ARTICLES - HOT OFF THE FAGGOT

Proclamation of Truth Our Work

Amplify’d from endrtimes.blogspot.com


Proclamation of Truth Our Work

--In a special sense Seventh-day Adventists have been set in the world as watchmen and light-bearers. To them has been entrusted the last warning for a perishing world. On them is shining wonderful light from the Word of God. They have been given a work of the most solemn import,--the proclamation of the first, second, and third angels' messages. There is no other work of so great importance. They are to allow nothing else to absorb their attention.

The most solemn truths ever entrusted to mortals have been given us to proclaim to the world. The proclamation of these truths is to be our work. The world is to be warned, and God's people are to be true to the trust committed to them. . . .

Shall we wait until God's judgments fall upon the transgressor before we tell him how to avoid them? Where is our faith in the Word of God? Must we see things foretold come to pass before we will believe what He has said? In clear, distinct rays light has come to us, showing us that the great day of the Lord is near at hand, "even at the door."-- Testimonies, vol. 9, pp. 19, 20. (1909)

Evangelism, pp.119,120.

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Cattle Mutilations: Us or “Them”?

Amplify’d from mysteriousuniverse.org

Within the annals of Forteana, there can be little doubt that one of the most mystifying of all puzzles is that relative to cattle-mutilations. As far as the UFO research arena is concerned, the one theory that, more than any other, provokes so much interest is the idea that the mutilations are the work of extraterrestrials engaged in nightmarish, genetic experimentation. But, perhaps, we should be looking down here, rather than to the stars, for the answers…

Following a series of mutilations between 1976 and 1978, Manuel S. Gomez, a rancher from Dulce, New Mexico, who had himself lost a number of cattle, approached the Senator for New Mexico (and former NASA astronaut), Harrison Schmitt, and requested that inquiries be made to determine if some form of investigation could be instigated to settle the problem.

Schmitt duly complied, and on July 10, 1978 wrote to Chief Martin E. Vigil, of the New Mexico State Police, and informed him of the concerns of Gomez, and other ranchers in the area, many of who were also losing livestock to the elusive mutilators.

Aware that Police Officer Gabe Valdez, of Espanola, had investigated a number of such cases, Vigil asked Captain P. Anaya, of the Espanola Police, to forward him copies of all relevant paperwork, which could be made available to the senator.

One report, filed by Valdez in June 1976, stands out as being of profound significance. At 8.00 p.m. on June 13, Valdez was contacted by Manuel Gomez and advised that he had found a three-year-old cow on his ranch that bore all the classic signs of mutilation. Gomez said the cow’s left-ear, tongue, udder and rectum had been removed with what appeared to be a sharp instrument. Yet there was absolutely no blood in the immediate vicinity of the cow, nor were there any footprints in evidence. There were, however, ground-markings that gave every impression some form of aerial object had landed and carried out a grisly attack on the unfortunate animal.

At 5.00 a.m. on the following day, Valdez set off for the Gomez ranch. On arriving, Valdez was confronted by a scene of carnage. The cow was just as Gomez had described: three years old, laying on its right-side, and with vital body-parts having been removed with the utmost precision. That was not all. There were also strange landing-marks. Valdez recorded the details in a two-page report:
“Investigations revealed that a suspected aircraft of some type had landed twice, leaving three pod marks positioned in a triangular shape. The diameter of each pod was 14 inches. Emanating from the two landings were smaller triangular shaped tripods 28 inches and 4 inches in diameter. Investigation at the scene showed that these small tripods had followed the cow for approximately 600 feet. Tracks of the cow showed where she had struggled and fallen. The small tripod tracks were all around the cow. Other evidence showed that grass around the tripods, as they followed the cow, had been scorched. Also a yellow oily substance was located in two places under the small tripods. This substance was submitted to the State Police Lab. The Lab was unable to detect the content of the substance.”

Three days later, Valdez contacted Dr. Howard Burgess, a retired scientist from Sandia Laboratories, and asked him to conduct a radiation-test at the scene. The results were astounding. All around the tripod-marks and in the immediate tracks, the radiation-count was twice that of normal. Valdez came up with an intriguing hypothesis for this: “It is the opinion of this writer that radiation findings are deliberately being left at the scene to confuse investigators.”

Valdez noted in his report that this incident was typical of those he had investigated over the course of a sixteen-month period. “They all carry the same pattern,” he asserted. Perhaps most pertinent, Valdez had been able to determine that, in a number of cases, the animals in question had high doses of atropine in their blood-systems.

“This substance is a tranquilizing drug,” reported Valdez.

What are the chances,  I wonder, of aliens from some far-away galaxy utilizing atropine to sedate cattle before systematically butchering them? Personally, I’d say the chances are practically zero.

In other words, while it is unlikely to satisfy those who so desperately wish to believe that the mutilations are the work of bug-eyed aliens from distant worlds, the presence of atropine in a significant number of the reports coming out of Dulce suggests we may be looking at a definitively home-grown operation – but one that utilizes the alien-motif as a convenient cover – focused on matters relative to biological-warfare and, perhaps, concerns about such worrying, and growing, issues as Creutzfeldt-Jacob-Disease, or Mad-Cow Disease, as it is more commonly known.

Someone, at an official level, it might well be argued, is deeply concerned about emerging viruses in the food-chain, and is secretly sampling cattle across the nation to determine the state of their health. Those engaged in such activities, however, are very happy to have you think the killings and mutilations are the work of aliens. Don’t fall for their ruse.

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GPS Tracking the Only Way to Get Kids to Go to School

Amplify’d from gawker.com








Adrian Chen


GPS Tracking the Only Way to Get Kids to Go to SchoolA California elementary school is launching a six-week pilot program to track their young students like so many wild bobcats. Kids with a lot of absences will be able to volunteer to be tracked with GPS in order to make sure they are in school learning, instead of doing the sex and the gangs out on the street. From the Orange County Register:


Seventh- and eighth-graders with four unexcused absences or more this school year are assigned to carry a handheld GPS device, about the size of a cell phone.


Each morning on schooldays, they get an automated phone call reminding them that they need to get to school on time.


Then, five times a day, they are required to enter a code that tracks their locations – as they leave for school, when they arrive at school, at lunchtime, when they leave school and at 8 p.m.


This is great. We should just stop pretending that any kids actually could want to go to school and invest in more and more elaborate tracking devices for them. All teachers should get an iPhone app with little blips showing where all their kids are. Twice every day assistant principals can roam the land with tranquilizer darts and 4x4s and bring in the truants.

[Composite image via Shutterstock]

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Why Is the Military Creating an Army of Fake People on the Internet?

Amplify’d from gawker.com








Adrian Chen


Why Is the Military Creating an Army of Fake People on the Internet?Here's a slight glimpse into the Air Force's cyber warfare efforts: a request for bids from last summer for "Persona Management Software," which would allow one person to command an army of fake online people.

From the request, posted on the Federal Business Opportunities website:

Software will allow 10 personas per user, replete with background , history, supporting details, and cyber presences that are technically, culturally and geographacilly consistent. Individual applications will enable an operator to exercise a number of different online persons from the same workstation and without fear of being discovered by sophisticated adversaries. Personas must be able to appear to originate in nearly any part of the world and can interact through conventional online services and social media platforms.

The request was for 50 licenses, which means the Air Force hoped to create up to 500 fake Internet people. The request was filled in June, which means these fake people could be roaming the 'net right now.

According to the request, the software was to be deployed in Iraq and Afghanistan. Why? To secretly gather embarrassing party pics from Taliban solders' Facebook profiles? To swing Iraq newspaper polls about whether the U.S. is evil? May they'll help us beat out North Korea in eBay auctions for rogue nukes. [via Daily Kos, image via Shutterstock]

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Vatican should show public reparation for its sins

Amplify’d from www.timesunion.com

Vatican should show public reparation for its sins

The Rev. Kenneth Doyle's anger at the local perpetrator of the sexual abuse of children under his care ("A test of faith," Perspective, Feb. 13) needs to be redirected to the Vatican and the church hierarchy that have covered up the abuse for decades.

I refer Father Doyle to the Feb. 13 New York Times Magazine article, "The Irish Affliction." Writer Russell Shorto describes the institutionalized abuse that went on throughout the Irish Catholic church for years. Even when the local hierarchy called on the Vatican to take action against it, the Vatican's response was to advise the faithful to "pray, fast and give alms." It's no wonder that the Irish people are leaving the church in droves.

The Vatican needs to show some kind of public reparation for its sins. I recommend sack cloth and ashes, on their knees in St. Peter's Square, for the Pope, cardinals and bishops who have continued to put the needs of the institutionalized church above the precious children who have been in their care.

CLAIRE MALONE

Delmar

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Berlusconi scandal embarrasses the Vatican top brass

Amplify’d from www.nzherald.co.nz

Berlusconi scandal embarrasses the Vatican top brass

Karima El Mahrough, the Moroccan teen also known as Ruby. Photo / AP

Karima El Mahrough, the Moroccan teen also known as Ruby. Photo / AP

An annual celebration of the 1929 treaty that governs relations between Italy and the Vatican took an awkward turn yesterday, when Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, who is engulfed in a prostitution scandal, attended a ceremony with the Vatican's No 2 official, Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone.



Berlusconi has come under criticism from the Catholic church over the scandal, which centres on his alleged encounters with a 17-year-old Moroccan girl. The 74-year-old leader was recently indicted on charges that he paid for sex with the girl, and then abused his influence in an attempt to cover it up. He denies the charges.



In comments last month, Bertone said the Vatican was concerned about the scandal and following its developments attentively. He called for a "more robust morality, a sense of justice and legality" among everyone, particularly those in public office.



Pope Benedict XVI has not mentioned the scandal directly, though he did say last month that public officials must "rediscover their spiritual and moral roots."

The Vatican's criticism will be widely interpreted as a blow to Berlusconi, whose conservative coalition had gained the church's favour thanks to its pro-church positions on social issues.



Still, Berlusconi has so far survived a scandal that would have forced most European leaders to step down. He insists he will finish his term, which ends in 2013.



The premier has improved his parliamentary majority, which was eroded after a split with a longtime ally, Gianfranco Fini, who commands a few dozen parliamentarians.



- AP

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Vatican sanctions abusive Chilean priest

Amplify’d from www.upi.com

Vatican sanctions abusive Chilean priest

SAO PAULO, Feb. 19 (UPI) -- The Vatican has found an 80-year-old Chilean priest guilty of sexually abusing minors and ordered him isolated, a Brazilian archbishop announced.

Catholic Archbishop Ricardo Ezzati in Sao Paulo said in a statement Friday the Rev. Fernando Karadima was ordered to retire to an undisclosed location to repent in isolation, The New York Times reported.

The Vatican decision said Karadima was sentenced to "lifelong prohibition from the public exercise of any ministerial act, particularly confession and the spiritual guidance of any category of persons."

The lawyer representing Karadima in the Vatican prosecution, Juan Pablo Bulnes, said Karadima maintained his innocence and would appeal the church's verdict.

At least four men accused the priest of abusing them when they were youths in his parish, the report said.

Criminal charges against Karadima were dismissed last year on lack of evidence, although an appeals court in Santiago is reviewing the case, the Times said.

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Berlusconi Sex Scandal Awkward For Vatican

Amplify’d from www.huffingtonpost.com
Berlusconi Vatican

By Francis X. Rocca

Religion News Service

VATICAN CITY -- No major Western European leader in recent years has been a more stalwart ally of the Roman Catholic Church than Italy's Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi.

Berlusconi's stands against euthanasia, living wills, in-vitro fertilization and domestic partnerships have put his country in line with Catholic teaching, and out of sync with all other major countries in the region, including traditionally Catholic Spain. His government has also granted large financial subsidies to Catholic schools, and expanded tax breaks for church-owned businesses.

Yet in Berlusconi's increasingly public personal life, the billionaire businessman-turned-politician is not exactly a model of Catholic values.

After months of ever more graphic reports of wild parties and sex with young women, including several alleged prostitutes, a judge on Tuesday (Feb. 15) ruled that Berlusconi must face trial on April 6 on charges of paying for sex with a minor and obstruction of justice.

The tension between Berlusconi's political platform and his personal behavior has put church leaders in an exquisitely awkward position, to which they have reacted with conspicuous understatement.

Last month, in what was widely taken as an allusion to the Berlusconi crisis, Pope Benedict XVI told a gathering of Rome police that public officials must "rediscover their spiritual and moral roots."

Vatican Secretary of State Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, the church's No. 2 official, said the Vatican was watching the Italian situation with "great attention and concern," and he called on leaders to show a "more robust morality."

Slightly stronger words came a few days later from Cardinal Angelo Bagnasco, head of the Italian bishops' conference, who said public officials must show "sobriety, personal discipline ... and honor."

Yet even Bagnasco did not refer to the prime minister by name, and he tempered his criticism by questioning the motives of investigating prosecutors.

Significantly, the most eloquent statement by church leaders so far may have been a moment of silence. At a ceremony on Friday (Feb. 18) commemorating treaties between Italy and the Vatican, Bertone and Berlusconi were both present but reportedly did not speak. By contrast, at a similar ceremony four years earlier, the Vatican's No. 2 spent a half-hour in private conversation with then-Prime Minister Romano Prodi, with whom he was publicly at odds over Prodi's support for domestic partnerships.

Catholic bishops have several strong reasons to refrain from openly criticizing Berlusconi now. The most obvious is that the church needs the cooperation of his center-right government to pursue its legislative agenda.

Church leaders here have long refrained from commenting on political leaders' private lives, as opposed to their policies, said Massimo Franco, a writer for Italy's leading newspaper Corriere della Sera.

That public-private distinction also holds in the United States, said Russell Shaw, a former chief spokesman for the U.S. bishops' conference. During the 1998 sex scandal involving President Bill Clinton and the former White House intern Monica Lewinsky, the American bishops never issued a group statement, and most bishops refrained from comment, Shaw said.

Another factor inhibiting Italian church leaders in the Berlusconi matter, Franco said, may be last year's controversies over clergy sex abuse in several European and Latin American countries, which undermined the church's moral authority in the eyes of many critics.

Last month, Berlusconi's outspoken coalition-partner Umberto Bossi, leader of the Northern League party, made a not-so-subtle allusion to abusive priests when he suggested that prosecutors who had been investigating the prime minister should also pay a visit to the Vatican.

Still, the pressure on church leaders to break with the prime minister may grow too strong to resist. An anti-Berlusconi demonstration by hundreds of thousands of Italian women on Sunday (Feb. 13) won the endorsement of the editor of the Italian bishops' official newspaper; one of the most prominent speakers at the rally in Rome was a 70-year-old nun who is also an activist against sex trafficking.

Practicing Catholics are a core element of Berlusconi's political base, but their support is "eroding," said Roberto D'Alimonte, a political scientist at Rome's LUISS Guido Carli University.

"It's easier for church leaders to turn a blind eye, but there's a problem at the parish level," D'Alimonte said. "It's not easy for a pastor to explain why the church supports a man whose behavior is so in contrast with family values."

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Priest, 56, accused of sex assault at church

Amplify’d from www.staradvertiser.com

Priest, 56, accused of sex assault at church

He arrived in the islands two weeks ago to conduct services for the St. Sophia's Catholic mission

The priest charged in connection with the alleged kidnapping and sexual assault on the grounds of an East Honolulu church arrived in Hawaii only two weeks ago.

The Rev. Bothdan Borowic, 56, was charged yesterday with kidnapping and two counts of fourth-degree sexual assault. He was being held in lieu of $75,000 bail.

The assault occurred in what is known as the Makai House, a former convent on the grounds of Holy Trinity Church, 5919 Kalanianaole Highway in Kuliouou.

The priest was to lead services for the St. Sophia's Ukrainian Greek Catholic Mission, said Patrick Downes, spokesman for the Catholic Diocese of Hawaii. The priest was staying at Makai House, which is at the back of Holy Trinity Church. St. Sophia's holds services daily in a small chapel of Makai House, Downes said.

The 55-year-old woman told police the priest held her against her will and sexually assaulted her about 1:55 p.m. Sunday. The priest was arrested at Makai House at about 1:30 p.m. Wednesday.

A man who answered the door at the Makai House yesterday declined to answer questions, as did people working in the Holy Trinity church office.

Ukrainian Greek Catholic rites are separate from those of the more common Roman Catholic churches like Holy Trinity. But Ukrainian Catholics also fall under the leadership of the Vatican and the pope.

St. Sophia's is part of the Chancery of St. Nicholas Eparchy in Chicago, Downes said. The priest arrested, however, is a member of the Ukrainian Catholic Archeparchy based in Winnipeg, Manitoba.

The Rev. James Karepin, chancellor of St. Nicholas Eparchy in Chicago, said in a written statement that the suspect is "a priest from Canada."

He said there is no record of the priest receiving an authority from his office to conduct any services or perform any missionary activities in Hawaii.

Karepin said the victim contacted Bishop Richard Seminack, head of St. Nicholas in Chicago, and was advised to file a report with police.

St. Sophia's, founded in 1975, has a congregation of 15 to 20 people. Police said the victim was a member of the church. Efforts to reach members of the church were unsuccessful. Holy Trinity School, also on the same Kalanianaole grounds, shut down last June.

Star-Advertiser reporters Gregg K. Kakesako and Robert Shikina also contributed to this report.


 




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Vatican: Chilean priest guilty of abusing minors

Amplify’d from www.chron.com

Vatican: Chilean priest guilty of abusing minors

By EVA VERGARA
© 2011 The Associated Press


SANTIAGO, Chile
— A prominent Chilean priest whose sex abuse case was closed by a judge has been found guilty by the Vatican.

The Vatican's Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith says Fernando Karadima is guilty of abusing minors and "must retire to a life of prayer and penitence." Friday's statement from the Vatican means Karadima can't meet with his former parishioners or other priests.

Four men accused Karadima of sexually abusing them for years in a wealthy Santiago parish where he was a respected leader in Chile's Catholic church.

The former archbishop didn't believe them, and a local judge closed the case, citing the statute of limitations. A prosecutor is appealing.

Read more at www.chron.com
 

Rights versus religion, no tolerance for Christianity

Amplify’d from www.thebostonpilot.com
Rights versus religion, no tolerance for Christianity


By Father John Flynn, LC

Posted: 2/18/2011

ROME (Zenit.org) -- For many years, homosexual groups pleaded for tolerance and an end to laws that they considered discriminatory. Now that in large part they have won their case their enthusiasm for tolerance has largely vanished.

Christians, who for reasons of conscience feel they cannot be in favor of homosexual behavior, are increasingly under pressure. The latest case of this in Britain involves a Christian doctor, Hans-Christian Raabe.

Back in January he was appointed to the Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs, the BBC reported Feb. 7. He has just been sacked from his role as an advisor to the government after it became known he had written an article linking homosexuality to pedophilia.

He co-authored a study called "Gay Marriage And Homosexuality: Some Medical Comments in February 2005." The article said that, while the majority of homosexuals are not engaged in pedophilia, there is a disproportionately greater number of homosexuals among pedophiles.

"My appointment has merely been revoked as a result of my views on matters completely unrelated to drug policy," Raabe complained in comments published the same day by the Daily Mail newspaper.

Commenting on the push to impose acceptance of homosexuality a short time before, in a Jan. 24 column, Daily Mail writer Melanie Phillips had lamented: "What was once an attempt to end unpleasant attitudes towards a small sexual minority has now become a kind of bigotry in reverse."

Phillips went on to chronicle some cases of how Christians were unfairly treated due to their views on homosexuality. Her alarm at this trend was not misplaced, as subsequent reactions revealed.

Vicious

According to a Feb. 1 report by the Christian Institute after her column Phillips received a "vicious outpouring of hate," including calls for her to be killed. Phillips commented that the homosexual lobby is spewing out in abundance the very hatred and intolerance of which they accuse others.

In any case, she continued, just because someone does not agree with the homosexual lobby does not mean that they hate them.

"What really alarms me, and the reason why I bang on about the dangers of these different rights agendas, is that they are eroding the bedrock values that underpin our free, tolerant and liberal society," Phillips added.

Shortly before this episode Peter and Hazelmary Bull were fined for refusing to allow a same-sex couple to book a room in their Cornwall hotel in September 2008.

Judge Rutherford of the Bristol County Court awarded Martyn Hall and Steven Preddy 1,800 pounds each, said a Jan. 18 report by the BBC. The two are in a civil partnership, but the Bulls, citing their Christian beliefs, had a policy of only letting out double rooms to couples who are married.

"Our double-bed policy was based on our sincere beliefs about marriage, not hostility to anybody," Mrs Bull commented after the judgment.

Mike Judge, from the Christian Institute, which funded the Bulls' defense, told the BBC that: "This ruling is further evidence that equality laws are being used as a sword rather than a shield."

"The right to hold religious beliefs, and to act in keeping with one's faith, is being set against the right not to be offended -- and is losing," observed a Jan. 18 editorial in the Telegraph newspaper.

The editorial argued that there is now an unhealthy imbalance between the freedom of believers and those who consider themselves discriminated against.

Adoption

Another example of that imbalance came when a Christian pediatrician lost her claim of religious discrimination following her dismissal from an adoption panel for holding that children should not be placed with homosexual couples.

Sheila Matthews lost her position on the Northamptonshire County Council when she asked to abstain from voting in cases involving homosexual couples, the Independent newspaper reported Nov. 16.

Regional employment judge John MacMillan said that the issue "transcends the boundaries of all religion." He also ruled that Matthews should pay the respondents' costs.

The article reported that in her testimony Matthews said: "As a Christian, my faith leads me to believe that marriage between a man and a woman in a faithful monogamous sexual relationship is the most appropriate environment for the upbringing of children.

She explained that she had begun researching the issue in 2004 and had found research with evidence that children placed with homosexual couples did not do as well as those with heterosexual couples. According to the judge her position was based more on scientific grounds than on religious, and for that reason her petition was denied.

Over in Canada the Saskatchewan Court of Appeal ruled that the province's marriage commissioners could not opt out of performing ceremonies for same-sex couples, the National Post reported, Jan. 11.

The five-member court unanimously rejecting both of the government's proposed laws. One proposed allowing all marriage commissioners to refuse to perform civil marriage ceremonies that are contrary to their religious beliefs. The other would have granted the exemption only to those commissioners who held office when same-sex marriage was legalized in November 2004.

Right to an opinion

It's not only Christians, however, who run into trouble for their views on homosexuality. A remarkable case of this recently occurred involving an Australia web-based forum, On Line Opinion.

Graham Young, the founding editor, explained the situation in a Feb. 7 posting. For 11 years the site has been an open platform for ideas, he said.

The future of the site is now under threat because of a campaign to stop advertisers placing their ads, which account for about half of the money needed to run it. This happened after the publication of an article by Bill Muehlenberg opposing same-sex marriage.

Young said that he had decided to publish a series of articles, from a variety of viewpoints, on the issue of same-sex marriage following calls for the issue to be debated by federal parliament. Muehlenberg's article was well-researched and couched in fairly neutral language, he said.

He added that if people did not agree with the article's opinions then the way to respond is by contributing their own opinions, instead of trying to suppress any contrary ideas.

Muehlenberg's article was published in December. Following a campaign by homosexual activists a number of companies stopped placing ads on the site and the income from ads has dropped to practically zero, said Young.

Christopher Pearson commented on the situation in a Feb. 5 article in the Australian newspaper. He contacted the companies involved and one of the replies received was from the ANZ bank.

"The removal of our advertising should not be viewed as a violation of free speech; it's simply that we choose not to advertise on blogs that do not align to our organizational values," he was told by them.

"Oh, brave new world! Apparently anything less than uncritical endorsement of gay marriage no longer aligns with the ANZ's organizational values." Pearson remarked.

Hate

Homosexual activists accuse Christians, and others, who do not agree with them of hating them. This is in spite of repeated explanations that it is not the persons that they oppose, but only their sexual conduct.

In fact, the Catechism of the Catholic Church clearly states that "Deliberate hatred is contrary to charity" (No. 2303).

When it comes to homosexuality the Catechism urges that people with homosexual tendencies "must be accepted with respect, compassion, and sensitivity." (No. 2358) Nevertheless, the practice of homosexual behavior is not accepted by the Catholic Church, along with many other Christians.

Increasingly, the rights of homosexuals are trumping the right to carry out what believers feel called to do. If religious freedom is to be real it needs to allow people to act according to their conscience.
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The Pope, the Presidents and the pictures: Where is the controversy?

Amplify’d from people.partilepep.com


The Pope, the Presidents and the pictures

Where is the controversy? 

After months of accusing President James Michel of cozying up to Arab leaders and favouring Islamic values over Christianity, to which the majority of the Seychellois belong, suddenly, the same people are finding it unacceptable that he has brought out a clock with a souvenir photo of himself with Pope Benedict, taken at last year’s visit to the Vatican.

Le Nouveau Seychelles Weekly has been particularly vocal. It sees that as plain electioneering by President Michel.
In last week’s issue, Le Nouveau Seychelles Weekly said: “The modus operandi is clearly to give the impression that our president is now a Catholic and since 90% of our population is of the catholic faith, these people would be more likely to vote for one of their own, rather than Wavel Ramkalawan, for instance, who is of the Anglican faith.”
The article concludes; “...the Church condones the action of President Michel in using the Pope’s picture in this way. If this is so, then the church’s silence is ‘...the most urgent, the most disgraceful, the most shameful and the most tragic problem’ in this country. And to think that over 90% of our population supports this very church, leaves a lot to be desired”.
The concluding remark is a gross insult to the many Catholics as it insinuates that it is a shame to follow the Catholic Church. But, we shall begin by reminding Volcère, Ramkalawan and other cynics that in 2006 President Michel won the Presidential election, with a majority in most districts, including those where most people are Catholics and even Grand Anse Praslin, where there is a significant Anglican following. He did not need a photograph with the Pope to help him win.
Secondly, “faith” is a personal matter. It is practised in different ways, either openly or in the intimacy of one’s home and daily work, according to one’s convictions. James Michel was baptised as a Catholic and has never repudiated his religion. “Do not judge, and you shall not be judged”, the Scriptures say.
Thirdly, the clock depicting the President and the Pope, is nothing more and nothing less than a memento - a “Souvenir of President Michel’s Visit to the Vatican, 25th Oct 2010” - destined as a gift for the festive season, as the label on the presentation box of the clock clearly indicates (“Compliments of the Season”). Only a depraved mind could assign to it a meaning other than that for which it was intended.
President Michel has met twice with Pope Benedict- in October 2006 and again late last year.  The two leaders met as two Heads of State. Besides being the leader of the world’s Catholics, Pope Benedict is also Head of State of the Vatican.
Long before him, Mr. Mancham, then Chief Minister met with Pope Paul V1 - in 1967- at the Vatican, during a stopover in Rome. The photo was carried ironically in The Seychelles Weekly. Volcere is ignorant of his own paper’s history.  Maybe, he was still a toddler then. But, we remind him that the photo was used rather extensively and 1967- was also an election year.
1967 was the year when the first election based on Universal Adult Suffrage was held.
The same Pope Paul V1 also received Dr. Hilda Stevenson-Delhomme at the Vatican. Mrs. Delhomme was accompanied by her two daughters.  Nothing controversial about that. As was the case with Mr. Mancham.
After Mr. Mancham, President Albert Rene met with John Paul 11 also at the Vatican. But the most important meeting was in Seychelles- in December 1986- when the widely travelled Pope made a six-hour stopover on his way from an extensive tour of Australia and the Pacific.  President Rene welcomed the Pope at the airport and also received him at State House.
Also at the airport and at the Holy Mass at Stad Popiler was James Michel, then a cabinet minister.
Many Seychellois still have photos, even albums of Pope John Paul’s historic visit to Seychelles among their treasured possessions.   Some have enlarged photos of the visit, showing the Pope with the President, or with local Church leaders of the time, including the late Bishop Felix Paul and his deputy, Father Edwin Mathiot. - Nothing wrong with that!
The fact remains that President Rene did not issue souvenir photos of himself
with the Pope. That was his choice.  President Michel has chosen to do so, like Mr. Mancham as Chief Minister, as a memento of their visit to the Vatican. That is their choice and must be respected.
Ramkalawan and his one - time candidate for Anse Aux Pins, Volcere can seek an audience with the Pope too and then have a souvenir photo to show around. As Mr. Mancham and Dr. Stevenson - Delhomme proved in their time, you don’t have to be a President to meet with the Pontiff.
The Pope, as a universal leader, in fact often meets with leaders who are non-Christian. Pope John Paul 11, for instance, travelled to many Muslim countries, such as Egypt, Tunisia and Indonesia.
During the two-week tour which took him to Seychelles in 1986, he had also visited Bangladesh, a country where 99.99% of the population are Muslims.
Some months ago, those who have suddenly become fervent Catholics, were accusing President Michel of selling out to Arabs and being prepared even to welcome Bin Laden to Seychelles. Then, they were against the Carnaval International de Victoria. Now, unashamedly, they are using religion and one or two priests, who are willing to join them in their perverse game.
Only a few weeks ago, Nouvo Vizyon was claiming that the Star, had been
removed from the Botanical Garden purposefully by Government to please certain Arab and Muslim leader, presumably Sheikh Khalifa of the UAE. The newsletter edited by SNP leader Ramkalawan himself , deemed that this was the Star of David, symbol of all Christians, proof that some people are blissfully ignorant of
their own religion.  The Star of David is the symbol of the Jewish faith. The one at the Botanical Garden was the Cross of the Orient- which we learnt as children guided the three Wise Men to the Place of the Nativity when Jesus was born.
All this just goes to show that some people will stoop very low and can even use religion as a football to suit their twisted objectives.
President Michel should go ahead with what he believes is right. The Seychellois are behind him, as the forthcoming polls will show. What his few detractors can do is make sure they go and vote. They should then return home and await the results. They are in for a big shock!
Read more at people.partilepep.com
 

Democracy-minded Catholics aim for laity 'Bill of Rights’ with Jacksonville meeting

Amplify’d from jacksonville.com

Democracy-minded Catholics aim for laity 'Bill of Rights’ with Jacksonville meeting

John Frank, chairman of the Planning Committee for the North Florida Catholic Listening Assembly, leads a meeting.  JEFF BRUMLEY/The Times-Union
JEFF BRUMLEY/The Times-Union
John Frank, chairman of the Planning Committee for the North Florida Catholic Listening Assembly, leads a meeting.

IF YOU GO
Registration has closed for Saturday’s American Catholic Council listening session in Jacksonville, but limited numbers of walk-ups may be able to attend, organizers said. The meeting will be held from 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the University Center at the University of North Florida, 12000 Alumni Drive in Jacksonville. Visit the website at acn.americancatholiccouncil.org  for more information.


Catholics pushing for a democratic reform of their church will gather in Jacksonville Saturday to remind bishops lay people need to be heard.


The idea behind the “listening assembly” at the University of North Florida, and at least 72 similar meetings held nationwide in the past year, is to formulate a “Catholic Bill of Rights,” organizers say. Participants in the American Catholic Council hope their effort will give the laity a greater and more consistent voice in matters concerning the running of parishes, dioceses and the church as a whole.


The movement’s goals “are largely in opposition to the teachings of the Second Vatican Council and the Holy Spirit,” Galeone said in his written directive


A Catholic theologian described the movement as one of many American efforts seeking structural reform of the church and that, like others, will likely make little or no dent in the way the Vatican does business. It joins other groups — seeking everything from the ordination of women to returning to the Latin Mass — considered “pressure groups” by the church.


The American Catholic Council is “pigeon-holed ideologically as Catholics on the left” and represent “a tempest in a tea pot” when seen in the context of global Catholicism, said Lawrence Cunningham, a professor of theology at the University of Notre Dame.


But the organizers of the North Florida listening session see things much differently. In a recent  planning session and in individual interviews, they said they are confident that church history and the divine are with them.


“The Holy Spirit is not just manifested in” the hierarchy “but also in the laity,” said John Frank, chairman of the planning committee for the North Florida listening assembly.


That’s an idea foreign to most Catholics, who, Frank said, are unaware they have not only the right but the obligation to voice concerns to their priests and bishops. American values of democracy and participatory government would infuse the church with openness and accountability, he said.


Opinions gathered from the 90 participants Saturday in Jacksonville, online and at other meetings will be collected and presented to a national gathering planned for sometime this summer in Detroit, Frank said.


Gainesville resident and planning committee member Natalie Cornell said issues like the clergy sex scandal and people leaving the church must be addressed with lay input.


“The bishops make all the decisions about everything in the church,” she said. “They don’t necessarily have to listen to anyone.”


That fact is contrary to the spirit of the Second Vatican Council, which imparted more rights to the laity than has been implemented since it concluded in 1965, said Tom Umlauf,  another Gainesville resident and planning committee member.


Umlauf said it stings that critics have branded listening session participants as heretics and schismatics.


“If we do not take our problems with the church to our leaders, it verges on sin,” Umlauf said.


Participants are often asked why they don’t simply join a denomination that has the kind of governing structure they want to see adopted by the Vatican, Umlauf said. The answer: He wouldn’t leave the United States despite wanting it to be a better place, so why would he leave his church?


“I’m staying here to make it better,” Umlauf said. “It’s better when the people are being heard.”


The Vatican Council was a three-year gathering of the world’s bishops that decided that the Mass and sacraments should be in everyday language instead of Latin. It also stipulated that lay people have a right and obligation to share matters of concern with the hierarchy, Cunningham said.


But he added that most dioceses around the world, including Galeone’s, have formed councils through which lay people can express concerns and ideas to their bishops, Cunningham said.


Regarding differences of opinion about the meaning and future of Vatican II, and whether it has been properly instituted or not, “is a huge, huge debate in the Catholic Church today.”

jeff.brumley@jacksonville.com
(904) 359-4310

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