When you vandalize a church, make sure you get the right one!

800px-facade_of_saint_patricks_by_david_shankbone-300x225

I actually couldn’t help laughing when I read about this – and I’m a pastor! In the fight to defend traditional values this story pretty much tells you how we got to where we are today.

After unknown persons, probably upset about California banning homosexual marriage, spray-painted swastikas on a San Francisco Catholic Church, the pastor was upset. But not for the reason you might think. From KCBS, out West, comes this gem:

Vandals may have marked up the wrong church Saturday night in an apparent revolt against Proposition 8 supporters.

Black spray-painted swastikas marred the front of Most Holy Redeemer Catholic Church in San Francisco’s Castro district. Though the church itself is gay friendly, the proposed ban on gay marriage had support from prominent Catholics up to and including Pope Benedict.

Pastor Steve Meriweather told KCBS his parishioners actually share the vandals’ sentiment against Prop 8. “I think it’s unfortunate that they selected our community to attack,” said Meriweather, “because it’s the wrong one.”

If only they had asked the good pastor first he might have directed them to a church more worthy of being vandalized!

Photo credit: Facade of St. Patrick’s Cathedral, New York by David Shankbone

Did protestor say there was no point in Jews having survived Holocaust?

The following video shows protesters in Hartford, mostly supporting Hamas if we are to judge by appearances.

What is truly appalling is the reaction of a woman (named Levy, no less) who apparently says there was no point in Jews having survived Hitler’s concentration camps to come out into the world and behave in this fashion. Watch for this at 2:00 into the video. I had to watch this several times to be sure I saw what I saw.

What is sadly ironic here is that Hitler’s Final Solution was worsened through the instigation of a man we might nowadays call a radical jihadist, Amin al-Husseini, the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem.

Who was al-Husseini? He was a godfather of the modern pan-Islamic movement which seeks to destroy Israel (and Jews) today – and did so long before 1967, or 1948. Few are aware of the Nazi-Islamic connection during World War II. Al-Husseini was known to have personally urged Hitler and his underlings to liquidate the Jews. Evidence is abundant as to this fact and even Wikipedia has published a picture of a 1943 telegram from Himmler to the Grand Mufti in which he lauds the Mufti’s efforts:

‘To the Grand Mufti: The National Socialist [Nazi] movement of Greater Germany has, since its inception, inscribed upon its flag the fight against the world Jewry. It has therefore followed with particular sympathy the struggle of freedom-loving Arabs, especially in Palestine, against Jewish interlopers. In the recognition of this enemy and of the common struggle against it lies the firm foundation of the natural alliance that exists between the National Socialist Greater Germany and the freedom-loving Muslims of the whole world. In this spirit I am sending you on the anniversary of the infamous Balfour declaration my hearty greetings and wishes for the successful pursuit of your struggle until the final victory.’ Reichsfuehrer S.S. Heinrich Himmler

Yugoslavia sought to indite the Mufti as a war criminal for his role in raising 20,000 Muslim S.S. troops to kill Jews in Central Europe.

A convicted and executed Nazi war criminal was quoted as saying:

The Mufti was one of the initiators of the systematic extermination of European Jewry and had been a collaborator and advisor of Eichmann and Himmler in execution of this plan…He was one of Eichmann’s best friends and had constantly incited him to accelerate the extermination measures. I heard him say, accompanied by Eichmann, he had visited incognito the gas chamber of Auschwitz.

It is time for people to realize what they are really doing when they support Hamas: they are supporting an ideology that wishes to replicate the tactics – and the results – of al-Husseini… and Hitler.

(Video from the Hartford Courant.)

Straight talk about straight marriage

wedding-ring-300x200

Recommended to kick off your new year: some arguments for heterosexual marriage which are not religiously based. After all, some like to say that all truth is God’s truth; therefore, there must be some non-religious way to explain why marriage has always been heterosexual. Enter the Witherspoon Institute’s Patrick Lee:

In a well-ordered society, the state should give legal recognition to real marriage, promote it, protect it, and privilege it over other sexual arrangements—as a good for the spouses and the children their union may form. The state has an essential interest in the health of marriage. Generally speaking, children will receive the best and most loving care if they are raised by their biological parents, who have formed a community aimed at providing the most suitable environment for any children they may help bring into being. Almost always, children can count on their mothers to care for them when they are young; the institution of marriage is dedicated to ensuring, as much as possible, that fathers also will fulfill their responsibilities to the children they help procreate, and to the mothers of their children. Furthermore, where the institution of marriage is strong, people’s sexual passions and energies—frequently difficult to control, often leading to self-centeredness and exploitation—are channeled toward intelligible goods, namely, marriage and family.

Unfortunately, that’s seen as a little too quaint in many quarters – particularly the quarter we live in. Read the rest here at Public Discourse.

Atheist recognizes that Africa needs God

British author and former member of Parliament Matthew Parris has penned a simply remarkable piece in which, despite his atheism, he recognizes that Africa needs God. His own youth on that continent and his adult experience there have led him to see that there is a difference between Christian mission and what other “non-governmental organizations,” or NGO’s, can do.

Now a confirmed atheist, I’ve become convinced of the enormous contribution that Christian evangelism makes in Africa: sharply distinct from the work of secular NGOs, government projects and international aid efforts. These alone will not do. Education and training alone will not do. In Africa Christianity changes people’s hearts. It brings a spiritual transformation. The rebirth is real. The change is good.

This goes to the heart of the matter: that Christianity – or, more accurately, Christ – changes people.

In addition to this frank recognition of the reality of the Gospel’s effect, Mr. Parris punctures the balloons of multiculturalism which have been allowed to float through Western naïveté and historical illiteracy:

There’s long been a fashion among Western academic sociologists for placing tribal value systems within a ring fence, beyond critiques founded in our own culture: “theirs” and therefore best for “them”; authentic and of intrinsically equal worth to ours.

I don’t follow this. I observe that tribal belief is no more peaceable than ours; and that it suppresses individuality. People think collectively; first in terms of the community, extended family and tribe. This rural-traditional mindset feeds into the “big man” and gangster politics of the African city: the exaggerated respect for a swaggering leader, and the (literal) inability to understand the whole idea of loyal opposition.

Bingo. All cultures are not created equal. Cultures are fed and informed by their underlying worldview. The West finds itself under siege, internally and externally, because of an appalling and unwarranted self-doubt. So, in the case of Africa, the dismissal of Western culture blinds Europeans and Americans to the reality that African tribal belief, Islamic jihad, shari’a law, etc., are the wellspring of so many of the problems infesting the region.

Be sure to read the entire article.

Praying for peace in the Middle East

middle_east_geographic-300x268

It’s out of fashion to say it out loud but nonetheless true that there will be no permanent peace in the Middle East (or anywhere else) until we have the actual presence of the Prince of Peace with us. We believe that a king, Messiah Jesus, will reign in righteousness and that this reign will be personal, literal, and physical. (Acts 1:11) Having said this, I want to be quick to say that Christians are called to be at peace with others (Romans 12:18) and to make peace. Christians should imitate God by upholding and working for justice for all people. This being the case, how should we assess the current conflict between Israel and the Palestinians of Gaza?

In Connecticut, we have a blog, which I won’t dignify with a link, which refers to Israeli Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni as Israel’s “Blond Bitch of Belsen.” Besides being crude, the moral equation between the Holocaust and Israel’s own right of self-defense is offensive in the extreme.

The Arab-Israeli wars have long been a David-and-Goliath scenario, but the Left has skillfully transformed the public’s perception such that Israel, vastly outmanned and tiny in territory has been transformed into the Goliath. The issues are of course complex, but the simplistic thinking is not to be found among Biblical Christians, as the media would have us believe.

How should we begin to think about Gaza?

First, it would be irrational to separate this conflict from the larger context of the Jihad which is being waged against Israel and other Western nations by Muslim radicals. To say this is not to agree with or support everything that the Bush Administration has done, but it would be foolhardy not to take the statements of the jihadists at face value – something the U. S. has seldom done, at least publicly. Christians must recognize that radical Muslims do not believe their own apocalyptic vision can unfold properly until there is effective war against the Jews. Not enough people understand that Muslims are expecting their own Messiah, called the Mahdi, whom they believe will subjugate the world with the help of none other than Jesus, called Isa by Muslims. Many are now noting that the Muslim “end times” seems to present us with a dark mirror of the biblical apocalypse in which their Messiah seems to fulfill the deeds and functions of the Biblical Antichrist. In any event, there can be little doubt of coordination between Hamas, Hezbollah, Iran and others.

Second, the world’s prejudices are never more on display than when Israel makes a military move. Someone has cleverly pointed out that if Israel were to make a “proportional response,” it would have to fire off 2,000 rockets unannounced into Gaza and rejoice by handing out candies when there were casualties. Only Israel is held to such a standard, which is designed solely to hamstring it, pure and simple. When Jews are killed for being Jews, no one cares.

Third, Christians are no longer in agreement that the land of Israel belongs to Israel by Divine grant. The persistent, malicious name-calling of the Left has ensured that anyone holding such a position is referred to as a “Christian Zionist” and his opinions are therefore to be dismissed out of hand. Yet Christians do well to remember the anger of God against those who divide the land, and would deny Israel even a sliver of the Middle East.

If ever in doubt as to how to pray, Christians should pray for his Kingdom to come, and His Will to be done!

More churches added to Connecticut Church Map

Here are some fresh updates to our Church Map, as we’ve been seeking to fill geographic “holes” that have existed in the map since its earliest days. If you would like to submit your church or another church for inclusion, please let us know.

Granby: Valley Brook Community Church

Lebanon: Lebanon Bible Church

Middlefield: Victory Christian Church

Moosup: Faith Community Church

New Milford: Bible Baptist Church

Norwalk: Northeast Community Church

Norwich: Norwich Alliance Church

Pawcatuck: Lighthouse Community Baptist Church

Pleasant Valley: Praise Christian Fellowship

Southbury: Calvary Fellowship

Stamford: Bethany Assembly of God

Suffield: River Valley Fellowship Church

Voluntown: Living Word Fellowship

Updates to Connecticut Church Map

Our Church Map, powered by Google Maps, is a great resource and it’s still growing as we continue to add Evangelical and Charismatic churches across the state. Click on a pin and you can find information such as:

  • church location
  • church web address
  • church phone number
  • link to additional info on the church from Google

We hope to add additional features in the future, so stay tuned.

We’ve also added a few more churches to the Map:

Have a church you’d like to see added? Let us know!

You can be polled on gay marriage – but you can’t vote on it!

gavel-300x200

So says the Family Institute of Connecticut’s Executive Director, Peter Wolfgang, in a welcome return to blogging this week. Wolfgang assails the approach of our new media-political regime. Speaking about the Kerrigan case, Wolfgang says:

The court released its decision on the Friday before Columbus Day weekend. The following Tuesday a Courant/UConn poll was released purporting to show that most Connecticut residents approved of the judicial imposition of same-sex marriage.

This is how a “revolution from above” is conducted. Step 1: Have four judges undemocratically force same-sex “marriage” on Connecticut. Step 2: Have the media rush in to say to the public, “Move along, folks. Nothing to see here. Most of you are OK with this. Only a few rabble-rousers oppose it.”

But how accurate is a poll taken over a weekend — particularly a three-day holiday weekend — when many people are away? The Courant’s poll on the constitutional convention, for instance, begun on a Saturday, misjudged the “no” vote by 20 points.

Perhaps this is why those who cite polls to buttress their claim that Connecticut residents support same-sex marriage are unwilling to let those same residents vote on it.

Wow. There – he said it. The simple fact of the matter is that in States like ours, the public opinion is not listened to, much less adhered to. We cannot even say that it is influenced or shaped any more so much as it is managed. The results are challenging, both for a weary public who want to be “fair-minded” and for a weak Church.

Carl Trueman writes a sobering post in Reformation 21, the online magazine of the Alliance of Confessing Evangelicals, called “Goodbye Larry King, Hello Jerry Springer.” Trueman’s word picture neatly captures the marginalization of evangelicals and anyone else who might dare to challenge the emerging homosexual orthodoxy:

You can have the hippest soul patch in town, and quote Coldplay lyrics till the cows come home; but oppose homosexuality and the only television program interested in having you appear will soon be The Jerry Springer Show when the audience has become bored of baiting the Klan crazies. Indeed, evangelicals will be the new freaks….

When church leaders, faculty, and the movers and shakers of the evangelical world find themselves excluded from the reputable avenues of power and cultural and professional influence and preferment, then we will see what their doctrine of scripture is really like, whether it really is solid, whether it really shapes their lives, their actions, and their priorities. The question is: will those in positions of authority in the schools, colleges, denomination and seminaries have the backbone to do what is necessary? Will they be willing to consider the reproach of Christ greater than the treasures of Egypt? When the invitations to the Larry King Show dry up, to be replaced by those from Jerry Springer, will they hold the line? I wish I had seen more evidence that that was the case and could be more confident about the future.

We need only look at how quickly Rick Warren fell from Media Darling status once he took a biblical and yet gracious stand against homosexual marriage in California. I think we shall all soon be required to give a reason for the hope that lies within us – and be able to articulate what the living out of that hope entails, and why.

Obama creates shock, fury by picking Rick Warren

President-elect Obama has angered many supporters – and probably many detractors – by asking California Pastor Rick Warren to give the invocation at the upcoming inaugural ceremonies. Politico.com reports:

“Your invitation to Reverend Rick Warren to deliver the invocation at your inauguration is a genuine blow to LGBT Americans,” the president of Human Rights Campaign, Joe Solomonese, wrote Obama Wednesday. “[W]e feel a deep level of disrespect when one of architects and promoters of an anti-gay agenda is given the prominence and the pulpit of your historic nomination.”

The rapid, angry reaction from a range of gay activists comes as the gay rights movement looks for an opportunity to flex its political muscle. Last summer gay groups complained, but were rebuffed by Obama, when an “ex-gay” singer led Obama’s rallies in South Carolina. And many were shocked last month when voters approved the California ban.

“There is a lot of energy and there’s a lot of anger and I think people are wanting to direct it somewhere,” Solomonese told Politico.

The selection of Warren to preside at the inauguration is not a surprise move, but it is a mirror image of President Bill Clinton’s early struggles with issues of gay rights. Obama has worked, and at times succeeded, to bridge the gap between Democrats and evangelical Christians, who form a solid section of the Republican base.

Warren has been more outspoken than usual lately about issues seen as purely moral, particularly gay marriage. This was unavoidable given the fur flying in California over Proposition 8. A CNN piece pointed out Warren’s objections, the kinds of objections that make sense but don’t get much airplay these days.

Warren’s support of California’s Proposition 8, a measure that outlaws same sex marriage in the state, sparked the ire of many gay rights proponents earlier this fall.

Warren, who has made it a practice not to endorse candidates or political parties, wrote in October that the issue of gay marriage is not a political issue, but instead “a moral issue that God has spoken clearly about.”

“For 5,000 years, every culture and every religion — not just Christianity — has defined marriage as a contract between men and women,” Warren wrote in a newsletter to his congregation. “There is no reason to change the universal, historical definition of marriage to appease 2 percent of our population.”

Warren also stirred controversy earlier this week when he told Beliefnet.com his grounds for opposing same-sex marriage laid primarily on his right of free speech.

“There were all kinds of threats that if [Proposition 8] did not pass, then any pastor could be considered doing hate speech if he shared his views that he didn’t think homosexuality was the most natural way for relationships, and that would be hate speech.”

Warren has also spoken out against abortion and defended Christians from the knocks they have taken (unwarranted in my view) for being “single-issue voters.” In a recent interview with Beliefnet, Warren outlines a fascinating discussion he had with Democratic senators:

And I went around the room and when I came to Chuck Schumer I said, “Chuck, how bad, if you had a candidate and he was right in EVERY SINGLE AREA that you agreed with but he’s a holocaust denier, there’s no way you’re gonna vote for a holocaust denier. That’s a single issue issue for you. And I said, “For these people who believe life begins at birth, alright–at conception–it’s an America holocaust. They believe that there’s 40 million people who should be here. And to them that’s an issue.”

These views may be starting to change some people’s views of Warren, sometimes seen as the poster child for a New Evangelicalism that isn’t as in-your-face about the contents of the Gospel and moral issues. But Warren has probably never been what the political Left would like people to believe he is.

Likewise, many Evangelicals have been uncomfortable with Warren because of this perceived overemphasis on social action at the expense of evangelism. Warren himself seems to be annoyed at this and takes pains to correct false impressions, as seen in a USA Today profile earlier this month:

He never stopped planting churches, he says, but as he spoke around the world, he realized government, business and non-profits could all share in efforts to reconcile global conflict.

“All of a sudden, I started having people of goodwill who were not Christian or not church members saying, ‘We’d like to do that. We’d like to partner with you on helping the poor. We’d like to help end AIDS. We’d like to help end corruption and injustice.’

“So,” he says, “I started making the appeal for people of goodwill, whether they happened to believe, as I do, that Jesus Christ is the son of God, or not, to work together on the areas where we can work together, and not worry about the areas where we can’t.”

Says Warren, “We’ll work with anybody who wants to stop AIDS.” And that, he says, “really makes the fundamentalists mad.”

“But when people say Saddleback is not a evangelistic church,” or that Warren is not standing for Christ all the time, “there’s a spiritual term for that,” he says.

“It’s when you cross an abalone with a crocodile. It’s a crock of baloney.”

If he can infuriate so many different kinds of people he must be doing something right.