Wednesday 4 March 2009

INDIAN CHRISTIANS CALL FOR JUSTICE AHEAD THE UPCOMING ELECTION



N. Gopalaswami, the Chief Election Commissioner of India, announced this week that a five-phase parliamentary election would take place from April 16, with polls ending on May 13.
Just before the announcement both Catholic and Protestant leaders released a memorandum, which they plan to give to the leaders of political parties, stating, "All political parties must put the security of all religious minorities, and especially of the Christian community at the top of their electoral agenda," according to UCANews.com
It also called upon political parties to bring to justice the “culprits of crimes” committed against Christians, notably in Orissa, where over 60 Christians were killed and 50,000 displaced by anti-Christian violence last year.
During a press conference to announce the memorandum, some of the Christian leaders spoke of how the perpetrators of anti-Christian crimes in Orissa were still free because they have political support.
Archbishop Vincent Concessao of Delhi said that “hate campaigns” against Christians and Muslims were continuing in parts of India in order to gain votes for Hindu political parties.
He added that he wanted political parties and their supporters to denounce violence and promote justice and human rights, especially for Muslims and Christians.
The memorandum also requested that political parties make plans to promote the economic progress of Christians, who are often among the poorest in India, and to set up a judicial commission to assess the loss of rights that they had suffered. It also said that the rights of Christians from lower castes should also be restored.
Christians from lower castes often lose out from quotas meant to help the socio-economic development of lower caste people, as Christians themselves do not accept the Hindu caste system.
Auxiliary Bishop Franco Mulakkal of Delhi said the memorandum would make "the electorate more alert and will be heard by all."
He urged people to vote in the upcoming elections and said that the church believed in democracy and the secular principles of India.
The leaders also said that they would form an ecumenical delegation and meet the leaders of all political parties ahead of the election and present them with the memorandum

INDONESIA HOLDS YOGA FESTIVAL INSPITE OF MUSLIM FATWA; RISKS REALLY MATTERS WHEN IT COMES TO OPPOSITION


An eight-day international yoga festival opened Tuesday on the Indonesian holiday island of Bali despite a fatwa against the exercise from the country's top Muslim body.
Organisers said seminars and workshops would help introduce yoga to a wider audience and rejected the clerics' concerns that some forms of the popular exercise were a threat to Islam.
"The festival has a universal value. It doesn't belong to any religious teachings," International Bali-India Yoga Festival spokeswoman Susi Andrini told AFP.
Yoga, an ancient Indian aid to meditation dating back thousands of years, is a popular form of physical exercise and stress relief in Indonesia.
But the Indonesian Council of Ulemas, the top religious body in the mainly Muslim country, issued a fatwa in January banning Indonesian Muslims from all forms of yoga that involve Hindu religious rituals such as chanting mantras.
It said performing yoga purely for the physical benefits was however acceptable.
The move raised the hackles of religious moderates and civil libertarian groups who accused the council of meddling in affairs over which it had no authority.
Religious edicts issued by the ulemas are not legally binding on Muslims but it is considered sinful to ignore them.
Andrini said organisers were not afraid to hold the festival at the Bajrasandi Bali Monument in Denpasar -- the capital of the Hindu-majority island of Bali -- despite the fatwa.
"I'm a Muslim myself. Our kind of yoga, which is called Patanjali, involves movement and breathing. People may recite their own mantra or prayer according to their faith," she said.
"We want to make Bali a place for spiritual tourism. Visitors will seek the spiritual aspect first rather than leisure."
Andrini expected about 500 people from around the world, including the United States, Germany, Sweden, Japan and China, would participate in the festival.

STUDENT MADE POSTERS CENSORED FOR USING ' FAITH WORDS ' IN TENNESSEE




Administrators at Lakeview Elementary School in Mt. Juliet, Tenn., told parents that the posters, promoting the See You at the Pole student prayer event, mentioned "God" and are therefore precluded by school board policy and prohibited in the hallways as inappropriate.
Attorneys with the Alliance Defense Fund, a legal alliance defending religious liberty, filed a lawsuit today on behalf of 10 parents and their children, seeking an injunction against banning private religious expression on student-made posters.
"Christian students shouldn't be censored for expressing their beliefs," said ADF Senior Counsel Nate Kellum in a statement. "It's ridiculous as well as unconstitutional to cover up these references to God and prayer – one of which is the national motto itself – on posters announcing a student-led activity."
Further, Kellum surmised, "School officials appear to be having an allergic reaction to the ACLU's long-term record of fear, intimidation, and disinformation, despite a previous court ruling at this very school that said students can observe these types of events on school property."

In 2006, lawyers from the ACLU sued the school to stop it from recognizing religious events, including See You at the Pole and the National Day of Prayer.
In May 2008, a U.S. District Court judge refused to grant the ACLU's request.
This year, each poster, made on personal time without the use of any school funds or supplies, included the disclaimer: "See You at the Pole is a student-initiated and student-led event and is not endorsed by Lakeview Elementary or Wilson County schools."
Nevertheless, the lawsuit states, the school's assistant principal told parents – upon advisement from the principal and director of schools for the county – that Scripture verses and phrases mentioning "God" would not be permitted on the posters. Even "come pray" was deemed in violation of school policy for using the word "pray."
With the date of the "See You at the Pole" event only a few days away, rather than asking the students to make new posters, the school provided green slips of paper to obscure the offending words.
WND contacted Lakeview Elementary's vice principal, but she declined to comment until she could familiarize herself with the details of the lawsuit.
Attorneys from ADF contend the disclaimer statement on the posters was more than enough to release the school from any perceived endorsement of the "God" messages, and that burying the words behind green paper constitutes a clear violation of First Amendment rights.
"The Constitution prohibits government officials from singling out religious speech for censorship," Kellum said, "but this is exactly what Lakeview school officials did when they ordered these words to be covered."

LEBANON DROPS SUPPORT FOR THE BIBLE PARK; COUNCIL CITES LACK OF FINANCIAL DETAILS; PRAY AND MAKE A DIFFERENCE....







The council voted in November to accept Bible Park USA's proposed economic impact plan and back an inter-local agreement that would support the county commission should it vote to create a tourism development zone for the park property.
Councilman Alex Buhler asked the council to suspend the rules of order for Tuesday's meeting to discuss an ordinance he had crafted regarding the Bible Park. Buhler's ordinance was not on the agenda.
The vote to suspend the rules and the subsequent vote to rescind all previous Bible Park ordinances passed unanimously.
"I don't see where they're investing anything," Buhler said about Bible Park developers.
Park developer Rob Wyatt, president of California-based Entertainment Development Group, said in a statement that he was surprised by the council's decision.
"It is puzzling that the Lebanon City Council, during a national economic crisis in which layoffs are a daily announcement and tax revenues are hard to find, would fail to support an international tourism development that will attract tourists who will spend their money in Wilson County restaurants, hotels and businesses, leaving behind millions in tax revenues annually, before they go back home," Wyatt said.
"We have operated in good faith with the Lebanon City Council, and we have not been contacted by anyone on the Council with a request for additional information at any time in the last weeks or months," the developer said.
Buhler said he asked the council to take back support for the park because he and other council members got no response after asking repeatedly to see financial statements from park developers.
"The public has a right to know who is behind this," Buhler said.
Wyatt said in his statement, issued after the council meeting, that the developers would provide complete financial details after getting approval from the county Industrial Development Board to develop a plan for the park.
S.C. park didn't last
Councilman William Farmer said he was troubled that the same group that brought the Hard Rock Park to South Carolina is backing the Bible Park.
Farmer referred to SafeHarbor Holding, an equity investor in the proposed Bible Park, which also developed the Hard Rock Park.
The $400 million Hard Rock Park opened in Myrtle Beach, S.C., last summer and sold recently at a bankruptcy auction for $25 million.
The ordinance to end support will require a second vote on March 17.
The Wilson County Commission is scheduled to vote March 13 on a proposed tax incentive package. The future of that package isn't certain because of the Lebanon council's vote.
State law requires the city and the county sign off on a tourism development zone, which allows use of taxes generated by the development to pay off bonds issued to finance it.



Buhler said he asked the council to take back support for the park because he and other council members got no response after asking repeatedly to see financial statements from park developers.
"The public has a right to know who is behind this," Buhler said.
Wyatt said in his statement, issued after the council meeting, that the developers would provide complete financial details after getting approval from the county Industrial Development Board to develop a plan for the park.
S.C. park didn't last
Councilman William Farmer said he was troubled that the same group that brought the Hard Rock Park to South Carolina is backing the Bible Park.
Farmer referred to SafeHarbor Holding, an equity investor in the proposed Bible Park, which also developed the Hard Rock Park.
The $400 million Hard Rock Park opened in Myrtle Beach, S.C., last summer and sold recently at a bankruptcy auction for $25 million.
The ordinance to end support will require a second vote on March 17.
The Wilson County Commission is scheduled to vote March 13 on a proposed tax incentive package. The future of that package isn't certain because of the Lebanon council's vote.
State law requires the city and the county sign off on a tourism development zone, which allows use of taxes generated by the development to pay off bonds issued to finance it.

ANTI-CONVERSION BILL IN SRI-LANKA FACES OPPOSITION; PRAYERS MAKING DIFFERENCES.....


Sri Lanka ― U.S. Congressmen are pressing Sri Lanka to drop its controversial anti-conversion bill.
The proposed bill, called the "Prohibition of Forcible Conversions," imposes fines of up to 500,000 Sri Lankan rupees ($4,425 USD) and up to seven years in prison for trying to convert a Sri Lankan citizen from one religion to another by using "force, fraud or allurement."
The harshest punishments are aimed at those convicted of converting women or children. The Jathika Hela Urumaya political party, whose leadership is comprised of Buddhist monks, drafted the bill.
According to Gospel For Asia, a leader of that party went on record saying that US-funded Christian missionaries are one of the greatest threats facing Sri Lanka.
Ironically, Sri Lanka's constitution guarantees freedom of thought, conscience and religion. That's what has made the anti-conversion bill divisive. Debate has been deferred amid opposition from Christians.
Craig Detweiler with Asian Access says many are already working toward reconciliation, regardless of the politics or jockeying for power that has gripped the small island nation.
"One of our vice presidents serves as a pastor in Colombo, Kithu Sevana Church. They're doing remarkable things to bring Sinhalese and Tamils together in the name of Christ, and yet there are proposed laws that could make that a crime."
The pastor networks Asian Access supports have been watching the anti-conversion saga. "We have pastors in Mongolia, Japan and Thailand who are very concerned about what is happening in Sri Lanka. If certain laws are passed, maybe by a Buddhist majority there, it could be exported to other countries."
Keep praying for wisdom for their team of church leaders. "We're hopeful that the Christian community, which is a small minority, will be able to broker a fragile peace between the Buddhist majority Sinhalese and the Hindu minority Tamil community, and that there may be healing to a country that desperately needs it."
Sri Lanka is a colorful and highly-complex country whose people have paid a heavy price in a decades-long civil war. According to the Associated Press, the death toll is estimated at roughly 40 civilians every day, with more than 100 wounded, as artillery shells and gun battles between the two sides devastate the Sri Lankan northeast.

MARCH 4TH; NATIONAL DAY OF FASTING AND PRAYER FOR AMERICA; LET'S ALSO PRAY AND MAKE A DIFFERENCE



"Jesus Christ is our hope. He died for our sins and rose from the dead. We all must appear before His Judgment seat (2 Corinthians 5:10). Obeying God is more important than the economy or who is president", adds Krotoski."Every day more and more people realize our nation's sins are great and want to return to obedience to God in our government, families and communities, as America's founders did", adds Krotoski. Our families need God; Our government needs God;


America needs God.America's founders were political Christians. They founded America to be a Christian nation. The government paid for and recommended the Bible for use in schools. The first act of Congress was to pay Christian chaplains to pray for America, and the founders had days of prayer and fasting as well. Let's stop denying this truth.America's first Supreme Court Chief Justice, John Jay, said, "[God] has given to our people the choice of their rulers, and it is their duty-as well as privilege and interest-of our Christian nation to select and prefer Christians for their rulers."

Today, Christians across America agree with Chief Justice John Jay and declare America is a Christian nation and we want real Christians who follow Jesus for leaders.Following Jesus is the way out of the bad economy. Obedience is what made America the number one country in the world.In celebration of returning to God, Pray Daily America has produced a special TV show called "In God We Trust

The TV show will first debut March 4th at 6pm PST / 9pm EST on www.PrayDailyAmerica.com and will be available throughout the week. Then as funds come in, the program will air on TV stations across America. Donations to support TV time and to strengthen America in Christ can be given at www.PrayDailyAmerica.com. Christians and pastors of all denominations are asked to gather together and pray. Many churches meet on Wednesdays, so this is a good day to cry out to God. Churches can also watch online anytime over the next week. More information is at: www.PrayDailyAmerica.com/Pray.html.

MISSIONARIES IN PANAMA WAGE WAR ON DRUGS; PRAY AND MAKE A DIFFERENCE IN PANAMA


SAN BLAS ISLANDS, Panama - If you want to find the major source of United States' illegal drug problem, you have to look no further than Latin America.
Colombia alone accounts for almost 80 percent of the world's cocaine supply. As traffickers become more creative in getting their product to market, the war on drugs gets tougher.

Panama is the bridge between the Colombian drug runners and their major U.S. customers. That is forcing the Colombian and Panamanian Governments to work together to stop the flow. Their front line is a remote jungle on their border. It is there that a primitive tribe of Indians is caught between the forces of good and evil. They are called the Kuna.
There are 360 islands along the Caribbean coast of Panama, that make up the homeland of the Kuna people. You might not think such an idyllic place would be the scene of fierce warfare, but that's exactly what's happening here.
I visited the island of Ustupu, near the Colombian border. It is rarely seen by tourists, with life going on as it has for centuries for the Kuna who live on this crowded island. We visited Chief Jonatan, to ask his permission to be there.
The Kuna are a gentle people who make their living from the sea. Fishermen leave at dawn in dugout canoes, diving for their catch. And that's when problems arise.
Narcos 'Expect' Locals to Run Drugs
Drug runners sometimes leave floating bundles of cocaine near the islands, making it known that they expect the product to be transported to the city. This lessens the risk the traffickers face, but makes life dangerous for the Kuna.
"Maria" is a Kuna woman.
"The traffickers come mostly in the middle of the night, and the people are often reluctant to say anything to the authorities about it because the drug runners have threatened to kill them if they do," she said.
The average income here is just over $100 per month. That makes it tempting for some of these Indians to transport the drugs to the city, where the drug runners have promised big rewards.
I took a ride to the nearby mainland with a local fisherman, to the place where these Kuna bury their dead - and sometimes hide the drugs.
They say that they have a rule in their community that they don't want any drugs on their island. So if the fishermen find drugs, they bring them up here into these rivers and hide them until such time as they can figure out what to do with them. If they do take the drugs to the narcos, they could get caught by the police and put in prison. But if they don't, the narcos get angry and come cause trouble for the people in the villages.
Christian Missionaries
Some Kuna have become addicted to cocaine in the process. But there's another group trying to influence these islanders: Christian missionaries. And where the narcos bring threats and intimidation, these evangelists bring the good news of God's love.
Keith and Wilma Forster have dedicated their lives to helping these people. For the last 37 years, they have been instrumental in translating the Bible into the Kuna language. In that time, they've seen first hand the war between good and evil.
"The unbelievers said to the believers, 'If you touch those Bibles, we will hand you over to the terrorists like we did the missionaries,'" Keith said.
Some of their fellow workers were even killed.
"They came in on a Sunday evening, took all three missionaries simultaneously, and we never saw them again," he said.
But those sacrifices haven't been in vain. The number of Kuna Christians has grown steadily through the years, and the Church on this island is reaching out to other Kuna pastors throughout the province.
Over 100 Christian leaders from other islands came to a conference, spending an entire week in intensive training, led by a team of American missionaries. The men spent hours in study and scripture memory, while their wives learned hymns and did their own training.
After nightfall, the village came together and filled the local meeting house for a time of worship by the light of a generator -- complete with dances and hymns in their native tongue.
Tensions will remain high in this region as long as the drug trafficking continues. But Kuna Christians are optimistic that the gospel's influence will continue to flourish, and one day this tropical paradise will send missionaries around the world.

OBAMA AIDES CLEAR CLERGY PRAYERS BEFORE RALLIES


Dan Gilgoff, who blogs God & Country for U.S. News and World Report, recently described the unprecedented Obama campaign and administration policy of having official invocations at his public rallies vetted by a White House aide.
At least so far as Gilgoff knows, they've all been approved. Small wonder, as evidently the clergy censor themselves before dialing DC to read their prayers to an aide.
During Obama's recent visit to Fort Myers, Fla., to promote his economic stimulus plan, a black Baptist preacher delivered a prayer that carefully avoided mentioning Jesus, lest he offend anyone in the audience.
In case self-censorship fails, the Obama administration has a little extra insurance, Gilgoff says, by
"... scheduling the invocations to be delivered before the president arrives at the events -- and before national cable network cameras start rolling.
Whoops! Remember, that didn't work so well at the big Lincoln Memorial concert during inaugural week.
Millions of fans of controversial New Hampshire Episcopal Bishop Gene Robinson -- thrilled that the first openly gay bishop had been named to give the invocation -- were mystified, and mad, that his prayer was not broadcast by HBO, which had exclusive rights to the concert.
Indeed, it was delivered before Obama and his family entered and we bloggers all relied on Christianity Today's Sarah Pulliam who posted her YouTube video of Robinson's words.
Naturally, Americans United for Separation of Church and State opposes having anyone on the public payroll blessing -- or rejecting -- prayers, whether the president has arrived at the rally podium or is hovering nearby awaiting the amen.
Of course, if the invocations, however bland, are just for local consumption, not for us all, why do it? Or should the argument be that no prayers are wasted because an audience of One is always tuned in?