Alabama Chief Justice Moore may be chief justice no more
"Homosexual conduct is, and has been, considered abhorrent, immoral, detestable, a crime against nature, and a violation of the laws of nature and of nature's God upon which this Nation and our laws are predicated. Such conduct … is destructive to a basic building block of society—the family. … It is an inherent evil against which children must be protected." A Don Wildmon fundraising letter? Nope. An Alabama Supreme Court decision written by Chief Justice Roy Moore, who became famous several years ago for his defiant display of the Ten Commandments.
Moore issued a concurring opinion in a case awarding custody of three children to their father over their lesbian mother. And now that case—or more specifically, Moore's decision—is becoming a national issue. The Christian Coalition (yes, it's still around) is praising Moore's act, saying he protected marriage and strengthened traditional families. Gay rights organizations are calling him unfit to sit on the bench. "Chief Justice Moore has decreed that his personal religious beliefs will now be the law of the land in Alabama," the head of the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force tells The New York Times. "This violates the constitutional mandate of separation of church and state, and it renders him unfit to serve as a judge." The Times reports that State Rep. Alvin will "ask the Alabama Judicial Inquiry Commission to examine Chief Justice Moore's opinion to see whether he should be removed."
Even if he's not removed, editorializes The Montgomery Advertiser, he may have shot himself in the foot: "Ironically, Moore may well have provided an avenue for the federal courts to overturn any presumptions against homosexual parents in custody cases in Alabama while he goes on to claim he is actually defending them."
The Birmingham News reports that the Lambda Legal Defense and Education Fund also filed a complaint with the commission. In an editorial Wednesday, The Birmingham News opined, "If it's Moore's personal belief that homosexuals are unfit parents, so be it. He's entitled to that belief. But as the Supreme Court's chief justice, he should stick to the pertinent laws to reach a decision." Elsewhere, the editor and publisher of The Montgomery Independent attacks Moore: "The hatred that has spewed out of the mouths of public officials in Alabama this past week condemning gays and lesbians would make a visitor here think homosexuals are some well-armed foreign enemy attacking our border."
The lion shall lie down with the … close enough
Since Weblog's other weblog, Zooblog, is on hiatus, this item will have to be posted here. The Independent reports that Kenyans believe they're seeing the fulfillment of biblical prophecy as a lioness has adopted a second baby oryx (a kind of antelope). Behavioral scientists, meanwhile, think the lioness just has a psychological disorder. The first oryx was killed by another lion after the lioness defended it for two weeks. The second oryx (which apparently didn't bond as well with the lioness) was rescued by rangers. The lioness may be looking for a third.
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(Note: For the most part, Weblog keeps the headlines given by the news sources. So if you're upset by the The Deseret News calling Mormonism a church or an Australian newspaper using anatomical terms, complain to them, not Weblog )
Bush tells China to respect religious freedom:
- Bush touts U.S. Values to Chinese | Liberty not to be 'feared,' president says on TV (The Washington Post)
- Bush encourages Chinese to pursue religious freedom | Little progress in talks with Jiang (The Boston Globe)
- A prayer for Beijing | In time, Beijing's officials will learn, however, that it is not prayer, but fighting against freedom of religious expression, that is harming their country. (Editorial, The Washington Times)
- Bush urges China on religious freedom (Associated Press)
- Bush preaches democracy to China (BBC)
- Bush urges freedom of worship in China (The New York Times)
- Chinese leader grilled on religion | Defends rights record before skeptical Bush (The Toronto Star)
- Bush urges Jiang to respect religion | Bush, beginning his two-day trip to Beijing, said he hoped that Jiang, "as a president of a great nation, would understand the important role of religion in an individual's life." (Associated Press)
- Activists want religion high on Bush's China agenda | Bush may be taking the advice. (The Christian Science Monitor)
- Jiang: China has freedom of religion | Claims detainees broke law in other ways (Associated Press)
- Condoleezza Rice says China needs to release detained clergy | Jiang avoids issue (AFP)
- Supporters of detainees appeal to Bush | China often releases prisoners in connection with high-level U.S. visits (Associated Press)
- Groups striving for freedom in China | Several Orange County- based religious groups are in the forefront of the fight for religious freedom in China (The Orange County Register)
Hostages:
- Abu Sayyaf reportedly sends signals of Burnham release | Philippine newspaper reports that a letter from one of the Burnhams' captors indicated the group would surrender and release its hostages unharmed in exchange for amnesty (The Wichita Eagle)
- Missionaries look back on ordeal as a blessing | Heather Mercer and Dayna Curry continue to speak on being hostages in Afghanistan (Houston Chronicle)
Politics:
- High profile a drag on faith-based office | The publicity from President Bush's executive order opening a White House faith-based office undercut the administration's ability to quietly shepherd through the initiative, a presidential scholar said yesterday. (The Washington Times)
- Also: Group cites Bush charity plan flaws | Political miscalculations and poor communication inside the White House have plagued President Bush's effort to direct more money to religious charities, say scholars (Associated Press)
- Group criticizes U.S. churches for idolizing nation | Kingdom Now movement, largely made of Vineyard,. Mennonite, and Pentecostal congregations, criticizes "Christian America" belief (Religion News Service)
- Day's religious focus will hurt party, Harper says | Victory for former party head would result in the Canadian Alliance being branded an anti-abortion party (The National Post)
Church and state:
- Federal judge sides with atheist in dispute over Ten Commandments | Court rejects Nebraska city's argument that monument in city park hasn't hurt anyone and should be protected by the First Amendment's guarantee of religious freedom (Associated Press)
- Grace under fire | A school-prayer ruling attacks academic freedom (Josiah Bunting III, The Wall Street Journal)
Crime:
- Searching for truth in killing of nuns | PBS documentary, "Justice and the Generals," examines 1980 murders (The Plain Dealer, Cleveland)
- Audit says clergyman misused state funds | Bishop James Wilkowski accused of using $68,000 in state grants for his own use instead of using it to help AIDS patients (Chicago Sun-Times)
- Teen receives 12-year prison term, sympathy from minister hit by rock | Johannes Christian lost his sight and had every bone in his face broken (The Plain Dealer, Cleveland)
- Faith in our fathers? | Boston's cardinal struggles to manage a moral crisis (Newsweek)
- Religious leader issues apology | Pledging to keep working to prevent sexual abuse by priests, the president of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops expressed regret to children victimized in the past (Associated Press)
Church life:
- Orthodox Church on way to Antarctica | Continent's first church would not only offer pastoral care to a handful of researchers but would also stand as a memorial to the 47 Russians buried on the continent over decades of exploration (The Moscow Times)
- Protestant rebranding 'a challenge without Pope figure' | Germany's Protestants spending £900,000 to improve its profile. Their new slogan will be: "Protestants ask questions." (Ananova)
- Church's shock rock | An unholy row over what residents call an ungodly din caused a Melbourne suburban council and a rock 'n' roll church to lock horns in court. (News.com.au, Australia)
- LDS Church now 5th largest in U.S. | Mormons pass up Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (Deseret News, Salt Lake City)
- Church rises from ashes | Barrington United Methodist Church congregation appears stronger than ever (The Daily Herald, Chicago suburbs)
- A savior for the churches | Idea of a catechumens returns to Germany at a time when the churches there are dying (Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung)
- Churches could host 'services' all week | Bigger congregations mean bigger buildings, bigger parking lots and bigger Sunday morning traffic jams. All those "biggers" could also mean our churches are poised to become big, bad neighbors. (Ruth Ann Baker, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette)
- Revolving clergy harms religion | Firings higher than national labor force (Gerald L. Zelizer, USA Today)
Christianity and other religions:
- Pat Robertson calls Islam a religion of violence, mayhem | Broadcaster says American immigration policy allows too many from Middle East, not enough from Europe (The Washington Post)
- Wicked without the rationales | Those still on a quest for the "root causes" of Islamic extremism will fail to see the evil at their own doorsteps. (Joseph Loconte, The Washington Times)
- Clergy group rejects Jewish representative | Two ministers resign membership in protest after association's vote (The Boston Globe)
- Losing Lutherans | With which outsiders may a religious believer pray without betraying his own religious tradition? (Rod Dreher, National Review Online)
Franklin Graham makes AIDS a priority:
- Franklin Graham thrives in family business | Lunge into the AIDS issue shows a different kind of boldness (The Washington Times)
- Self-righteous vs. permissive | A seemingly double image of the church has emerged during the Rev. Franklin Graham's impressive International Christian Conference on HIV/AIDS in Washington (Uwe Siemon-Netto, UPI)
- Helms says he regrets not getting into fight against AIDS earlier | Senator promised to keep it on his agenda until he leaves office next year. (Associated Press)
Sex & marriage:
- Red Cross quits AIDS effort | Abortion foes protested condom distribution at Olympics (The Washington Post)
- Investing in abstinence? | Some may listen to the secretary of state about condom use, but a call girl offers her condom cues instead. (Tracy Quan, Salon.com)
Pop culture:
- Chile Temptation ban contested | Lawyers say 1988's Last Temptation of Christ should be permitted (BBC)
- Swastika film poster escapes ban | French court allows Amen promotion, which links crucifix and swastika (BBC)
- With God into the charts | Inside Germany's biggest Christian band, Normal Generation? (Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung)
- Christians outraged at vagina, penis shows | Vagina Monologues and the Puppetry of the Penis will perform next to cathedral (News.com.au, Australia)
- Video shop Christ set to challenge godless viewers | Creator of Queer as Folk is writing The Second Coming, a TV show in which the Son of God returns as a 36-year-old virgin named Steve who works at a video shop (The Guardian, London)
National Religious Broadcasters:
- Religious broadcasters force out new president | Evangelists were urged to be less political (The Washington Post)
- Broadcasting group chief ousted (The Washington Times)
- Earlier: New NRB President Resigns | Christian broadcasters divided over politics-religion controversy. (Christianity Today, Feb. 18, 2002)
Other stories of interest:
- Abortion battle: Prenatal care or pressure tactics? | 'Crisis pregnancy centers' expand and draw criticism (The Washington Post)
- A theologian for these times? | Stanley Hauerwas's single-minded pacifism is out of date (Charles Marsh, The American Prospect)
- Radiation charges against Vatican Radio dropped | Hearing ends in just minutes (Reuters)
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