Wednesday, 7 January 2009

ATHEISTS SEND A MESSAGE ON 800 BUSES IN LONDON


LONDON — The advertisement on the bus was fairly mild, just a passage from the Bible and the address of a Christian Web site. But when Ariane Sherine, a comedy writer, looked on the Web site in June, she was startled to learn that she and her nonbelieving friends were headed straight to hell, to “spend all eternity in torment.”
This message — except the “probably” — has been approved by Richard Dawkins, scientist and author of “The God Delusion.”
That’s a bit extreme, she thought, as well as hard to prove. “If I wanted to run a bus ad saying ‘Beware — there is a giant lion from London Zoo on the loose!’ or ‘The “bits” in orange juice aren’t orange but plastic — don’t drink them or you’ll die!’ I think I might be asked to show my working and back up my claims,” Ms. Sherine wrote in a commentary on the Web site of The Guardian.
And then she thought, how about putting some atheist messages on the bus, as a corrective to the religious ones?
And so were planted the seeds of the Atheist Bus Campaign, an effort to disseminate a godless message to the greater public. When the organizers announced the effort in October, they said they hoped to raise a modest $8,000 or so.
But something seized people’s imagination. Supported by the scientist and author Richard Dawkins, the philosopher A. C. Grayling and the British Humanist Association, among others, the campaign raised nearly $150,000 in four days. Now it has more than $200,000, and on Tuesday it unveiled its advertisements on 800 buses across Britain.
“There’s probably no God,” the advertisements say. “Now stop worrying and enjoy your life.”
Spotting one of the buses on display at a news conference in Kensington, passers-by were struck by the unusual message.
Not always positively. “I think it’s dreadful,” said Sandra Lafaire, 76, a tourist from Los Angeles, who said she believed in God and still enjoyed her life, thank you very much. “Everyone is entitled to their opinion, but I don’t like it in my face.”
But Sarah Hall, 28, a visitor from Australia, said she was happy to see such a robust example of freedom of speech. “Whatever floats your boat,” she said.
Inspired by the London campaign, the American Humanist Association started running bus in Washington in November, with a more muted message. “Why believe in a god?” the ads read, over a picture of a man in a Santa suit. “Just be good for goodness’ sake.”
Although Australian atheists were refused permission to place advertisements on buses saying, “Atheism: Sleep in on Sunday mornings,” the British effort has been striking in the lack of outrage it has generated. The Methodist Church, for instance, said it welcomed the campaign as a way to get people to talk about God.
Although Queen Elizabeth is the head of the Church of England, Britain is a deeply secular country with a dwindling number of regular churchgoers, and with politicians who seem to go out of their way to play down their religious beliefs.
In 2003, when an interviewer asked Tony Blair, then the prime minister, about religion, his spokesman, Alastair Campbell, interjected, snapping, “We don’t do God.” After leaving office, Mr. Blair became a Roman Catholic.
More recently, Nick Clegg, a member of Parliament and the leader of the Liberal Democrats, announced that he was an atheist. (He later downgraded himself to agnostic.)
David Cameron, leader of the Conservative Party, alluded to a popular radio station when he joked that his religious belief was like “the reception for Magic FM in the Chilterns: it sort of comes and goes.”
Still, since Sept. 11, 2001, religion has played an ever more important role in public discussions, said Mr. Dawkins, the best-selling author of “The God Delusion,” with the government increasingly seeking religious viewpoints and Anglican bishops still having the automatic right to sit in the House of Lords.
“Across Britain, we are used to being bombarded by religious interests,” he said, “not just Christians, but other religions as well, who seem to think that they have got a God-given right to propagandize.”
Next week, the Atheist Bus Campaign plans to place 1,000 advertisements in the subway system, featuring enthusiastic quotations from Emily Dickinson, Albert Einstein, Douglas Adams and Katharine Hepburn.
An interesting element of the bus slogan is the word “probably,” which would seem to be more suited to an Agnostic Bus Campaign than to an atheist one. Mr. Dawkins, for one, argued that the word should not be there at all.
But the element of doubt was necessary to meet British advertising guidelines, said Tim Bleakley, managing director for sales and marketing at CBS Outdoor in London, which handles advertising for the bus system.
For religious people, advertisements saying there is no God “would have been misleading,” Mr. Bleakley said.
“So as not to fall foul of the code, you have to acknowledge that there is a gray area,” he said.
He said that potential ads were rejected all the time. “We wouldn’t, for example, run an ad for an action movie where the gun was pointing toward the commuter,” he said.
But Mr. Bleakley said he had no problem with the atheist bus ads. “We do have religious organizations that promote themselves,” he said. “If somebody doesn’t believe in religion, why wouldn’t we carry an ad that promotes the opposite view? To coin a phrase, it’s not for us to play God.”

PASTOR GETS 90 YEARS PRISON FOR MOLESTATION


SANTA ANA – An Anaheim pastor, who had videotaped himself molesting a 13-year-old parishioner in a church office, cried and clutched a Bible behind his back Monday as he was led from a courtroom in handcuffs after pleading guilty to 34 felony sex counts.
Raul Rosas Hernandez, 44, was sentenced by Superior Court Judge Francisco Briseno to 90 years in prison after he admitted molesting four girls and one boy over a 10-year span beginning in 1996.
Briseno said the sentence is tantamount to a life term because Hernandez must serve 85 percent of the 90 years before he becomes eligible for parole.
Deputy District Attorney Heather Brown said Hernandez, who was the pastor of Faith in Action Church, could have faced a life term plus 214 years in prison had he been convicted at trial.
She said she agreed to the 90-year sentence in part to save victims the psychological trauma of testifying at Hernandez's trial and – in one case – watching the graphic videotape.
The tape shows a naked Hernandez engaging in various sex acts in his church's office with the 13-year-old girl, Brown said.
At one point in the video, Hernandez answers a ringing telephone with the salutation "God bless you," in Spanish, Brown said. The tape closes with Hernandez in the pulpit delivering a sermon on blasphemy, Brown added.
That victim was in court to watch Hernandez plead guilty, but she did not comment.
A second victim, who had been molested by Hernandez over a period of seven years, told Briseno "I am thankful that this is over and that he didn't get away with it." She said she felt that he had violated his position of trust, adding, "I am not going to let him ruin my life."
Senior Deputy Public Defender Lisa Eyanson said Hernandez decided to plead guilty because he, too, did not want to put the victims through the ordeal of a trial.
He pleaded guilty to multiple counts of lewd and lascivious acts upon children, other sexual acts, and distributing pornography to a minor, plus sentencing enhancements for substantial sexual conduct with children.
He also admitted to failing to appear in court after he was released on $100,000 bail when he was first arrested in the case in February 2006. Prosecutors said at the time that they believed Hernandez was trying to collect money so he could flee to Mexico and avoid prosecution.
Several members of his congregation showed up in court to support him during his earlier court appearances. But on Monday, the only spectators were his victims and their friends.
After the sentencing, Brown said "it was the epitome of hypocrisy for him to be crying and clutching his Bible in court today. He wasn't crying and clutching his Bible when he was violating his position of trust as a pastor and molesting his victims."

HENRY BRANDT, 92, TROTTED THE GLOBE AND USED BIBLE TO GUIDE OTHERS



ORLANDO - For more than 50 years, Henry Brandt traveled the world using the Bible to counsel others.

No destination was too far to go for Brandt. He made six visits to Africa in one year and even went as far as the Brazilian rain forest to provide marriage counseling to a missionary couple."He got to the source of why a person was angry and helped that person be free from that anger," said Chris Anderson, Brandt's stepdaughter.Brandt died of complications from Parkinson's disease at his home in Singer Island near West Palm Beach on Nov. 24. He was 92. His family, friends and the many people he counseled will gather this week in Orlando to honor his life.


Brandt was born in Edmonton, Alberta, in 1916, the youngest of 10 children. He grew up in Detroit and received his bachelor's degree from Houghton College in New York, his master's in clinical psychology from Wayne State University and his doctorate degree in marriage and family relations from Cornell University.

Brandt moved to Florida in 1987 with his wife, Jo, who became smitten with him after seeing him speak at a Campus Crusade for Christ event in California 35 years ago.Brandt converted to Christianity as a young man and sought to combine his educational background with his faith to solve people's everyday problems, his wife said. He hosted several radio programs for Moody Bible Institute and taught at various universities, including his alma mater, Houghton College, North American Baptist Seminary and Trinity Evangelical Divinity School.He also wrote several books on counseling and biblical teachings, including The Heart of the Problem and Soul Prescription. In 2006, he founded the Henry Brandt Foundation in Montana to make his teachings available to a wider audience."There were thousands of people who have said he changed my life," Jo Brandt said.Brandt, who reveled in public speaking, was rendered almost speechless by Parkinson's disease in the days leading up to his death, but he managed to tell his wife how much he loved her, Chris Anderson said.The day before Brandt's death, Anderson and her mother sang old gospel hymns by his bed. As they sang the last verse of "Jesus Loves Me," Brandt began moving his lips, mouthing the words "Jesus loves me, this I know, for the Bible tells me so," Anderson said."He didn't have the strength to make the sounds, but his lips were moving," she said.He died at home the next day, looking out over the ocean, Anderson said.In addition to Anderson and his wife, Brandt is survived by his children and stepchildren, Richard Brandt of Chicago; Beth Blanchard of Richmond, Ky.; Suzanne Redhed of Cleveland; Juliette Anderson of Moscow, Idaho; and numerous grandchildren and great-grandchildren.Brandt's memorial service will be held at 1:30 p.m. Saturday at First Baptist Church in Orlando. Quattlebaum-Holleman-Burse Funeral Home handled the arrangements.

Tuesday, 6 January 2009

" YOUTH WAVES " IN NEW DELHI - A REPORT OF ICPF YOUTH CAMP 2008







NEW DELHI - " YOUTH WAVES " in new delhi. The youths in delhi were overjoyed by the 15 the winter camp conducted by the DELHI ICPF. Many youths were transformed by the love of Jesus. this camp was a lie changing experience for them.
"Awesome , Fantabulous, rock on for christ, life changing camp, too good, life cheering, fabulous, superb....." were some of the comments made by the campers. When celebrations were round the corner,ICPF Delhi Region arranged it's 15th winter camp at Mount Carmel Junior School, Anand Niketan, Delhi. Though it was breath taking winter in Delhi, around 114 students gathered from Delhi and it's satellite cities. There were 20 leaders and 10 elders to take care of the students. The participants seemed so excited from the first session in itself. This camp made a mark in bringing the most new comers. Vibrant and fiery preachers added flavours and colours to the excitement to the participants. When Rev Arun Michael, Allahabad focussed on the spiritual uplifting and Bro.Geo Varghese from Ahemadabad focused on the issued related with students. Students were fascinated by the theme "Radical And Vibrant Encounter"(RAVE). Students gave their undivided attention to the career classes delivered by Mr. Sony V Thomas (General Manager, Marketing, Nokia) and Mr. John Harrison(YMCA, Secretary,Hostel Services, New Delhi) on developing leadership skills. gathered youths were also challenged by the Spirit filled deliveries of Pr. M.K Babu and Algin Singh.
Angelos,along with Bro. Bonny Andrews & Sunny James Daniel added more flavours in leading the young people into the time of meaningful worship. The participants were waiting for the lively worship time. Sessions for counselling, games and group competitions met the mental and physical needs of the Campers. Students poured out their doubts in the Question and Answer sessions and were satisfied by the accurate hits. Many young lives were touched and they surrendered their lives for Christ. The movie "Road to Redemption" made many to commit their lives for ministry. The camp was concluded by Pr. S.Martin. We do here acknowledge the hard work put in by Staff workers and CGPF members.

"All Glory And Honour Belongs To Him Alone".

Camp Highlights:
Total attendance :140
Accepted Christ : 33
Decided to live a Holy life : 44
Decided to take water Baptism : 24
For ministry : 37

Sunday, 4 January 2009

GRIEF FOR ' THE FLYING PRIEST'


Michael C. Kelly, the pastor at St. Francis de Sales Catholic Church in Purcellville, had a number of techniques for bringing people into the flock.
There was his disarming sense of humor, reflected in the signs he put on the doors of the confessional booths, which read, "Your Name Here." There was his knack for attracting attention, such as when he'd ride his homemade airplane-style bicycles through town, earning him the nickname "the flying priest." And there were his everyday actions, parishioners said, which exemplified the message of giving and self-sacrifice ubiquitous in his sermons.
Kelly, 53, died this week doing one final good deed. While driving to the funeral of another priest, Kelly pulled over in the Hamilton area about 9 a.m. Wednesday during a fierce wind storm to remove a fallen tree from the road so no one would get hurt. That was when he was struck and killed by another falling tree, authorities said.
To the mournful congregation of more than 1,700 families, Kelly's act was the exclamation point on the end of years of devoted service.
"The angels swooped down and carried him off," said a damp-eyed parishioner, Ruth Showalter, outside the Loudoun County church yesterday. "That was him. He got out there for people."
Kelly's father, John F.J. Kelly, put it another way.
"The good Lord needed an outstanding priest," said Kelly, 80, of Foneswood, Va. "He needed him now."
Friends said Kelly's compassion, diverse biography and quirky talents helped him win the hearts of congregants and non-Catholics alike in Purcellville, though he had been at St. Francis for less than three years. Kelly was born in Newport Beach, Calif., the son of a Marine. His family eventually settled in Alexandria in 1969, and Kelly graduated from Mount Vernon High School.
He walked several paths before finding his calling, congregants and relatives said, serving in the U.S. Navy — where he attained the rank of boatswain's mate, 2nd Class — studying history at what was then Mary Washington College and later working alongside his father as a private weapons and security consultant for the military. He was ordained in 1995, but his love of the military and history never faded. He was a Civil War reenactor, playing the part of a Union soldier from a Massachusetts unit known as the "Irish Brigade."
His gift, parishioners said, was his ability to combine those experiences into a powerful message and manner. In the confessional booth, congregants said, he had a gentle demeanor, encouraging people to "be merciful on yourself." When called for, he could be firm, and he often repeated the slogan "Improvise, adapt and overcome" — a popular saying among Marines — to those facing challenges. After preaching, he implored churchgoers to "continue the march."
"We're fighting to overcome ourselves," said Nicole Robertson, 25, in explaining Kelly's command. A convert to Catholicism, Robertson said she would not have joined the church if it weren't for Kelly. Robertson said she was unable to attend classes necessary for conversion because of a conflict with her work schedule in 2007.
So Kelly improvised, adapted and overcame.
"He agreed to meet with me one-on-one," Robertson said. "We met every week. After I came fully into the Catholic Church, he really was a father to me in many ways."
Kelly, who also served at St. James in Falls Church, St. Ambrose in Annandale and Sacred Heart of Jesus in Winchester, had a reach that extended beyond the walls of the church's gleaming white building. Around town, he was famous for riding bicycles that he crafted to look like World War I and II-era fighter planes and appeared with them in parades.
In the afternoons, he would often ride from his residence at the church and wait on the corner for passing school buses full of waving, giggling children who lit up when they saw the flying priest.
"All the kids would be waving, waving waving," said Janice Rees, a staff member at the church. "You'd see the occasional pickup truck full of workers heading home, looking curiously, like, 'What the heck was that?' "
Parishioners said a fixture of Kelly's sermons was a command to spread God's message through good deeds. Kelly was driving on Harmony Church Road, south of Holmes Mill Road, when he came across the fallen tree. For some, the fact that he died while trying to shoulder the burden of a tree has taken on special meaning.
"He always spoke of the 'tree of the cross' — Jesus dying on a tree," said Dorothy Gessner, 81, a parishioner for 48 years. "The other day, when I was praying, the thought came to me: [Kelly] was killed by a tree. He was very close to Christ."
In a homily last weekend, Kelly, whose funeral is Tuesday, cited a Bible passage that conveyed how giving "completes" an individual. Although they were shocked and saddened, those who knew him said the way he died was not a surprise.
"You never had to ask for help," said parishioner Sheila Cowling of Leesburg. "He was there."