Kansas House narrowly defeats state Religious Freedom Restoration Act In something of a surprise move, the Kansas House rejected a Religious Freedom Restoration Act that would ordered local governments to “not substantially burden a person’s or group’s exercise of religion.” “The bill had been given preliminary approval Wednesday on a 65-58 vote,” The Kansas City Star reports (the bill needed 63 to pass). “Within 24 hours, [the bill] had lost four votes. The final vote was 61-59.”
“The arguments were the same this year as last year” when the bill passed, said Rep. Dan Williams, who sponsored the measure. The defeat, he told the Associated Press, “makes no sense.”
The bill would have faced a tougher time in the Senate, where last year’s bill languished and died. Twelve states have adopted similar measures since 1997, when the U.S. Supreme Court struckdown a federal version of the bill.
Meanwhile, the Kansas House is considering another bill that would require the Kansas Department of Health and Environment to regulate abortion clinics‘ facilities, equipment, personnel, patient screening, abortion procedures and incident reporting.
Focus on the Family calls for boycott of Big Brothers-Big Sisters Focus on the Family devoted its radio program yesterday to discussing mentoring (audio), and one of its main points was calling for a boycott of mentor program Big Brothers-Big Sisters for its mandating local chapters to allow homosexuals to work with children in the program.
“The national leadership of Big Brothers has received a landslide of criticism from parents, pro-family groups, members of Congress and even its own local directors,” Focus Vice President Bill Maier said. “But they stubbornly refuse to reconsider this ill-advised policy, choosing instead to appease homosexual pressure groups at the expense of the well being of the children they serve.”
“This sort of thing is going to hurt kids because without funding we have to let staff go and limit our number of mentors,” Robin Rogers, executive director of Colorado Springs Big Brothers-Big Sisters, told the Colorado Springs Gazette.
Noreen Shanfelter, a spokeswoman for the national office, said that Focus isn’t right. “These are the same allegations—false allegations” that have been around for a while, she said. “We don’t have any policy that requires agencies to match homosexuals with children. We have a nondiscrimination policy.”
In fact, says Rogers, the organization gets parents’ approval before assigning a gay mentor to their child.
But Focus on the Family President James Dobson says it’s the nondiscrimination policy that’s troubling. “I have supported Big Brothers Big Sisters for years, but the well being of children is too important to ignore,” he says. “It is unfortunate that such a reputable organization has resorted to playing political games with America’s children caught in the crosshairs. I hope that even now Big Brothers-Big Sisters will reassess their dangerous policy.”
The call has sparked reaction from Big Brothers-Big Sisters organizations around the country.
More articles
War and Iraq:
- Seeking a ‘sensible midpoint’ | On rare occasions, the alternatives to war are worse than war (William R. Bouknight, The Commercial Appeal, Memphis)
- ‘The call to be peacemakers is not optional’ | We cannot make the universe or our planet safer through violence (Barbara A. Holmes, The Commercial Appeal, Memphis)
- ‘War is such an intoxicating elixir’ | War shifts food from the mouths of our children, education from their brains, and medicine from the veins of our elderly citizens (Frank A. Thomas, The Commercial Appeal, Memphis)
- Atlantans of many faiths pack pews, pray for peace | Two hundred solemn faces—some seasoned with age, others fresh with youth—packed the pews at the Ebenezer Baptist Church on Monday night as leaders from various faiths took to the pulpit to pray for peace (The Atlanta Journal-Constitution)
- Church Iraq statement ‘welcomed’ | Foreign Secretary Jack Straw has welcomed the statement on Iraq by leaders of the UK’s Catholic and Anglican churches – despite their concerns about the moral case for war (BBC | video)
Faith-based initiative:
- Secularists target prison charity | The Bush administration’s faith-based charity initiative has reached another hurdle as its critics sue a religious program in Iowa prisons and a new welfare rule on religion receives its final public comments today (The Washington Times)
- ‘Armies of compassion’ heed different calls | One of the possible effects of President Bush’s faith-based initiative proposal is that organizations such as the Nashville Rescue Mission could receive federal funding without changing the religious focus of its counseling programs (The Tennessean)
- Initiative needs more than faith | It makes sense to put faith-based organizations on equal footing for funds (The Indianapolis Star)
- Clear ground rules quell worries on religious funding | There are better ways the government can encourage the good works of religious organizations without undermining constitutional values (Editorial, USA Today)
- Religious charities can help | The CARE Act does not change the civil-rights landscape in any way (Rick Santorum, USA Today)
- State, groups discuss aid | Nonprofits want to hear details of Bush initiative (Anchorage Daily News)
Church and state:
- Christian prayer our heritage | Many clergy, when asked to open the legislative sessions in prayer at our state Capitol, have ended their prayers in the name of Jesus Christ (H. Wayne Williams, Rapid City Journal)
- School talk dispute didn’t need to occur | Renting the building to the Pensacola Study Group, an affiliate of the Nation of Islam, does not mean that the School District endorses the group’s beliefs, no more than renting it to a group of Baptists, gardeners, or environmentalists would mean an endorsement of their views (Editorial, Pensacola [Fla.] News Journal)
- Christian group sues over facility-use fee | County charges church an hourly fee for using a public building that other community groups can use free (The Washington Times)
- Prayer issue heating up in Temecula | In a move to restore sectarian prayer as a regular part of its twice-monthly meetings, the City Council plans on enlisting the services of Southwest County Assemblyman Ray Haynes, officials said Monday (North County Times, Escondido, Calif.)
- Court orders some religious language stricken from graduation speech | A three-judge panel of the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals upheld a lower court ruling dismissing a lawsuit filed by the student, saying that the actions of school officials were correct because the “proselytizing” nature of portions of the speech amounted to forcing the audience at the commencement ceremony to take part in a religious exercise (UPI)
- Secularists target prison charity | Two lawsuits say the prison used Iowa monies to teach Christianity, discriminated by hiring only workers of a particular religious view, and gave privileges to prisoners who joined. (The Washington Times)
- Still searching for right mix | Keeping a proper constitutional distance between church and state when the state is supplying funds for church programs may be more difficult than Bush believes (Editorial, Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel)
- Porn king can run a TV station but not the Church | Church leaders are angry that a pornography baron can apply to run a radio or television station but Church organizations can not (The Daily Telegraph, London)
Politics and law:
- President hailed as prophet | The president for life of Turkmenistan, who has already had a month renamed after him and another for his late mother, was hailed as a prophet of God by his ministers yesterday to mark his 63rd birthday (The Daily Telegraph, London)
- MPs told they will burn in hell | That’s how fringe religious group Catholic Action lobbied against prostitution bill (Nzoom)
- Clergy push anti-slots campaign | Md. ministers fear poor will suffer most (The Washington Post)
- Sacred image, secular dealings | The Catholic Church wants to make this clear: Mexico’s dark-skinned queen is not a commodity (San Antonio Express-News)
- Europeans struggle over God reference | This time the battle is about whether to include God in the constitution of the new European Union. It’s a bad idea. (Steve Gushee, Palm Beach [Fla.] Post)
- Catholic Christians condemn priests’ involvement in politics | Concerned Roman Catholic members in Blantyre have written a hard-hitting letter criticising some bishops and priests for their active and partisan involvement in politics contrary to the teachings of their church (Malawi Standard)
- Hopefuls speak to ministers | Four candidates appear at governor’s forum (The Advocate, Baton Rouge, La.)
- Chesco abortion foes organize to influence GOP committee | A new organization aiming to place antiabortion proponents on the influential Chester County Republican Committee is quietly taking shape within the county’s political circles (The Philadelphia Inquirer)
Religious freedom:
- Government accused in stifling civil rights | Fear and duct tape are among the latest tactics employed to erode religious freedom and other constitutional rights in post- Sept. 11 America, the Rev. Bob Edgar told a receptive audience Saturday (The Tampa Tribune)
- Jordanian blasphemy verdict shakes the free press | Three Jordanian journalists got jail sentences Monday for an article about the prophet Muhammad. (The Christian Science Monitor)
- Also: Jordanian court convicts 3 journalists | Charged with libeling Islam’s prophet (Associated Press)
- Religious freedom is fine, but at 2am? | It is not that Peter Joel is anti-Christian. He would just like some sleep. (The Age, Melbourne, Australia)
Persecution and violence:
- An emerging threat | The attack on the American missionary Joseph William Cooper and subsequent developments point to the increasing strains on the secular fabric of Kerala (Frontline, India)
- Hong Kong’s Catholic leader raps China | Bishop Joseph Zen fears a proposed law could be used against Hong Kong’s Roman Catholic church because of its ties to underground Catholic churches in the mainland. (Associated Press)
- Wake up, Holy Father | If the Pope will not speak out against Kurds being gassed by Saddam, one would think that he would at least speak out against Christians being persecuted for practicing their faith (Shmuley Boteach, The Jerusalem Post)
- Christian underground smuggles North Koreans to safety in South | In recent years, Christian advocacy groups—sponsored mainly by Koreans living in the United States, Japan and South Korea—have set up a chain of safe houses and orphanages to smuggle North Koreans into China. (San Francisco Chronicle)
- State minister vows to curb religious violence in Georgia | The meeting with the religious minorities held in Evangelical Baptist church in Tbilisi, Georgian State Minister Avtandil Jorbenadze “in the name of President Shevardnadze apologized” for violent attacks against the religious minorities (Civil Georgia)
President Bush’s religious speech:
- Bush’s religious allusions cause stir | Some say it’s not unusual; others uneasy (The Times-Picayune, New Orleans)
- Some voice concern over president’s religious rhetoric | In the midst of a war on terrorism and before a war in Iraq, two combatants are not shy about invoking the name of God. (The Boston Globe)
- Also: Bush’s God talk irks some religious observers (The Atlanta Journal-Constitution)
- Some voice concern over president’s religious rhetoric | Both President Bush and Osama bin Laden fervently assert that God is on their side (The Boston Globe)
- The Gospel according to Bush | It is hard to imagine President George W. Bush making a speech on the subject of Iraq—or for that matter, any subject—without mentioning the deity and the war between good and evil in which He or She is apparently enlisted on our side (Paul Vitello, Newsday)
- Bush increasing religious allusions | Lately, Bush has gone beyond his usual broad remarks on the power of faith in general to use language and ideas specific to Christianity (Associated Press)
- Bush is blasted for calling on faith during hard times | When “theologians” complain about the president’s reliance on God, Americans should be suspicious of their true agenda. (Andrea Neal, The Indianapolis Star)
- In God he trusts – how George Bush infused the White House with a religious spirit | Cabinet meetings start with prayers while speeches demonstrate the President’s faith, but is all this adding to divisions with Europe? (Rupert Cornwell, The Independent, London)
- President Bush’s religious language may be heartfelt – but what if it’s also exclusionary? | How to speak of the spirit to all of us (Jane Eisner, Philadelphia Inquirer)
- Is Bush too prone to moralizing speech? | Those who are bothered by any reference to religious faith in public life are perfectly justified in voting against Bush, but they shouldn’t kid themselves: They’re never going to find a candidate who avoids the sort of morally charged phrases they claim to detest, phrases that go “straight to the gut” and call people to a cause greater than themselves – especially at a time of war (Vincent Carroll, The Rocky Mountain News, Denver)
Missions and ministry:
- Missionaries adjust to risks in Arab lands | At issue is not whether to preach “the good news” to Muslims abroad, but whom should be sent to do it (The Christian Science Monitor)
- Chaplains—the unarmed heroes | How do you prepare a soldier that he or she will become aware of the overwhelming power of sin in this sense of the word? (Uwe Siemon-Netto, UPI)
- Christian Palestinians rise up | Faith plays role in young man’s role in a 28-month-old Palestinian uprising for statehood in the West Bank and Gaza Strip. (Reuters)
- Russian group is offering values to fill a void | A youth group called Walking Together offers itself as a path to social and moral—and some say political—rectitude. (The New York Times)
- Forum members visit recovering missionary | The political fallout from an attack on a Neshannock Township missionary continues to settle, even half a world away from the scene of the crime (New Castle [Pa.] News)
- Amish, Mennonites pitch in to help north Alabama tornado victims | Since January, rotating crews of Mennonites and Amish volunteers have been toiling in the winter cold and rain to build homes for the victims of November’s tornadoes (Sarasota Herald-Tribune)
- Take your seat at the first supper | The Alpha Course would like to invite you to a relaxed dinner and friendly chat. But there’s a catch. They want your soul (The Herald Magazine, Glasgow, Scotland)
- Evangelicals praying for a revolution | The Call’s founders, staging an all-day revival at the Rose Bowl on Saturday, seek a worldwide spiritual awakening (Los Angeles Times)
Money and business:
- Taking God to work | Religion, spirituality making way into daily workplace (Waterloo and Cedar Falls (Ia.) Courier)
- This land is Costco’s land | Cities steal property, and give it to Costco (Ramesh Ponnuru, National Review Online)
- The root of all evil | Black churches bring in experts to teach congregations about money management (San Francisco Chronicle)
- Illinois is showing faith | Religious groups OK’d for tax-exempt financing (The Bond Buyer)
- In Alabama they’re asking, ”How would Jesus tax?” | Ordinarily I’m all for keeping church and state separate. But if the church somehow introduced compassion into Virginia state government, it would be a pleasant change (Patrick Lackey, The Virginian-Pilot)
Vatican releases Nazi papers:
- First papers emerge from Vatican archives | Include a letter seeking papal intervention against the Nazis written by a famed Jewish convert to Catholicism, Edith Stein (Associated Press)
- Glasnost at the Vatican | For decades, the issue of the papacy’s silence in the face of Germany’s murder of 6 million Jews has cast a heavy shadow over Catholic-Jewish relations (Editorial, The Jerusalem Post)
Pop culture:
- Today’s TV isn’t Christians’ reality | If God existed, would he allow TV programs like “The Bachelor” and “The Bachelorette”? (Dana Parsons, Los Angeles Times)
- Richer for the experience | Leigh Nash, lead vocalist for Sixpence None the Richer, has kept her sanity despite the craziness of the music industry. (The Washington Times)
- If God loves us, why judge us at all? | Whatever you think of Left Behind prophecy, Tim LaHaye’s new book is right about God’s mercy (Frederica Mathewes-Green, Beliefnet)
Archaeology and historical sites:
- A rare look at Bible history | Dead Sea Scrolls display in Grand Rapids is unique (The Toledo Blade)
- Ministries say expeditions to archaeological sites support creationism (San Antonio Express-News)
- Joseph’s Tomb destruction ‘very serious,’ says PM aide | Gissin gave no details as to how the tomb will be protected, but added that the desecration of holy sites cannot be taken lightly (The Jerusalem Post)
Education:
- Creed plus curriculum | Union University President David Dockery has moved the school forward and fostered change while keeping a focus on education in a Christian environment (Jackson [Tenn.] Sun)
- Notes of faith: Gospel choirs gain popularity in public schools | Sweet harmonies of culture, joy, faith irresistible (The Beacon Journal, Akron, Ohio)
- Monologues for homogeneity | The Cardinal Newman Society recently published a list of 42 Catholic colleges that are allowing the performance this year of The Vagina Monologues, Eve Ensler’s infamous play (Winfield Myers, National Review Online)
- State school board debates ‘intelligent design’ | One member calls it ‘screwball science,’ another finds it ‘fascinating’ (The Charleston Gazette)
- Schools may pay the price if they ignore new guidelines on religion | Education Department guidelines say schools will lose federal funding if they unconstitutionally promote religion or unconstitutionally deny students’ religious-liberty rights (Charles Haynes, Freedom Forum)
- New U.S. guidelines on prayer in schools get mixed reaction | Policy says educators risk losing federal funds if they try to suppress such activities. The change comes in for praise and criticism (Religion News Service)
- Administration fine-tunes religious rights in public education | The guidance is the latest chapter in a story that involves much more than the public schools (Terry Eastland, The Dallas Morning News)
- Schools blast Christian group’s policies | Some universities remove InterVarsity; NU chapter hasn’t faced similar charge (The Daily Northwestern)
Wheaton College loosens restrictions:
- Wheaton College eases alcohol, dancing ban | Some faculty members went to a Mexican restaurant Monday night and celebrated (Chicago Tribune)
- Also: Wheaton students can dance; staff may drink | “Drinking and tobacco use are none of the college’s business,” spokeswoman Pat Swindle said the trustees decided (Chicago Sun-Times)
- Cultural revolution comes to Wheaton | Call it the booty shake heard around the world. (At least ’round the evangelical Christian world.) (Cathleen Falsani, Chicago Sun-Times)
- Wheaton College loosens ban on drinking, dancing (The Daily Herald, Chicago suburbs)
Science and health:
- Churches join fight against HIV/Aids | Religious organizations in Zimbabwe have joined the Government and non-governmental organizations in fighting the Aids scourge, which is decimating sections of the society (The Herald, Zimbabwe)
- Sex may not be behind Africa’s Aids problem | New research based on hundreds of studies suggests only about a third of HIV infections in Africa are sexually transmitted (Ananova)
- Spiritual intelligence | If cognitive intelligence is about thinking and emotional intelligence is about feeling, then spiritual intelligence is about being (British Medical Journal)
- Robertson doing well after surgery on prostate | Robertson’s physician confirmed during the operation that the disease had not spread (The Virginian-Pilot)
- A journey of science and faith | When Steve Wright learned he had cancer, he placed his confidence in his doctors and his trust in prayer. (The Baltimore Sun)
- Faith-based medicine inappropriate for FDA | David Hager is a devout Christian obstetrician and gynecologist whose track record suggests he has no qualms about mixing his religious beliefs with his medical practices (Editorial, Honolulu Advertiser)
Crime:
- Man held in thefts from churches | First he ransacked the offices of a Maywood church to steal cash and a digital camera. Days later in Hackensack, he swiped the keys to a 2000 Honda from an usher’s coat during Sunday Mass (The Bergen [N.J.] Record)
- Some church leaders mobilizing pastors to rally behind opposition | The activities of the church leaders were exposed following the arrest last week of Bishop Trevor Manhanga of the Evangelical Fellowship of Zimbabwe and three MDC activists (The Herald, Zimbabwe)
- Police try to solve church burglaries | Four churches hit in less than two months (The Advocate, Baton Rouge, La.)
- Con man takes advantage of religious, single women | The 30-year-old, last seen in Rio Grande do Norte, presents himself as a good evangelical Christian and after a few days says he is in love and proposes (Ananova)
- Cross at Slavic Christian Center cut down again | For the second time in less than two years, vandals have sawed off a 350-pound metal cross mounted atop the Slavic Christian Center sanctuary in Tacoma (The News Tribune, Tacoma, Wash.)
- Rwanda pastor found guilty by U.N. tribunal | “We are saddened by the outcome of this trial,” says Adventist leader (Adventist News Network)
Church life:
- Church landmark exemption OK’d | City Council gives proposal slim preliminary approval (Pittsburgh Post-Gazette)
- Also: Historic designation bill gets OK | A narrow majority of City Council members preliminarily approved a controversial bill on Wednesday that would allow only the owners of religious buildings to nominate the structures for historic designation (Pittsburgh Tribune-Review)
- Historic churches preservation promoted | Members of St. Innocent Cathedral and ROSSIA – Russian Orthodox Sacred Sites in Alaska – created the Spirit in Snow display of eight snow churches to promote the preservation of the historic endangered churches (Anchorage Daily News)
- ‘Prophets’ of doom challenge area clergy | A self-proclaimed prophet and others have interrupted church services and confronted clergy over the past several weeks are followers of the late “Brother” Julius Schacknow, whom they call “the Lord Julius Christ.” (The Hartford [Conn.] Courant)
- Standoff on Mount Athos | Greek monks defy patriarch in battle for soul of Orthodoxy (The Washington Post)
- Kawaiaha’s pastor investigation confidential | Association of Hawaiian Evangelical Churches says allegation did not allege a violation of any criminal laws (Honolulu Advertiser)
- Church denied right of worship | The head of Church of God in East Africa, the Rev Byrum Makokha, yesterday banned worshipping at the chaos-hit Buru Buru church beginning today. (The East African Standard, Nairobi, Kenya)
- Heritage of Kirk ‘will be destroyed by merger plan’ | The Church of Scotland is in danger of throwing away its Presbyterian heritage, a leading evangelical minister has claimed (The Evening News, Edinburgh, Scotland)
- Mennonites bring service, prayer into urban Lancaster | It’s not organized, but it’s certainly a trend (Associated Press)
Immigration:
- Coming if you’re ready or not | There are now an estimated 20,000 people waiting in Ethiopia to immigrate to Israel (Haaretz, Tel Aviv)
- Israel to allow 20,000 Ethiopians to enter (UPI)
American Christianity:
- A nation bound by faith | Of all its national traits, America’s religiosity is probably the most baffling—and infuriating—for the rest of the world. Where does it come from? Why do Americans think they’re on the side of right? And why it will not go away (Newsweek International)
- The Columbus myth | What took Spain to the New World was unbridled political power claiming God’s favor and approbation, supported by evangelical Christians, armed with overwhelming technological superiority, and driven by an insatiable need for oro (Chet Raymo, The Boston Globe)
- Faith and the front | Civil War was a time of religious revival, and both North and South felt God was on their side (The San Diego Union-Tribune)
- Quoting the Bible in public | It is increasingly rare to hear Scripture quoted in public, partly because of legal constraints, but largely because the Bible has become unfamiliar territory (David Yount, Scripps Howard News Service)
Occult:
- Making paranormal less normal | Conference seeks to counter culture’s calm on the occult (The Dallas Morning News)
- A magical tale of vicars and witches | Children’s author Graham Taylor could earn a fortune thanks to his interest in the occult. What would his parishioners say? (The Daily Telegraph, London)
Interfaith relations:
- Piety and politics sunder a riot-torn Nigerian city | Once an urban milange of faiths and tribes, Kaduna is now abuzz with religious piety, with Muslims on one side and Christians on the other (The New York Times)
- Minister battles military over faith | Jewish group joins Pentecostal in bid to diversify chaplaincy (The National Post, Canada)
- Christians, traditional healers clash over stone | The Christians recently sued the traditional healers for allegedly beating them when they found them praying at the stone (The Monitor, Kampala, Uganda)
- Church’s critics are wrong | To say that Jesus “fulfilled” the promises God made to Israel affirms something positive about Jesus, but does not, in itself, say anything negative about Judaism (Eugene J. Fisher, The Jerusalem Post)
- 600 Ugandans struggle for recognition by Israel as Jews | After years of persecution for their beliefs, the Abayudaya now live in relative harmony with the surrounding Christians and Muslims. Their biggest challenge, it turns out, is with the Israelis (The New York Times)
- 21 people reconvert to Hinduism in Orissa | The members of the two Hindu families had converted to Christianity some years ago and wanted to return to their original fold, police sources said (PTI)
Theology:
- Methodist bishop cleared of heresy | C. Joseph Sprague held that “the myth of the Virgin birth was not historical fact” (Chicago Tribune)
- Also: Bishop cleared of heresy for fourth time (The Daily Herald, Chicago suburbs)
- Also: Dismissal of heresy charge called ‘dysfunction’ | “What is dysfunctional is that we even have to make complaints,” said the Rev. Thomas Lambrecht, who led a group charge against Bishop C. Joseph Sprague for doubting the virgin birth, divinity and bodily resurrection of Jesus (The Washington Times)
Judge Roy Moore:
- Coral Ridge again raising money for chief justice’s defense | But some take issue with letter’s claim that Roy Moore faces jail (Associated Press)
- Also: Fund-raising pitch has absurd premise (Editorial, Montgomery Advertiser)
- Appeals court to hear monument appeal | Judge ruled monument unconstitutional in November (Associated Press)
- Gay activist meets with chief justice about homosexuality | “We left there agreeing to disagree,” says retired Huntsville minister Felicia Fontaine (Associated Press)
Archbishop Rowan Williams:
- Bear necessities | Archbishop gets baptism of fur (The Guardian, London)
- The Archbishop of Canterbury (The Times, London)
- New archbishop is known for taking stands | No doubt about it, the Most Rev. Rowan Williams, who will be formally enthroned as Archbishop of Canterbury on Feb. 27, makes good copy (Peter Steinfels, The New York Times)
Sex and marriage:
- Preacher making a point on marriage | To press for rights of same-sex couples, won’t sign licenses. (The Boston Globe)
- Welfare reform, marriage tied | A freshman Republican senator has introduced a welfare-reform bill that calls for $350 million for marriage promotion, signaling that neither welfare reform nor a push to promote two-parent families is going to languish in the Senate as it did last year (The Washington Times)
- Government urges under-16s to experiment with oral sex | Family campaigners believe that the course, called A Pause, is having the reverse effect by exciting the sexual interest of children (The Times, London)
- Also: Children told ‘try oral sex’ (The Evening Standard, London)
- Cal Poly campus’s faculty faces battle over proposed anti-pornography resolution | Academics and students would need permission from the university president to look at pornography online (The Chronicle of Higher Education)
Clergy sex abuse:
- Baptist minister accused of sex abuse | Michael M. Taylor is already a registered sex offender (Chicago Tribune)
- Long Island monsignor scorns jury, insisting he is no ‘monster’ | A grand jury report suggests that Msgr. Alan J. Placa protected pedophiles. But had the grand jury spoken to him, Mr. Placa says, he would have denied everything (The New York Times)
- Judge rules church suits can proceed | Archdiocese’s 1st Amendment motion rejected (The Boston Globe)
- Dismissed priest fails to report in Philippines | When the Rev. Roberto Batoon was kicked out of the Diocese of Honolulu last month for admitting to sexual misconduct with a minor, he was instructed by Bishop Francis X. DiLorenzo to return to his diocese in the Philippines to face possible further action (The Honolulu Advertiser)
- A pause in some suits involving priests | A number of lawyers in Boston agree to a break in litigation to foster sex abuse settlements (Los Angeles Times)
Other stories of interest:
- Being single isn’t an easy road for a Christian | Nowhere in the Bible does it say living a life for Jesus would be easy. So why would you think that living as a single person would be any easier? (Robertoa C. Reed, Philadelphia Daily News)
- Mother Teresa to be beatified by Pope John Paul II in October (Bloomberg News)
Related Elsewhere
Suggest links and stories by sending e-mail to weblog@christianitytoday.com
See our past Weblog updates:
and more, back to November 1999