ARTICLES - HOT OFF THE FAGGOT

The debate over what is good and evil in literature

The debate begins (continues) again …

With the release of the next in the Chronicles of Narnia film series, Voyage of the Dawn Treader, the debate over what is good and evil in literature rears its immortal head again. People who worry about such things want to characterise Rowling’s work (Harry Potter) as evil and Lewis’s (Chronicles of Narnia) as good even though they both use magic and mythology as central elements of the worlds in which the stories occur.

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It seems to me that much of this discussion assumes the ability to categorise literature easily into "good" and "evil". I don't think it is that easy. Much overtly Christian literature has elements that I would be very wary of. And there is much that is overtly non-Christian that has much value. Surely the whole point of the need for discernment is because, in a beautiful fallen world, there is good and evil everywhere and we need to mine it for all it is worth. The human mind has the capacity to see and hear what it will in almost anything. If we wish to see evil - that is what we will see and hear; if we wish to see good - that is what we will see and hear. It is our initial frame of reference that determines, to a large extent, what we will see and hear. I don't think anything should be excluded from consideration and so would encourage all to readthe-chronicles-of-narnia-prince-caspian-20080422050922373_640w Lewis and Rowling and Tolkien and Pullman and much more. All creativity is evidence of the image of God in the world and to assert that only Christians can produce such slivers of imago dei is arrogant. Christians need to think critically about everything we read and permit expressions of God's grace in what may seem to be the most graceless literary places. The ruthless dichotomy of good and evil as if everything can be sorted in such a black/white way is, in my view, completely unhelpful.

- Steve Parker

Read more at reinventingsdawheel.blogspot.com
 

Living Christian or Sub-Christian? Filling All things with Himself

Filling All things with Himself

The law is a school master to lead us to Christ. But Christ is not a school master to lead anyone to the law. Jesus lives to draw all people to Himself and thereby make them one with the Father. Living in the Father as sons, human beings represent the law of the spirit of life as Jesus fills them and the entire universe with Himself.

The Mosaic law was a shadow of what was to come. Now that the reality is here, we live in it and this reality lives in us.  But the ‘it’ is actually a ‘Him.’ We live in Christ and not in representations and shadows. Thus we are made real as human beings rather than shonky or shoddy representations of lists. We grow into the dignity and authority of the sons and daughters of God as the Son of God lives in us. Let’s be clear. Jesus is not Moses amplified. He does not minister the law of Moses. God the Holt Spirit ministers Jesus as an impartation of sonship to us. The law of the Spirit of life is the personification of Jesus. It is a Him -  Christ in you.

The Father’s command escapes the religious and self-centered. But it is there to be perceived by the humble and hungry. His command is this: “Live in My Son.” His Son’s testimony is  “I AM YOUR LIFE.”

Having attempted life as a ‘commandment keeper’ I can testify to the bankruptcy of the law’s ability to make one whole or holy. The attempt to live in law makes us aware of sin, invigorates sin and maintains sin’s control over one’s life. I have seen that ‘commandment keeping’ actually multiplies sin and creates ‘sins’ from things that are not sinful. Why? To live outside Christ is innately sinful. It is to remain in the sinful independence of the knowledge of good and evil when God has given us a new and living way: His Son.

I have also seen that ‘commandment keeping’ creates the illusion of ‘keeping the commandments’ by drawing people to focus on one command while ignoring the rest. This is why some bandy around the Sabbath as a kind of talisman to fend off the coming judgment. For many Sabbath-keepers the second-coming is publicly the ‘blessed hope.’ Privately it is their worst fear.

A sad thing about ‘commandment keeping’ is that it is not about God. It is about us. Commandment keeping creates pride, religiosity and vanity. It can make people ridiculous and blind them to the true potential of their life as a son of God in Christ. Law mongering maintains people in the knowledge of good and evil  that Adam chose and leaves them outside the life in God that Jesus makes available to all. Jesus had real authority while the ‘authorities’ had none because He lived in His Father as a son while the ‘authorities’ lived in the law.

The commandment keeper lives in a double-bind. Not only is righteousness beyond his reach, but the christ (sic) he has imagined is incapable of helping him keep the commandments because he is no christ at all. The commandment keepers’ christ is hand-maiden to the law and under the feet of the law. With the real Jesus Christ, all things are under His feet and where they are not, we as His representatives live to place them there.

‘My old self has been crucified with Christ. It is no longer I who live, but Christ lives in me. So I live in this earthly body by trusting in the Son of God, who loved me and gave himself for me. 21I do not treat the grace of God as meaningless. For if keeping the law could make us right with God, then there was no need for Christ to die’ Gal 2.20-21 NLT.

Read more at daringadventist.wordpress.com
 

Advice: Don't run red lights at 4am with 513 pounds of weed in your minivan

Amplify’d from gawker.com

Advice: Don't run red lights at 4am with 513 pounds of weed in your minivan.


Send an email to Jeff Neumann, the author of this post, at jeff@gawker.com.

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Hotel Says $11 Million Christmas Tree Was 'Overload'

Amplify’d from gawker.com

Hotel Says Million Christmas Tree Was 'Overload'Remember that $11 million fake Christmas tree adorned with rubies, gold and diamonds in the lobby of the Emirates Palace hotel? The hotel says it regrets "attempts to overload" the holiday with gaudiness, and then blamed it on a jeweler.

According to the AP, the hotel issued a statement to local media that apologized for "attempts to overload the tradition followed by most hotels in the country with meanings and connotations that do not fall in line with the (hotel's) professional standards." But the Emirates Palace added that a jeweler in the hotel was responsible for the decorations: "The hotel is just a venue for exhibiting the tree." Maybe! Either way, here's a ridiculous video from the hotel's website, promoting the 43-foot tall monstrosity:


Send an email to Jeff Neumann, the author of this post, at jeff@gawker.com.

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Perlitz acknowledges describes his sexual encounters as being with "young men" News flash: a minor is not a man

Amplify’d from www.ctpost.com

A face likes his belies this kind of crime

Doug Perlitz has a face like "Christ on Earth."


That's how Perlitz's lawyers say supporters describe him.


Let's mull this over. This is an admitted child abuser. He traded food -- basic human sustenance and shelter -- to homeless Haitian boys, street kids, for sex. That's depraved. There's nothing Christ-like about that.


All the while he ran the Project Pierre Toussaint school, Perlitz dispensed little that came without strings attached. He built a charity. And he used it to rake in donations from well-intending and unsuspecting supporters to feed what he craved: forcible sex with some of the poorest, most downtrodden and vulnerable children in the world. That's rape.


And yet when this handsome golden boy stands before U.S. District Court Judge Janet Bond Arterton for sentencing Tuesday on only one count of traveling for the purpose of engaging in illicit sexual conduct, also known as "sex tourism," it belies the reality that Perlitz is not taking full responsibility for what he's done. Not by a long shot. Just look at the sentencing memorandum his lawyers have prepared for the judge.


Perlitz acknowledges he "crossed the line," but describes his sexual encounters as being with "young men." News flash: a minor is not a man. He describes a relationship with a priest from Fairfield University as "dark and abusive." By the time teenagers enroll in college, they know the difference between right and wrong, illicit and improper. Perlitz even admits he struggled with his sexual identity. Lots of folks do. They don't become pedophiles. Enough excuses.


Michael Nowacki is a devoted Catholic from New Canaan who's been "banished" from St. Thomas More Church for speaking out and urging his parish to investigate how the Haiti Fund, Perlitz' fundraising arm, spent money parishioners contributed. Nowacki was on the cusp of making a sizeable donation to the Haiti Fund after hearing a homily from Perlitz's mentor, the Rev. Paul Carrier, that he describes as "so mesmerizing it brought tears to people's eyes."


Nowacki can still recall the theme. "It was about the only two true emotions that motivate people: love and fear."


Then Perlitz was arrested. Carrier and his intermediaries stopped responding to Nowacki's calls and e-mails. Nowacki found it odd, especially because Carrier knew he intended to write a check to the Haiti Fund. Though Carrier has not been charged with any crime, the sentencing memorandum from Perlitz's attorneys lays some of the blame for Perlitz's misconduct on an unnamed influential priest their client met when he first arrived at Fairfield University. Carrier, a former head of the campus ministry at Fairfield University, traveled to Haiti with Perlitz, raised funds for his protege's charity and is now under investigation by the Society of Jesus New England Province, a Jesuit order.


Nowacki intends to be in the courtroom when Perlitz is sentenced.


"I want to see his face, see his expression," Nowacki says. "Doug Perlitz needs to be forgiven, but he can only be forgiven if he makes a full confession, takes responsibility for his actions and explains fully what went on there, who else was involved and who knew what he was doing to these boys."


But that's not all. "He has to face (some of) his victims in court," Nowacki says, "and begin to repair the damage he's done to them."


A little human warmth surely must have gone a long way with these boys. Instead of giving mercy, Doug Perlitz asks the government to show him some. He deserves no mercy. When it might have really counted, he had none.


Connecticut Post columnist MariAn Gail Brown can be reached at 203-330-6288 or mgbrown@ctpost.com.

Read more at www.ctpost.com
 

Patriarch Gregorios III: speech to Christian/Muslim conference

Amplify’d from www.speroforum.com

Patriarch Gregorios III: speech to Christian/Muslim conference

"It is in the aim and intention of Israel, as an exclusively Jewish State, of creating in the Middle East a dust of confessional statelets: Sunni, Shi'a, Druze, Kurd."

By Speroforum

Gregorios III is Patriarch of the Church of Antioch and spiritual leader of the Melkite Catholics. In December 2010, he was quoted by the Lebanon Daily Star as claiming that attacks against Levantine Christians, such as the attack the Our Lady of Salvation Church in Baghdad, were part of a “Zionist conspiracy against Islam.” He reportedly stated that "All this behavior has nothing to do with Islam... But it is actually a conspiracy planned by Zionism and some Christians with Zionist orientations and it aims at undermining and giving a bad image of Islam.” He further added that "it is also a conspiracy against Arabs and the pre-dominantly Muslim Arab world that aims at depicting Arabs and Muslims in Arab countries as terrorist and fundamentalist murderers in order to deny them their rights and especially those of the Palestinians.”


In the text of his statement (below) to Christians and Muslims assembled in Damascus, he said "It is in the aim and intention of Israel, as an exclusively Jewish State, of creating in the Middle East a dust of confessional statelets: Sunni, Shi'a, Druze, Kurd. That is the dreadful danger menacing the Arab world and Islam and even Christianity." 



Speech of His Beatitude Patriarch Gregorios III at the First International Congress: Christian-Muslim Brotherhood


Damascus, December 15, 2010





Dear brothers and sisters,



Greetings to you all! I particularly want to thank Muslim brothers, especially the muftis, ulemas, imams and preachers who have come from all Syrian regions, for being here. Special greetings to the university students here present!



Greetings and thanks also go to their Excellencies the Ministers of the Awqaf, the muftis and imams who have come from different Arab countries, as well as different countries' ambassadors to Syria. To them I dedicate this talk about the Synod for the Middle East, which was an Eastern Christian event, an historic event being the first of its kind.



I thank Their Holinesses and Their Beatitudes the Patriarchs and their representatives, as well as His Excellency the representative of the Holy Father, His Excellency the Apostolic Nuncio in Damascus, Their Excellencies the Metropolitans and Bishops who have come from Arab countries and Europe, especially Eastern Europe (Russia, Romania, Cyprus, Greece and Turkey). I greet them all, together with the priests, monks and nuns and all the faithful from our Churches who have come from Syria, Lebanon, Jordan, Palestine and Egypt.




A beautiful saying of His Holiness John Paul II, who so loved our Arab countries and visited them, comes to mind, a phrase from his last Message for the World Day of Peace, 1 January 2005, and I quote: "Can an individual find complete fulfilment without taking account of his social nature, that is, his being 'with' and 'for' others?[1]"



Our Lord is described thus in the Gospel: "Lo, the virgin shall be with child and shall bear a son and they shall call his name Emmanuel; which being interpreted is, God with us." (Matthew 1: 23) God is with and for us, for as Saint Irenaeus says, "the glory of God is living man[2]." This is the faith of all Christians. They repeat it every time they say the Creed: "I believe in one God, Father almighty, Maker of heaven and earth, and of all things visible and invisible. And in one Lord, Jesus Christ, only-begotten Son of God... who, for us and for our salvation, came down from heaven, was incarnate of the Holy Spirit and the Virgin Mary and became man... " On the basis of this spiritual conviction, I named this congress, "The Synod for the Middle East and Arab countries." That was with the aim of highlighting the relationship between the Synod and Arab countries as well as between the Synod and the Muslim world.



A simple calculation shows us the following state of affairs: the Middle East is made up of Arab countries, together with Turkey and Iran. The majority of its population is Muslim; 350 million inhabitants, of whom there are 15 million Arab Christians. So, the Synod for the Middle East is a Synod for Arab countries, for Arabs, a Synod for Arab Christians in symbiosis with their Arab society. It is a Synod for the "Church of the Arabs" and "Church of Islam," that is, the Church existing in a Muslim setting. Lastly it is a Synod for Christians and Muslims living together in the Arab East!



This was an important event, of a unique kind. Thanks are due to His Holiness Pope Benedict XVI who called for this Synod to be held as the most important synodal event since the Second Vatican Council brought the Eastern Churches to prominence!



In this Synod, the platform was given to Eastern Churches: there were patriarchs, archbishops, bishops, priests, monks and nuns, and lay faithful too.



It is evident that in this Synod, the causes of the Middle East and the Christian presence in the Muslim Arab East took first place. That is why I addressed to Their Majesties, Their Highnesses and Excellencies, the Kings, Emirs and Presidents of Arab countries, a letter explaining to them the topic and goal of the Synod - the situation of Christians in Arab countries. And I ended by telling them that the only guarantee of the Christian presence in the Arab East is that of their Muslim brothers.



Indeed, the Arab world, the presence of Christians in the Arab world, Christian Arab identity and the challenges that face the Christian presence in this Arab world were the subject of different speeches, discussions and recommendations.



After this, I addressed a second letter to Arab leaders in which I set out the most important issues discussed by the Synod that concerned our Arab world.



Extracts from the Letter addressed to Kings and Presidents



Of Arab countries after the Synod in Rome



I had the honour of addressing a letter to you (dated 18/06/2010) on the subject of the Special Assembly for the Middle East of the Synod of Bishops entitled The Catholic Church in the Middle East: Communion and Witness.



At the end of this Synod, it is my pleasure to communicate the following reflections to you in this letter:



1. The Arabic language was an official language of the Synod alongside other languages. A resolution requested that it be adopted again in the Vatican's Roman Dicasteries. It is a gift due to the concern of the Arab Catholic Patriarchs and Bishops for the Arab world! Indeed it is the language of our culture, faith and societies. It is the great common denominator among Arab countries. This represents a great achievement!



2. The Arab Middle East, together with Turkey and Iran, was the most important topic before the Synod.



3. To speak more precisely, the following themes were the special subject of the Synod: living together, life together, citizenship, modernity, faithful laity, human rights, including those of women, religious freedom of worship and conscience, the construction of churches and places of worship, especially in Saudi Arabia, respect for others and their beliefs, plurality, diversity, rejection of fanaticism, violence, negative fundamentalism, extremism, terrorism, exploitation of others, especially weaker folk and minorities...



4. Featuring in all the discussions of all members of Synod (about 200 persons), was especially Islamic-Christian dialogue in all its dimensions and modalities, significance and urgent necessity, and the support to be brought to its development and animation by all Christians and Muslims.



5. The Synod members or Fathers dealt with the challenges that Christians have to cope with, which include: emigration, insecurity, economic, social and political crises, and the consecutive wars in the region. These challenges have increased, especially because of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. They are the cause of many misfortunes and calamities in our societies. They have sown hatred and enmity among Christian and Muslim citizens locally, regionally and globally. Also resulting from them are fundamentalism and terrorism, represented in the media as though Muslim and Christian Arabs were born terrorists and fundamentalists! This might make people think that religion is the cause of terrorism, violence and fundamentalism, though religion is not to blame for all that. As a result of this state of affairs our whole society has become "abused," with these disasters mainly striking our young generations!



6. The Fathers and members of Synod sought remedies for these calamities: they found that the most efficacious remedy is principally Islamic-Christian dialogue. In the Arab world, it must be our daily bread. In any case that dialogue was the experience of our living together throughout our shared history of the last 1432 [Islamic] years, despite dark centuries, when problems, tensions and even massacres whose victims can be counted in thousands, caused loss of trust in living together, in others and their values... And in its place crept in hatred and enmity and the traditional virtues of pity, compassion, love and fellowship became stunted...



7. The Fathers and members of Synod stressed the need to overcome crises! We must continue the journey together. Furthermore they considered that the success of our singular and difficult experiment in living together is the guarantee of the success of dialogue between followers of different faiths. What is more, it became clear to all, as was remarked on and reported often in the press, that any failure and lack of success of our experience of living as Christians and Muslims together in the East will have a destructive effect on all possibilities for dialogue, and will be a bad harbinger of the fact that all dialogue among people, civilisations and religions in East and West, will be doomed to failure.



8. So we shall have the following result: the East, symbol of plurality and dialogue becomes void of Christians. So the Arab East becomes Muslim without Christians. On the other hand, the West is considered Christian (even if only through baptism). This Christian West supports Israel, in its turn considered the enemy of Islam and Muslims. So the final, terrifying equation is this: the Christian West supports Israel and Jews, the enemies of Islam and Muslims! So Christian Europe is the enemy of Islam and Muslims! And that is precisely the great misfortune, the dark and terrifying future that awaits us! God grant it may not happen!



9. Peace was a basic topic of the Synod's deliberations, speeches and proposals. For peace is both the greatest good and a lost possession! Peace is the great challenge! Peace is most desired by all sides! That is also why bringing it about is the responsibility of all: East and West, Arabs, Europeans and Americans. The Synod members strongly emphasised the role of the Vatican and the Pope or Popes, because of the global influence they exercise. The members of Synod, Patriarchs, Cardinals, and Bishops, emphasised their own responsibility to work for peace. Yet we think that peace is an Arab responsibility! We think that if Arab countries were united in fellowship and concord, and nobly, boldly and firmly decisive, they could impose on the Israelis, with the United States of America, and Europeans, a complete just and lasting peace. For this bold peace is the great jihad (struggle) and the great challenge, which can give an answer to all other challenges, issues, fears, apprehensions that afflict our Middle East. [End of the letter.]



Having said this, I am speaking with unshakeable faith and conviction to my Christian brothers and sisters, sons and daughters, to my Muslim brothers and sisters, and remembering words that our dear President Dr. Bashar al-Assad said, explaining the relational dimensions between people, "In Syria, we are united. We are a natural model for society, for humanity, and for interreligious relations. We ought not only to provide a model for relations between religions and citizenry, but also do this for a more noble and universal reality - humanity!"



God has created us in this holy land of the East. It was a Holy Land for Jews, before us, and subsequently for us and for Muslims. It is an important common spiritual heritage, which we do not value enough. This comprises the holiness of the land, of the Scriptures and many common religious values. This was described by the Second Vatican Council in its declaration, Nostra Aetate, dedicated to the Catholic Church's relations with Jews and Muslims.



The existence of these three religions in the region is unique, important and vital. This state of affairs has significance in the life of Christians, on the spiritual, national and cultural level... Christians must acknowledge this fact despite the circumstances; the multiplicity of nationalities and the different intellectual and religious trends.



We have to look for common Islamic-Christian values and make them the subject of studies, conferences, congresses and Muslim-Christian meetings. There should result from that a programme of joint academic and spiritual work for Christians and Muslims.



The Synod for the Middle East inspired in me the idea of an important project: holding a Synod for the Middle East in the Middle East, gathering Churches together: Orthodox, Catholic and Protestant.



Another idea came to my mind of organising a Muslim-Christian assembly in the Middle East, which would study all the topics touched on by the Roman Synod's documents: the Instruction, the Instrumentum Laboris, the Lineamenta, then the discussions and speeches during the Synod; the recommendations and finally the Message to the People of God.



All these documents speak of the Christian presence in correlation with Muslim society.



Here are some paragraphs from the final Nuntius[3] directly to do with the subject of this congress:



I. The Church in the Middle East: communion and witness through history


3.2. The second challenge comes from the outside, namely, political conditions, security in our countries and religious pluralism.



We have evaluated the social situation and the public security in all our countries in the Middle East. We have taken account of the impact of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict on the whole region, especially on the Palestinians who are suffering the consequences of the Israeli occupation: the lack of freedom of movement, the wall of separation and the military checkpoints, the political prisoners, the demolition of homes, the disturbance of socio-economic life and the thousands of refugees. We have reflected on the suffering and insecurity in which Israelis live. We have meditated on the situation of the holy city of Jerusalem. We are anxious about the unilateral initiatives that threaten its composition and risk to change its demographic balance. With all this in mind, we see that a just and lasting peace is the only salvation for everyone and for the good of the region and its peoples.



3.4. We have extensively treated relations between Christians and Muslims. All of us share a common citizenship in our countries. Here we want to affirm, according to our Christian vision, a fundamental principle which ought to govern our relations, namely, God wants us to be Christians in and for our Middle Eastern societies. This is God's plan for us. This is our mission and vocation - to live as Christians and Muslims together. Our actions in this area will be guided by the commandment of love and by the power of the Spirit within us.



The second principle which governs our relations is the fact that we are an integral part of our societies. Our mission, based on our faith and our duty to our home countries, obliges us to contribute to the construction of our countries as fellow-citizens, Muslims, Jews and Christians alike.



V. Co-operation and dialogue with our fellow-citizens, the Muslims

9. We are united by the faith in one God and by the commandment that says: do good and avoid evil. The words of the Second Vatican Council on the relations with other religions offer the basis for the relationship between the Catholic Church and the Muslims, "The Church regards with esteem also the Muslims. They adore the one God, living...; merciful and all-powerful, the Creator of heaven and earth, who has spoken to men." (Nostra Aetate 3)



We say to our Muslim fellow-citizens: we are brothers and sisters; God wishes us to be together, united by one faith in God and by the dual commandment of love of God and neighbour. Together we will construct our civil societies on the basis of citizenship, religious freedom and freedom of conscience. Together we will work for the promotion of justice, peace, the rights of persons and the values of life and of the family. The construction of our countries is our common responsibility. We wish to offer to the East and to the West a model of coexistence between different religions and of positive collaboration between different civilisations for the good of our countries and that of all humanity.



Since the appearance of Islam in the seventh century and to the present, we have lived together and we have collaborated in the creation of our common civilisation. As in the past and still existent today, some imbalances are present in our relations. Through dialogue we must avoid all imbalances and misunderstandings. Pope Benedict XVI tells us that our dialogue must not be a passing reality. It is rather a vital necessity on which our future depends (Pope Benedict XVI, Meeting with Representatives from the Muslim Communities, Cologne, 20 August 2005). Our duty then is to educate believers concerning interreligious dialogue, the acceptance of pluralism and mutual esteem.



VI. Our Participation in Public Life: An Appeal to the Governments and to the Political Leadership in Our Countries

10. We appreciate the efforts which have been expended for the common good and the service to our societies. You are in our prayers and we ask God to guide your steps. We address you regarding the importance of equality among all citizens. Christians are original and authentic citizens who are loyal to their fatherland and assume their duties towards their country. It is natural that they should enjoy all the rights of citizenship, freedom of conscience, freedom of worship and freedom in education, teaching and the use of the mass media.



We appeal to you to redouble your efforts to establish a just and lasting peace throughout the region and to stop the arms race, which will lead to security and economic prosperity and stop the haemorrhage of emigration which empties our countries of its vital forces. Peace is a precious gift entrusted by God to human family, whose members are to be "peacemakers who will be called children of God." (Mt 5:9)



VII. Appeal to the International Community


11. The citizens of the countries of the Middle East call upon the international community, particularly the United Nations conscientiously to work to find a peaceful, just and definitive solution in the region, through the application of the Security Council's resolutions and taking the necessary legal steps to put an end to the occupation of the different Arab territories.



The Palestinian people will thus have an independent and sovereign homeland where they can live with dignity and security. The State of Israel will be able to enjoy peace and security within their internationally recognized borders. The Holy City of Jerusalem will be able to acquire its proper status, which respects its particular character, its holiness and the religious patrimony of the three religions: Jewish, Christian and Muslim. We hope that the two-State-solution might become a reality and not a dream only.



Iraq will be able to put an end to the consequences of its deadly war and re-establish a secure way of life which will protect all its citizens with all their social structures, both religious and national.



Lebanon will be able to enjoy sovereignty over its entire territory, strengthen its national unity and carry on in its vocation to be the model of coexistence between Christians and Muslims, of dialogue between different cultures and religions, and of the promotion of basic public freedoms.



We condemn violence and terrorism from wherever it may proceed as well as all religious extremism. We condemn all forms of racism, anti-Semitism, anti-Christianism and Islamophobia and we call upon the religions to assume their responsibility to promote dialogue between cultures and civilisations in our region and in the entire world.





Dear brothers and sisters, friends,



We are called to academic and prophetic advances, in all sincerity, friendship and mutual respect: for the uninterrupted growth of fundamentalism and extremist movements are geared up and capable of leading the Eastern Arab world into disasters, of which young Christians and Muslims - who form 60% of the Arab population - will be the chief victims.



That underlines the vital and capital importance for the future of opening ourselves to each other, Christians to Muslims and Muslims to Christians. This openness will define the dynamics of our Arab world's evolution in respect of:

- The concept of state and of religion and their interaction



- Modernity



- Rights of man and woman



- Freedom of worship and of conscience



- The idea of "better religion"



We, Christians and Muslims, must reach joint positions about the danger of the growth of various fundamentalist concepts, whether Christian, Muslim (or Jewish). It is up to us to safeguard righteous religious, spiritual and humane values, and especially the values of human dignity and freedom.



That is what will guarantee a better future for our societies and for all our Arab countries together. I dare say that the evolution of our Arab Christian and Muslim society conditions the success of all the efforts that the Churches are making in the pastoral, cultural, social and economic fields; for young people; and for halting emigration. This evolution, linked to the promotion of values mentioned above, is a joint responsibility for Christians and Muslims.



The realisation of our objectives will be proportionate to our efforts, carried out together, for adopting these values and putting them into practice.

On all that our future, our existence, our presence, our communion, our witness and the future of our Arab society depend.



I will also venture to say that, internally, the success of all our pastoral, apostolic, catechetical, academic, pedagogical, clerical and monastic activity depends on the evolution of the common Muslim-Christian journey.

In other words, the religious development of our society depends on the religious evolution of our Christian society which is dependent upon the religious evolution of Muslim society. And the preservation of our Christian values depends largely on the evolution of Muslim society.



That was all highlighted throughout the course of the Synod, whose recommendations must be applied in our Churches, in collaboration with our Muslim fellow-citizens. Since people are the product of their social environment, the different components of that environment were invited to take part in this Synod, including Muslims and a rabbi.

There should not be forgotten the existence of a major obstacle lying in the way of this journey and evolution: the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Peace must be made in the Arab region: peace that will have a great influence of the evolution of the above-mentioned values and will halt Arab Christian emigration.



Allow me to add an intuition which, over days, has become a certainty for me:


1- I believe that it is most important to examine in depth the ideology behind the religious fundamentalism, terrorism and increasing violence perpetrated here and there against Christians.



2- Genuine Islam is foreign to that ideology.



3- That ideology is the biggest danger to Islam. It can destroy that religion showing a hideous image of it.



4- There is a big danger to the Arab world with its Muslim majority, tending to show Arabs in general and Muslims in particular as fundamentalist terrorists and assassins. This makes it permissible to refuse any legitimate claim, especially coming from Palestinians. That explains the refusal of the international community to find a solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and recognize an independent Palestinian State.



5- Another component of this danger is the increasing harassment of Christians; the prohibition which is made, in some countries, against their building churches; the denial of freedom of conscience, most recently in Egypt and Iraq.



6- All those things are so many aces in the hands of Israel for establishing a State exclusively for Jews. The argument put forward by Israel in that regard is as follows, "See how Muslims treat Christians and other minorities! How could we live with them in this country? And if we allowed the creation of a Palestinian State, it too would become an Islamic, fundamentalist, terrorist State."



7- It is in the aim and intention of Israel, as an exclusively Jewish State, of creating in the Middle East a dust of confessional statelets: Sunni, Shi'a, Druze, Kurd.



That is the dreadful danger menacing the Arab world and Islam and even Christianity.



I conclude with the closing section of my letter to Arab Kings, Emirs and Presidents:



In our preceding letter (18 June 2010), we spoke to you as follows: "You are the guarantee of the Christian presence in the Middle East!" You are indeed our warranty! We said it again in the Synod, a prominent platform for the Arab cause, as we faced the media from all over the world! ...



Today at the Synod's end, we say to you, dear, most esteemed friends: you are the guarantee of the success of the Synod held in Rome. You are the warranty of the decisions, proposals and hopes of this Synod being followed up and put into action in our Arab countries!



The sessions of the Synod were preceded by prayers according to the different liturgical rites and languages of our Eastern Churches, whose main language is Arabic.



We shall continue our prayers, in our churches and monasteries for peace, for all our fellow-citizens and for you personally! You have care for the sons and daughters of our parishes! Care for our many churches, monasteries, institutions, which are at the service of our Arab countries that we love and for which we have laboured and will continue to give our all in the service of their prosperity and development, with the Blessing of God and through your vigilance!



We are praying to Almighty and Merciful God, for our Arab homelands, and for Christians and Muslims to remain together and together be salt, light and the leaven of faith, hope and love!



We put our hope in God, for the Synod to be the beginning of a Arab national way of faith and dialogue, common to Christians and Muslims, for a better future for all of us, in Syria, our dear country, and in all our dear Arab countries.







Gregorios III

Patriarch of Antioch and All the East,

of Alexandria and of Jerusalem



Translation from French: V. Chamberlain

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[1] Message for the World Day of Peace 2005 http://www.vatican.va/holy_father/john_paul_ii/messages/peace/documents/hf_jp-ii_mes_20041216_xxxviii-world-day-for-peace_en.html



[2] Irenaeus Against Heresies 4: 34, 5-7 http://www.earlychurchtexts.com/main/irenaeus/glory_of_god_humanity_alive.shtml



[3] http://www.voltairenet.org/article167406.html

Read more at www.speroforum.com
 

Catholics flee Iraq, hope for peaceful coexistence dims

Amplify’d from theundergroundsite.com

The ongoing exodus of Christians from Iraq caused by stepped up attacks by Muslim extremists raises doubts as to whether or not contemporary Islam can coexist peacefully with non-Islamic people.

Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki said recently that Christians are part of the foundation of Iraqi civilization, the Wall Street Journal said. Nonetheless, the government has not successfully curbed the activities of extremists.

Maliki said, “The Christian is an Iraqi. He is the son of Iraq and from the depths of a civilization that we are proud of,” The WSJ reported. It further noted that some Christians in Iraq still speak Aramaic, the language of Jesus.

Chaldean Catholic Archbishop Bashar Warda told NPR News that Christians have lived in Iraq since the second century. However, whereas there were one million Christians in Iraq in 2003, today only half as many remain.

Since the Oct. 31 siege by Muslim extremists of Our Lady of Salvation Church, assaults on Christians have stepped up, further raising urgency among Christians to flee the country, or to seek refuge in Kurdistan, Northern Iraq, NPR News said.

Extremists have been threatening Christians by either sending envelopes to their homes with bullets inside or through text messages. Homemade bombs are also being used to set Christian homes on fire in Baghdad and other cities, NPR News reported.

Emergent strain of Islam

The WSJ said that what is occurring in Iraq may be indicative of relations between non-Islamic groups and this emergent strain of Islam. It noted that in Egypt, Coptic Christians are continuously assailed, and attacks on churches increase visibly during Easter and Christmas.

The WSJ said because Christians are too small a minority to pose any valid threat in Muslim majority countries, the attacks occur simply because they coexist with Muslims in Islamic majority countries.

The new strain of Islam as described by WSJ is not well controlled by governments, as is the case in Iraq, where radical Islam continues unrestrained. This may indicate that today’s strain of radical Islam cannot coexist with other non-Islamic faiths, even outside Iraq.

The WSJ also noted efforts by Pope Benedict XVI to bridge the divide with little success, largely because the Vatican’s Islamic counterparts lack support from their own countries’ governments.

Christian militia

NPR News reports that there have been talks between Kurds and Christians about the possible formation of a separate Christian province with its own Christian militia.

Salem Tamo Kako, a Christian member of the Kurdish parliament, told NPR News that the talks arose as hundreds of Iraqi Christians have moved to Kurdistan in Northern Iraq over the past few weeks, and thousands more are expected to follow.

Kako however told NPR News that he is against the forming of a separate Christian province with its own militia, as he felt this would only make Christians more of a target, NPR News said.

Read more at theundergroundsite.com
 

Our Knights In Rusting Armor: K of C Hit With First Sex Abuse Scandal

Amplify’d from www.opednews.com

Our Knights In Rusting Armor: K of C Hit With First Sex Abuse Scandal

By Dan Vojir
"The supreme purpose of the Columbian Squires is character building."

Holy
hypocrisy! One of the most powerful lay organizations in the world has
finally succumbed to a sex-abuse scandal: The Roman Catholic Church's
own Knights of Columbus. Yes, that's right, the KofC, that bastion of
money, male bonding and morals has gotten slapped with not one but two
sexual abuse lawsuits. And due to the size of the organization, it's
likely that more will follow.


NEW HAVEN, CT, December 14, 2010 -- The Miami law firm of Herman, Mermelstein & Horowitz
announces the filing of two new child sexual abuse lawsuits against the
Knights of Columbus, one of the world's largest organizations for
Catholic men... The suits allege that the two boys were sexually abused
on multiple occasions by Julian Rivera, the leader of the Columbian
Squires [youth group] in Brownsville, Texas. One victim claims that
Rivera sexually abused him at gunpoint, and also threatened to kill his
family if he did not comply with Rivera's demands.



In addition, one of the victims said he was "shared" by another
Columbian Squires leader. This last exposes a whole new aspect to the
situation: these are not isolated incidents. These suits go beyond the
sexual abuse seemingly endemic in the Catholic Church's priesthood. And
like the Vatican, the K of C has covered up the abuse:


According to the Complaints, Rivera was a leader in the Columbian
Squires youth program until very recently, despite a 1986 report to two
different Knights of Columbus officials that Rivera sexually abused a
member of his Squires group.




A Matter of Size




Considering the span of years that the Church has had to
account for sexual abuse, it is surprising that the Knights of Columbus
has not been indicted earlier. Then again, considering its size and
influence, it becomes clear that the organization's cover-ups must have
been well orchestrated: there are over 5000 Columbian Squire Circles
[chapters] throughout the U.S., Canada, Mexico, the Caribbean, the
Philippines and even Cuba.


And the membership of the Knights of Columbus is matched
by the size of its fund-raising pocketbook: while giving over $1.37
billion over the last 10 years, it also has assets of over $14 billion
and $70 billion in life insurance policies. No wonder it could afford
to spend $1.4 million on Prop 8.


Its innate homophobia
is a force to be reckoned with. Indeed, the K of C has flaunted its
homophobia by spending more money to fight same-sex marriage than on its usual charitable donations, including donations to food drives. In other words, "The poor we will always have," but the chance to fight equal rights for gays, well, we may not always have.


Given the amount of money and assets involved, it will
be interesting to see how Pope Benedict reacts to this latest scandal
...and if he had any knowledge of cover-ups. His defense of the Knights
of Columbus will be convoluted at best: will he try to save this piggy bank from being
shattered by public opinion? And if he defends it too much, will he add
to the rancor towards the Vatican concerning its history of cover-ups?


Another portal to hypocrisy has been discovered, while another bastion of rectitude has fallen.

Read more at www.opednews.com
 

Priest says Muslim extremists want to rid Middle East of Catholics

Priest says Muslim extremists want to rid Middle East of Christians
Cairo, Egypt,
(CNA).- An Egyptian priest has explained that radical Muslims are trying to rid the Middle East entirely of Christians, who once comprised the largest religious group in the region.

“This is what the Muslim fundamentalists want,” the Egyptian Catholic spokesman Fr. Rafic Greische told Vatican Radio.

“They want the Christians to evacuate from the Middle East and leave. And this is what is happening every day.” He expressed frustration that governments throughout the region, not noted for their responsiveness to popular concerns, “do not take serious action to relieve or solve these problems.”

Egyptian Christians face significant public and private discrimination, including policies that make it nearly impossible for them to build churches. In November, a crowd demonstrating for their right to build a church in Giza clashed with police, who fired on unarmed protesters.

More than 150 people –including some children– remain in jail following that incident, in a country notorious for police brutality and other human rights abuses.

While Christians have difficulty even finding a place to worship in Egypt, some Egyptian Muslims manage to make their antipathy against the country's Christians well-known. Fr. Greische said groups of Muslims are known to “become violent and make demonstrations,” often burning pictures of the head of Egypt's Coptic Orthodox Church.

They're particularly offended, he noted, by “people who want to change their religion” – specifically, Muslims who want to become Christians, who can expect ostracism and may face death threats. Christians who dare to evangelize Egyptian Muslims can expect violent retribution if their work becomes known.

Even instances of Christians becoming Muslims can make these tensions turn explosive. In October, when suicide-attackers at Iraq's Cathedral of Our Lady of Salvation killed almost 60 worshipers at a Sunday Mass in Baghdad, the Islamic State of Iraq group claimed it was an act of retaliation for two alleged female converts from Christianity to Islam, supposedly being held captive by Coptic Christians.

Iraqi experts at the time told CNA that they had no reason to believe the story. Fr. Greische noted that it might simply have been an instance of an ordinary domestic disagreement, being turned into a public libel against Coptic Christians in a climate of suspicion and hostility.

He suspected that the Oct. 31 attack in Baghdad, one of the deadliest acts of anti-Christian terrorism in years, was a response to the Synod for the Middle East that had concluded earlier in the month. That synod ultimately issued only light criticisms of Islamic regimes, and represented an exercise of the kind of religious liberty Islamic extremists disallow.

Fr. Greische said the Baghdad incident had given rise to a climate of fear among Christians throughout the region. “All the churches, we have police all around our churches,” he told Vatican Radio. “It’s as if we are in a fortress.”

It's made for a difficult Advent season. “Up to now, we don’t really feel Christmas in the joyful way,” he acknowledged. But within churches that may feel like fortresses, Egyptian Christians have a deeper source of security: “Jesus, who is with us (through) all these difficulties that we have.”

Read more at www.catholicnewsagency.com
 

Support groups report rise in calls

Amplify’d from www.irishtimes.com

Support groups report rise in calls

KITTY HOLLAND, PATSY McGARRY and PADDY AGNEW in Rome

ORGANISATIONS SUPPORTING victims of childhood sexual abuse have reported a high volume of calls for help over the weekend, following publication of the Murphy report chapter about paedophile former priest Tony Walsh.

Publication of the chapter was approved after Walsh, who was previously jailed for sexually abusing six boys, was sentenced to 16 years for abusing a further three victims.

In Rome, the Holy See yesterday had no wish to comment on the previously redacted Murphy Report chapter. Senior Vatican spokesman Fr Federico Lombardi said: “I have nothing to add to the comments made by the Archbishop of Dublin . . .”

Labour education spokesman Ruairí Quinn has renewed his call for the congregations to hand over the title deeds of their schools while maintaining patronage.

This follows confirmation he received in a parliamentary reply that Irish religious congregations have handed over just €20 million of the €348 million promised last year following publication of the Ryan report. In addition, more than €26 million remains outstanding from the original indemnity deal done with the orders in 2002.

In Ballyfermot, where many of Walsh’s victims were abused, Archbishop of Dublin Dr Diarmuid Martin spoke on December 12th in advance of the publication of chapter 19 and apologised to the people of the parish.

One of the organisations supporting victims of abuse, the Dublin Rape Crisis Centre, said there had been a “steady flow” of calls not just from victims of abuse but from the family members and friends of victims.

Chief executive Ellen O’Malley Dunlop said “some of the most harrowing calls actually have been from parents of victims who didn’t believe their children when they told them they had been abused.

“These parents are absolutely heartbroken.” In some of those cases “their children have taken their own lives”.

Maeve Lewis, director of the One in Four organisation, said there had been “a big increase” in calls on Friday. Ms Lewis said “a lot of people calling were very upset and distressed and angry”. The telephone counselling service Connect was open over the weekend and experienced an increase in calls.

In Rome, Vatican insiders said yesterday that there was nothing very unusual about one of the most controversial aspects of the chapter, namely that the Roman Rota (Vatican Appeal Court) in 1994 initially partly overturned the Dublin canon law court’s 1993 ruling that Walsh should be laicised.

Canon law experts point out that the Rota, then as now, is extremely reluctant to annul sacred vows, be they marriage vows or be they a priest’s vows of ordination. The court may have been guilty of seeing paedophilia as a “disease”, comparable to alcoholism. It may also have felt that Walsh would be more controlled and supervised if he remained in the priesthood.

Whilst the Murphy commission points to the scandal of the 17-year-long failure of the Dublin Archdiocese to deal with Walsh, Pope Benedict, then Cardinal Ratzinger, took only two months to have him laicised following Cardinal Connell’s intervention with Pope John Paul II.

Archbishop Martin, who served in the Vatican from 1976 to 2001, has also said any awareness he had of clerical child sex abuse in Dublin while he was abroad came from the media.

“The Archbishop [of Dublin] I knew best was Archbishop Dermot Ryan when he was living in Rome, where he was for a year before he died,” he said. “He [Archbishop Ryan] never once mentioned anything about abuse,” he recalled.

Read more at www.irishtimes.com