"Weblog: Hindu Leader of Anti-Missionary Mob Gets Death Sentence, Others Life in Prison"
"Newsweek on the Holy Land's Christians, a confrontation between Anglican evangelicals and Rowan Williams, the end of church bingo, and other stories from online sources around the world"
Indian Christians 'satisfied' with sentence | But the All India Christian Council said the punishment would do little to end religious persecution in the eastern state of Orissa (AFP)
Killers of Australian missionary in India enraged by beef eating | A Hindu extremist convicted in the murder of Australian missionary Graham Staines and his two sons said he committed the crime after seeing tribal Indians eat beef, which is forbidden by Hinduism, a report said (AFP)
Eritrean children locked up for having Bibles, says Amnesty | The authorities in the east African country are persecuting a minority Christian church by subjecting 27 girls and 30 boys to "cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment" (The Guardian, London)
Vatican rebukes Georgia, Orthodox Church | The Vatican issued an unusually strong rebuke to the former Soviet republic of Georgia and its dominant Orthodox Church on Saturday, after the government scrapped an accord guaranteeing religious freedom for Catholics (Associated Press)
Middle East:
Dark days in Bethlehem | Under siege from all sides, Christians in the Holy Land have never been so beset. A report from the front (Newsweek)
Israel's Christian soldiers | Citing Scripture, Evangelical Christians have taken up the cause of preserving Israel with a passion—no matter how many liberal Jews find their unlikely devotion unsettling (New York)
Christians feel vulnerable in post-Saddam Iraq | Their main concern, as for all Iraqis, is the resultant insecurity. But Christians are also worried about a potential Islamization of Iraq (Reuters)
Also: Post-Saddam: Iraqi Christians fear repercussions | The dictator protected them from fundamentalists, but now the community fears that intolerance may return to their country (NDTV, India)
Breaking the Heathen stereotype | On the 27th of September, a number of people from the area will gather for Pagan Pride Day (Richard B. Culver, The Dallas Morning News)
Of spindles and spirituality | The Church of Craft, a faith pieced together over the last three years like some sort of cosmic quilt, is looking for a permanent home, legal assistance to clarify their tax status as an official church, and the best place to buy googly eyes (The New York Times)
Waiting for the messiah of Eastern Parkway | While he was alive, Rebbe Menachem Schneerson was the unifying leader of the Lubavitchers. Now, nine years after his death, some of his followers eagerly await his resurrection — and others see belief in a second coming as a curse on their movement (The New York Times Magazine)
Anglican breakup over gay clergy:
Episcopal diocese rebukes gay stand | The Episcopal Diocese of Central Florida became one of the first in the nation Saturday to officially reject the national denomination's policies on homosexuality (The Orlando Sentinel)
Infighting is wrecking Church's image, says archbishop | The Archbishop of York, Dr David Hope, read the riot act to the warring factions in the Church of England last night, warning them that their squabbling was destroying the Church's credibility (The Daily Telegraph, London)
Also: Evangelicals warn Williams on gay issue | The Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr Rowan Williams, opened the largest gathering of Church of England evangelicals for decades last night amid division and dissension over the issue of homosexuality (The Daily Telegraph, London)
Earlier: Evangelicals warm up in gay row | The 2,000 people gathered in a blustery, drizzly Blackpool represent the biggest gathering of evangelical Anglicans for 15 years (BBC)
Sex wars in church | The row touches on issues of race, gender, culture and sexuality in a combination that could be fatal for the Anglican communion (Alison Webster, The Guardian)
Episcopalians place faith in dialogue | In interviews last week with 53 leaders or senior wardens from Atlanta's 93 Episcopal parishes, a team of reporters found no mass defection or financial crisis (The Atlanta Journal-Constitution)
'Most churches just want to help people' | Down the road from the Winter Gardens in Blackpool, where the evangelicals are meeting, some of their views are observed with incredulity by George Fisher, vicar of St Thomas's parish church and his evangelical curate Pat Nesbitt (The Guardian, London)
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Church report reinforces gay policy | The Church of England looks set to reinforce its policy on homosexuality by ruling out recognition of gay partnerships, in a discussion document to be published later this autumn (The Guardian, London)
Views on spiritual leadership | What is your faith's view on gay clergy and especially placing gay clergy in leadership positions? Religious leaders respond (Los Angeles Times)
More on Archbishop of Canterbury:
Archbishop says legal system fails children | The Archbishop of Canterbury, Rowan Williams, yesterday delivered a scathing attack on the criminal justice system in his most overtly political speech to date (The Observer, London)
Marriage law eyed for GOP platform | Republicans are prepared to oppose homosexual "marriage" in their national platform, Republican National Committee Chairman Ed Gillespie said yesterday (The Washington Times)
Ethnic, religious alliance backs gay-marriage ban | An alliance of African American, Latino, Asian, Jewish, Catholic and Muslim religious leaders lent their support Wednesday to a constitutional amendment to ban gay marriage that will soon be introduced in the Senate (San Francisco Chronicle)
Defining marriage a tricky task | For much of its history, marriage has been an economic, reproductive, political and practical concern for the benefit of families rather than individuals (Anne Mahoney, The Denver Post)
Let America decide | If marriage is to be radically redefined, the decision should, at the very least, be made by the American people and their elected representatives, not by unelected, unaccountable judges (Marilyn Musgrave, The Denver Post)
Concept is just fear run amok | The Defense of Marriage Act provides all the protection that any state needs from the would-be menace called same-sex marriage (Julie Tolleson, The Denver Post)
Straight, gay could both lose | The debate about the definition of marriage is based on the states' long-standing power to license, conduct and regulate marriages. We know that power has always been presumed constitutional. But that may have ended 32 years ago without notice (Michael Woodson, The Denver Post)
Church bingo dwindling | As some players opt instead for high-stakes bingo at American Indian casinos, and as many church leaders question the compatibility of Catholicism and gambling, church bingo is being cast aside (The Arizona Republic)
Salt of the earth and the heavens | In Colombia, an centuries-old salt mine has been turned into a crystal cathedral (Los Angeles Times)
New life seen in Protestant churches | Despite significant membership losses from the 1960s to the 1980s in their national denominations, many Episcopal, Methodist, Lutheran, and Presbyterian churches are vital places, said Diana Butler Bass, an author and professor at Virginia Theological Seminary (Religion News Service)
Revving up the young a mission in life | Susan Gormann became Australia's youngest female religious leader when she was inducted moderator of the Uniting Church of Victoria and Tasmania (The Age, Melbourne, Australia)
Go straight to Heaven | Mother Teresa is on the verge of canonization, only six years after her death. Here's why the Pope is in a hurry to create new saints (Anne Sebba, The Spectator, U.K.)
Bishop Grahmann bars speaker, so group moves event | Bishop Charles Grahmann has banned a leader of Corpus, a national organization that supports allowing Catholic priests to marry, from speaking next month on property owned by the Dallas Diocese (The Dallas Morning News)
History:
The Miss Stone Affair: A hostage crisis in Macedonia | An American missionary spinster and a beautiful Bulgarian woman (who turns out to be pregnant) are kidnapped in the rugged mountains of Macedonia and held for ransom by bandit-revolutionaries (The New York Times Book Review)
John Winthrop: The Puritan dilemma | We have lost touch with our Puritan forebears. We have forgotten, in our giddy and disrespectful era, how wretched it must have been to live with them (The New York Times Book Review)
Bible track | George Rosie reviews Reformation: Europe's House Divided 1490-1700 by Diarmid MacCulloch (The Sunday Herald, Glasgow)
Beat of a different drummer | Mark Curtis Anderson captures the rugged tug of war of his youth—between sex, drugs, rock 'n' roll and the threat of damnation or the promise of salvation—in a heartfelt, funny and offbeat memoir, Jesus Sound Explosion (Minneapolis Star-Tribune)
Decoding the subtleties of best-selling 'Da Vinci' | The early Christians opposed paganism in all forms, but the mother goddess cannot be lumped in with the rest, because every patriarchy - and not just religious ones - justifies its existence by demeaning women (Joseph F. Kelly, The Plain Dealer, Cleveland)
Former CoE bishop and media personality Jim Thompson dies:
The Rt Rev Jim Thompson | The Right Reverend Jim Thompson, who died on the cruise ship Minerva II yesterday aged 67, was Bishop of Bath and Wells from 1991 until 2001 and before that spent 13 arduous years as Bishop of Stepney in the diocese of London; his determinedly liberal views - on homosexual adoption, racism, women priests, and so on - were regularly aired on the Today programme's Thought for the Day slot (The Daily Telegraph, London)
Twenty years ago, Republicans, Democrats, evangelicals, gay activists, and African leaders joined forces to combat AIDS. Will their legacy survive today’s partisanship?