InterVarsity, Rutgers reach agreement on student leaders
The Rutgers InterVarsity Multiethnic Christian Fellowship has dropped its lawsuit against the university after the two institutions reached an agreement on student leadership requirements.

In a joint statement (available at both the InterVarsity Christian Fellowship and Rutgers websites), the groups say that "the university assured the fellowship that its voting members are permitted to take into account both their own religious beliefs and those of candidates when selecting and voting for their leaders under university policy. Accordingly, during continuing discussions, [the institutions] were able to settle upon a leadership selection process that adheres to university policy and also assures the fellowship's ability to select and maintain leaders compatible with the purposes of the group. The university has approved the organization's constitution."

Last September, the university said the group would no longer be considered a "registered student organization" because its constitution violated the university's anti-discrimination policies.

"This agreement places Rutgers at the forefront in demonstrating that the principles of inclusivity, diversity, free association, and free expression are complementary, not contradictory," Emmet A. Dennis, Rutgers vice president for student affairs, says in the statement.

Michelle DeRitter, president of the InterVarsity chapter, was also quoted. "I can state unequivocally that Christian students can come to Rutgers and participate as equal and valued members of the university community," she said.

The Alliance Defense Fund, which funded the InterVarsity chapter's lawsuit, claimed total victory. In a press release, it said the settlement is "fully in favor of the religious student organization … Under the settlement the university assures the evangelical Christian organization that the fellowship is not violating university policies by requiring that leaders have a credible profession of faith and concur with the fellowship's statement of faith."

The joint statement, however, doesn't seem to go quite that far. The policy says voting members of the group are allowed to take religious beliefs into account when choosing leaders. It does not say that those who disagree with the fellowship's statement of faith can be banned from holding leadership positions. That seems to be at the core of some of the other InterVarsity disputes around the country, including a fight at Tufts University in 2000.

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Still, David French, the attorney who represents InterVarsity chapters in all these disputes, is pleased with what happened at Rutgers. "This resolution is good for both sides," he says in the Alliance Defense Fund press release. "True diversity is enhanced by the presence of a Christian voice on campus, and that voice cannot exist without basic constitutional protections.  This settlement helps the University achieve diversity and the students retain their freedoms."

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War with Iraq:

  • Baghdad prays as U.S. bombs drop | For Roman Catholic author James Douglass, a veteran crusader for nonviolence, how was it to be in a Baghdad under bombardment by his own nation? (Associated Press)

  • Iraq's heritage | The war and archeology (David Klinghoffer, National Review Online)

  • 179th chaplain heads to Mideast | Keith Bohley, a chaplain with the 179th Airlift Wing of the Ohio Air National Guard, doesn't know where his next official service will be staged (News Journal, Mansfield, Oh.)

  • Churches to join in nationwide prayer about war | Working through the National Prayer Committee, a coalition of religious leaders in all 50 states, local pastors are spreading the word through a vast e-mail network (The Sun, Bremerton, Wash.)

  • If you want to effect change, play by the rules | Neither Wesley nor Luther expected to remain on the payroll while they railed against the establishment. Nor should Methodist pastors who tilt at windmills in Iraq while neglecting their flock (Virgil Van Camp, Amarillo [Tex.] Globe-News)

  • Americans should pray about war, ministers say | As leaders of churches in the area, ministers around North Branch have taken the task of guiding their congregations through the theological troubled waters of wartime (North Central Minnesota Post Review)

Iraqi aid and relief:

Interfaith relations:

  • Muslims reach out to other believers in Beaverton | They're scared of Baptists (The Oregonian)

  • Jewish, Christian leaders unite | Campaign is a project of the International Fellowship of Christians and Jews, whose co-chairmen are Rabbi Yechiel Eckstein and campaign strategist Ralph Reed, the former Christian Coalition leader who often provides political advice to the Bush administration (The Washington Times)

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Church and state:

Church life:

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  • In liturgy, man serves, God wills | "Liturgy is the regular communal processing of our life and our experience through an alternative set of metaphors, symbols, narratives, memories, and hopes," theologian Walter Brueggemann wrote in Interpretation and Obedience (David Waters, The Commercial Appeal, Memphis)

  • Presbyterian Church plans to lay off 10 workers | Denomination had to make up shortfall in budget (The Courier-Journal, Louisville, Ky.)

  • Ministers urge Christians to treat others with love | Christians oppose Ku Klux Klan rally (The Greeneville [Tenn.] Sun)

  • Vicar hits at holiday holy days | Jill Warren says people use Holy Week as an excuse to just have a holiday (Express & Star, U.K.)

  • Hard work & hope | Churches keep the faith as Union City grapples with slow economy, job losses (Erie [Pa.] Times-News)

  • Following Christ into the future | It is one thing to present a vision for the future shape of the Church. It is another to find practical ways of realizing that vision—and another again to establish a process which moves a large complex organization forward (Helen McLeod, The Evening News, Edinburgh, Scotland)

  • Church's majority plans to stay put | 25 percent say they'll follow James Merritt, former president of the Southern Baptist Convention, to a new church (The Atlanta Journal-Constitution)

Faith and belief:

Health and sickness:

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Vatican sex glossary:

  • Vatican's last word on safe sex - No | A new "ethical glossary" issued by the Vatican warns against safe sex and says that condoms do not protect against sexually transmitted diseases (The Sydney Morning Herald)

  • Italian gays blast Vatican's new sex glossary | A controversial new Vatican glossary of sexual terms says homosexuals are not normal and that countries which allow gay marriages are inhabited by people with "profoundly disordered minds." (Reuters)

  • New church glossary angers gay community | Just a day after the release, gay groups were calling the 900-page glossary "vicious" and "irresponsible" (The Philadelphia Inquirer)

  • Outrage at Vatican ethics dictionary | The Vatican published an ethical dictionary yesterday saying homosexuality has "no social value", warning against concepts such as "safe sex" and "reproductive health" and insisting that condoms don't protect against sexually transmitted diseases (The Guardian, London)

Books:

  • Paradise on Earth | A close reading of the pope's surprisingly secular poetry (Slate.com)

  • An ex-priest bears witness to his former vocation | One could call The Other Side of the Altar a memoir, but that would not do justice to the wisdom and reach in author Paul Dinter's interpretation of the Roman Catholic Church (Jason Berry, Chicago Tribune)

  • Kirk faces unholy row over English hymn cull | Selecting the 750 hymns to be included in the new edition has taken eight years and resulted in 250 being dropped, the majority of them from England (Scotland on Sunday)

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