Category: Religion

re·li·gion: a set of beliefs concerning the cause, nature, and purpose of the universe, esp. when considered as the creation of a superhuman agency or agencies, usually involving devotional and ritual observances, and often containing a moral code governing the conductof human affairs. Posts in this category pertain to religious matters and issues.

  • The Responses of Civilized Society

    Unlike the completely alleged, never-substantiated, and since-retracted Newsweek story, much religiously motivated desecration takes place in the world. Not surprisingly, the vast majority is perpetrated by extremist Muslims. (Referenced in the articles linked: desecration of Joseph’s tomb and the murder of a young rabbi who tried to save a Torah, a Jewish cemetary on the Mount of Olives, the Jewish religious school at the Shalom al Yisrael synagogue in Jericho, the Christian Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem, photographer Andres Serrano’s ”Piss Christ” — a photograph of a crucifix submerged in urine, Sinead O’Connor ripping up a photograph of Pope John Paul II during a Saturday Night Live appearance, and the destruction of two priceless, 1,500-year-old statues of Buddha by the Taliban government in Afghanistan.) How do Jews, Christians, and people of other faiths respond?

    CNSNews reports that the usual response is not outraged violence, but grief:

    “No one has ever been killed [over a desecration],” Rosenblum said. “There have been desecrations here in shuls [synagogues],” he said. “It provoked rending of garments.”

    And what of the Christian response?

    Christian places have also been desecrated. The most prominent example was the Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem, seized and held by Palestinian militants for more than a month. The church is built over the grotto where many Christians believe Jesus was born.

    During the 39-day siege, in which the militants held clergy captive, militants reportedly urinated on the floor, used pages of the Bible as toilet paper and stole all the gold and other religious ornaments they could find.

    When the militants left, the Christian response was to clean the place in time for Sunday Mass.

    Columnist Jeff Jacoby explains why Islam is disrespected in a Boston Herald column today. While Muslim nations rage, civilized society reacts to similar (and much worse) treatment without resorting to violence:

    Of course, there was a good reason all these bloody protests went unremembered in the coverage of the Newsweek affair: They never occurred.

    Christians, Jews, and Buddhists don’t lash out in homicidal rage when their religion is insulted. They don’t call for holy war and riot in the streets. It would be unthinkable for a mainstream priest, rabbi, or lama to demand that a blasphemer be slain.

    Of course, I find it completely hypocritical that a society that encourages “honor” killings of rape victims – not to mention all the other myriad human-rights violations of Muslim women – claims to value a mere book so highly.

    And let us not forget: the one documented incident of Qa’ran desecration at Gitmo was perpetrated by… a Muslim prisoner:

    Other Pentagon officials said the only person who had desecrated the Koran at Guantanamo Bay was a detainee who ripped pages from the Muslim holy book and used them to plug a toilet as a way to protest his detention.

  • Christian Carnival LXX

    A Pentinent Blogger has posted Christian Carnival LXX: Long Day’s Journey Out Of Night:

    The night is far spent, the day is at hand: let us therefore cast off the works of darkness, and let us put on the armour of light.

    Romans 13:12

  • Christian Carnival LXIX: Semicolon

    Christian Carnival LXIX has arrived, hosted this week by Semicolon:

    Welcome to the Christian Carnival and to Semicolon. I pray that you will be edified, educated, and encouraged as I was in reading and thinking through ALL sixty of the entries for this week. Yes, I read them all. Have fun as we blog through Ephesians 6.

  • Slashdot Does Narnia?

    brightMystery links to a discussion of Disney’s upcoming Narnia movie at – of all places – Slashdot. The good professor rightly points out the bizarre nature of such a topic at Slashdot, and then describes first one commentor expressing discomfort that CS Lewis’ classic Chronicles of Narnia series “was really Christian propaganda”, and second, the reactions of later commentors “basically calling the first one out for expecting a writer not to write from the standpoint of his religious beliefs”.

    Quite funny, actually. Anyone with an IQ sufficiently high to frequent a site such as Slashdot and who has read the Chronicles of Narnia at any point past the age of, say, twelve should realize that Lewis – much more than just writing “from the standpoing of his religious beliefs” – wrote the series as an allegory of the Bible.

    Unfortunately, I agree with the professor’s assessment of the eventual outcome of a Disney production of The Lion, The Witch, and The Wardrobe (to be titled Narnia as previously mentioned).

  • What would Jesus Do…?

    Arianna Huffington acrimoniously asks “What would Jesus do… with Tom Delay?” and then fatuously answers her own question:

    Would Jesus strong-arm lobbyists to pay for his golfing trip to St. Andrew’s in Scotland? Would Jesus let a lobbyist pay for him to stay at the Bethlehem — I mean, London — Four Seasons?

    Would Jesus, were he to smoke, and were he to be smoking on federal property, and were he asked politely not to, then reply: “I am the federal government.”

    Would Jesus say, “Judges need to be intimidated. They need to uphold the Constitution… We’re going to go after them in a big way.”

    If DeLay and his pious pals had been around for the Sermon on the Mount, perhaps the most famous line about humility ever spoken would have been given a rewrite:

    “Blessed are the meek, for they shall inherit the earth… unless the pushy hire Jack Abramoff at 750 shekels an hour; then the meek (and the Indians) are screwed.”

    Oh, why not? I’ll have a go at it. Of course, I’ll just use one example – actual words of Jesus – as He might have responded to Arianna Huffington and her rock-wielding circle of friends:

    If any of you is without sin, let him be the first to throw a stone at her.(John 8:7 NIV)

  • Christian Carnival LXVIII

    This week’s Christian Carnival is hosted by Kentucky Packrat.

  • Wittenberg Gate: Christian Carnival

    Wittenberg Gate hosts this week’s Christian Carnival:

    Posts are divided into the following categories: Apologetics, Bible Study, Books, Christian Living, Church Issues, Culture & Current Events, Family, Gospel, and Theology.

    Do you think anything I write is carnival-worthy?

  • Pseudo-Polymath: Christian Carnival LXVI

    Christian Carnival LXVI, brought to you by Pseudo-Polymath:

    Welcome to Christian Carnival number LXVI. Thank you all very much for the time and effort XX of you have put into preparing the essays which make this carnival possible.

    The theme for today’s Carnival is to try be akin to liturgy, that is I’m going to try to organize the posts as best I can to parallel a service of worship. What that means is that after reading the (your) wonderful essays, I categorized it by what part of the liturgy it evoked for me. So enough about me, let’s go in a join the service.

  • Benedict XVI

    Pope Benedict XVIGlad to see another conservative elected as the next Pope. And a fairly speedy election, as well:

    With unusual speed and little surprise, Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger of Germany became Pope Benedict XVI on Tuesday, a 78-year-old transitional leader who promises to enforce strictly conservative policies for the world’s Roman Catholics.

    I’m sure there’s a lot of commentary out there, but I’ve been too busy researching for my upcoming mission trip to Oaxaca, Mexico, to scout it out…

    (Hat tip:Drudge)

  • The 65th Christian Carnival

    The 65th Christian Carnival is up today at AnotherThink. Interestingly, the carnival was posted from Oaxaca:

    I am posting this week’s Christian Carnival from Oaxaca, Mexico, a land of many languages and cultures. I’m using Paul’s nine evidences of the transformed life as a way of forcing some structure on your entries.

    You’ll find a section for each “fruit of the Spirit” rendered in English, in Greek, and in one of the indigenous languages of Mexico—this last accompanied by a semi-literal translation.

    I hope this serves as a reminder that we will stand before Jesus with men and women from every nation and tribe and people and language. (Rev. 7:9) Pray that the Word of Life may very soon reach into every dark corner of the earth.

    Interesting for two reasons: 1) since Oaxaca is where I’ll be going this summer on a mission trip, and 2) because it gives me hope that I’ll be able to mission-blog live while I’m there.