Vocapedia >
Religions >
Christianity > Jesus Christ
New Testament
The 190-foot-tall cross in Groom, Texas,
is among the largest in the country.
Photograph: Damon Winter
Gerrymander U.S.A.
NYT
July 12, 2022
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/07/12/
opinion/texas-redistricting-maps-gerrymandering.html
Amanda
Morales, from Guatemala, and her daughter Ilsy, 8,
have
been staying at the San Juan Bosco migrant shelter,
hoping
to enter the United States.
Photograph: Adriana
Zehbrauskas
for The New York Times
Thousands of Migrants Have Been Waiting for Months to Enter U.S.
People
from around the world have been lingering on the border,
awaiting
the end of pandemic restrictions.
Their
fate remains one of the Biden administration’s
biggest
challenges on immigration.
NYT
May 19,
2022 Updated 2:31 p.m. ET
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/05/19/
us/migrants-border-title-42.html
Ryan Hoffman’s mother, Irene Hoffman, at home,
with a
full-size painting of Jesus
that she is painting for a local church.
“If Ryan
can’t get help soon,” she said,
“I’m
afraid we’ll find him dead on the side of the road.”
Photograph:
Ángel
Franco
The New York Times
A Former
College Lineman Now on the Streets, Looking for Answers, and Help
Ryan
Hoffman, a U.N.C. Football Player Two Decades Ago, Is Now Homeless
NYT
MARCH 5, 2015
https://www.nytimes.com/2015/03/08/
sports/ncaafootball/ryan-hoffman-a-unc-football-player-two-decades-ago-is-now-homeless.html
Fanny, a
United States citizen,
asleep
in the suburban Atlanta home where she was staying
in early
2018.
Her
mother was deported to Mexico the year before.
Photograph: Melissa Golden
Redux, for The New York Times
An
American Middle Schooler, Orphaned by Deportation
Fanny
was in middle school when ICE came for her mother,
leaving
her to navigate the struggles of adolescence by herself.
NYT
July 30,
2019
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/07/30/
magazine/deported-mother.html
Mother
and Children with Bible and Gun,
from the series Home,
by
Anthony Haughey, 1992
Photograph: Anthony
Haughey
The National Photographic Collection
A look
at the Irish:
photography in Ireland from 1839 to now – in pictures
In Our
Own Image:
Photography in Ireland, 1839 to the Present
is the
first in a series of exhibitions
forming
the first comprehensive
historical and critical survey of photography
from
across the island of Ireland.
Coinciding with the centenary of the establishment of modern Ireland,
In Our
Own Image draws on material from from archives,
private
collections and contemporary commissions,
charting
how the medium has both reflected
and shaped Irish cultural identity.
In Our
Own Image:
photography in Ireland, 1839 to the present
curated
by Gallery of Photography Ireland
in
partnership with Dublin Castle / OPW
is at
The Printworks, Dublin Castle until 6 February
G
Tue 14
Dec 2021 07.00 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/world/gallery/2021/dec/14/
a-look-at-the-irish-photography-in-ireland-from-1839-to-now-in-pictures
James Baldwin with a boy in Durham, N.C.,
1963.
Mr. Schapiro’s images of Mr. Baldwin’s 1963
tour of the South
were included in Mr. Baldwin’s book “The
Fire Next Time.”
Photograph: Steve Schapiro.
Steve Schapiro, Photojournalist Who Bore Witness, Dies at 87
He documented the civil rights movement
and subjects as
diverse as narcotics users,
migrant workers and movie stars,
seeking to capture their
emotional heart.
NYT
Published Jan. 24, 2022
Updated Jan. 25, 2022, 11:46 a.m. ET
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/01/24/
arts/steve-schapiro-dead.html
Jesus
UK / USA
https://www.npr.org/2023/02/06/
1154880673/jesus-commercial-super-bowl-billboard-
he-gets-us-hobby-lobby-evangelical-billion
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/05/19/
us/migrants-border-title-42.html
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/04/03/
opinion/christ-resurrection-easter.html
https://www.npr.org/2019/11/30/
783840663/pope-francis-sends-a-relic-of-jesus-manger-to-the-holy-land
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/07/30/
magazine/deported-mother.html
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/12/21/
opinion/manger-jesus-birthplace-islam.html
http://www.npr.org/sections/parallels/2017/03/20/
520846214/tomb-of-jesus-is-restored-in-jerusalem
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/02/13/
opinion/what-jesus-can-teach-todays-muslims.html
http://www.nytimes.com/2016/12/23/
opinion/humanizing-jesus.html
http://www.nytimes.com/2016/04/07/world/middleeast/jerusalem-
christians-jesus-tomb.html
http://www.theguardian.com/world/gallery/2015/apr/03/
the-passion-of-jesus-in-pictures
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/09/20/
opinion/mr-and-mrs-jesus-christ.html
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2012/sep/19/
jesus-christ-really-have-wife
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/09/19/us/
historian-says-piece-of-papyrus-refers-to-jesus-wife.html
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2010/dec/26/bethlehem-
tourism-boom-israel
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2007/feb/27/
religion.israel
https://www.theguardian.com/stage/2006/dec/13/
theatre1
Jesus-Christ USA
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/12/24/
opinion/jesus-christ-christmas-incarnation.html
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/04/19/
opinion/god-good-friday.html
one of
Christianity's holiest sites
— the
shrine that, according to tradition,
houses the tomb of Jesus.
The ornate
shrine,
called the Edicule,
sits in the
center of Jerusalem's
Church of
the Holy Sepulchre,
one of the
world's oldest churches,
a 12th
century building
sitting on fourth century remains
in
Jerusalem's Old City.
According
to Roman Catholic
and
Orthodox Christian belief,
the Edicule
encases the ancient cave
where
Jesus' body was entombed
and
resurrected.
The Edicule
shrine
is built
around the original cave;
visitors
can kneel before a marble niche
that covers
what is believed to be the bench
where
Jesus' body was placed.
http://www.npr.org/sections/parallels/2017/03/20/
520846214/tomb-of-jesus-is-restored-in-jerusalem
the
Incarnation USA
http://www.nytimes.com/2016/12/23/
opinion/humanizing-jesus.html
the Lord
the word of the Lord
Twelfthtide
https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/Twelfthtide
manger
USA
https://www.npr.org/2019/11/30/
783840663/pope-francis-sends-a-relic-of-jesus-manger-to-the-holy-land
The church
marking the traditional site of Jesus' birth
USA
The Church
of the Nativity,
in the
Palestinian city of Bethlehem,
is one of
the world's
oldest continually operating churches.
https://www.npr.org/sections/parallels/2016/12/24/
506835403/photos-at-christmastime-historic-bethlehem-church-
in-midst-of-restoration
https://www.npr.org/sections/parallels/2016/12/24/
506835403/photos-at-christmastime-historic-bethlehem-church-
in-midst-of-restoration
The
shrine holding the tomb of Jesus
in Jerusalem’s Old City.
The
shrine,
an unsteady 206-year-old structure
held together by an iron cage,
has
become an uncomfortable symbol
of Christian divisions.
Photograph: Gali
Tibbon
Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
Risk of
Collapse at Jesus’ Tomb Unites Rival Christians
By DIAA
HADID NYT
APRIL 6, 2016
http://www.nytimes.com/2016/04/07/
world/middleeast/jerusalem-christians-jesus-tomb.html
the
Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem
UK
http://www.theguardian.com/world/2004/sep/28/israel.
religion
the shrine
around what many believe
is the tomb
of Jesus in Jerusalem’s Old City USA
http://www.nytimes.com/2016/04/07/
world/middleeast/jerusalem-christians-jesus-tomb.html
Church of the Holy Sepulchre in
Jerusalem USA
The Stone
of Unction,
where
Jesus’ body was said
to have
been prepared for burial
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/05/27/
world/middleeast/pope-francis-jerusalem.html
Father
Son
Christ's
example UK
https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2016/dec/25/
queen-uses-christmas-message-to-urge-britons-to-take-a-deep-breath
last supper > holy grail
UK
http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/mar/31/
crowds-flock-spanish-chuch-leon-holy-grail-claim
The Cenacle,
the hall on Jerusalem’s Mount Zion
venerated by Christians
as the room
of the Last Supper USA
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/05/27/world/middleeast/
mass-planned-on-mount-zion-stirs-ancient-rivalries.html
Shroud of Turin / Turin shroud
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2013/mar/28/turin-
shroud-tv-pope-francis
https://www.reuters.com/article/newsOne/idUSL0252287
20080602
Chocolate Christ exhibition cancelled
UK / USA
http://www.theguardian.com/world/2007/mar/31/
religion.artnews
http://www.usatoday.com/travel/news/2007-03-30-
chocolate-jesus_N.htm
The passion
of Jesus UK
https://www.theguardian.com/world/gallery/2015/apr/03/
the-passion-of-jesus-in-pictures
Jerusalem > Via Dolorosa UK
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2013/jul/27/
the-new-jerusalem
Jesus on the cross
thorn
bleed
blood
Golgotha
the
Cross USA
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/07/12/
opinion/texas-redistricting-maps-gerrymandering.html
the
True Cross
the Room of the Last Supper in Jerusalem
The 'Via Crucis' (Way of the Cross)
procession
at Rome's Colosseum...
the procession which commemorates
the last hours in Christ's life
Those nuns still there are mostly
older.
Outside their rooms,
wheelchairs line the hallway
next to a statue of Jesus.
Photograph: James Estrin
The New York
Times
http://archive.nytimes.com/www.nytimes.com/slideshow/2008/12/16/
nyregion/20081216CONVENT_6.html
After 146 Years, a Brooklyn
Convent Is Closing
NYT
17 December 2008
https://www.nytimes.com/2008/12/17/
nyregion/17convent.html
Holy Land UK
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2010/dec/26/bethlehem-
tourism-boom-israel
Bethlehem
UK
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2010/dec/23/
bethlehem-shepherds-dying-breed
born in a
manger in Bethlehem
USA
http://www.nytimes.com/2016/12/23/
opinion/humanizing-jesus.html
Bethany,
a site on
the eastern bank of the river Jordan
where some
Christians believe Jesus was baptised
UK
http://www.theguardian.com/world/gallery/2014/may/25/
pope-francis-visits-the-middle-east-in-pictures#img-9
Nazareth
The road from Nazareth to Bethlehem
Last Supper
Christ's table
communion
celebrate
the Eucharist, the Communion
bread and wine
miracle UK
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2010/mar/05/
nun-cured-pope-parkinsons-ill
resurrection
sacrifice
Corpus of news articles
Religions, Faith > Christianity >
Jesus Christ > New Testament
A Prayer at Christmas
December 24, 2012
The New York Times
By ANN HOOD
Providence, R.I.
BACK when I was 8 or 9 and wanted to be a nun, I would often stop at church on
my way home from school. The school sat across the street from two churches: St.
Joseph’s, which we called the French church, and Sacred Heart, which is where my
family went. Sacred Heart was built by and for Italian immigrants, an odd pale
stucco building in the midst of rundown mill houses. I would enter and let my
eyes adjust from the bright afternoon light to the dim interior. The smell of
incense and candles burning permeated everything, and I liked to stand still for
a moment and breathe it in before I dipped my hand into the holy water in the
marble aspersorium. My wet fingers made the sign of the cross as I made my slow,
reverential way down the worn maroon carpet to the altar.
I prayed a lot in those days. For straight A’s, which I got without God’s help.
For a friend, since I was a lonely, peculiar child who had trouble making
friends. For my father to come home from Cuba, where he was based with the
Seabees. For a real Christmas tree, instead of the fake silver one with pompom
tips my mother put up in my father’s absence.
These prayers were fervent, desperate. But when I went to church alone on those
long-ago afternoons, I prayed just for the sake of comfort, for the peace it
brought me. Sometimes a nun might appear in her habit and allow me to scrape the
melted candle wax from the marble. I imagined, briefly, a life of devotion like
that. A swishing black dress and a giant wooden crucifix swinging from my rosary
beads.
That fantasy disappeared eventually, along with the ritual of churchgoing. I
didn’t get the same sense of peace at Sunday Mass. For reasons I can’t remember,
my family eventually stopped attending church, and I started questioning the
Catholic Church’s beliefs. I dabbled a little, but nothing stuck.
So I was surprised when I was struck with a desire to go to church earlier this
month. Not a Mass, but inside a church, where I might pray quietly and alone. In
my adult life, I had spent a lot of time angry at God, mostly over the sudden
deaths in my family — my brother at 30, my daughter at 5. This year we’d
suffered another sudden loss, a favorite aunt killed in a car accident. Why on
this December afternoon I felt the need to check in with God, I cannot say.
Maybe a conversation with a friend who spoke about going to church when her
daughter was ill, or maybe the appearance of Christmas lights and decorations
around town.
Whatever the reason, I walked to a Catholic church a few blocks from my home in
Providence. The afternoon was chilly. Boughs of evergreen draped across the
wrought-iron gate. I climbed the steps to the front door and pulled. Locked. I
walked around to the side. Then the other side. Then the back. All locked. There
were other churches, I thought. Plenty of them.
I went home and got in my car and drove from church to church to church. All of
them were locked. With each locked door, my need to get inside and pray grew. I
felt it was imperative, that if a person needed to go to church and pray, she
should be able to do that. All the things I wanted to pray about washed over me.
I wanted to explain to God why I’d been so angry. I wanted to apologize for
things I’d done wrong. I wanted to put in a good word for my son, and for my
daughter, and for my mother’s health, and for a dozen other things. But six,
then seven churches were locked.
When I told my husband, he looked confused. I was not a religious person, after
all. “It’s expensive to keep them open,” he, the churchgoer in our family,
explained. “But what about truly desperate people?” I insisted. “It’s probably
not safe to keep them open like that,” he said. Then he added, “Maybe in bigger
cities?”
The next day, I was in New York City. The weather had turned as warm as spring,
and after a lunch in Midtown I decided to take a walk. The mild temperature made
me forget that it was Christmastime, and I was surprised to see a line of people
in front of Saks Fifth Avenue waiting to see its window displays. I joined them.
Then I crossed the street to stare up at the Christmas tree in Rockefeller
Center and smile at the white angels blowing their trumpets in front of it.
As I turned to walk to the subway, a sign caught my eye: ST. PATRICK’S IS OPEN.
I read it again. ST. PATRICK’S IS OPEN. Although I quickly realized the sign was
there because of all the scaffolding around the church, I still couldn’t help
but feel that it was also there just for me.
A church that was open! I crossed the street and went inside. The grandeur of
St. Patrick’s is nothing like the little stucco church of my childhood in West
Warwick, R.I. And even on a Tuesday afternoon, it was crowded with tourists. But
the candles flickered, and the smell of wax and incense filled me. I dipped my
fingers in the holy water, and walked slowly up the long center aisle to the
altar. Around me, people snapped pictures of the manger with their phones. A
woman holding a baby in a Santa suit rushed past me. When I got to the front
pew, I lowered the kneeler, and I knelt. I bowed my head and I prayed.
In the years since I’d done this simple act in church, I have prayed at home and
in hospital waiting rooms. I have prayed for my daughter to live, for the bad
news to not be true, for strength in the face of adversity. I have prayed with
more desperation than a person should feel. I have prayed in vain.
This prayer, though, was different. It was a prayer from my girlhood, a prayer
for peace and comfort and guidance. It was a prayer of gratitude. It was a
prayer that needed to be done in church, in a place where candles flicker and
statues of saints look down from on high; where sometimes, out of nowhere, the
spiritually confused can still come inside and kneel and feel their words might
rise up and be heard.
Ann Hood is the author, most recently,
of “The Red Thread”
and the forthcoming novel “The Obituary Writer.”
A Prayer at Christmas,
NYT,
24.12.2012,
https://www.nytimes.com/2012/12/25/
opinion/a-prayer-at-christmas.html
Is
Religion Above the Law?
October 17,
2011
9:00 pm
The New York Times
By STANLEY FISH
Stanley Fish on education, law and society.
The
religion clause case recently argued before the Supreme Court — Hosanna-Tabor v.
EEOC — centers on the “ministerial exception,” the doctrine (elaborated over the
last 40 years) that exempts religious associations from complying with neutral,
generally applicable laws in some, but not all, circumstances.
In 2005 Cheryl Perich, a teacher in the Hosanna-Tabor Lutheran Evangelical
School, returned from an extended sick leave (she had been diagnosed with
narcolepsy) to find that her services were no longer wanted. She declined to
resign as requested, and after a resolution satisfactory to her was not
forthcoming she filed a disability discrimination suit. The church responded by
terminating her as a teacher, alleging that its reason was theological, not
retaliatory. The Missouri synod, the church explained, requires its adherents to
resolve disputes rather than bring suit in civil court; in failing to follow
this rule, Perich had transgressed a core Lutheran belief.
The church further argued that as a “commissioned minister” Perich fell under
the ministerial exception even though the bulk of her time was spent teaching
secular subjects. Perich (through her attorneys) replied that her duties were
not primarily religious, and that the assertion of a doctrinal violation was an
afterthought devised to serve as a pretext for an act of retaliation in response
to her having gone to the courts in an effort to secure her rights.
So the issues are, first, was she a minister in the sense that would bring her
under the exception (in which case the state could not intervene to protect
her), and, second, was the doctrine the church invoked as the reason for its
action truly central to its faith? (There are other issues in play but, as we
shall see, two are more than enough.)
The most perspicuous example of a ministerial exception is the Catholic church’s
limitation of membership in the priesthood to males. If a university were to
have a rule that only men could serve as professors, it would be vulnerable to a
suit brought under the anti-discrimination provisions of Title VII of the Civil
Rights Act of 1964. The difference (or so it has been asserted) is that there is
no relationship between professorial skills and gender — a woman can perform the
duties of a teacher of history or chemistry as well as a man — while the
tradition of an all-male priesthood is rooted in religious doctrine. So the
university would be engaged in discrimination pure and simple, whereas the
church’s discrimination is a function of its belief that the all-male priesthood
was initiated by Christ in his choice of the apostles.
Were the state to intervene and declare the tradition of an all-male priesthood
and the doctrine underlying it unconstitutional, it would be forcing the church
to conform to secular norms in violation both of the free exercise clause (the
right of a religion to be governed by its own tenets would be curtailed) and the
establishment clause (the state would in effect have taken over the management
of the church by dictating its hiring practices). (I am rehearsing, not
endorsing, these arguments.)
This clear-cut example — to which both sides in Hosanna-Tabor v. EEOC refer
frequently — may be the only one (and it is only clear-cut because it has behind
it 2,000 years of history). For the question quickly becomes one of boundaries —
how far does the ministerial exception extend? To whom does it apply? Not only
are there no answers to such questions, it is not obvious who is empowered to
ask them.
If the ministerial exemption is to have any bite, there must be a way of
distinguishing employees central to a religious association’s core activities
from employees who play only a supporting role (the example always given is
janitors). But if the line marking the distinction is drawn by the state, the
state is setting itself up as the arbiter of ecclesiastical organization and
thus falling afoul of the establishment clause. And if the line is drawn by the
religious association, the religious association is being granted the power to
deprive as many of its employees as it likes of the constitutional protections
supposedly afforded to every citizen. It is these equally unpalatable
alternatives — this Scylla and Charybdis — that the justices find themselves
between in oral argument. What a mess!
It is tempting to bypass the mess by getting rid of the ministerial exception
altogether and demanding that churches, synagogues and mosques obey the law just
as everyone else does. But that draconian solution would imply that we get rid
of the religion clause as well; for it would amount to saying that religion
isn’t special, and both sides of the clause insist that it is. The free-exercise
clause tells us that that religion is especially favored and the establishment
clause tells us that it is especially feared (the state should avoid
entanglement with that stuff). How do you honor the claims of free exercise
without bumping up against the establishment clause by allowing exceptions to
laws that everyone else must follow?
The difficulty is sometimes finessed by cabining free exercise in the private
sphere. Free exercise, it is said, is fine as long as its scope is limited to
the expression and profession of belief; but once it crosses over into actions
the state has a duty to regulate, free exercise must give way to the authority
of fair and neutral laws. (This is the holding of a line of cases from Reynolds
v. United States [1878] to Employment Division v. Smith [1990].)
This cutting of the joint works fine for a religion that places minimal burdens
on its adherents and asks only that they attend to the personal relationship
between them and their God. But what about religions that expand the area of
faith to include rites the faithful must celebrate and worldly actions they are
expected to perform? What about religions that refuse to recognize, and even
consider impious, the distinction between the private and the public spheres?
Can the state step in and say, “No, you’re wrong; that practice you’re worried
about isn’t really essential to your faith; give it up so that a system of laws
put in place for everyone isn’t destroyed by exceptions.” Doesn’t society,
Justice Sonia Sotomayor asked at oral argument, “have a right at some point to
say certain conduct is unacceptable, even if religious?”
The question is, at what point? And who gets to decide when that point has been
reached? Indeed there is a question even more basic (and equally unanswerable
except by fiat): who gets to say whether a “certain conduct” is religious and
centrally so? A resolution of the Hosanna-Tabor case, Justice Samuel Alito
observes, “depends on how central a teaching of Lutheranism” the injunction
against “suing in a civil tribunal” really is. Before we can decide (he
continues) whether the church’s asserted reason for terminating Perich is a
pretext, we must determine whether this is in fact “a central tenet of
Lutheranism.” And if we decide that it isn’t, wouldn’t we be “making a judgment
about the relative importance of the Catholic doctrine that only males can be
ordained as priests and the Lutheran doctrine that a Lutheran should not sue the
church in civil courts?” And what authorizes the Court to do that in opposition
to what the churches themselves say?
The same dilemma attends the other vexed question. How, wonders Chief Justice
John Roberts, “do we decide who’s covered by the ministerial exception?” By
getting to “the heart of the ministerial exception,” answers Douglas Laycock,
speaking for the church. But that is simply to relocate the problem in a phrase
that itself demands explication. Who’s to say where the heart is? In some
churches, Justice Anthony Kennedy observes, there aren’t “full time ministers at
all; they’re all ministers.” So does everyone fall under the exception and can a
non-hierarchical church simply declare that none of its members can seek redress
for acts of discrimination because they’re all ministers? Just before the oral
argument concludes, Justice Sotomayor is still awaiting clarification: “So
define minister for me again?”
She will be waiting forever. There is no way out of these puzzles, and that is
exactly the conclusion Justice Stephen Breyer reaches: “I just can’t see a way …
of getting out of the whole thing.” Justice Alito points to the absurdity of
calling in expert witnesses to determine the truth of disputed matters of
religion, but, he asks, “How are we going to avoid that? I just don’t see it.”
Later he concludes that “you just cannot get away from evaluating religious
issues,” which is of course exactly what the courts are not supposed to be
doing.
So how will the case turn out? Clearly none of the justices wishes to pronounce
as a theologian. And just as clearly none of them is happy with the prospect of
a ministerial exception without defined limits. Breyer gestures in the direction
of a solution that avoids the hard questions. Grant the Church the core doctrine
it cites and inquire into whether Perich was given adequate notice of it. If she
was, she loses; if she wasn’t, she wins. But no one will be satisfied with that
maneuver, which will itself raise a host of new unanswerable questions in place
of the questions supposedly avoided. All these questions were explored by John
Locke at length in his “Letter Concerning Toleration” (1689), and at one point
Locke gives voice to a weariness we might echo today: Would that “this business
of religion were left alone.” But as long as there is a religion clause, that’s
not an option.
Is Religion Above the Law?, NYT, 17.10.2011,
https://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/10/17/
is-religion-above-the-law/
On Basic Religion Test,
Many Doth Not Pass
September 28, 2010
The New York Times
By LAURIE GOODSTEIN
Americans are by all measures a deeply religious people, but they are also
deeply ignorant about religion.
Researchers from the independent Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life phoned
more than 3,400 Americans and asked them 32 questions about the Bible,
Christianity and other world religions, famous religious figures and the
constitutional principles governing religion in public life.
On average, people who took the survey answered half the questions incorrectly,
and many flubbed even questions about their own faith.
Those who scored the highest were atheists and agnostics, as well as two
religious minorities: Jews and Mormons. The results were the same even after the
researchers controlled for factors like age and racial differences.
“Even after all these other factors, including education, are taken into
account, atheists and agnostics, Jews and Mormons still outperform all the other
religious groups in our survey,” said Greg Smith, a senior researcher at Pew.
That finding might surprise some, but not Dave Silverman, president of American
Atheists, an advocacy group for nonbelievers that was founded by Madalyn Murray
O’Hair.
“I have heard many times that atheists know more about religion than religious
people,” Mr. Silverman said. “Atheism is an effect of that knowledge, not a lack
of knowledge. I gave a Bible to my daughter. That’s how you make atheists.”
Among the topics covered in the survey were: Where was Jesus born? What is
Ramadan? Whose writings inspired the Protestant Reformation? Which Biblical
figure led the exodus from Egypt? What religion is the Dalai Lama? Joseph Smith?
Mother Theresa? In most cases, the format was multiple choice.
The researchers said that the questionnaire was designed to represent a breadth
of knowledge about religion, but was not intended to be regarded as a list of
the most essential facts about the subject. Most of the questions were easy, but
a few were difficult enough to discern which respondents were highly
knowledgeable.
On questions about the Bible and Christianity, the groups that answered the most
right were Mormons and white evangelical Protestants.
On questions about world religions, like Islam, Buddhism, Hinduism and Judaism,
the groups that did the best were atheists, agnostics and Jews.
One finding that may grab the attention of policy makers is that most Americans
wrongly believe that anything having to do with religion is prohibited in public
schools.
An overwhelming 89 percent of respondents, asked whether public school teachers
are permitted to lead a class in prayer, correctly answered no.
But fewer than one of four knew that a public school teacher is permitted “to
read from the Bible as an example of literature.” And only about one third knew
that a public school teacher is permitted to offer a class comparing the world’s
religions.
The survey’s authors concluded that there was “widespread confusion” about “the
line between teaching and preaching.”
Mr. Smith said the survey appeared to be the first comprehensive effort at
assessing the basic religious knowledge of Americans, so it is impossible to
tell whether they are more or less informed than in the past.
The phone interviews were conducted in English and Spanish in May and June.
There were not enough Muslim, Buddhist or Hindu respondents to say how those
groups ranked.
Clergy members who are concerned that their congregants know little about the
essentials of their own faith will no doubt be appalled by some of these
findings:
¶ Fifty-three percent of Protestants could not identify Martin Luther as the man
who started the Protestant Reformation.
¶ Forty-five percent of Catholics did not know that their church teaches that
the consecrated bread and wine in holy communion are not merely symbols, but
actually become the body and blood of Christ.
¶ Forty-three percent of Jews did not know that Maimonides, one of the foremost
rabbinical authorities and philosophers, was Jewish.
The question about Maimonides was the one that the fewest people answered
correctly. But 51 percent knew that Joseph Smith was Mormon, and 82 percent knew
that Mother Theresa was Roman Catholic.
On Basic Religion Test,
Many Doth Not Pass,
NYT, 28.9.2010,
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/09/28/us/28religion.html
10 Commandments Judge
Runs for Ala. Governor Again
June 1, 2009
Filed at 2:34 p.m. ET
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The New York Times
MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) -- Alabama's Ten Commandments judge is
running for governor again.
Roy Moore's campaign Web site went up Monday morning, inviting supporters to
sign a pledge to help elect Moore governor.
The 62-year-old Moore scheduled a formal ''candidacy announcement'' later in the
day.
Moore ran for governor in 2006, but lost.
When he was a circuit judge, Moore waged a court battle to display a homemade
plaque of the Ten Commandments in his courtroom.
Later, as chief justice of the Alabama Supreme Court, he placed a granite
monument of the Ten Commandments in the lobby of the state judicial building.
His refusal to remove it, in defiance of a federal judge's order, cost him his
office in 2003.
----
On the Net: Judge Moore '10 For Governor:
http://www.moore2010.com
10 Commandments Judge
Runs for Ala. Governor Again, NYT, 1.6.2009,
http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/2009/06/01/us/
AP-US-Alabama-Governors-Race.html
For Catholics,
Heaven Moves a Step Closer
February 10, 2009
The New York Times
By PAUL VITELLO
The announcement in church bulletins and on Web sites has been greeted with
enthusiasm by some and wariness by others. But mainly, it has gone over the
heads of a vast generation of Roman Catholics who have no idea what it means:
“Bishop Announces Plenary Indulgences.”
In recent months, dioceses around the world have been offering Catholics a
spiritual benefit that fell out of favor decades ago — the indulgence, a sort of
amnesty from punishment in the afterlife — and reminding them of the church’s
clout in mitigating the wages of sin.
The fact that many Catholics under 50 have never sought one, and never heard of
indulgences except in high school European history (where Martin Luther
denounces the selling of them in 1517 and ignites the Protestant Reformation)
simply makes their reintroduction more urgent among church leaders bent on
restoring fading traditions of penance in what they see as a self-satisfied
world.
“Why are we bringing it back?” asked Bishop Nicholas A. DiMarzio of Brooklyn,
who has embraced the move. “Because there is sin in the world.”
Like the Latin Mass and meatless Fridays, the indulgence was one of the
traditions decoupled from mainstream Catholic practice in the 1960s by the
Second Vatican Council, the gathering of bishops that set a new tone of
simplicity and informality for the church. Its revival has been viewed as part
of a conservative resurgence that has brought some quiet changes and some highly
controversial ones, like Pope Benedict XVI’s recent decision to lift the
excommunications of four schismatic bishops who reject the council’s reforms.
The indulgence is among the less-noticed, less-disputed traditions to be
restored. But with a thousand-year history and volumes of church law devoted to
its intricacies, it is one of the most complicated to explain.
According to church teaching, even after sinners are absolved in the
confessional and say their Our Fathers or Hail Marys as penance, they still face
punishment after death, in Purgatory before they can enter heaven. In exchange
for certain prayers, devotions or pilgrimages in special years, a Catholic can
receive an indulgence, which reduces or erases that punishment instantly, with
no formal ceremony or sacrament.
There are partial indulgences, which reduce purgatorial time by a certain number
of days or years, and plenary indulgences, which eliminate all of it. You can
get one for yourself, or for someone else, living or dead. You cannot buy one —
the church outlawed the sale of indulgences in 1857 — but charitable
contributions, combined with other acts, can help you earn one. There is a limit
of one plenary indulgence per sinner per day.
It has no currency in the bad place.
“It’s what?” asked Marta de Alvarado, 34, a bank cashier in Manhattan, when told
that indulgences were available this year at several churches in New York City.
“I just don’t know anything about it,” she said, leaving St. Patrick’s Cathedral
at lunchtime. “I’m going to look into it, though.”
The return of indulgences began with Pope John Paul II, who authorized bishops
to offer them in 2000 as part of the celebration of the church’s third
millennium. But the offers have increased markedly under his successor, Pope
Benedict, who has made plenary indulgences part of church anniversary
celebrations nine times in the last three years. The current offer is tied to
the yearlong celebration of St. Paul, which continues through June.
Dioceses in the United States have responded with varying degrees of enthusiasm.
This year’s offer has been energetically promoted in places like Washington,
Pittsburgh, Portland, Ore., and Tulsa, Okla. It appeared prominently on the Web
site of the Diocese of Brooklyn, which announced that any Catholic could receive
an indulgence at any of six churches on any day, or at dozens more on specific
days, by fulfilling the basic requirements: going to confession, receiving holy
communion, saying a prayer for the pope and achieving “complete detachment from
any inclination to sin.”
But just a few miles west, in the Archdiocese of New York, indulgences are
available at only one church, and the archdiocesan Web site makes no mention of
them. (Cardinal Edward M. Egan “encourages all people to receive the blessings
of indulgences,” said his spokesman, Joseph Zwilling, who added that he was
unaware that the offer was missing from the Web site, but would soon have it
posted.)
The indulgences, experts said, tend to be advertised more openly in dioceses
where the bishop is more traditionalist, or in places with fewer tensions
between liberal and conservative Catholics.
“In our diocese, folks are just glad for any opportunity to do something
Catholic,” said Mary Woodward, director of evangelization for the Diocese of
Jackson, Miss., where only 3 percent of the population is Catholic. At church
recently, she said, parishioners flocked to her for information about
indulgences. “What all do I have to do again to get one of those?” she said they
asked.
Even some priests admit that the rules are hard to grasp.
“It’s not that easy to explain to people who have never heard of it,” said the
Rev. Gilbert Martinez, pastor of St. Paul the Apostle Church in Manhattan, the
designated site in the New York archdiocese for obtaining indulgences. “But it
was interesting: I had a number of people come in and say, ‘Father, I haven’t
been to confession in 20 years, but this’ ” — the availability of an indulgence
— “ ‘made me think maybe it wasn’t too late.’ ”
Getting Catholics back into the confession booth, in fact, was one of the
underlying motivations for reintroducing the indulgence. In a 2001 speech, Pope
John Paul II described the newly reborn tradition as “a happy incentive” for
confession.
“Confessions have been down for years and the church is very worried about it,”
said the Rev. Tom Reese, a Jesuit and former editor of the weekly Catholic
magazine America. In a secularized culture of pop psychology and self-help, he
said, “the church wants the idea of ‘personal sin’ back in the equation.
Indulgences are a way of reminding people of the importance of penance.
“The good news is we’re not selling them anymore,” he added.
To remain in good standing, Catholics are required to confess their sins at
least once a year. But in a survey last year by a research group at Georgetown
University, three-quarters of Catholics said they went to confession less often
or not at all.
Under the rules in the “Manual of Indulgences,” published by the Vatican,
confession is a prerequisite for getting an indulgence.
Among liberal Catholic theologians, the return of the indulgence seems to be
more of a curiosity than a cause for alarm. “Personally, I think we’re beyond
the time when indulgences mean very much,” said the Rev. Richard P. McBrien, a
professor of theology at the University of Notre Dame who supports the
ordination of women and the right of priests to marry. “It’s like trying to put
the toothpaste back in the tube of original thought. Most Catholics in this
country, if you tell them they can get a plenary indulgence, will shrug their
shoulders.”
One recent afternoon outside Our Lady Queen of Martyrs Church in Forest Hills,
Queens, two church volunteers disagreed on the relevance of indulgences for
modern Catholics.
Octavia Andrade, 64, a retired secretary, laughed as she recalled a time when
children would race through the rosary repeatedly to get as many indulgences as
they could — usually in increments of 5 or 10 years — “as if we needed them,
then.”
Still, she supports their reintroduction. “Anything old coming back, I’m in
favor of it,” she said. “More fervor is a good thing.”
Karen Nassauer, 61, a retired hospital social worker who meets Mrs. Andrade
almost daily for Mass, said she was baffled by the return to a practice she
never quite understood to begin with.
“I mean, I’m not saying it is necessarily wrong,” she said. “But I had always
figured they were going to let this fade into the background, to be honest. What
does it mean to get ‘time off’ in Purgatory? What is ‘five years’ in terms of
eternity?”
The latest indulgence offers de-emphasize the years-in-Purgatory formulations of
old in favor of a less specific accounting, with more focus on ways in which
people can help themselves — and one another — come to terms with sin.
“It’s more about praying for the benefit of others, doing good deeds, acts of
charity,” said the Rev. Kieran Harrington, spokesman for the Brooklyn diocese.
After Catholics, the people most expert on the topic are probably Lutherans,
whose church was born from the schism over indulgences and whose leaders have
met regularly with Vatican officials since the 1960s in an effort to mend their
differences.
“It has been something of a mystery to us as to why now,” said the Rev. Dr.
Michael Root, dean of the Lutheran Theological Southern Seminary in Columbia,
S.C., who has participated in those meetings. The renewal of indulgences, he
said, has “not advanced” the dialogue.
“Our main problem has always been the question of quantifying God’s blessing,”
Dr. Root said. Lutherans believe that divine forgiveness is a given, but not
something people can influence.
But for Catholic leaders, most prominently the pope, the focus in recent years
has been less on what Catholics have in common with other religious groups than
on what sets them apart — including the half-forgotten mystery of the
indulgence.
“It faded away with a lot of things in the church,” said Bishop DiMarzio of
Brooklyn. “But it was never given up. It was always there. We just want to
people to return to the ideas they used to know.”
For Catholics, Heaven Moves a Step Closer,
NYT, 10.2.2009,
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/02/10/nyregion/10indulgence.html
Texas
Report Says 12 Girls
at Sect Ranch Were Married
December
24, 2008
The New York Times
By DAN FROSCH
Texas child
welfare officials have concluded that a dozen under-age girls living at the
ranch of a polygamist sect that was raided in April were involved in “spiritual”
marriages to older men.
It also said that hundreds of children at the ranch had suffered neglect through
their exposure to such improper relationships.
The findings were released Tuesday in a report by the Texas Department of Family
and Protective Services that focused on the sect living at the Yearning for Zion
Ranch in Eldorado.
“The Yearning for Zion case is about sexual abuse of girls and children who were
taught that under-age marriages are a way of life,” the report said. “It is
about parents who condoned illegal under-age marriages and adults who failed to
protect young girls — it has never been about religion.”
According to the report, sexual abuse of children at the ranch was common, with
12 girls, ages 12 to 15, “spiritually” married to older men. Seven of those
girls had given birth to one or more children, the report found.
But a spokesman for the families at the ranch, who belong to the Fundamentalist
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, or F.L.D.S., rejected the report’s
conclusions and questioned its authors’ motives.
The spokesman, Willie Jessop, called the report “a desperate attempt by the
officials of the Family and Protective Services Department to try and justify
their barbaric actions of April 3.”
Pointing out that the courts had ordered the return of the children who had been
removed from the ranch, he added, “Now they are trying to put out a report and
justify it, and it doesn’t hold up.” The sect broke from the mainstream Mormon
Church after it rejected polygamy in 1890 and has since found itself in public
legal battles over the practice.
The report, requested by the executive commissioner of the Texas Health and
Human Services Commission, detailed the controversial raid on the ranch.
After receiving a call alleging child abuse at the ranch from someone claiming
to be a teenage sect member, the authorities raided the West Texas compound and
removed 439 children. The raid drew national attention for weeks as the state
grappled with placing the children in foster care, and the F.L.D.S. went to
court to win their return.
Both the Texas Supreme Court and the Court of Appeals ruled that the raid had
been too broad, that it was not backed by evidence of sexual abuse, and that
there had been no grounds to seize the children. Ultimately, all but one of the
children were returned to their parents, and the authorities have investigated
whether the original report of abuse was a hoax.
Since the raid, however, 12 men living at the ranch were indicted by a grand
jury in Eldorado, on charges including the sexual assault of a minor and bigamy.
The report also noted that F.L.D.S. parents had since taken court-mandated
classes on “the appropriate discipline and the psychosexual development of
children,” and that girls had been educated on how to identify and report sexual
abuse.
Meanwhile, the child welfare agency has ended cases involving 424 children after
determining the children were safe from sexual abuse and neglect. Fifteen cases
remain active.
Patrick Crimmins, a spokesman for the state agency, said the report showed why
the ranch had been raided in the first place.
“We went in there to do an abuse and neglect investigation,” he said. “We didn’t
go in there to remove and put kids in foster care.”
Texas Report Says 12 Girls at Sect Ranch Were Married,
NYT, 24.12.2008,
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/12/24/us/24abuse.html
George
Docherty,
Pastor Who Influenced Pledge,
Dies at 97
December 2,
2008
The New York Times
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
ALEXANDRIA,
Pa. (AP) — The Rev. George M. Docherty, who was credited with helping to push
Congress to insert the phrase “under God” into the Pledge of Allegiance, died on
Thursday at his home in central Pennsylvania. He was 97.
His wife, Sue Docherty, announced the death, saying Mr. Docherty had been in
failing health for about three years.
In 1952, Mr. Docherty, then pastor of the New York Avenue Presbyterian Church in
Washington, just blocks from the White House, gave a sermon saying the pledge
should acknowledge God. He was born in Glasgow, Scotland, and was unfamiliar
with the pledge until he heard it spoken by his 7-year-old son, Garth.
“I didn’t know that the Pledge of Allegiance was, and he recited it, ‘one
nation, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all,” ’ he recalled in an
interview with The Associated Press in 2004. “I came from Scotland, where we
said ‘God save our gracious queen,’ ‘God save our gracious king.’ Here was the
Pledge of Allegiance, and God wasn’t in it at all.”
There was little effect from that initial sermon, but Mr. Docherty delivered it
again on Feb. 7, 1954, after learning that President Dwight D. Eisenhower would
be at the church.
The next day, Representative Charles G. Oakman, Republican of Michigan,
introduced a bill to add the phrase “under God” to the pledge, and a companion
bill was introduced in the Senate. Eisenhower signed the law on Flag Day that
year.
George Docherty, Pastor Who Influenced Pledge, Dies at 97,
NYT, 2.12.2008,
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/12/02/us/02docherty.html
Mormons
Tipped Scale
in Ban on Gay Marriage
November
15, 2008
The New York Times
By JESSE McKINLEY and KIRK JOHNSON
SACRAMENTO
— Less than two weeks before Election Day, the chief strategist behind a ballot
measure outlawing same-sex marriage in California called an emergency meeting
here.
“We’re going to lose this campaign if we don’t get more money,” the strategist,
Frank Schubert, recalled telling leaders of Protect Marriage, the main group
behind the ban.
The campaign issued an urgent appeal, and in a matter of days, it raised more
than $5 million, including a $1 million donation from Alan C. Ashton, the
grandson of a former president of the Mormon Church. The money allowed the drive
to intensify a sharp-elbowed advertising campaign, and support for the measure
was catapulted ahead; it ultimately won with 52 percent of the vote.
As proponents of same-sex marriage across the country planned protests on
Saturday against the ban, interviews with the main forces behind the ballot
measure showed how close its backers believe it came to defeat — and the
extraordinary role Mormons played in helping to pass it with money,
institutional support and dedicated volunteers.
“We’ve spoken out on other issues, we’ve spoken out on abortion, we’ve spoken
out on those other kinds of things,” said Michael R. Otterson, the managing
director of public affairs for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints,
as the Mormons are formally called, in Salt Lake City. “But we don’t get
involved to the degree we did on this.”
The California measure, Proposition 8, was to many Mormons a kind of firewall to
be held at all costs.
“California is a huge state, often seen as a bellwether — this was seen as a
very, very important test,” Mr. Otterson said.
First approached by the Roman Catholic archbishop of San Francisco a few weeks
after the California Supreme Court legalized same-sex marriage in May, the
Mormons were the last major religious group to join the campaign, and the final
spice in an unusual stew that included Catholics, evangelical Christians,
conservative black and Latino pastors, and myriad smaller ethnic groups with
strong religious ties.
Shortly after receiving the invitation from the San Francisco Archdiocese, the
Mormon leadership in Salt Lake City issued a four-paragraph decree to be read to
congregations, saying “the formation of families is central to the Creator’s
plan,” and urging members to become involved with the cause.
“And they sure did,” Mr. Schubert said.
Jeff Flint, another strategist with Protect Marriage, estimated that Mormons
made up 80 percent to 90 percent of the early volunteers who walked door-to-door
in election precincts.
The canvass work could be exacting and highly detailed. Many Mormon wards in
California, not unlike Roman Catholic parishes, were assigned two ZIP codes to
cover. Volunteers in one ward, according to training documents written by a
Protect Marriage volunteer, obtained by people opposed to Proposition 8 and
shown to The New York Times, had tasks ranging from “walkers,” assigned to knock
on doors; to “sellers,” who would work with undecided voters later on; and to
“closers,” who would get people to the polls on Election Day.
Suggested talking points were equally precise. If initial contact indicated a
prospective voter believed God created marriage, the church volunteers were
instructed to emphasize that Proposition 8 would restore the definition of
marriage God intended.
But if a voter indicated human beings created marriage, Script B would roll
instead, emphasizing that Proposition 8 was about marriage, not about attacking
gay people, and about restoring into law an earlier ban struck down by the State
Supreme Court in May.
“It is not our goal in this campaign to attack the homosexual lifestyle or to
convince gays and lesbians that their behavior is wrong — the less we refer to
homosexuality, the better,” one of the ward training documents said. “We are
pro-marriage, not anti-gay.”
Leaders were also acutely conscious of not crossing the line from being a
church-based volunteer effort to an actual political organization.
“No work will take place at the church, including no meeting there to hand out
precinct walking assignments so as to not even give the appearance of
politicking at the church,” one of the documents said.
By mid-October, most independent polls showed support for the proposition was
growing, but it was still trailing. Opponents had brought on new media
consultants in the face of the slipping poll numbers, but they were still
effectively raising money, including $3.9 million at a star-studded fund-raiser
held at the Beverly Hills home of Ron Burkle, the supermarket billionaire and
longtime Democratic fund-raiser.
It was then that Mr. Schubert called his meeting in Sacramento. “I said, ‘As
good as our stuff is, it can’t withstand that kind of funding,’ ” he recalled.
The response was a desperate e-mail message sent to 92,000 people who had
registered at the group’s Web site declaring a “code blue” — an urgent plea for
money to save traditional marriage from “cardiac arrest.” Mr. Schubert also sent
an e-mail message to the three top religious members of his executive committee,
representing Catholics, evangelicals and Mormons.
“I ask for your prayers that this e-mail will open the hearts and minds of the
faithful to make a further sacrifice of their funds at this urgent moment so
that God’s precious gift of marriage is preserved,” he wrote.
On Oct. 28, Mr. Ashton, the grandson of the former Mormon president David O.
McKay, donated $1 million. Mr. Ashton, who made his fortune as co-founder of the
WordPerfect Corporation, said he was following his personal beliefs and the
direction of the church.
“I think it was just our realizing that we heard a number of stories about
members of the church who had worked long hours and lobbied long and hard,” he
said in a telephone interview from Orem, Utah.
In the end, Protect Marriage estimates, as much as half of the nearly $40
million raised on behalf of the measure was contributed by Mormons.
Even with the Mormons’ contributions and the strong support of other religious
groups, Proposition 8 strategists said they had taken pains to distance
themselves from what Mr. Flint called “more extreme elements” opposed to rights
for gay men and lesbians.
To that end, the group that put the issue on the ballot rebuffed efforts by some
groups to include a ban on domestic partnership rights, which are granted in
California. Mr. Schubert cautioned his side not to stage protests and risk
alienating voters when same-sex marriages began being performed in June.
“We could not have this as a battle between people of faith and the gays,” Mr.
Schubert said. “That was a losing formula.”
But the “Yes” side also initially faced apathy from middle-of-the-road
California voters who were largely unconcerned about same-sex marriage. The
overall sense of the voters in the beginning of the campaign, Mr. Schubert said,
was “Who cares? I’m not gay.”
To counter that, advertisements for the “Yes” campaign also used hypothetical
consequences of same-sex marriage, painting the specter of churches’ losing tax
exempt status or people “sued for personal beliefs” or objections to same-sex
marriage, claims that were made with little explanation.
Another of the advertisements used video of an elementary school field trip to a
teacher’s same-sex wedding in San Francisco to reinforce the idea that same-sex
marriage would be taught to young children.
“We bet the campaign on education,” Mr. Schubert said.
The “Yes” campaign was denounced by opponents as dishonest and divisive, but the
passage of Proposition 8 has led to second-guessing about the “No” campaign,
too, as well as talk about a possible ballot measure to repeal the ban. Several
legal challenges have been filed, and the question of the legality of the
same-sex marriages performed from June to Election Day could also be settled in
court.
For his part, Mr. Schubert said he is neither anti-gay — his sister is a lesbian
— nor happy that some same-sex couples’ marriages are now in question. But, he
said, he has no regrets about his campaign.
“They had a lot going for them,” Mr. Schubert said of his opponents. “And they
couldn’t get it done.”
Mr. Otterson said it was too early to tell what the long-term implications might
be for the church, but in any case, he added, none of that factored into the
decision by church leaders to order a march into battle. “They felt there was
only one way we could stand on such a fundamental moral issue, and they took
that stand,” he said. “It was a matter of standing up for what the church
believes is right.”
That said, the extent of the protests has taken many Mormons by surprise. On
Friday, the church’s leadership took the unusual step of issuing a statement
calling for “respect” and “civility” in the aftermath of the vote.
“Attacks on churches and intimidation of people of faith have no place in civil
discourse over controversial issues,” the statement said. “People of faith have
a democratic right to express their views in the public square without fear of
reprisal.”
Mr. Ashton described the protests by same-sex marriage advocates as off-putting.
“I think that shows colors,” Mr. Ashton said. “By their fruit, ye shall know
them.”
Jesse McKinley reported from Sacramento,
and Kirk Johnson from Salt Lake City.
Mormons Tipped Scale in Ban on Gay Marriage, NYT,
15.11.2008,
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/11/15/us/politics/15marriage.html
Editorial
A Case
of Religious Discrimination
November
12, 2008
The New York Times
Displays of
the Ten Commandments have long been a lightning rod in constitutional law, and
so they are again today. The Supreme Court is hearing arguments in a challenge
to a city’s decision to allow the Ten Commandments to be placed in a public
park, while refusing to allow a different religion’s display. The court should
rule that that city’s decision violates the First Amendment prohibition on the
establishment of religion.
Pleasant Grove City, Utah, has a city park, known as Pioneer Park, that includes
various unattended displays. These include historical artifacts from the town, a
Sept. 11 memorial, and a Ten Commandments monument that was given to the city by
the Fraternal Order of Eagles, a national civic group.
A religious organization called Summum, which was founded in 1975 and is based
in Salt Lake City, applied to install its own monument in the park. The monument
it proposed would include the group’s Seven Principles of Creation (also called
the Seven Aphorisms), which it believes were inscribed on tablets handed down
from God to Moses on Mount Sinai.
Pleasant Grove City rejected Summum’s application. It told the group that it had
a decades-old practice of only accepting displays that directly related to the
city’s history, or that were donated by groups with longstanding ties to the
community. But this was not a firm policy at the time. It was only later that
the city adopted a written policy enshrining these criteria.
Summum sued, arguing that the rejection of its monument violated its right to
free speech under the First Amendment. The United States Court of Appeals for
the Tenth Circuit in Denver agreed. In allowing monuments in its park, the court
ruled, Pleasant Grove City had no right to discriminate on the basis of the
content of those monuments. The city was free to ban all unattended displays if
it wanted to. But once it decided to allow such displays, the court ruled, it
had no right to permit the Ten Commandments but bar the Seven Principles of
Creation.
The federal appeals court reached the right result, but regrettably, it ducked
the issue at the heart of the case, which turns on the Establishment Clause of
the First Amendment. The real problem is that Pleasant Grove City elevated one
religion, traditional Christianity, over another, Summum. The founders regarded
this sort of religious preference as so odious that they included a specific
provision in the First Amendment prohibiting it. The United States Court of
Appeals for the Tenth Circuit has a bad record on Establishment Clause cases,
which made it easier for all of the parties to treat the case as a simple speech
case.
But as the American Jewish Committee, Americans United for Separation of Church
and State and other groups argue in a friend-of-the-court brief, the Supreme
Court should not make this mistake. It should squarely confront the religious
discrimination underlying Pleasant Grove City’s rejection of Summum’s monument
and make clear that the city violated the Establishment Clause.
There is no shortage of churches, synagogues and private parcels of land where
the Ten Commandments could be displayed without the need to include the credos
of alternative faiths. Public property like Pioneer Park must be open to all
religions on an equal basis — or open to none at all.
A Case of Religious Discrimination, NYT, 12.11.2008,
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/11/12/opinion/12wed1.html
Billy
Graham Would Like to Meet,
Pray With Obama
November 8,
2008
Filed at 3:01 a.m. ET
The New York Times
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
CHARLOTTE,
N.C. (AP) -- Billy Graham has counseled every American president since Dwight
Eisenhower. But the evangelist known for his globe-trotting crusades has no
plans to mentor Barack Obama, though his son did say his father would like to
meet the president-elect and pray with him.
Graham turned 90 on Friday. His son, the Rev. Franklin Graham, told The
Associated Press that Billy Graham's mind remains sharp even as his body
continues to fail.
Billy Graham still remains engaged in the planning and direction of the ministry
he founded, but his days as a pastor to presidents have faded.
''My father feels like his time and day for that is over,'' Franklin Graham
said. ''But he would certainly like to meet (Obama) and pray with him.''
About 160 of Billy Graham's family and friends celebrated his birthday Friday at
his home in Montreat with fried chicken, barbecue and sweet tea. His ministry
had received some 100,000 greetings, including a video from President Bush.
His health contrasts starkly with his days commanding a ministry that put him
behind the pulpit to speak with 215 million people in more than 185 countries
and placed him in the confidence of some of the world's most powerful people.
Billy Graham's views are still respected in White House circles. Republican
presidential candidate John McCain called on Graham at his mountainside home
during the campaign, and Obama tried to meet him but was unable to due to the
preacher's poor health.
Though never partisan in his preaching, Billy Graham is a registered Democrat.
His son expressed concern about Obama's views on abortion and gay marriage -- an
issue Franklin Graham raised in a meeting with the Illinois senator -- saying
that he and is father are conservatives who believe the Bible speaks clearly on
those issues.
''President-elect Obama heard our position,'' said Franklin Graham, who now
heads the Charlotte-based Billy Graham Evangelistic Association. ''And I told
him that this was very difficult for us and hard for us. It's a moral issue that
we just can't back down on.''
Obama favors abortion rights, and does not support a constitutional amendment to
ban gay marriage. He supports civil unions and believes states should decide
their own laws about marriage.
Meanwhile, Billy Graham's health remains a concern among family and friends, who
note he still struggles with the loss of his wife, Ruth, who died last year.
He was hospitalized last year for nearly two weeks after experiencing intestinal
bleeding, and he has also had prostate cancer. Earlier this year, he had
elective surgery to update a shunt that controls excess fluid on his brain. The
shunt was first installed in 2000 and drains fluid from through a small tube,
relieving excess pressure that can cause symptoms similar to Parkinson's
disease.
''He could catch a cold and his life could come to an end,'' Franklin Graham
said. ''At his age, any little thing could be a serious event. We realize
that.''
Despite his limitations he still has one thing: a booming voice.
This weekend, that voice will once again cross borders when a message dubbed in
Portuguese will be broadcast in Brazil in an effort to bring some 1 million new
believers into the fold.
And privately, he has been working on a book about aging, trying to put his
late-life lessons into context for those soon to follow him.
''He's always been ready to die,'' Franklin Graham said. ''But nobody's prepared
him for getting old.''
Billy Graham Would Like to Meet, Pray With Obama, NYT,
8.11.2008,
http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/us/AP-Billy-Graham.html
Francis
Sayre Jr.,
National Cathedral Dean,
Dies at 93
October 12,
2008
The New York Times
By DENNIS HEVESI
The Very
Rev. Francis B. Sayre Jr., who in his 27 years as dean of the National Cathedral
in Washington raised his sonorous voice against McCarthyism, segregation,
poverty and the Vietnam War while presiding over construction of the cathedral’s
majestic Gloria in Excelsis Tower, died Oct. 3 at his home on Martha’s Vineyard,
in Massachusetts. He was 93.
The death was confirmed by Elizabeth Mullen, a spokeswoman for the Episcopal
cathedral, one of the most influential religious institutions in the nation.
Dean Sayre, a lanky, elegant man whose grandfather was President Woodrow Wilson,
first climbed into the pulpit of the monumental cathedral, in northwest
Washington, in 1951. Soon after, and well before the United States Supreme
Court’s landmark 1954 decision in Brown v. Board of Education, he was calling
for an end to school segregation.
Discrimination was a recurring theme for Dean Sayre. In a 1957 sermon, as the
civil rights movement gained momentum, he urged his parishioners to join the
struggle. He invoked the Prophet Elijah’s Old Testament challenge, “How long
will ye go limping between the two sides?” Then he said, “That question,
chilling in its candor, probes rather painfully; and I’m afraid we’ve been doing
a good bit of limping ourselves, and the testing may not be far off.”
In March 1965, Dean Sayre joined the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. on the
voting-rights march from Selma to Montgomery, Ala.
When Senator Joseph R. McCarthy of Wisconsin was railing at purported Communist
influence in the country in the 1950s, Dean Sayre was not afraid to denounce
him. In a 1954 sermon, he called McCarthy one of a crew of “pretended patriots”
and said, “There is a devilish indecision about any society that will permit an
impostor like McCarthy to caper out front while the main army stands idly by."
Francis Bowes Sayre Jr. was born in the White House on Jan. 17, 1915. He was the
fourth grandchild of President Wilson and the first-born of the president’s
daughter Jessie. His father was a Harvard law professor who later became an
assistant secretary of state.
Francis Jr. graduated from Williams College and received his divinity degree
from the Union Theological Seminary. He was a chaplain in the Navy in World War
II and later had a parish in Cleveland.
Dean Sayre married Harriet Hart in 1946; she died in 2003. He is survived by two
daughters, Jessie Maeck and Harriet Sayre McCord; two sons, Thomas Hart Sayre
and Nevin Sayre; and eight grandchildren.
In his nearly three decades presiding over the cathedral, the cornerstone for
which was laid in 1907, Dean Sayre oversaw phased construction that brought the
Gothic structure, known officially as the Cathedral Church of St. Peter and St.
Paul, to 90 percent completion. The cathedral’s 300-foot tower — with nearly 400
carved angels soaring on its four turrets and 32 balustrade pinnacles, and 73
bells inside — was completed in 1964.
Dean Sayre retired in 1978. Four years earlier, in an interview with The
Washington Post, he said, “Whoever is appointed the dean of the cathedral has in
his hand a marvelous instrument, and he’s a coward if he doesn’t use it.”
Francis Sayre Jr., National Cathedral Dean, Dies at 93,
NYT, 12.10.2008,
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/10/12/us/12sayre.html
An Effort to Market the Priesthood
April 15, 2008
The New York Times
By DAVID GONZALEZ
The banners hanging in the main corridor of St. Joseph’s Seminary in Yonkers
declare, “Through Faith We Grow.” The class portraits that line that very same
corridor tell the opposite tale. Half a century after the halcyon days when
several hundred men at a time studied to be ordained as priests for the Roman
Catholic Archdiocese of New York, only 22 are enrolled.
Even more alarming to Catholics, although six men expect to be ordained in May,
none are entering the first-year theology program. While seminary officials
attribute the sudden drop to extra preparatory course requirements that went
into effect this year, it is nonetheless a jarring development.
“You do what you can, as well as you can, for as long as you can, and hope it
works,” said Bishop Gerald Walsh, the seminary’s rector. “I’d be optimistic if
we had enough clergy present for young people and willing to talk to them.”
He will have enough — and then some — on Saturday, when Pope Benedict XVI visits
the seminary for a prayer service and youth rally. The pope’s mere presence will
be a jolt of encouragement to the seminarians. It will also offer them and other
priests and nuns the chance to mingle with 20,000 young people and plant a seed
for vocations.
There will be flashy videos, with quick cuts, stirring sound tracks and fearless
priests on New York streets. Goody bags will include glossy post cards of the
pontiff emblazoned with the word “Willkommen!” — and the Web address
nypriest.com, the seminary’s recruiting site. In coming weeks, the archdiocese
will send its schools posters that announce, “The World Needs Heroes,” including
one of black-suited priests crossing an intersection — looking like “Going My
Way” meets “Reservoir Dogs.”
Officials of the archdiocese do not apologize for embracing Madison Avenue
marketing to counter a sharp decline in vocations.
An increasingly secular and materialistic culture, reluctance among the young to
accept lifelong celibacy, and anger over the church’s handling of sexual abuse
scandals have all contributed to the precipitous drop, the officials say.
Vocational directors recognize that the public’s confidence has been shaken by
the scandals. They have chosen, however, to focus their marketing campaign on an
upbeat message.
The Rev. Luke Sweeney, director of vocations for the archdiocese — which covers
the Bronx, Manhattan, Staten Island and seven counties west and north of the
city — says the church must make its case if it hopes to reinvigorate a
priesthood that is increasingly elderly. “How do we get the ‘cool’ factor back
into the priesthood?” Father Sweeney said. “If we don’t sell the priesthood, we
can’t legitimately ask a young man to consider the priesthood as a vocation.”
What the seminary lacks in numbers, it may make up for in intensity and
eagerness. The seminarians speak of finding a joy and purpose that eluded them
in secular careers.
“We live in a very confusing world, a world where there is a lot of evil in it,
and good men need to step forward,” said Brian Graebe, a former high school
teacher who is finishing his first year. “You can stick your head in the sand,
or you can do something to change it. What more heroic life is there than to
touch these eternal mysteries?”
St. Joseph’s Seminary — informally known as Dunwoodie, after its neighborhood —
is hardly alone in its diminished fortunes. Nationally, the enrollment of
seminarians in four-year theology programs has been flat for the last decade,
currently numbering 3,286, said Sister Katarina Schuth, a professor at St. Paul
Seminary School of Divinity, part of the University of St. Thomas in Minnesota.
More than a quarter of those seminarians, she said, were foreign born.
“It’s a tough time for the church,” Sister Schuth said. “Dunwoodie has lost
proportionately more than most. It really is a puzzle, given the huge population
of New York and the boroughs.”
When St. Joseph’s opened in the late 1800s, its stone castle, topped by a
gleaming cupola and perched majestically atop a hill, was described by Bishop
Bernard McQuaid of Rochester as “the grandest seminary building in Christendom.”
It was also, according to the Rev. Thomas J. Shelley, a Fordham University
professor, one of the most progressive seminaries of its age, with an
intellectual tradition to rival the best Catholic universities, until a Vatican
crackdown on modernist thought a century ago led to a more orthodox approach.
Still, priests who were seminarians during the 1940s and ’50s recall a tranquil
place whose daily rhythms were marked by the clanging of the bell for classes,
meals and Mass. Many came from immigrant, working-class homes where the
religious life was seen as a step up.
The Rev. Gerard J. DiSenso, who grew up poor in the Bronx, said the first time
he had a room all to himself was when he entered the seminary in 1947.
That he was surrounded daily by more than 200 seminarians was encouraging and
humbling.
“You sensed that you were not absolutely needed,” said Father DiSenso, who is
now retired. “There were enough candidates that the seminary could afford to
discharge people.”
He still goes to the seminary weekly to use its library, though he has little
contact with the few men who are now there. “It’s like a shell of itself,” he
lamented. “It’s completely different.”
Yet some changes have been for the better, he and other priests of his
generation say. Unlike past years, when seminarians hardly left the grounds,
today’s students come and go. They are assigned to work in parishes each summer
to learn the demands they will encounter upon ordination.
And while enrollment is down, it better reflects the city’s changing
demographics, in that there are more Hispanic candidates, both at the seminary
and in a program aimed at cultivating high school students for the priesthood.
In addition to the 22 seminarians to be ordained for the archdiocese, 14
candidates were sent to Dunwoodie by religious orders.
The biggest change, however, is in the age and backgrounds of seminarians.
Decades ago, young men entered the seminary in their teens. Today, many have
college degrees and have worked in business, science or even the military —
experiences that can give them an added measure of empathy for their
congregants.
“They have more experience in the world, more than we had,” Bishop Walsh, the
rector, said. “They’re probably a little more secure in their choice.” Among the
current seminarians are former teachers, engineers, executives and even a
funeral director.
At 39, Ronald Perez is the oldest candidate for ordination next month. A former
paralegal at a Midtown law firm, he moved to New York from Los Angeles 10 years
ago to change his life. By the time he decided to become a priest, he had worked
at a failed manufacturing company and a dot-com that missed the boom.
His decision to become a priest was gradual, he said, coming after years of
involvement in activities at his home parish, St. Patrick’s Cathedral. He
credited the talks he had with visiting seminarians for nudging him closer to
the religious life. Like many other contemporary candidates for the seminary, he
started studying philosophy with other prospective priests.
“The door was open, so if it was for you, go on, but if not, leave, no questions
asked,” he said. “That first year was crucial. It gave me a chance to look back
at my life and the world around me. Nothing I could have done as an engineer or
a paralegal would give me contentment and happiness. Something was missing. I
realized what it was: becoming a priest.”
The other great shift in recent decades has been a growing conservatism among
seminarians, marked by an emphasis on ritual and on being set apart from the
laity. In interviews, some older priests said their ministry was rooted in a
deep understanding of the social and material needs of their congregants.
Younger priests and seminarians emphasized the sacramental aspects of their
vocation.
“Something that attracted me was the priest’s proximity to Christ at the Mass,”
said Steven Markantonis, a second-year student. “He is using the same words
Jesus used 2,000 years ago, when the bread and wine become the body and blood of
Christ.”
He said that after ordination, he expected to be “nothing more” than a parish
priest tending to his congregation’s spiritual life.
“Regarding their social needs, it is a fine line,” he said. “You have to know
where your job ends and another person’s job begins.”
Dean R. Hoge, a sociologist at Catholic University who has studied recently
ordained priests, said there were indications that they were less collaborative
with the laity. “They are more concerned about their status of being set apart,”
Dr. Hoge said. “The younger ones are more concerned about moral teaching. The
old guys hate to even talk about that.”
He cautioned that the American laity, now the most educated in history, want to
have a bigger say in parish decisions.
Bishop Walsh, who once served as a pastor in Washington Heights, home to many
struggling immigrants, said the church had to be understanding of its members
and their burdens.
“Many people in the parishes I was in had jobs on Sunday that they had to do to
put food on the table,” he said. “That is a religious value, too, raising a
family. We can’t say, if you do not go to church 52 Sundays a year, you are
failing as a Catholic.”
His seminarians, he said, should be gentle to the people in the pews. “People
will never forget the priest who is nasty to them,” he said. “They could care
less about who knows theology.”
However conservative the younger generation of clergy may be, Bishop Walsh said,
it is increasingly committed to working with young people. For winning new
recruits to the priesthood, no brochure or video can compete with the friendship
and example of a parish priest.
Anthony Mizzi-Gili Jr. still remembers the priests of his childhood, men who
graduated from Dunwoodie and earned his trust and admiration. After years of
indecision, he ultimately followed in their footsteps and is now a third-year
seminarian.
During midday Mass last week, he played the organ with gusto, as the chapel
reverberated with “Sing With All the Saints in Glory.”
Afterward, he took lunch in the refectory, which was built to hold hundreds but
now could fit the entire student body at a few tables. Mr. Mizzi-Gili looked
around but refused to sound discouraged. “It shows vocations are still there,”
he said. “Regardless of the numbers, we’re still there.”
An Effort to Market the
Priesthood, NYT, 15.4.2008,
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/04/15/us/
nationalspecial2/15seminarians.html
FACTBOX:
America's Roman Catholic population
Thu Apr 10,
2008
7:59am EDT
Reuters
(Reuters) -
Once solidly Irish, Italian and Polish, the U.S. Roman Catholic Church, the
largest Christian denomination in the country, has become increasingly Hispanic
in recent years.
Like other mainline denominations it is also losing members to competing faiths
such as evangelical Protestant churches.
Following are some facts and figures about the U.S. Catholic population, which
will greet Pope Benedict when he visits the United States from April 15 to 20.
- According to a recent nationwide survey by the Pew Forum on Religion and
Public Life, 23.9 percent of the adult U.S. population identifies itself as
Catholic. This tallies with estimates by the U.S. Catholic Church itself.
- Since the early 1970s the percentage of the population counting itself as
Catholic has remained stable at around 25 percent. But according to Pew, no
other major faith has experienced greater net losses with 31.4 percent of U.S.
adults saying they were raised Catholic and about one in 10 describing
themselves as former Catholics.
- In the face of these losses the Church has maintained its share of the U.S.
population by winning its own converts but mostly through immigration,
especially from Latin America. The United States Conference of Catholic Bishops
says that about 39 percent of U.S. Catholics are Hispanic.
- The USCCB also says that since 1960, 71 percent of U.S. Catholic population
growth has been Hispanic and that by the second decade of the 21st century, more
than 50 percent of U.S. Catholics will likely be Hispanic.
- The USCCB estimates that there are 2.3 million African American Catholics.
There is also a growing population of Vietnamese Catholics in areas like north
Texas.
- The U.S. Northeast remains one of the centers of American Catholicism, with 29
percent of all adults there belonging to the faith.
- One indicator of the resiliency of Catholicism in any country is the Mass
attendance rate among the flock. According to a 2007 survey by Georgetown
University's Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate, about one fifth of
U.S. Catholics attend Mass at least once a week while 11 percent go almost every
week.
(Sources: Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life;
United States Conference of
Catholic Bishops;
Reuters;
Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate)
(Compiled by Ed Stoddard;
Editing by Mike Conlon and Xavier Briand)
FACTBOX: America's Roman Catholic population,
R,
10.4.2008,
https://www.reuters.com/article/domesticNews/idUSN09459287
20080410
Southern
Baptists
Back a Shift on Climate Change
March 10,
2008
The New York Times
By NEELA BANERJEE
Signaling a
significant departure from the Southern Baptist Convention’s official stance on
global warming, 44 Southern Baptist leaders have decided to back a declaration
calling for more action on climate change, saying its previous position on the
issue was “too timid.”
The largest denomination in the United States after the Roman Catholic Church,
the Southern Baptist Convention, with more than 16 million members, is
politically and theologically conservative.
Yet its current president, the Rev. Frank Page, signed the initiative, “A
Southern Baptist Declaration on the Environment and Climate Change.” Two past
presidents of the convention, the Rev. Jack Graham and the Rev. James Merritt,
also signed.
“We believe our current denominational engagement with these issues has often
been too timid, failing to produce a unified moral voice,” the church leaders
wrote in their new declaration.
A 2007 resolution passed by the convention hewed to a more skeptical view of
global warming.
In contrast, the new declaration, which will be released Monday, states, “Our
cautious response to these issues in the face of mounting evidence may be seen
by the world as uncaring, reckless and ill-informed.”
The document also urges ministers to preach more about the environment and for
all Baptists to keep an open mind about considering environmental policy.
Jonathan Merritt, the spokesman for the Southern Baptist Environment and Climate
Initiative and a seminarian at Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary in Wake
Forest, N.C., said the declaration was a call to Christians to return to a
biblical mandate to guard the world God created.
The Southern Baptist signatories join a growing community of evangelicals
pushing for more action among believers, industry and politicians. Experts on
the Southern Baptist Convention noted the initiative marked the growing
influence of younger leaders on the discussions in the Southern Baptist
Convention.
While those younger Baptists remain committed to fight abortion, for instance,
the environment is now a top priority, too.
“In no way do we intend to back away from sanctity of life,” said the Rev. Dr.
Timothy George, dean of Beeson Divinity School in Birmingham, Ala.
Still, many powerful Southern Baptist leaders and agencies did not sign the
declaration, including the convention’s influential political arm, the Ethics
and Religious Liberty Commission.
Dr. Barrett Duke, vice president for public policy at the commission, played
down the differences between the declaration and the Southern Baptist
Convention’s position.
The declaration says in fact that lack of scientific unanimity should not
preclude “prudent action,” which includes changing individual habits and giving
“serious consideration to responsible policies that effectively address” global
warming.
The declaration is the outgrowth of soul-searching by Mr. Merritt, 25. The
younger Mr. Merritt said that for years he had been “an enemy of the
environment.” Then, he said, he had an epiphany.
“I learned that God reveals himself through Scripture and in general through his
creation, and when we destroy God’s creation, it’s similar to ripping pages from
the Bible,” Mr. Merritt said.
Southern Baptists Back a Shift on Climate Change, NYT,
10.3.2008,
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/03/10/us/10baptist.html
October 27, 1955
The silence
of a wise and noble Anglican voice
From the Guardian archive
Thursday October 27, 1955
Guardian
"Billy" Temple was one of the most
radical spirits to become Archbishop of Canterbury. For decades after his death,
aged 63, after only two years in office, many mourned him as the lost leader of
Anglicanism.
William Temple, whose death is
announced, was a son of the Most Rev Frederick Temple, Archbishop of Canterbury.
He had a brilliant university career, gaining a first in [Greats] ... [His]
appointment to Canterbury came as near to being demanded not only by Anglicans
but by the whole nation as anything could well be. His known sympathies with
drastic reform, not merely in Church but also in social and economic matters,
roused opposition in some quarters, and it was an open secret that efforts were
made to get some other man appointed.
The following is from the leader comment: There are few Englishmen who could so
ill be spared as William Temple, for there are few with his gift for leadership
and his wise, bold, tolerant and generous mind. Few men have made so great mark
on their age; none has done so much to draw together the spirit of the Church
and the spirit of the democracy.
He was the son of an archbishop, a man, like himself, of great intellectual
distinction and a courageous reformer. But those interests drew him, as they did
not draw his father, into active co-operation with working men on the basis of
comradeship and equality, and his whole life was influenced by that experience.
He was free from intellectual pride and could learn from the society of men
whose discontents he could admire and share, lessons that stood him in good
stead when he was a high dignitary of the Church.
The W.E.A. [Workers Educational Association] owed him an immense debt, but he
would have been the first to acknowledge that he owed a great debt to the W.E.A.
A French thinker has said that to every man of 20 the world is a scandal,
implying that as he gets older he begins to understand that it is better not to
try to interfere with arrangements that look ill enough but rest on some strong
basis. Temple was always a man of 20. He was never reconciled to injustice, and
... used every means to educate the Church and the nation about the problems of
social and international life. His statesmanlike qualities were shown in his
speeches on the war. Englishmen lament today not only the silence of a noble
voice but the loss of a mind whose help would have been invaluable in
unravelling the desperate problems of tomorrow.
From the Guardian archive > October 27, 1955 >
The silence of a
wise and noble Anglican voice,
G,
27.10.2006,
https://www.theguardian.com/news/1944/oct/27/
mainsection.fromthearchive
On This Day - July 19, 1951
From The Times Archives
The Canterbury Festival is now
a
more secular affair, and became
a major arts festival in 1984.
This year it
begins on October 9
THE narrow streets round the
cathedral are bright with streamers and flags to-day in honour of the Canterbury
festival. The prettiest decorations are in Mercery Lane, which points to Christ
Church Gate, the main entrance to the precincts. There baskets of flowers are
slung across the road on ropes of evergreens.
It was the cathedral’s own festival — normally an annual event, though none was
held last year — that opened to-day. The city’s festival will not, strictly
speaking, begin till a week next Monday; but the profusion of decorations
already in the streets is pleasantly suggestive of the close ties that link city
and cathedral here. Their happy relationship was equally reflected in the
congregation which this afternoon filled the cathedral for the introductory
service of the Cathedral festival programme, which will continue for 10 days.
Besides the large representation in the choir stalls of civic and county
authorities and dignitaries — the mayors of 22 Kent towns and the Barons of the
Cinque Ports were among them, all in their robes — there must have been a great
many Canterbury citizens in the nave. But the distinguishing feature of this
occasion was the world-wide distribution of the communities which had sent
delegations to the service. It was said that virtually all denominations of
Christians in every part of the world, except Roman Catholics, were represented.
The strongest national contingent from overseas was from the United Sates, with
26 representatives of various Churches.
From The Times Archives > On This Day - July 19, 1951,
The Times,
19.7.2005,
http://www.newsint-archive.co.uk/pages/main.asp
May
23, 1856
Churches must not dictate
workers' leisure
From The Guardian archive
Friday May 23, 1856
Guardian
Tyranny is never less entitled to
respect than when it attempts to appease its victims by sops. There is a vast
display of ostentatious activity just now among the leaders of religious
agitation about what is called a "boon to the working classes".
We can venture to disparage this
liberal offer because the Saturday half-holiday has long been an established
institution in Manchester, and its good effect on the social condition of the
community well ascertained.
Londoners cannot do better than to adopt it. The hard-working population of the
metropolis will only fall into error if they allow it to be supposed that the
arrangement of mutual benefit to themselves and their employers is accepted by
them in lieu of the personal freedom which they have an inalienable right to
exercise on another day of the week.
This is the tack on which their weakness is being assailed by some benevolent
friends of theirs, who never troubled themselves particularly about the
cessation of Saturday labour, or the performance of Saturday music, until they
became inflated with the notion of taking Sunday under their own control, and
dictating their own mode of keeping it to others, who dissent entirely from
their views of Sabbath observance.
We believe [many of them find it] sorely against the grain to have to raise a
hand in propagation of any kind of popular amusement.
It is probable that they are tormented by a remorseful apprehension that they
are making terms with the powers of evil. It is a pity that they should put
themselves to so much unnecessary pain for the sake of an end which will
certainly not be attained.
A little leisure time, more or less, in the week will not produce contented
acquiescence in an unwarrantable interference with social liberty. For this kind
of irritation there is no lenitive but justice. The working classes will even
concede far too much if they exert themselves to show, as they certainly may,
that they cannot make use of their free hours on Saturday afternoon exactly as
they would, if they were allowed to do so, on Sunday.
The proper answer is that they claim, in the disposal of all their hours, not to
be bound by the notions of religious obligation which any dominant church or
party in the legislature may entertain.
It is characteristic of the arrogance with which the puritanical faction comport
themselves, that they positively vaunt this early closing on Saturday as a
compromise between the demands of the people and their own pretensions.
From The Guardian archive > May 23, 1856 >
Churches must not
dictate workers' leisure, G,
Republished 23.5.2006,
https://www.theguardian.com/news/1856/may/23/
mainsection.fromthearchive
July 3, 1852
Lord Derby looses bigotry
on the streets
From the
Guardian archive
Saturday July 3, 1852
Guardian
We regret to have to record one of
those disgraceful riots which exist only where the lower class Irish dwell in
considerable numbers - arising out of the perpetual feuds between the Irish
catholics and the lower class of English factory hands.
There has been in Stockport a bad
feeling between the two classes, partly on trade quarrels, partly on national
grounds, but chiefly the result of religious differences between ignorant Irish
catholics on the one hand, and as ignorant English protestants on the other.
Sunday last was the anniversary of the usual procession of all Roman catholic
scholars connected with the three chapels in Stockport. The recent royal
proclamation against Roman catholic processions was much discussed. Party
feelings amongst the lower classes ran high, the catholics boasting they would
not be stopped, and the protestants declaring that their processions ought to be
put down. The procession, however, did take place on Sunday afternoon, and, on
the whole, passed off quietly.
The only badges or symbols that might be supposed to contravene the
Proclamation, were a ball and cross, and a gilt dove. But very suddenly (on
Tuesday) considerable numbers of English and Irish made their appearance, and
commenced fighting with sticks and other weapons. The police were attacked; the
military sent for.
A considerable number of men and youths were conveyed to the Court House. Many
were severely wounded, and from four o'clock in the morning till noon, four
medical men were engaged in dressing their hurts.
Comment: The riot appears the direct offspring of Lord Derby's proclamation
against Roman catholic processions and costumes. We cannot think the catholics
blameless in persisting in their procession. But the irretrievable disgrace
belongs to the bullies and ruffians who abuse the name of Protestants.
The sacrilegious ransacking of churches, the fiendish destruction of houses and
furniture, and the most cruel and cowardly murder, are memorials of protestant
zeal and enlightenment alone. The affair was more like a battle than a fight.
The bloodshed, the violence, and the rapine are protestant handiwork, not in
self-defence, but in brutal and licentious phrenzy
Had not the tory government, by a popularity-hunting attack upon Roman catholic
ceremonials, cast about to stimulate the sectarian passions of the electors, we
should have been free from the shame and danger.
From the archive > July 3, 1852 >
Lord Derby looses bigotry on
the streets,
G, Republished 3.7.2006,
https://www.theguardian.com/news/1852/jul/03/
mainsection.fromthearchive
November 23 1828
The Catholic question
From The Guardian archive
November 23 1828
From the Manchester Guardian
Our columns this day contain two
long advertisements in reference to the Catholic question; the one from the
enemies of concession; the other from those who are anxious that ministers
should not be embarrassed in the adoption of those measures in respect to it,
which are obviously necessary for the pacification of Ireland, and to the
ultimate welfare of the empire.
The former of these documents is the fruit of those importunate appeals with
which our Tory papers have teemed for many weeks past, in favour of Brunswick
clubs. But it does not, we are happy to see, breathe the truculent spirit with
which we have been so greatly dis gusted in the columns of our contemporaries.
There are none of the almost treasonable threats of the Leeds Brunswickers; nor
is it proposed so far to imitate the French at the worst periods of the
revolution. All that our anti-Catholic friends have in contemplation is to
relate to the legislature the story of their fears in the constitutional form of
a petition — a very moderate and tolerably unobjectionable proceeding. If they
really are afraid, of course they are entitled to say so, however irrational
their apprehension may be. Gentlemen have as much right to make the Catholics a
bug-bear, as the Yorkshireman the other day had to fancy his next door neighbour
a witch. But the Catholics are as much warranted in claiming that they should
not be subjected to punishment (and degradation is punishment) on account of the
terrors of others, as the poor woman at Leeds was to be protected against the
unaccountable fancy which inspired her prosecutor with such a penchant for
pinching and bleeding her.
We must confine ourselves strictly to a few observations, suggested by the
documents before us. The number of signatures to the anti-Catholic requisition
(exclusive of the clergy, whom we consider as of no weight in this matter,) is
we believe 506. Of these, however, there is a very large proportion whom we,
with a very extensive knowledge of the inhabitants of Manchester, now hear of
for the first time.
To the counter declaration, the number of names, with the residences of each
attached, is 431. A considerable number, where the residences were not stated,
have, we understand, been erased.
The anti-Catholic requisition contains the names of one barrister and two
physicians. The counter-declaration has two barristers and 11 physicians. We
might carry this principle of comparison much further, but the late hour at
which we are writing absolutely compels us to pause.
We shall merely add that we see in the papers before us a triumphant, and to us
most gratifying confirmation of the assertion we have repeatedly ventured to
make — that amongst the wealthy, intelligent and educated portion of the
community in which we live, there is a decided preponderance in favour of the
settlement of Catholic claims.
From The Guardian archives >
The Catholic question, from the
Manchester Guardian,
November 23 1828, The Guardian Review, p. 24, 16.4.2005.
https://www.theguardian.com/books/2005/apr/16/
featuresreviews.guardianreview5
On This Day - March 7, 1817
From The Times Archives
The sect founded by the former
chambermaid
and self-proclaimed mystic, Joanna Southcott,
attracted more than
100,000 adherents.
The Times was sceptical about her prophecies
and condemned
the actions of her followers
A PREACHER in a chapel in Sheffield
was deputed by his congregation to wait upon one George Turner at Leeds, a high
priest of that class of believers. He went to Leeds and had a conference with
Turner who gave him his instructions. On his return, he called his congregation
together on Thursday night, the 16th of January last; the doors were closed, and
the preacher told them that he had received a command from Turner, believing it
to be from God, that all the congregation and believers were to cease working on
the Monday morning following. All those who had any effects were to tell them
and deposit all the money they had into his hands, declaring at the same time,
that George Turner had appointed him the Lord’s Treasurer.
The believers in George Turner’s mission generally struck work –— that is
declined to do any thing; and our informant says, that he abstained from
working, but he did not sell his furniture, though a great number of others did.
Many sums of money were paid at different times and the believers lived in
feasting and riot for two weeks, until the money that had been contributed was
exhausted.
On the same night, __________ proclaimed from the pulpit, that he was authorised
by George Turner, who had it in a command from God that on the 28th of that
month there would be a violent earthquake which would swallow up all churches
and chapels in England. After that the destroying angel would go through the
land and smite with death in every house all persons that had ridiculed Turner’s
faith.
The
Times, On this day, 7.3.2005.
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