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Christian "politicians" and the end of time

October 19, 2013 by Don M. Burrows in Uncategorized

When congressional stenographer Dianne Reidy got pulled from the House floor for screaming “prophetic pronouncements” at voting representatives, most of us simply viewed her as someone worthy of pity.

But to others she was the victim of “religious persecution,” because, they believe, she spoke what the Spirit led her to say—that being, of course, that the government is run amok (since, as everyone knows, the Holy Spirit is a fiscal conservative). To these folks, slavery, Civil War, two world wars, and decades on the brink of possible nuclear annihilation were not enough to bring about the End Times. For that, it took a debate about health insurance.

But this is not really about Obamacare; it’s not about whether the government should provide health care at all; it’s not about the proper role of government in people’s lives. Legitimate philosophical debates about the role of government have been around since (before) the founding of the republic.

But one subgroup on one side of that debate has now decided that such discussions must always be about something much larger than that. And in retrospect this turn of events was inevitable. Fiscal conservatives have been courting religious conservatives for decades, and now, finally, they have now successfully wedded the two. So we can’t be too surprised that, for some, whether the government sets up private insurance exchanges or outlaws policy rejections based on pre-existing conditions—whether the government does anything at… [Read more…] about Christian "politicians" and the end of time

My Tattooed Teenager

October 15, 2013 by Aliza Worthington in Uncategorized

 

She’d been asking for years. My firstborn, with the red hair and creamy skin, wanted a tattoo. For years she’s been asking.

The child who, if she could, would paint her room a different color every other month. The child who, if her parents could, would ask them to rearrange the furniture in her room every other week. The child who, as a pre-teen, declared matter-of-factly, “I require constant change.”  The undeniable implication was, “Is that so wrong?  Is that so difficult?  Why is nobody accommodating me???”

A tattoo. The most permanent of permanent body alterations.

When she was fourteen and fifteen, it was easy to laugh – “Pffffft!  Over my dead body!”  “You?  The girl who gets tired of a haircut after three hours?” And my go-to favorite, “If you still want one when you’re older, we’ll talk.” Well, she was coming up on seventeen, and wanted to talk.

I knew better than to offer a henna tattoo – you know – the kind that isn’t permanent and the design can be different every time! No, I knew better. And each time she brought it up, tentatively and unusually respectfully, I pushed her off.  I couldn’t help but admire her persistence, though, with this request. Normally that sort of thing annoys me – you know, the kid asking over and over for something I’d already said “no” to.

This topic, however? There was something in the way she asked that told us this was different.

To be clear, she knew Dave (hubs to me/dad to her) and I had… [Read more…] about My Tattooed Teenager

The Christian right and pornographers: brothers in arms

October 7, 2013 by John Shore in Uncategorized

We’ve all heard the anti-gay vitriol spouted by Pat Robertson, Tony Perkins, and all the other right-wing Christian leaders who make their fortunes hectoring and persecuting LGBT people.

What, really, makes such Christians tick? What defines their ethos? What is the true taproot of anti-gay Christianity? Underneath all of their posturing and hyperbole—even underneath their belief that they are only being true to the Bible—what core conviction is really informing the Christian right’s condemnation of homosexuality?… [Read more…] about The Christian right and pornographers: brothers in arms

Small Comfort

August 20, 2013 by Aliza Worthington in Uncategorized

A very good and sweet friend sent me the 33-minute video below, and asked my opinion of it. In its first five minutes, a man named Ray Comfort says that he’s a Jew, and starts interviewing people about Hitler and the Holocaust. My friend knows that I am an (actual) Jewish writer with a strong interest in history, politics and education. So, hopefully that explains why it took me each of the steps you see below, and a good ten minutes, to realize the awful point and comparison Comfort tries to make with this film.

I’d love to hear how others’ reactions to this film compare to mine. If you don’t have time to watch it, consider these your crib notes. I now present to you an extremely abridged version of how Ray Comfort proceeds to elicit (read: manipulate) the responses he wants from his person-on-the-street interviews. My reaction to each step along the way is in parentheses.

Step 1
Ray Comfort
: Ever heard of Hitler/the Holocaust?
Person on the street: Nope.
(Me: horrified this stuff is not apparently being taught in schools and/or remembered.)

Step 2
Ray Comfort
: Ever heard of Hitler/the Holocaust?
Person on the street:  Yeah, he was the the leader of Germany who started WWII and killed a bunch of Jews, right?
(Me: Oh, for the love of all that is holy, tell me there is, after all, a glimmer of hope for our educational system.)

Step 3
Ray… [Read more…] about Small Comfort

“I lived 30 years alone”: A Christian lesbian grandmother tells her story

August 6, 2013 by John Shore in LGBT, Uncategorized

Here is a letter I got in response to the call I put out on my blog awhile back asking for the personal testimony of gay Christians:
I am a 72-year-old Christian mother and grandmother. I had a wonderful career as a teacher for every age, from pre-school through college. I served as a member of our church council, as a Sunday school teacher, as a Vacation Bible School superintendent, and I have been on mission trips to every continent. My hobbies are studying, reading, travel, genealogy, gardening, and dogs.… [Read more…] about “I lived 30 years alone”: A Christian lesbian grandmother tells her story

To Pro-Lifers Who Believe Adoption is Always the Answer

August 2, 2013 by Guest Author in Christian Issues, Uncategorized

A couple of posts back, Unfundamentalist Christian Aliza Worthington (who is so unfundamentally Christian that she is, in fact, Jewish), recently published here An Open Letter to Pro-Lifers, in which she shared the basis for her conviction that if she became pregnant the choices facing her should be hers and hers alone. The core of her argument was this:… [Read more…] about To Pro-Lifers Who Believe Adoption is Always the Answer

Mos Def gets force-fed for Guantanamo

July 14, 2013 by Dan Wilkinson in Uncategorized

Actor and musician Yasiin Bey, aka Mos Def, recently released a video in which he undergoes the force-feeding procedure that hunger-striking prisoners at Guantanamo Bay are being subjected to. You can read a first-hand account here, or watch the video yourself:… [Read more…] about Mos Def gets force-fed for Guantanamo

Al Mohler Does It Again

July 11, 2013 by Don M. Burrows in Fundamentalism, Uncategorized

If Jesus taught that what comes out of a man defiles him, surely the blatant inaccuracies and lies peddled by many of his most ardent followers must concern him at least a little, especially when they are done in connection with the Bible.

But such was the case yet again recently when Albert Mohler, president of the Southern Baptist Convention’s flagship seminary, was asked at the SBC’s recent convention to give his “succinct” and “Biblical” view of homosexuality. As per usual when Mohler opens his mouth, what he claims to be the case is almost precisely opposite what any mainstream scholar on the topic would tell you.… [Read more…] about Al Mohler Does It Again

A spontaneous prayer about the DOMA ruling

June 26, 2013 by John Shore in Uncategorized

As you’re probably by now aware, today the Supreme Court declared a 1996 law denying federal benefits to legally married same-sex couples (the shamefully named Defense of Marriage Act) unconstitutional.

When huge things happen in my life—things I know I can no sooner consciously process than I can fly a space shuttle—I turn to God. In this case, I want to thank God. I just learned of this ruling. So I thought that I would type my thanks/prayer as they’re actually happening in my heart and mind, and so in that very direct and personal fashion commune with you around this mind-bogglingly joyful occasion.
Dear God:

Thank you.

Thank you, thank you, thank you.

We’re slow. We’re afraid; we take our time; we’re always happy to let the next guy solve the problem we started.

We know justice needs doing; we balk at doing it ourselves.

But gottdangit if all along you’re not watching: if you’re not caring, if you’re not tracking our relationship with the justice that we so readily claim that we want.

And slowly but surely, inch by inch–and despite our constant and petulant resistance–you move us toward that justice. You walk us to the truth. You bring us to do the thing that must be done: the right thing, the truthful thing, the thing that it was always your will that we do.

Finally and gloriously, you make your will ours.

You make us win. You do that to us first as individuals, and then as a nation. And I know that you are doing the same thing to all of us,… [Read more…] about A spontaneous prayer about the DOMA ruling

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