peter Singer, he actually has the moral development of a 13-year-old boy.

Singer, who has managed to convince uncounted numbers of undergraduates that the life of an infant is the moral equivalent of a snake's, contends that Bush's morality is deficient because the president see things "very simply, in black and white, as good versus evil." And that's true–Bush, not having the intellectual firepower of a Princeton professor, was unable to come up with any description of the murder of 3000 innocent people any more sophisticated than "evil." I'm sure that Singer, moral adult that he is, had no problem finding the good side of September 11.

Professor Singer said Mr. Bush was wrong to go to war in Afghanistan (he suggested that a truly Christian leader would have "turned the other cheek" when America was attacked on September 11, 2001) because it led to the loss of innocent life.

Singer's encyclopedic knowledge of Christian ethics and political theory clearly fail him here. "Turn the other cheek" is from a sermon of Jesus' meant for His disciples, not as political advice to the leaders of secular governments. As for Afghanistan, I guess Singer is saying that no country has the right to defend itself if there is a likelihood that innocent life might be lost in the process. So, because German civilians were bound to die in the invasion of Germany, the Allies had no business taking out Hitler, who was killing innocents at unprecedented rates.

He said Mr. Bush was also wrong to go to war in Iraq, since Saddam Hussein posed no threat to the US. He conceded that all presidents had moral failings, but said Mr Bush's were more serious, because of his power.

Singer's encyclopedic knowledge of American history and government clearly fail him here, as well. Bush has no more power than any other president, at least not any post-World War II president (if you want to talk about military power). And unfortunately, that famous Singer logic fails him, too. If it is wrong to go to war because it will lead to the loss of innocent life, then it would have been wrong to go to war even if Saddam had posed a threat to the US. Conversely, if it isn't wrong to go to war despite the loss of innocent life when one's country is threatened, then how can it have been wrong to take out the Taliban and as much of al-Qaeda as we could before they could attack the US again?

A bit of advice, Pete: stick to dead babies. It's what you know.

(Thanks to Tim Blair for the link.)
Athanasius on 04.17.04 @ 10:12 PM EST [link]


Democratic Party at prayer


Some of the same folks who would admonish Catholic bishops regarding their "disregard of church-state separation" gathered recently in Washington for "Ecumenical Advocacy Days for Global Peace with Justice." According to John Lomperis, writing for the IRD, it was the usual suspects–NCC, peace-and-justice, church-and-society types of various denominations, etc. What's interesting is the level of overt partisanship on display, not too surprising since the participants "included a[n] official of the Executive Committee of the Democratic National Committee, a liberal Democratic congressman, an aide to another liberal Democratic congressman, and an activist who fondly recalled her work on George McGovern’s 1972 presidential campaign.  Also speaking was Maureen Shea, the Director of Government Relations for the Episcopal Church, who previously held prominent positions in the Clinton Administration, a pro-abortion political action committee, and a Democratic-leaning activist group." Among the sillier, not to mention more revealing, moments was right at the start:

The conference opened with an impassioned sermon by Jim Winkler, the head of the United Methodist Board on Church and Society. He excoriated "the disastrous war against Iraq" and the "oppressive imperial army" of the United States.

According to Winkler, the estimated $13 trillion spent by the U.S. military during the Cold War years was "the equivalent of burying money in the ground."  He claimed that the world would have been a "paradise" if the U.S. had had no national defense budget during that time and instead had spent that money "to bring the world adequate food, clothing, and shelter." This expenditure, according to Winkler, could have guaranteed a clean environment and "adequate health care and free education" for "everyone in the world."


Translation: the whole world would have looked just like Cuba–Winkler's definition of "paradise."
Athanasius on 04.17.04 @ 07:43 PM EST [link]


Another Hamas leader goes down


One of the co-founders of Hamas, Abdel Aziz Rantisi, was killed Saturday evening in a missile attack in Gaza. The UN will condemn, the PA will froth, the EU will sputter, and none will surprise anyone. In the meantime, Israel is a bit safer, and the remaining terror masters more worried that they might be next.
Athanasius on 04.17.04 @ 05:09 PM EST [link]


Friday, April 16th

More on pro-abortion Catholic politicians


This time it's Colorado Attorney General Ken Salazar, who's running for the US Senate. According to the Rocky Mountain News, he takes exception to remarks made by Denver Archbishop Charles Chaput:

Attorney General Ken Salazar, the leading Democratic candidate for U.S. Senate and a former seminarian, said Thursday Denver Archbishop Charles Chaput went "beyond the line" by criticizing Catholic politicians who fail to follow church teaching in their public lives.

Salazar was responding to a column in this week's Denver Catholic Register, the archdiocesan newspaper, in which Chaput called the actions of such politicians "phony."

"Candidates who claim to be 'Catholic' but who publicly ignore Catholic teaching about the sanctity of human life are offering a dishonest public witness," Chaput said.

"They may try to look Catholic and sound Catholic, but unless they act Catholic in their public service and political choices, they're really a very different kind of creature.

"And real Catholics should vote accordingly."

In response, Salazar said, "The archbishop can have his point of view as leader of a church, but I think when the archbishop tries to influence the outcome of elections and get involved in government and directing voters, he's gone beyond the line of what should not be breached in our American democracy, where we believe fundamentally in the separation of church and state."


Salazar has obviously not been listening to the National Council of Churches lately, though of course its leadership is trying to influence elections and direct voters in the right (make that left) direction. His trotting out church-state separation, while entirely predictable, is faintly ridiculous. Essentially what he's saying is that the Christian faith should have nothing to say about public affairs, at least not when it runs counter to liberal ideological orthodoxy. Chaput says nothing about who Catholics should vote for, only that they should consider Catholic moral teaching and its public implications in voting. It's especially laughable to consider the reason why certain Catholic politicians say they're pro-abortion: because they "don't want to impose their morality on others." This despite the fact that they are perfectly willing to impose their morality on others when the subject isn't abortion.
Athanasius on 04.16.04 @ 05:35 PM EST [link]


Thursday, April 15th

The house that porn built


The New York Times has apprently decided that its Home & Garden section is an appropriate place for a puff piece on a porn star. Jenna Jameson, one of America's foremost smut producers, has fine taste in art, and a serious spiritual side:

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz.–JENNA JAMESON was giving this writer a winter tour of her 6,700-square-foot Spanish-style palace, bought two years ago for $2 million, which she made through her pornography empire.

Two religious paintings grace her walls without irony: "St. Joseph Revealing the Madonna and Child to St. Dominic," which her husband, Jay Grdina, said was a 17th-century Spanish work, and "The Birth of Mary," an 18th-century Cuzqueño work from Peru.

Then there are the pictures of Ms. Jameson. "That's the first time I was portrayed in a major magazine photo," she said, pointing to a framed April 2003 Hustler cover. "It was a big deal for me."

...Ms. Jameson and Mr. Grdina were married last June by a former priest who is now a justice of the peace, in a Roman Catholic-style ceremony in their backyard. Mr. Grdina has always considered himself a practicing Catholic; Ms. Jameson said she is returning to her Catholic roots. Mr. Grdina said his family, Catholics, has come to support the work they do. His mother wears ClubJenna T-shirts. His sister is in charge of merchandising for ClubJenna.

Mr. Grdina and his wife say they lead a quiet life, often relaxing in the den watching television.

And what do they watch? "I'm a big horror movie fan," Ms. Jameson said.


I'm so delighted the Times decided to fill their readership in on the lifestyle of the rich and lascivious, and without the slightest hint of irony. Up next in the Newspaper of Record: kickin' back and talkin' kitchen decor with the Cartegena cocaine cartel.
Athanasius on 04.15.04 @ 09:34 PM EST [link]


We don't need no stinkin' rules


Liberals in the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America are again demonstrating that the current sexuality study is a farce, and that they intend to do what they want regardless of whether next year's Assembly changes the rules on actively gay clergy or not. According to the Los Angeles Times:

Defying their denomination's rule against active homosexuals in ordained ministry, three Lutheran congregations have appointed two gay men and a lesbian to serve as pastors in Hollywood, San Bernardino and Minneapolis.

The first of the three ministers, the Rev. Jennifer Mason, 41, is scheduled to be installed Sunday at Central City Lutheran Mission in San Bernardino, followed by the installation of the Rev. Daniel M. Hooper, 56, at Hollywood Lutheran Church on May 2 and the Rev. Jay Wiesner, 30, at Bethany Lutheran Church in Minneapolis on July 25.

Bishop Murray D. Finck of the Lutheran Church's Pacific Synod, which includes San Bernardino, said he was surprised and saddened by the San Bernardino mission's decision to call Mason as associate pastor. He urged the mission to reconsider its decision before her scheduled installation.

The series of installations are once again focusing attention on divisions within the denomination over how to respond to gay men and lesbians in the clergy.

The Rev. Paul Egertson, the former Lutheran bishop in Los Angeles, who plans to preach at Hooper's installation at Hollywood Lutheran Church, said Wednesday that he views such installations as acts that will eventually sweep away church laws against actively gay clergy.

"These are all the breaks in a very fragile dam that looks awfully solid but actually, in my view, is going to just either be taken down by deliberate courageous action by church bodies, or it's going to leak and leak and leak until it's more a sieve than a dam — and finally go away," Egertson said.

Bishop Dean Nelson, who presides over the church in the Los Angeles region, does not plan to participate in Hooper's installation ceremony.

Hooper and Mason were duly ordained as ministers in the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America. But they were later removed from the official church clergy roster when the church was informed that they were in committed same-sex relationships.


Now, imagine the uproar if churches in these synods were to tell the leadership that they'll get no more money until they start actually enforcing the rules of the denomination. The response: "You can't do that! It's contrary to the Constitution and Canons..." Oh, wait, that's the Episcopal Church, where liberals who set the train in motion in the 1970s through illegal ordinations of women are now banging conservative churches over the head with the rulebook. Anyone see a pattern here?
Athanasius on 04.15.04 @ 05:16 PM EST [link]


The mainline's foreign policy


National Council of Churches president Robert Edgar made a speech at the University of Missouri yesterday entitled "Toward a Peace-Centered Foreign Policy. It's too long to fisk, so I've selected passages that are representative of the whole to critique.

War-minded hawks in the Administration are even now trying to use the impact of the Iraq war to coerce and intimidate Syria, North Korea, Iran, and other states. The Administration’s policy of preemption–formed in the crucible of the September 11 bombings–shapes their agenda, and we need to understand what it prescribes for our dangerous world.

And the down side of this is what? For a secular state to try to make nice with people like Kim Jong Il and the mad mullahs is like expecting someone to try to be friends with a starving pit bull.

But the war was more than useless and destructive. It actually created new terrorist threats and acted as an effective recruitment tools al Qaeda. A year ago Egyptian President Mubarak feared the war would create “a hundred new bin Ladens.” Today it is estimated that tens of thousands of Iraqis have been mobilized to resist the US occupation, the Internet carries scenes of young men in the Middle East signing up for militias to go fight the US in Iraq. Terrorist bombers have found new targets in Madrid and elsewhere. It seems that by going to war with Iraq the only thing that we have actually pre-empted is our own ability to fight terrorism.

Though Edgar says earlier in the speech that "We all can be happy that the Iraqi people are free from [Saddam's] despotic rule," apparently that happy result isn't enough to mitigate the "uselessness" of the war. As for the rest, this is a common assertion on the left, and it's based on a fundamental misunderstanding of the Islamist phenomena. It is not simply our actions in the Middle East that the Islamists don't like, it's who we are. We're predominantly Christian and Jewish, democratic, and free. We respect and fully protect the rights of minorities. We are home to liberated women. We practice freedom of speech and of the press in a way that allows for public licentiousness. The point is that the terrorist ranks have been growing for over 20 years, and will continue to grow to the extent that they are not forcefully opposed. Weakness and accomodation on the part of the West will only embolden them in their view that the West is decadent and ripe for collapse. Just as they hit New York and Washington, they were bound to hit other Western cities as well. The attack on Madrid was inevitable–if not this year, then next, or the next.

The members of the National Council of Churches have articulated their faith foundation for involvement in seeking "a world bound together in intentional community, dedicated to the well-being of all people and all creation." The phrase comes from our 1999 policy statement "Pillars of Peace for the 21st Century." Referring to our "theological understanding that is global in nature," the statement points to the "transcending sovereignty and love of God for all creation," the "dignity and worth of each person as a child of God," and other biblical beliefs that call us to work for peace and justice for all the world’s people.

We can take a direct and firm step from that statement of belief to a foreign policy of peacemaking. Five simple but fundamental principles, proposed here, can give substance to such a policy. A peace-centered foreign policy must be:

Internationally engaged;
Rooted in multilateral cooperation;
Committed to collective security through arms control, deterrence, disarmament and international cooperation;
Dedicated to our best principles;
And, perhaps most importantly, proactive not reactive.


"Internationally engaged" is claptrap–Edgar isn't seriously suggesting that we're not now, is he? "Rooted in multilateral cooperation" is simply UN-worship; Edgar's continued faith in the UN rivals that of the Flat Earth Society in its willingness to ignore reality. The third item begs the question of terrorism–how exactly are we going to get al-Qaeda to agree to verifiable "disarmament," and why discuss "arms control" with people who shouldn't have them in the first place. "Deterrence," of course, is only effective if the other side is convinced you are willing to use force, which Edgar is against under all known circumstances. "Dedicated to our best principles" is just meaningless rhetoric. And I thought it was America's proactive approach in Iraq to which he was objecting.

Under "Internationally engaged, Edgar says, We must show ourselves willing to do the long-term work of developing fragile economic, political and social institutions; and patiently improving human rights. This requires persistent engagement over years, in some cases generations. Think for a moment of your own community and neighborhood, and the tremendous investment of time, sweat and resources needed to build up your local schools, houses of worship, and other institutions. We need to be engaged with a long-term helping hand to those who seek a better, freer life.

This is the same man who, a few minutes before, said "Let’s hand over authority in Iraq to the United Nations immediately...if they will have it." I guess he has less patience than he counseled folks at UM to have. He's right about this, certainly, but that just makes his hypocrisy as one of the leading voices of the cut-and-run crowd that much more galling. One also wonders if he even realizes that there really are people in Iraq who have no desire to lead their people to a "better, freer life" who must be forcefully opposed if Iraq is to be better and freer

Under "Multilateral cooperation," Edgar says, To address these threats, we need a strong United Nations and the active engagement of our democratic allies around the world. Ironically, at a time when the Bush Administration has either side-stepped the UN or tried to manipulate it, the United Nations has more clout and functions better than at any time in its history. Under the able leadership of Kofi Annan, the UN and its subsidiary bodies are playing positive roles around the globe.

The UN demonstrated its responsiveness and accountability following the September 11 attacks. Immediately afterwards, the Security Council joined us in pressuring the Taliban, and then passed resolutions to authorize international action against the Taliban and al Qaeda. The international community was mobilized to increase cooperation in fighting terrorism. In particular, the Security Council’s Counter-Terrorism Committee has been an important global "bully pulpit" to encourage all nations to crack down on terrorist financing, organizing and movement.

This has led to some dramatic breakthroughs in our global "war on terrorism," including some high-level al Qaeda arrests and crackdowns on al Qaeda operatives in Spain, Germany, Britain, Singapore and many other nations. Even countries that traditionally have been at arm’s length from us–such as Libya–have cooperated in the campaign against al Qaeda, which we need to remember is the major threat our nation faces today.


At this point I begin to wonder whether Edgar gets his news from anyone other than Kofi Annan's personal publicist. Heard of the Oil-for-Food scandal, Bob? Been to Bosnia lately, Bob? Know how long the UN tried to get anything positive out of Libya before the Iraq invasion, Bob? Know how little the UN has contributed to the "arrests and crackdowns" on al-Qaeda, Bob? Recall any of the furious manipulations of the Security Council by France and Russia over the last 10 years to prevent enforcement of SC resolutions, Bob? Bob? Earth to Bob, are you still with us?

Under "Pursuing collective security," Edgar says, Churches have a long history of activism on disarmament and arms control, even when the Cold War held the world in its tightest grip. In the 1950s mainline and Orthodox churches in the U.S. and the Soviet Union built relationships with each other that led them to increasingly bolder joint stances on the arms race. Today the world has changed greatly but is no less dangerous. It is time to commit ourselves anew to cooperation in disarmament and arms control.

Rather than disparaging international efforts to limit the spread of weapons of mass destruction, the U.S. should more vigorously engage with international agencies that seek to prevent the spread of nuclear, chemical and biological weapons, and the missiles that can transport them. But we can hardly put the genie back in the bottle. At least two dozen nations in the world today possess chemical or biological weapons, perhaps even forty nations. The United States has played a leading role in the proliferation of arms development to scores of countries. We must shift our export policies away from sowing instability in future trouble spots and instead work to curb the spread of arms.


As far as I know, the US has never sold chemical or biological, much less nuclear, weapons to any country, at least outside of NATO. Edgar doesn't want us "intimidating" North Korea or Iran, but we should "seek to prevent the spread" of WMD. Presumably he still believes in 90s-style bribery. Oh, and if I were you, Bob, I wouldn't go around bragging about what the NCC (and WCC) accomplished in putting forth "bolder joint stances on the arms race" with Soviet-controlled churches in the 1950s. Brings back bad fellow-traveler and/or hopeless naivete memories.

Under "Dedication to our best principles," Edgar says...oh, skip it. It's all about Guantanamo.

Under "Proactive not reactive," Edgar says, We should establish and invest the BILLIONS needed for a Peace Promotion and War Prevention Fund to engage in proactive peacemaking by addressing the root causes of war and conflict. In our interdependent world, we must match our investment in war fighting and defense spending–which dwarfs that of all other nations–with investments in peace building and conflict prevention. In the spirit of the Marshall Plan, a half century ago, a Peace Promotion and War Prevention Fund could be devoted to improving health conditions and educational opportunity for the world’s poorest citizens."

Whenever people like Edgar mention "root causes," check your wallet. Edgar is apparently unaware that many Middle Eastern countries–Saudi Arabia, for instance, the chief producer of terrorists for the last decade, or Iraq–have been awash in oil money for years. The keys to addressing the "root causes of war and conflict" are changes in culture–which no amount of money can accomplish–and political institutions, which must be transformed from being based in social control to being based in freedom. There's no amount of money that can be thrown at say, Syria, that will make it any less of a terror haven as long as Bashir Assad and his gang are in charge. Osama bin Laden was not a poor shop keeper in Riyadh before going into the terror business, and most of his followers are middle-class young men who happen to subscribe to a bloodthirsty religious doctrine.

And that should do it for now. Read the rest on your own if you wish. In any case, be sure to vote for Bob Edgar, Democrat for Congress, this Novem...oh, wait a minute. That was his last job.
Athanasius on 04.15.04 @ 01:22 PM EST [link]


Orthodox bishop gets WCC-ified


The current moderator of the World Council of Churches Central Committee, His Holiness Aram I, Catholicos of Cilicia, neatly demonstrates how being in such close contact with the WCC can infect even Orthodox prelates with an inability to think theologically about political issues. Interviewed by the WCC Public Information Team, he was asked about 20th century genocides:

How do you personally, as a Christian, make sense of those genocides?

Genocide is one of the most horrible expressions of violence and terrorism. It is a crime against humanity. The international community, and in fact all the religions of the world, cannot accept such crimes. Hence, those who have perpetrated and may perpetrate such crimes must be called to justice. The ecumenical movement, through the "Decade to Overcome Violence", must wrestle with this question.


The word you seem incapable of speaking here, Holiness, is sin. Genocide is the most extreme expression of the sinfulness of humanity, and normally an Orthodox bishop would have no trouble saying that, as a Christian, he sees genocide as sin writ enormous. Instead, he retreats into WCC-speak. Sad.

Athanasius on 04.15.04 @ 10:50 AM EST [link]


Wednesday, April 14th

The Godfather of terror strikes again


Of course, Palestinians should have expected full American approval of their every whim after this was revealed today by Middle East Newsline:

The United States has determined that Palestinian Authority Chairman Yasser Arafat approved an attack on a U.S. embassy convoy in which three Americans were killed in 2003.

U.S. diplomatic sources said a U.S. investigation into the bombing of the embassy convoy in the Gaza Strip in October 2003 pointed to a clear role by Arafat. The sources said Arafat granted approval to a plan to strike U.S. interests in PA areas.

Arafat, the sources said, did not draft or approve any details for a Palestinian attack. But they said Arafat agreed to a proposal relayed by a high-level aide for the Palestinians to "pass a message" to the United States.

According to the sources, a senior Arafat aide and member of the Fatah Central Committee left Gaza City for Arafat's headquarters in Ramallah in September 2003 to seek approval for a Palestinian attack on U.S. interests in the area. The Fatah official, described as a liasion between Arafat and Palestinian insurgents in the Gaza Strip, complained of U.S. policy toward the PA and Arabs.


And Palestinians want the US to do what for them?

(Thanks for LGF for the link.)
Athanasius on 04.14.04 @ 10:53 PM EST [link]


What goes around comes around


The big news of the day is that the US has decided to side with the only democracy in the Middle East against the people who danced in the streets on 9/11 and thought Saddam Hussein taking over Kuwait was peachy:

Joyless Palestinians took bitter consolation from the prospect of ruling Gaza on Wednesday as the United States backed Israel's hold on chunks of West Bank land.

Marking a historic U.S. policy shift, President George W. Bush implicitly recognised Israel's claim to some West Bank settlements and crushed the faint hope of Palestinian refugees that they might someday return to homes fled decades ago.

Even in Gaza, there was no celebration that the world's most powerful country also endorsed an Israeli plan to pull out troops and Jewish settlers from the desert strip.

"Why should we be happy when they gave us Gaza and swallowed the West Bank," said Ali Khalil at a Gaza City cafe.

"When they cancel our right of return and abort the dream of a Palestinian state, why should we be happy?"


Ah, the "right of return"–the Palestinian dream of destroying the Jewish state through demography. Your "right of return" to homes your people fled when told to by Arab states whose armies were trying to crush Israel at its birth was a fable, Mr. Khalil. A fantasy fed you by your corrupt leadership in an effort to prevent you from holding them responsible for the misery of your life. Why, even today, do you let them succeed?

Some cried, some just stared empty-faced at televisions beaming Bush's words from the White House as he stood beside Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon.

Palestinians said they had not felt such loss of hope since the start of an uprising in 2000 when talks foundered on setting up an independent state in the West Bank and Gaza–territories seized by Israel in the 1967 Middle East war.


To how many Palestinians do you suppose it has occurred that the intifada, and the extraordinary disregard for innocent human life shown in it, may have been one of the more significant contributing factors leading up to today's event?

Militants sworn to destroy Israel vowed to step up their war.

But few Palestinians could offer new ideas for how they could challenge Israel with such firm backing from the United States.

In Gaza, Amenah Abu Sharekh said she still guarded her dream.

"We will return from where we were forced to flee," she cried, surrounded by 11 grandchildren. "The Jews will go and we will return."


And thus will the fantasy world the Palestinians have lived in since 1948 be passed on to the next generation, and the next, and the next...
Athanasius on 04.14.04 @ 10:29 PM EST [link]


Frank Griswold, goober


Not to be excessively disrespectful to the Presiding Bishop of the Episcopal Church, but is it really possible that anyone in a position of authority in a major American denomination could say something this dumb and mean it:

Certainly, none of us had anticipated the effect of the ordination [of Gene Robinson] in New Hampshire. It was telecast around the world. Possibly naively, we thought it was a local event."

Will someone please find this man's keeper? I mean, he might do something dangerous, like try to take candy from a stranger.

(Thanks to the IRD for the quote.)
Athanasius on 04.14.04 @ 10:01 PM EST [link]


Kerry, Catholicism, and abortion


The Religion News Service's "Quote of the Day" is from Frances Kissling, president of the oxymoronic Catholics for a Free Choice, who declares:

"There is something profoundly disturbing about the current media attention focused on Sen. John Kerry's religious practice. For reporters to follow whether or not the senator receives Communion is an inappropriate invasion of private and sacred space."

Actually, what's far more disturbing is Kissling seeking to dissolve the bond between Catholics and their Church by claiming that one can be pro-abortion and Catholic, but that's another story. On Kerry, she's all wet, but she's consistent. The way she justifies being a pro-abortion Catholic is by claiming that religion and public policy have nothing to do with one another. What she's saying here is that Kerry's radically pro-abortion politics (he was among the few senators to vote against the partial-birth ban) have nothing to do with his claim, which he has promoted in his presidential campaign, to be a faithful son of the Church. I suspect that it will be the Church's leadership, rather than a Vatican-basher like Kissling, that will ultimately decide whether being a pro-abortion legislator and a Catholic are incompatible. In the meantime, as long as Kerry continues to trumpet his religious bona fides on the campaign trail, his willingness to lay aside one of his church's most important ethical teachings for the sake of his political ambitions is unquestionably newsworthy.
Athanasius on 04.14.04 @ 05:53 PM EST [link]


Passion continues to wreak havoc


From the AsiaNews, word of a movie having an unexpected impact on Arab viewers:

"Do you have the New Testament in Arab? Me and all my friends would like to read it." This was the request of 2 students from Qatar, after seeing Mel Gibson's The Passion of the Christ.   

Already on the second day after the film started showing in Qatar, many local newspapers are reporting the film on their front pages. According to the English language daily,
The Peninsula Qatar, since the first three days of its release, 66,321 tickets have been sold–smashing the record once held by Matrix Reloaded, which had sold 59,000.

The film is becoming so popular in Qatar that some theaters have cancelled showings of other films in order to increase viewings of Gibson’s blockbuster.

Middle East Christians are spellbound by the interest Arabs have taken in the seeing the Gospel portrayed on the big screen.

The movie has sparked hours of discussion between Christians and Muslims regarding questions of faith. Many Arabs were interested in seeing the film only because of the anti-Semitic controversy surrounding it. However the movie's theme is an unavoidable subject. "The message of loving your enemies and Jesus who, even while up on the cross, prayed for and forgave them strikes all viewers deeply," said two Americans working in Qatar.

The American couple said they were amazed the government had permitted the film to be released in an Islamic country like Qatar. "In the next few weeks tens of thousands of people living here will go and see this powerful retelling of Christ’s suffering and death. Many moviegoers react to the film. For example, those sitting next to us in the theater were moved and breathless. Others wept or had looks of disgust on their facers when watching the brutality Jesus underwent," they said.

"This film is generating huge interest in Jesus and the Bible," said the two Americans. "All this has never happened before!”


Despite getting Yasser Arafat's endorsement, The Passion has not caused any increase in anti-Semitic activity in the Middle East (it continues to gallop along just as it always has). But by causing Muslims to take a new look at Jesus, it may just spark a revolution in some hearts and minds. If so, may God continue to bless it.

(Thanks to Christopher Johnson for the link.)
Athanasius on 04.14.04 @ 09:08 AM EST [link]


Tuesday, April 13th

Ignorant or dishonest? You be the judge


Based on this story from the Charlotte Observer, I can see why you'd want to send your child to a school run by this guy...

A controversial Cabarrus County charter school that plans to teach Transcendental Meditation and Natural Law Curriculum when it opens this fall must remove all religion from its curriculum or lose its charter.

That was the message Thursday from the N.C. Charter School Advisory Board to the leaders of the Carolina International School.

The school has been challenged in recent months by local residents who believe its so-called Natural Law Curriculum and emphasis on meditation are rooted in Hinduism, and therefore don't belong in a public school. Carolina International would be the first charter school in Cabarrus County.

At a meeting Thursday in Raleigh, the 15-member charter school advisory board asked the new school to work with the board to remove religion from its plans.

Leaders of the Carolina International, however, say the school has nothing to do with religion.

"We never would have undertaken a charter-school application process if we felt in any way that these programs were religious in content," said Richard Beall, the school's director.

TM and Natural Law Curriculum are part of Consciousness-Based Education, or CBE, founded by Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, known to many from his friendship with the Beatles.


...if, that is, your ambition is to have your child grow up to be dumber than a sack of hammers.
Athanasius on 04.13.04 @ 07:55 PM EST [link]


Monday, April 12th

Lutherans settle up


According to the news service of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America:

The churchwide organization of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA) settled a civil suit brought against the church in Marshall, Texas, by 14 plaintiffs in a case that involved the behavior of a former ELCA pastor.  The former pastor, Gerald P. Thomas Jr., was found guilty of criminal sexual assault against children in a trial last year and was sentenced to a lengthy prison term.
    
At the request of the plaintiffs' attorney, the terms of the settlement were not disclosed by the court, said John R. Brooks, a spokesman for the ELCA. The settlement was approved April 12 in a Marshall court by District Judge Bonnie Leggat. The churchwide organization reached a tentative settlement with the plaintiff's attorneys March 27, subject to approval by the court.  The issues were "mediated in good faith, and the settlement was reached in good faith," Brooks said.
    
"The ELCA is thankful to have reached a settlement in a civil case" that arose from Thomas' conduct, Brooks said in a written statement. "We continue to pray for all who have been adversely affected by this disturbing case, and we ask your prayers for the victims of Thomas and for the congregation that he once served in Marshall." Brooks emphasized that Thomas is no longer an ELCA pastor.
    
With the cooperation of its insurance carriers, the ELCA "is grateful its share of the total settlement payment is being funded without adversely affecting the mission and ministry of this church," Brooks said. "In reaching its settlement, the ELCA admitted to no wrongdoing by the church."


One of the church's synods may still get stuck with a fat bill. There are no signs of a settlement with the Northern Texas-Northern Louisiana Synod.
Athanasius on 04.12.04 @ 09:55 PM EST [link]


Palestinian calls for SF intifada


Some bizarre people took to the streets of San Francisco this weekend (I know, I know, that's redundant) to protest American policy in Iraq. Lots of it was the usual garbage, but this excerpt from the remarks of a University of California–Berkeley lecturer in Near Eastern Studies, Hatem Bazian, was notable for its advocacy of violence (words of parentheses are crowd response):

"Are you angry? (Yeah!) Are you angry? (Yeah!) Are you angry? (Yeah!) Well, we’ve been watching intifada in Palestine, we’ve been watching an uprising in Iraq, and the question is that what are we doing? How come we don’t have an intifada in this country? Because it seem[s] to me, that we are comfortable in where we are, watching CNN, ABC, NBC, Fox, and all these mainstream...giving us a window to the world while the world is being managed from Washington, from New York, from every other place in here in San Francisco: Chevron, Bechtel, [Carlyle?] Group, Halliburton; every one of those lying, cheating, stealing, deceiving individuals are in our country and we’re sitting here and watching the world pass by, people being bombed, and it’s about time that we have an intifada in this country that change[s] fundamentally the political dynamics in here. And we know every–they’re gonna say some Palestinian being too radical–well, you haven’t seen radicalism yet!"

So here's a guy, foreign-born, who gets to come to the United States, get a doctorate at a public university and then go to work on the public payroll, who gets to stand up at a public rally and call for armed rebellion, without fear of any action being taken by his employer (as would undoubtedly not be the case in any predominantly Muslim nation). Is this a great country or what? Dr. Bazian, may we have your opinion on that? Dr. Bazian?

(Thanks to LGF for the quote.)
Athanasius on 04.12.04 @ 08:06 PM EST [link]


Sunday, April 11th

Icon of the Resurrection




From the Web site of the Orthodox Church in America.
Athanasius on 04.11.04 @ 01:05 PM EST [link]


The greatest Easter sermon ever


From the Paschal Homily of John Chrysostom:

If any man be devout and loveth God,
Let him enjoy this fair and radiant triumphal feast!
If any man be a wise servant,
Let him rejoicing enter into the joy of his Lord.
If any have laboured long in fasting,
Let him how receive his recompense.
If any have wrought from the first hour,
Let him today receive his just reward.
If any have come at the third hour,
Let him with thankfulness keep the feast.
If any have arrived at the sixth hour,
Let him have no misgivings;
Because he shall in nowise be deprived therefore.
If any have delayed until the ninth hour,
Let him draw near, fearing nothing.
And if any have tarried even until the eleventh hour,
Let him, also, be not alarmed at his tardiness.
For the Lord, who is jealous of his honour,
Will accept the last even as the first.
He giveth rest unto him who cometh at the eleventh hour,
Even as unto him who hath wrought from the first hour;
And He showeth mercy upon the last,
And careth for the first;
And to the one He giveth,
And upon the other He bestoweth gifts.
And He both accepteth the deeds,
And welcometh the intention,
And honoureth the acts and praises the offering.
Wherefore, enter ye all into the joy of your Lord;
Receive your reward,
Both the first, and likewise the second.
You rich and poor together, hold high festival!
You sober and you heedless, honour the day!
Rejoice today, both you who have fasted
And you who have disregarded the fast.
The table is full-laden; feast ye all sumptuously.
The calf is fatted; let no one go hungry away.
Enjoy ye all the feast of faith:
Receive ye all the riches of loving-kindness.
Let no one bewail his poverty,
For the universal Kingdom has been revealed.
Let no one weep for his iniquities,
For pardon has shown forth from the grave.
Let no one fear death,
For the Saviour's death has set us free.
He that was held prisoner of it has annihilated it.
By descending into Hell, He made Hell captive.
He embittered it when it tasted of His flesh.
And Isaiah, foretelling this, did cry:
Hell, said he, was embittered
When it encountered Thee in the lower regions.
It was embittered, for it was abolished.
It was embittered, for it was mocked.
It was embittered, for it was slain.
It was embittered, for it was overthrown.
It was embittered, for it was fettered in chains.
It took a body, and met God face to face.
It took earth, and encountered Heaven.
It took that which was seen, and fell upon the unseen.
O Death, where is thy sting?
O Hell, where is thy victory?
Christ is risen, and thou art overthrown!
Christ is risen, and the demons are fallen!
Christ is risen, and the angels rejoice!
Christ is risen, and life reigns!
Christ is risen, and not one dead remains in the grave.
For Christ, being risen from the dead,
Is become the first-fruits of those who have fallen asleep.
To Him be glory and dominion
Unto ages of ages.
Amen.

(Thanks to CaNN for the text.)

Athanasius on 04.11.04 @ 12:53 PM EST [link]


The Lord is Risen!


The Lord is risen indeed! Blessings to all on this glorious Easter morning!
Athanasius on 04.11.04 @ 07:51 AM EST [link]



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