President, Quayle Tout Values Theme

Fifty-two Sacramento ministers have come to the defense of an alternative newspaper to protest the actions of David Woodel, state director for the American Family Association.

Taking a full-page advertisement in the free distribution Sacramento News & Review (SN&R), church representatives, including 16 United Methodist and 11 Presbyterian ministers, defended the free-press rights of the publication, saying, “It saddens us to see the word ‘Christianity’ used as a cover for intolerance, bigotry, small-mindedness, and anger.”

In July, Woodel succeeded in having SN&R-which draws revenue from explicitly sexual personal preference advertising in its classifieds-removed from 16 Burger King franchises. “Most business people really don’t understand that there’s a civil war of values taking place,” Woodel says.

SN&R wrote that alternative newspapers are facing “increasing pressure from Religious Right groups that either use existing corporate policy or perceived homophobia in individual communities to in effect censor the newsweeklies.” Woodel, an insurance agent, sees it differently. Pointing to the homosexual and lesbian personal ads, he says, “These are people with sexual addictions who need help. The purpose of the News & Review is to desensitize and legitimize such activity.”

Meanwhile, Woodel is coping with the fallout, including clients who have canceled insurance because of his “intolerant” views, obscene graffiti painted on his building, and threats of sexual violence against his family.

Copyright © 1994 Christianity Today. Click for reprint information.

Also in this issue

The CT archives are a rich treasure of biblical wisdom and insight from our past. Some things we would say differently today, and some stances we've changed. But overall, we're amazed at how relevant so much of this content is. We trust that you'll find it a helpful resource.

Cover Story

Re-engineering the Seminary?

Timothy C. Morgan, with reports from Thomas S. Giles

Bringing the Poor to the Polls

Jane A. Rubietta

NORTH AMERICAN SCENE: Church Refuses to Vacate Building

Ministers Decry 'Censorship'

Thomas S. Giles

Finance Agency Faces $500,000 Suit

Camping Misses End of World

Joe Maxwell

Is Word-Faith Movement Out on a Limb

Randy Frame

State's Religious Ed Questioned in Nicaragua

Deann M. Alford

Haitian Relief Teams Prepare to Return

Jim Uttley, Jr.

News

Korean Presbyterian Church Refuses to Vacate Building

Tunnel Mystery Unearthed

Survey Questions Protestant Figures

Gridiron Star Tackles Urban Inner City Problems

Dale D. Buss

BOOKS: Getting to Yes

Douglas Groothuis, Denver Sem, reviewer

BOOKS: Worth Mentioning

John Wilson

Whose Feminism?

Mary Stewart Van Leeuwen, Easter College, Saint Davids, PA, reviewer

PHILIP YANCEY: The Power of Writing

PHILIP YANCEY: The Power of Writing

ARTICLE: Shouting Heresy in the Temple of Darwin

Phillip E. Johnson

News

Teaching Manhood in the Urban Jungle

Bob Moeller

News

News Briefs: October 24, 1994

Wire Story

Clinton Intervenes in RFRA Test Case

Gordon Aeschliman in Cairo, with reports from Baptist Press.

Wire Story

Prolifers Arrested in Cairo

Gordon Aeschliman, with reports from Baptist Press

Back from Bulgaria

Editorial

Get Real

George K. Brushaber

Editorial

EDITORIAL: Cairo’s Wake-up Call

Editorial

EDITORIAL: Take Us Out of the Ball Game

Lyn Cryderman

News

News Briefs: October 24, 1994

ARTICLE: The Good Capitalist

Michael Cromartie, director of Evangelical Studies Project at Ethics and Public Policy Center in D.C.

ARTICLE: Why They Helped the Jews

ARTICLE: The Translator’s Tale

Classic & Contemporary Excerpts from October 24, 1994

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Letting the Boat Out of the Bag

News

Is Laughing for the Lord Holy?

Joe Maxwell

View issue

Our Latest

The Russell Moore Show

David Platt on All You Want for Christmas

What if the most radical thing about Christmas isn’t that God came near—but that he came to serve?

Excerpt

The Story Behind Handel’s ‘Messiah’

The Bulletin with Charles King

Meet the unlikely characters who defined this musical classic.

News

The Christians Helping People Enslaved by Cybercrime Scam Centers

Erin Foley in Mae Sot, Thailand

After Myanmar’s military raided a compound, a network of ministries helps trafficking victims return home.

Dreaming Against the Machine

Technologies like AI privilege “growth” and “effectiveness” over imagination and inefficiency. God operates differently.

News

Church Provides Shelter, Aid During Bondi Beach Attack

Amy Lewis

Australian Christians are finding ways to support the Jewish community after an ISIS-motivated shooting killed 15.

News

How Rhode Island Churches Responded to the Brown Shooting

Harvest Prude and Kara Bettis Carvalho in Providence, Rhode Island

God “draws near to us in our suffering,” local pastor Scott Axtmann preached after Saturday’s deadly attack. Area ministries were active too.

The Bulletin

Hanukkah Attack in Australia and Christmas Hospitality

Steve Cuss, Mike Cosper, Clarissa Moll

Shootings prompt a conversation about antisemitism and violence, and Being Human’s Steve Cuss discusses God’s hospitality.

Review

Personal Preference Is No Way to Judge Faithful Worship

Steven Félix-Jäger’s new volume on biblical, aesthetic, theological, and pastoral considerations in worship will serve many churches.

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