"Amnesiac pastor" wants his money
Remember Barre Cox? He's the minister from San Antonio and former Abilene Christian University staffer who disappeared in 1994, then reappeared in December 2000 as James Simmons, preaching at a predominantly gay church in Dallas. Cox/Simmons claimed he had amnesia after waking up in a Memphis hospital, and had forgotten all about his wife and daughter. There have been questions about the truth of that claim.

Now Cox is trying to retrieve a bit of his past. He says he's under the care of a neuropsychologist and can recall "bits and pieces" of his former life. But what he really wants, reports the Abilene Reporter-News, is the August 1991 declaration of his death overturned and his estate returned to him.

The problem, says Cox's widow, is that there isn't much of an estate left—she spent it all raising their daughter. "It would mean total bankruptcy" if he wins the case, she says.

Tom DeLay apologizes for saying Baylor isn't Christian
"Don't send your kids to Baylor," House Majority Whip Tom DeLay told a conservative Christian group in Houston. "And don't send your kids to A&M. There are still some Christian schools out there—good, solid schools. Now, they may be little, they may not be as prestigious as Stanford, but your kids will get a good, solid, godly education."

After the comments appeared in the Houston Chronicle (they were secretly taped by Americans United for the Separation of Church and State), DeLay was forced to do some backtracking. "My response to a concerned parent has created a misunderstanding," he said. "Let me be Texas clear. I've been a longtime supporter of Baylor and Texas A&M."

Meanwhile, Baylor supporters continue to defend the school. "Tom DeLay must have been taken out of context," Baylor alum and former Republican congressman Jack Fields told The Dallas Morning News. "I know unequivocally that Baylor is committed to the Christian faith."

And Baylor spokesman Larry Brumley suggested the whip (who was kicked out of Baylor in 1967 for misbehaving) visit the school again. "Apparently Congressman DeLay's perceptions of Baylor have been influenced by people who are uninformed or misinformed about the Christian character and mission of Baylor University," he said.

Sinéad on scandal
Since Weblog knows you've been dying to know what singer Sinéad O'Connor has to say about the clergy abuse scandal, here it is:

All pedophiles, whether in church or street or home, should be dealt with by the laws of man and God in unison. All who protected them should admit their mistakes and step down from their jobs. All of us who are in deep grief about these scandals must be careful to learn the lessons within them. It is now our job, as I see it, to teach the teachers forgiveness and true Christianity.
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Clergy abuse:

  • Law saw pope, discussed quitting | Made secret Rome trip; says he'll address crisis (The Boston Globe)

  • The rules of abuse | Canon law helps explain how American bishops have handled priests who prey on underage youths (Associated Press)

  • Upside of convicting molester priests | Experts believe it purges church, gives victims credibility (San Francisco Chronicle)

  • The Pope steps in | Can he save the American church from the sex-abuse scandal? (Peggy Noonan, The Wall Street Journal)

  • Homosexuality in priesthood is under increasing scrutiny | The Catholic faithful are asking whether there is a closeted culture of homosexuality in the priesthood. (The New York Times)

  • Legal Games | How dioceses can still withhold the truth. (Rod Dreher, National Review Online)

  • Judge: Cardinal Must Answer Questions | Man claims Cardinal Law and the Boston Archdiocese failed to protect him from being sexually abused (Associated Press)

  • Sinead O'Connor: Forgive the priests | "All pedophiles whether in church or street or home, should be dealt with by the laws of man and God in unison. All who protected them should admit their mistakes and step down from their jobs. All of us who are in deep grief about these scandals must be careful to learn the lessons within them. It is now our job as I see it, to teach the teachers forgiveness and true Christianity." (Jeannette Walls, MSNBC)

  • Church Abuse Prosecutors Check Limits on Cases | There's even talk among the nation's prosecutors of circumventing statutes of limitations, with a theory that the legal clock shouldn't start ticking if church officials kept allegations from law enforcement (Associated Press)

Life ethics:

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Sex & marriage:

Politics & law:

Church and state:

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Persecution:

War in the Holy Land:

Church life:

  • He lives what he preaches, despite a few setbacks | John Cochran took people in need into his home. Then the home was burned by an arsonist (Brian O'Neill, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette)

  • Church of Scotland faces extinction in 50 years | "Many people are so far removed from the Church that several generations have passed without any family member having seen the inside of a church building far less having taken part in Christian worship," says report (The Scotsman)

  • Kirk's uncertain future | For anyone favouring a diverse and vibrant civil society, this decline should be of deep concern (Editorial, The Scotsman)

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  • Church faces 'divorce' over female bishops | Forward in Faith, the umbrella group for clergy who cannot accept women priests, has said its members will leave the Church of England if, as is expected within the next decade, it consecrates women bishops (The Daily Telegraph)

Money & business:

Theology:

Pop culture:

  • Beam me up, Rev. Scotty | Star Trek's religious themes boldly go where no TV show has gone before (The Christian Science Monitor)

  • Joshua needs saving | Bringing the Savior to a small town doesn't guarantee salvation. (Westword, Denver)

  • Also: Holy Hollywood | Billionaire Philip Anschutz is poised to become a PG-movie mogul. (Westword, Denver)

  • Also: Phil's big scores | Anshutz's domain stretches from kids' theater to pro sports. (Westword, Denver)

Catholicism:

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Other stories of interest:

  • Implantable chips ahoy | 'Mark of the beast' or sign of the times? (Bill Berkowitz, WorkingForChange)

  • A Bible for the Inuit | After 23 years, the huge task of translation into Inuktitut is complete (The National Post, Canada)

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