Saturday, September 8, 2012

Atheist's Want National Leaders to Separate Faith from Office

An Atheist group protesting at the Democratic National Convention in Charlotte, N.C., this week has revealed that its prime motivation is to raise awareness for the importance of the separation of church and state.

The Charlotte Atheists and Agnostics (CAA), an American Atheists affiliate, held its first protest late Tuesday afternoon at the corner of Stonewall Street and Caldwell Street, where members from the group spoke about the necessity of freedom from religion.

"The main goal was to demonstrate for the separation of church and state. We feel strongly that keeping religion out of government benefits all citizens, the religious and secular alike," Shawn Murphy from the CAA shared with The Christian Post in an email.

About Tuesday's protest, he added: "The event went very well. Despite the rain, we had a good turn out and plenty of positive interest. I was disappointed that the stage was not covered in any way. We got quite wet. I was delightfully surprised by the level of dedication of our speakers and audience who took the weather in good humor."

The atheist group clarified that its members were not necessarily protesting the Democratic Party, but using the widely-publicized event as an opportunity to draw attention to their mission.

"There is a need, even at the DNC, to make our voices heard in opposition to the overwhelming influence of religion in our political system. True, the Religious Right has a stranglehold on the Republican Party, and they are a huge threat to us, but there are also those in the Democratic Party who refuse to separate their religion from their office," the atheists explain on their Facebook page centered around the protest.

A host of other religiously motivated groups have also made their voices heard at the DNC, before and during the three-day event. On Friday, a confrontation between pro-abortion activists and a pro-life group that had come to pray for aborted babies at the site of the convention resulted in an 11-year-old pro-life girl being brought to tears, after which she wrote a letter describing her ordeal.
Meanwhile, delegates at the convention voted to reinstate the word "God" back in the Democratic National Convention's platform, although it took three roll calls to do so.

"If the narrative that's being presented on your station and through your channel and your network is that Democrats are godless people, they ought to know better. God is not a franchise of the Republican Party," said Senate Majority Whip Dick Durbin as he criticized Fox News in its coverage of his party striking the words "God" and "Jerusalem" from its platform.

"If you're trying to draw some conclusion that the Democrats are godless, present your evidence. Present your evidence," he added.

Thursday, June 21, 2012

Nigerian Leader Claims Boko Haram to Use Poison in Jihad Against Christians

By Stoyan Zaimov , Christian Post Reporter
June 20, 2012|11:00 am

The Islamist terrorist group Boko Haram is allegedly planning to declare holy war on Southern Nigeria, where most Christians are concentrated, and might use food poisoning tactics to kill as many as possible, according to the chairman of the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN).

"We have information and documents to show that this is a Jihad being sponsored and we have our documents to show where they have dispatched 2,000 people to prepare for Jihad to South East, 2,500 to South-South and about 2,000 to South West," said Bishop Emmanuel Chukwuma, CAN Chairman and Anglican Bishop of Enugu Diocese.

The organization also warned that Boko Haram, responsible for killing hundreds of Christians since 2011 with church bombings and shootings, is planning to lace meat in these southern areas with poisonous powder. CAN specifically warned residents to be careful about eating suya, which is a shish kebab-type food that can be made with various types of meats.

According to a report from Vangard, Bishop Chukwuma said: "We are warning our people to be careful of suya because we have now heard that they will start poisoning people through suya. They know the suya they give themselves in the North and suya they give to the people in the South. So people should be careful of suya.

"That is part of the information available to us now. There is a powder that is now being imported which they will spread on suya and after two weeks it will start eating your liver and other organs. We have gotten that information also."

Boko Haram directly admitted in a recent statement to wanting to wipe out Christians from Nigeria and establish Islamist rule.

"The Nigerian state and Christians are our enemies and we will be launching attacks on the Nigerian state and its security apparatus as well as churches until we achieve our goal of establishing an Islamic state in place of the secular state," Boko Haram declared in a statement last week, owning up to terrorist attacks last Sunday that killed at least six people and injured dozens.

Christians account for 40 percent of Nigeria's population, while 50 percent are Muslim, and 10 percent practice indigenous beliefs, according to statistics from the U.S. State Department. Most of Nigeria's Muslims live in the North.

The Vatican, which has condemned the continuous attacks on Christians in Nigeria, once again called for peace this past week.

"I am following with deep concern the news from Nigeria, where terrorist attacks are continuing, especially against Christians," Pope Benedict XVI said in his weekly address.

"I appeal to those responsible for the violence to immediately stop spilling the blood of innocent people," the head of the Holy See added.

So far, his pleas and the pleas of the Nigerian people have fallen on deaf ears, and many are showing their frustration and anger not only with the terrorists but also with the Nigerian government, which has been unable to contain the deadly attacks.

"Are Christians no longer free to worship God on Sundays? What are the security operatives doing on Sundays when they know that Sundays have become a target to bomb Christians? What is the Inspector General of Police doing? Is changing of uniform the reformation that we want or action to make what is happening in the North to be stampeded and stopped. Again, what are the members of the House of Representatives and Senate doing to promulgate law that will sanction those perpetrating this evil?" asked Bishop Chukwuma.

Chukuwma has also claimed that Christians in Nigeria are prepared to take on Boko Haram "physically and spiritually" in order to maintain their right to worship.

"We also want to put an alert that Christians in the South are ready to face them squarely because we heard that they have infiltrated this place, especially Enugu. We are prepared for war -- physically and spiritually against any form of attack on the church. Time has come for reprisal because nobody can stop us from worshiping our God," the spiritual leader said.

 http://www.christianpost.com/news/nigerian-christian-leader-claims-boko-haram-to-launch-jihad-with-poisoned-meat-76949/

PCUSA Mulls Overtures for Redefining Denomination's Marriage Definition

By Michael Gryboski , Christian Post Reporter
June 19, 2012|5:58 pm

Presbyterian Church (USA) has received overtures from various regional bodies within the denomination in favor of either changing the group's definition of marriage or loosening the enforcement of said definition.

Various presbyteries within PC(USA) have sent the General Assembly messages expressing support and opposition to these ideas for the 220th PC (USA) General Assembly.

According to Presbyterian News Service, the presbyteries of East Iowa, Hudson River, New York City and Redwoods submitted Amendment Overtures, which demand that PC (USA) change its definition of marriage from "a woman and a man" to "two people."

Five presbyteries – Boston, Genesee Valley, Cayuga-Syracuse, Baltimore, and East Iowa once more – have sent Authoritative Interpretation Overtures, which demand that Presbyterian churches in states that have legalized same-sex marriage should be allowed to perform same-sex wedding ceremonies.
Other Presbyteries, like Charleston-Atlantic and Foothills, have sent overtures opposing such changes to the constitution or the enforcement of its rules.

According to the PC(USA) Constitution, W-4.9001, "Marriage is a civil contract between a woman and a man. For Christians marriage is a covenant through which a man and a woman are called to live out together before God their lives of discipleship."
 
In previous General Assembly meetings, amendments to W-4.9001 have been proposed to change the definition of marriage found in the PC(USA) Constitution. These have included broadening the words to include the term "two people" rather than "a man and a woman." Thus far, none of these amendments, the latest being proposed in 2010, have been successful.

Michael J. Adee, executive director of More Light Presbyterians, a pro-gay organization within PC (USA), told The Christian Post that his organization is supportive of these efforts.

"More Light Presbyterians support both kinds of marriage equality overtures," said Adee, referring to the Authoritative Interpretation Overture and the Amendment Overture.

"I hope and pray that the General Assembly meeting soon in Pittsburgh will stand on the side of love and the right side of history."

When asked whether a potential change in the PC (USA)'s constitution on marriage definition would lead more congregations to leave the denomination, Adee said that congregations have left before.
"I am sad when any church feels it must leave because of the removal of barriers to faithful, qualified LGBT persons serving God in ministry within and through the Church," said Adee.

"There is no accurate way to know if a church might leave the denomination when it offers pastoral discretion with same-sex marriage. It is my hope and prayer that no church will leave the Presbyterian Church (USA) over same-sex couples seeking to be faithful in their relationships."

The 220th General Assembly for Presbyterian Church (USA) will take place this summer at the David Lawrence Convention Center in Pittsburgh, Pa.

 http://www.christianpost.com/news/pcusa-mulls-overtures-for-redefining-denominations-marriage-definition-76927/

Monday, June 4, 2012

Josh McDowell Launches Website to Fight Porn, 'Church's No. 1 Threat'

 http://www.christianpost.com/news/josh-mcdowell-launches-website-to-fight-porn-churchs-no-1-threat-75584/
 
By Anugrah Kumar , Christian Post Contributor
May 26, 2012|10:34 am

Apologist and author Josh McDowell launched Just1ClickAway.org, a new website to raise awareness about online pornography which he says is a problem big enough to cause the downfall of the church.

"The downfall of the church will not come from a lack of apologetic teaching; it will come from disintegration of the families in the church," says a video posted on the website, which was launched this week, just in time for summer vacation when students' media consumption significantly increases.
"The greatest threat to the cause of Christ is pervasive sexuality and pornography," McDowell, known as an articulate speaker, said in a statement Thursday. "Today we have, by and large, lost control of the controls because an intrusive immorality is just one click away from our children. With just one keystroke on a smartphone, iPad, or laptop, a child can open up some of the worst pornography and sexually graphic content you can imagine. There's never been such access in history. "

McDowell, who has written or co-authored 120 books since 1960, backs his claims with stunning statistics about the destructive impact of pornography on the Christian family.

More than 1 billion pornographic websites are one click away, and the average age of first-time viewers of pornography is 9 years old. About 80 percent of 15- to 17-year-olds have been exposed to hardcore porn, and the adult pornography industry reports that 20-30 percent of their traffic comes from children. More shockingly, half of all Christian families report that pornography is a problem, and 30 percent of pastors have viewed pornography in the last 30 days.

The newly produced video on the website shows that pornography aggressively preys on and attacks its victim, virtually in plain view of unsuspecting family members.

It features a boy, who looks below 10 years old and is seated on his bed with a tablet computer in the privacy of his bedroom. "Doing your homework?" asks a young woman, portrayed as a tempter. The boy, seeing her in his imagination, nods to say, "Yes." "Can I ask you something?" the girl says. "What's your favorite part about me? Do you wanna see more? I can show you whatever you want." Just then the mother comes into the room and tells him, "Honey, dinner is almost ready." Seeing her child's surprised reaction, she asks, "What's wrong?" "Nothing," he replies, pressing his laptop against his chest. "Finish up what you're doing and come on downstairs," his mother says.

The video goes on to feature a husband as well as a teenage girl as consumers of pornography and whose family members are also unaware of the dangerous viewing.

The video, which has a warning label for its mature content, later portrays each consumer being tortured by their addiction to pornography.

Offering hope and help, McDowell has made available resources to both spread awareness about the pervasiveness of pornography viewing and offer solutions. The Bare Facts, McDowell's "biblically based, medically sound and culturally relevant campaign" provides youth and those who influence them with an understanding of love, sexuality and relationships.

As part of a 45-city speaking tour in 15 countries throughout 2012, McDowell is touring Latin America with his Bare Facts campaign. With over 50 years in ministry, he has addressed more than 10 million young people, giving over 24,000 talks in 118 countries. McDowell lives in southern California with his wife Dottie and four children.

Saturday, May 12, 2012

Hot Button Issue!

Today there is a real hot button issue with same sex marriage.  Here is an in depth and lengthy argument about that very topic.

http://www.firstthings.com/article/2011/05/religion-reason-and-same-sex-marriage

Tongues-What are the Rules?

Tongues is an interesting topic within the church and can cause division and controversy.  I like this article and this pastor's perspective on it.  When I read the article it reminded me of a time some friends from India came over to visit ant they told me about an incident they encountered when a church let the whole body speak in tongues at once.  They were in the church and everyone started speaking in tongues and as they listened they heard something interesting from the couple in front of them.  After they were all done, the Indian couple tapped the couple in front of them on the shoulder and asked them if they wanted to know what they were saying.  The couple responded by saying that is impossible because they were speaking in tongues, but the Indian couple told them they were actually speaking Hindi their native language.  They continued to tell them they were worshiping the God Shiva in Hindi and were not speaking in an unknown language.  What they thought was a worshipful time with God turned out to be something completely different.

I think we have to be careful with spiritual gifts and truly seek out their place and how they function in our lives. 

http://www.christianpost.com/news/nc-megachurch-pastor-says-its-a-sin-to-forbid-speaking-in-tongues-74184/

Thursday, April 19, 2012

The CTS Economic Recovery Plan

I can see it now. Spring break is over but you have summer on your mind and all the cool things you are going to do this summer with your family. That's awesome because that is exactly what I am doing. You need to save some money now for that big trip across country or that cruise to the Bahamas. Let's face it. You are going to need gas money! 
 
We want to do our part to help you. From now through 30 April 2012, you can take a 10% tuition scholarship toward your next class or two. When you make your order from our Payment Center, just select the box that says " Member of the US Armed Forces?" This offer is not retroactive and does not apply to anyone already receiving the 10% scholarship discount.
Thank you for being diligent in your studies.

In His Grip,
Dr. Gary Tryzbiak

Thursday, April 12, 2012

Joni Eareckson Tada Talks about Disability

Joni Eareckson Tada on Wilberforce Award, 'Better Off Dead Than Disabled' Mentality 

By Eryn Sun , Christian Post Reporter March 16, 2012|8:44 am

 http://www.christianpost.com/news/joni-eareckson-tada-on-wilberforce-award-better-off-dead-than-disabled-mentality-71536/

A disturbing belief is spreading within the hearts of many around the world and within America: that a person is better off dead than disabled.

But a leading advocate for people with disabilities is fighting that notion and looking to educate the world and the church about the precious lives and rights of "those who seem to be weaker."
The Christian Post spoke to Joni Eareckson Tada on Thursday, the founder and CEO of Joni and Friends International Disability Center, about her countless achievements for the disabled community, unwavering faith in God, battle with breast cancer, and her latest recognition by Breakpoint and The Chuck Colson Center for Christian Worldview.

The 62-year-old evangelical author, who became a quadriplegic at the age of 17 due to a diving accident, just recently learned that she would be honored with the prestigious Wilberforce Award – named after the British parliamentarian who fought for 26 years to abolish slavery in Great Britain – during the annual Wilberforce Weekend held at the end of March.

CP: First of all, how do you feel to have gotten this award? Were you surprised, shocked? How did your husband react?
Tada: I was completely stunned by the news that I would be receiving this year's Wilberforce Award. I had actually nominated someone else, and when I received the first notification, I thought the committee had accepted my nominee. Imagine my surprise when I read it and discovered I was the recipient. My husband? He was just plain proud!

CP: Why do you think they chose you to receive this award?
Tada: For many years I have worked hard to promote a biblical worldview on disability, whether in churches or in the community. I served on the National Council of Disability and helped spearhead the effort to draft the original Americans with Disabilities Act. Most of all, it's been my heart's desire to see the church carry out the mandate from the Gospel of Luke, the 14th chapter where Jesus says to go out and find the disabled and bring them in. My life goal is to see the world's one billion people with disabilities embraced and encouraged by the church.

CP: What do you believe is the greatest achievement you and your organization have accomplished for the disabled?
Tada: I believe we have brought the plight of the world's special needs families before the church, reminding them that "those who seem to be weaker" are actually indispensable. Whether through the 25 U.S. family retreats we sponsor, or the thousands of wheelchairs and Bibles we've distributed in developing nations, our passion is to make certain these disabled people and their families find a place in the fellowship of the church.

CP: What do you believe is the foremost important problem right now facing the disabled and how is your foundation working to fight and overcome this?
Tada: There is a growing premise in this country and around the world that a person really is "better off dead than disabled." This premise reflects a fundamental fear that people have about disability and, unfortunately, it has influenced social policy, such as the legalization of physician-assisted suicide and the destruction of human embryos for stem cell research. Just this week a couple in Oregon were awarded $2.9 million because doctors did not diagnose their unborn child with Down syndrome. When we disregard the rights of the weakest and most vulnerable among us, then the rights of all of us are in jeopardy.

CP: How is your health right now? I know you were battling breast cancer. Have the treatments finished? Are you now in remission?
Tada: My health is great! It's been nearly 20 months since my battle against Stage 3 breast cancer and I have a little under four more years to go before I can be declared cancer free. As long as I take my daily medication, I feel I'm on the right and best track!

CP: With another obstacle to overcome, how do you continue to look to God for strength and reason that everything that He has planned for your life is for His glory and for your good?
Tada: My weakness, that is, my quadriplegia, is my greatest asset because it forces me into the arms of Christ every single morning when I get up. As long as I come to God with my need, I am promised more than enough grace to help me smile, not in spite of my disability but because of it. And that's good!

CP: Is there any words of advice you would like to give those who continue to fight injustice throughout the world?
Tada: The Bible is replete with commands to persevere, especially in the face of injustice. The God of the Bible also heartily commends those who strive for mercy and justice in this world. God is truly on the side of those who work for social justice, especially when we accompany that work with the giving of the Gospel!

Joni Eareckson Tada is the senior associate for Disability Concerns for the Lausanne Committee for World Evangelization and has authored nearly 50 books on disability and Christianity including her best-selling autobiography Joni.

For more than 30 years, she has worked to accelerate Christian ministry in the disability community through her wide array of life-affirming ministries begun by her organization including Wheels for the World, Christian Institute on Disability, the International Disability Center, Family Retreats, and her television and radio programs geared toward encouraging people with biblical insights.

She and her husband Ken Tada are currently traveling around the Bay area, speaking at different venues to energize and inform people about their disability ministry.

Objections to Christianity

Here is a video discussing objections to Christianity:

http://gnli.christianpost.com/video/the-10-most-common-objections-to-christianity-part-2-origins-of-life-alex-mcfarland-3380

Wednesday, April 4, 2012

Prayer for Prinsoners

Churches in Over 100 Countries to Pray for Prisoners This Week

 

By Brittany Smith , Christian Post Reporter
April 3, 2012|6:46 pm

Churches in 124 countries will be participating in Prison Fellowship International's (PFI) annual Week of Prayer for Justice, which began April 1 and will end on Easter Sunday.

Ron Nikkel, PFI president, said the prayer event grew out of the realization that many churches around the world are not engaging with prisoners. He told CP that PFI wanted to provide a "way of helping to engage churches at the prayer level."

He explained that often prisoners feel a sense of failure, and when churches get involved and meet with those in prison, it gives them back "a sense of worth, and that they can be forgiven."
"The Week of Prayer for Justice is one way we encourage Christians to support the work of transformation in the lives of prisoners," Nikkel said in a statement. "We pray for them and for those who surround them: prison chaplains and officials, ex-prisoners, their families, crime victims and the overall cause of justice."

One of the greatest difficulties for prisoners is isolation and alienation from community. They also fear what might happen to their families while they are in jail.

When churches become involved with prisoners and their families, through prayer and volunteering in prisons, it helps provide stability and a bridge back into the community when inmates get out, Nikkel told CP.

And this is extremely important because inmates often "gravitate back to old haunts and old friends, they re-cycle through the system," Nikkel explained.

According to a Pew Forum report, half of released inmates return to prison within three years of their release.

 "Punishing these offenders may feel like justice, but punishment alone is not just. Unless they are restored and rehabilitated, more than two-thirds will be back in prison within three years," Nikkel said. "This cycle of crime to prison to more crime is a disservice to our communities and to victims of crime."

But when there are places where these prisoners can belong to once they get out, that changes things. The best way to do this, Nikkel explained, is by having someone there to meet them when they are released from prison to "provide a refuge, friendship, and care for them regardless of their record."
"It is a vicious cycle, but it can be changed when Christians around the world understand the need and get involved," Nikkel continued. "The Week of Prayer for Justice is a great way for congregations to become better informed and learn how they can make a difference."

Many Prison Fellowship affiliates plan community events or special outreaches into local prisons during the week, and they encourage churches to conclude the week with a special worship service of celebration and commitment.

Prison Fellowship International's affiliates are active in every region of the world, working to improve the moral, social, physical and spiritual well-being of prisoners, ex-prisoners, their families and victims of crime.

Each day of the Week of Prayer for Justice has a specific focus:

• Sunday – Reconciling Relationships
• Monday – Caring for Victims
• Tuesday – Restoring Communities
• Wednesday – Welcoming Ex-Prisoners
• Thursday – Justice and Correctional Services
• Friday – Supporting Families
• Saturday – Visiting Prisoners
• Sunday – Transforming Lives and Communities

 http://www.christianpost.com/news/churches-in-over-100-countries-to-pray-for-prisoners-this-week-72605/

Wednesday, March 28, 2012

John Piper on Race

Here is an article where they talk about John Piper's view on how the Gospel should impact our view on race:

http://www.christianpost.com/news/john-piper-gospel-should-transform-how-christians-view-race-72120/

Those Easter Ads

http://www.christianpost.com/news/texas-atheists-great-without-god-ads-to-run-during-easter-rejected-72240/

"An atheist organization seeking to show families that they can be "great without God" or religion during Easter weekend received some setback after organizers were told the ads were inappropriate for the Texas theater targeted in the campaign."

Friday, March 23, 2012

Christian Clubs Told to 'Stop Whining,' Meet in Homes Like in Communist China

http://www.christianpost.com/news/christian-clubs-told-to-stop-whining-meet-in-homes-like-in-communist-china-70069/


By Stephanie Samuel , Christian Post Reporter
February 22, 2012|4:50 pm

NASHVILLE – An Americans United for the Separation of Church and State official told Vanderbilt University Christians to "stop whining" about the institution's all-comers policy and hold their meetings in private homes like Christians in communist China.

During the 2012 National Religious Broadcasters Convention's public policy debate on Tuesday, AU Executive Director Barry W. Lynn defended Vanderbilt's right as a private institution to impose a campus-wide nondiscrimination policy that could potentially drive religious student organizations off campus.

Those who oppose the policy, he said, should "get over it" and "stop whining."

"I would suggest that people in this position – to use a phrase on a button in my dentist office that he always wears when he works, it says, 'stop whining.' I'd say stop whining here. Why not do what evangelicals do: go out into the world, out into the community [and] have your meetings, if you have to, off campus. Show your faith [and] meet with students not in a club room somewhere in the university, but in those home churches that kept Christianity alive during the darkest days of communist China."

China, though it allows Chinese Christians to worship in two state-approved churches, does not give its people the right of religious freedom. Last year, many Chinese Christians were arrested and detained for conducting religious services in unregistered home churches, according to ChinaAid, a support group for China's persecuted Christians.

Vanderbilt requires organizations on campus to comply with its all-comers policy, which requires groups to extend membership and leadership positions to all who show up at meetings. In other words, organizations cannot require that leaders share the group's beliefs, goals and values.

Lynn said he believes the "all-comers" policy is a great idea.

"If you have a Christian club, the truth is you will be able to have and you will be required to permit [students] of any religious background or no religious background to come to your club, even run for the presidency of your club," he told the NRB audience.

Many Christian clubs on Vanderbilt University's campus already feature nondiscrimination statements in its constitutions allowing people of all beliefs and faiths attend and participate in meetings and activities.

Carol Swain, a Vanderbilt political science and law professor and adviser to the campus' Christian Legal Society, was also part of the four-panelist debate Tuesday.

She said, "The Christian Legal Society and the [Christian] group I'm aware of never discriminate against anyone for membership. They've had an all-comers policy but they've had biblically grounded principles when it comes to leading the organizations."

CLS and other Vanderbilt Christian clubs require leaders be a professing Christian, able to conduct Bible studies and worship meetings.

Lynn argued that Christian groups must "get over" themselves and open up their leadership positions to all people regardless of their beliefs.

Giving the example of a logging proponent heading an environmental club, he said, "I say get over it. This is the kind of thing that people need to be able to deal with in the real world; [there is] no reason they can't deal with it the university setting."

Lynn also argued that private colleges and university such as Vanderbilt should not have to subsidize organizations with principles that they do not agree with. Colleges subsidize student groups by allowing them to freely use campus facilities for meetings and activities as well as providing programmatic funding.

"I think universities, including private universities in particular, … have an absolute right to determine what kind of environment they want on their college campus," he asserted.
The policy, however, is "creating a very chilling environment" for religious freedom, Swain contended.

She and national CLS Senior Counsel Kim Colby told The Christian Post earlier that the policy was pushing CLS and other Christian groups off campus.

Mark Potok, director of the Southern Poverty Law Center, was also a participant in the NRB debate. He insisted that Christian groups were not being forced off campus.

Lynn, an ordained minister in the United Church of Christ, too insisted that groups were not being forced out but suggested that groups not willing to conform to the university's policy should meet off campus.

The Tennessee university began promoting an all-comers policy after campus Christian fraternity Beta Upsilon Chi reportedly dismissed an openly gay member from his position. Immediately after the incident, the university placed four clubs, including CLS, on provisional status last spring.
Vanderbilt University defended the policy in a statement to CP, saying, "We appreciate the value of religious organizations for our students. A few of our religious organizations maintain that their beliefs prevent them from complying with Vanderbilt's nondiscrimination policy."

"We believe all members of a registered student organization should be eligible to compete for leadership positions, but it is up to each student organization to select its own leaders."

Students and groups affected by the policy may have no legal recourse because the institution is privately funded, according to Liberty Counsel Founder and Chairman Mathew Staver.
Staver said the Tennessee school "can essentially do anything that they want to" in this current circumstance.

Supreme Court Rejects Christian Clubs' Appeal on School's Nondiscrimination Policy

http://www.christianpost.com/news/supreme-court-rejects-christian-fraternity-sorority-appeal-on-schools-nondiscrimination-policy-71787/

By Eryn Sun , Christian Post Reporter
March 20, 2012|10:33 pm

The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday denied an appeal by two religious groups at San Diego State University who sought to limit their membership to those who shared the same beliefs and values.

In a one-sentence order with no comment, the high court declined to hear the case, which came as no surprise to the Alliance Defense Fund, which represented the Alpha Delta Chi sorority and Alpha Gamma Omega fraternity.

"The United States Supreme Court decided not to hear a case today. Alpha Delta Chi (ADX) v Reed. But that's not really news considering that they decide not to hear about 99% of the cases brought to them," said David Cortman, ADF senior counsel.

"What is news though is that the issue in the case of whether religious groups can choose leaders who share their religious beliefs remains hotly contested on the national level."

Religious organizations across the country like InterVarsity Christian Fellowship and the two groups at SDSU are currently fighting to "remain religious," as Cortman described, with several universities targeting Christian groups for their purportedly "discriminatory" policies.

This includes requiring a leader to agree with the organization's statement of faith.
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"Christian student groups from coast to coast are being told that it is supposed 'discrimination' to choose leaders who share their religious beliefs," Cortman told The Christian Post.

"Seemingly to most, whether a group is religious or not, having a leader who shares the group's beliefs is simply common sense. This is especially so when many other (nonreligious) student clubs are permitted to choose leaders who share their ideological beliefs or viewpoints."
This was not logic, but law, the ADF lawyer stated.

In the case of Alpha Delta Chi v. Reed, a Christian sorority and fraternity sought to challenge a nondiscrimination policy of California State universities, which says that officially recognized campus groups cannot discriminate based on religion or sexual orientation.

"No campus shall recognize any fraternity, sorority, living group, honor society, or other student organization unless its members and leadership are open to all currently enrolled students at that campus, except that a social fraternity or other university living group may impose a gender limitation as permitted by Title 5," the policy reads.

If groups refused to adopt the university's policy, they would not be eligible for things like student funding, posting signs on campus, reserving office and meeting spaces, using the school name or mascot, and promoting themselves on the university's website.

Both the Alpha Gamma Omega fraternity and Alpha Delta Chi sorority have struggled to make ends meet by refusing to adopt the policy, which they believe is unconstitutional.

ADF filed a petition in December 2011 on behalf of the two groups at SDSU, asking the Supreme Court to weigh in on a previous ruling by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit, which upheld the university's policy.

Judge Harry Pregerson of the appeals court previously said that religious organizations could continue to set their own membership rules but they could not expect the university to subsidize them.
Cortman explained to CP, however, that Pregerson's remark was an inaccurate way of viewing the case.

"There is no 'subsidy' to religious groups when every student group shares in the same system of benefits set up by the school," he said. "It is more accurately an 'equal access' principle."

"The point of allowing students to form groups around those who are like-minded is to promote the supposed marketplace of ideas and to increase scholarship and debate. Nor does it increase the coveted diversity or tolerance we so often hear about to essentially silence certain groups by requiring them to be led by those who may disagree with their views."

Universities are in many ways a microcosm of society, Cortman further noted. For him, the subsidy argument would be similar to claiming that religious organizations or churches are "free to exist" but cannot use a municipality's water and sewer system, be protected by the police or fire department, or even use public roads for transportation – even though all other organizations are allowed to do so.
Though his organization had hoped to clarify the contested issue by appealing to the Supreme Court, they were rejected on Monday, continuing the battle and the confusion.

"Although I have read several theories as to why the court chose not to hear the case (including that they had already taken several cases with highly contested issues this term), in reality, my guess is that no one (outside the court) really knows the answer," the attorney asserted.

"We had hoped that the Supreme Court would have chosen to hear this case due to the continuing national importance of the issue," Cortman concluded, disappointed but not surprised by their stance.
He understood that at some point, however, the Supreme Court would in fact have to weigh in on the issue as the battled rages on between universities and religious groups.

The Alliance Defense Fund is currently evaluating their next steps, including possibly doing discovery on the supposed "new" policy that the university adopted at the 11th hour on the steps of the Supreme Court.

"It certainly should raise the question to all interested as to why the university, at the last minute, changed its policy that it so vehemently defended as constitutional for so many years. Most often actions speak louder than words."

Contraceptive Regulation

Here is one response regarding the issue of religious institutions having to cover the cost of contraceptives for employees or students.

CCCU Sends March 9th Letter to White House Regarding Contraceptive Mandate Accommodation

March 13, 2012
 
WASHINGTON – In a Friday, March 9 letter to the White House, the Council for Christian Colleges & Universities expressed its continued concern about the contraceptive mandate contained in the August 3, 2011, amendment to the Department of Health and Human Services regulations entitled Group Health Plans and Health Insurance Issuers Relating to Coverage of Preventative Services Under the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (File Code CMS-9992-IFC2). 

This mandate requires all employers, including religious institutions, to cover contraceptive services in their health care plans, including covering the contraceptives Plan-B and ella, which are widely considered to be abortion causing drugs.  Though the final regulations published on February 15, 2012, exempt churches from this mandate, the regulations do not offer exemption for other types of religious organizations, including CCCU institutions. 

In response to wide concern about the narrow exemption, President Obama indicated in a February 10 public statement that his administration had developed an “accommodation” for religious groups. He described an “accommodation” that would not exempt these groups from the mandate in the way that churches are exempt but would allow these other religious groups to avoid including in their health care plan services they find objectionable.  Instead, each group’s insurance company would be required to offer coverage for those objectionable services to the institution’s employees directly at no cost to the employee or employer.  In its letter last week, the CCCU expressed praise for the President’s desire to protect religious liberty, but concern about the narrowness of the religious exemption in the finalized regulations, including the fact that the regulations create two tiers of religious institutions.

“We believe the role of separating religious groups into two tiers, groups that are religious enough to be exempt and groups that are deemed less religious and must therefore only be ‘accommodated’ is not an appropriate role for the federal government because it puts the federal government in the position of determining the sincerity of the religious commitment of various groups.  We believe this is a precedent that could have long-term harmful effects on faith-based organizations, that are neither churches nor run by churches, yet are just as deeply committed to the principles of their faith as are centers of worship,” wrote CCCU President Paul Corts in the CCCU’s letter. 

Instead, the letter suggested that broader language, such as the exemption contained in the 1964 Civil Rights Act, be used.  “We believe that a better exemption would equally recognize all religious organizations that hold themselves out to the public as religious and that engage in religious, charitable, or educational activities for sincere religious purposes – such as the one found in the 1964 Civil Rights Act that recognizes any church, school, college, university, or other educational institution as eligible for the religious exemption if the institution is operated, owned, supported, and controlled by a religious corporation, or if the curriculum is intended to disperse the ideas of a particular religion  (42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2(e) (2)),” Corts wrote.

The CCCU’s letter indicated, however, that if the White House would not expand the scope of the exemption, other steps could be taken to improve the accommodation and better bring it in line with President Obama’s stated goal of protecting religious liberty.  Stating that the accommodation framework must apply the President’s workaround to both self-insured institutions and to student plans, the letter also requested that the regulations explicitly state that establishing two tiers of religious organizations, exempted versus accommodated, did not indicate any difference in the sincerity of the religious commitment of groups in both tiers. 

Finally, the letter also asked for a very robust firewall between the religious institution and their insurance providers’ provision of the objectionable services to the religious institutions’ employees.  Corts stated that, “Merely requiring insurance companies to offer this coverage does not provide this level of assurance to our institutions.  Rather, only an arms-length transaction, such as from a third-party entity established to provide coverage of all of the FDA required contraceptives that insurance companies can buy into, could provide our institutions the assurance that their premiums were not indirectly paying for the services they so oppose.”

Previously, the CCCU signed an inter-faith letter dated August 26, 2011, to Joshua DuBois, head of the White House Office of Faith-Based and Neighborhood Partnerships; submitted comments on September 30, 2011, to the Department of Health and Human Services, Department of Labor, and the Internal Revenue Service; and wrote a December 23, 2011, letter to President Obama opposing the limited religious protection contained in the mandate.
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About the CCCU:  The Council for Christian Colleges & Universities is a higher education association of 185 intentionally Christ-centered institutions around the world. The 116 member campuses in North America are all fully-accredited, comprehensive colleges and universities with curricula rooted in the arts and sciences. In addition, 69 affiliate campuses from 25 countries are part of the CCCU. The Council’s mission is to advance the cause of Christ-centered higher education and to help its institutions transform lives by faithfully relating scholarship and service to biblical truth. Visit www.cccu.org.

Saturday, March 3, 2012

Credit Hours in the News

CCCU Joins Higher Education Community in Support of Bill to Repeal State Authorization and Credit Hour Regulations

February 27, 2012 http://www.cccu.org/news/articles/2012/CCCU-Joins-Higher-Education-Community-in-Support-of-Bill

WASHINGTON – The Council for Christian Colleges & Universities has signed on to a letter delivered today to House members urging them to vote for H.R. 2117, the “Protecting Academic Freedom in Higher Education Act.” The bill is expected to be voted on in the House of Representatives this week. If passed, it will repeal the new federal definition of a credit hour and the federal parameters for how states must authorize the institutions that operate within their state. Both of these provisions were included in the Education Department’s “Program Integrity” rules, which were completed in 2010 and went into effect on July 1, 2011.

The two provisions have been vastly unpopular in the higher education community, as evidenced by the 51 higher education associations (including the CCCU), seven regional accreditation organizations, and 41 other accreditation organizations that signed onto today’s letter sent by the American Council of Education on behalf of all of these entities.

The letter notes that, except for the state authorization and credit hour provisions, the “Program Integrity” rules are part of a laudable attempt by the department to curb abuse and bring greater integrity to the federal student aid programs. “However, given the almost total lack of evidence of a problem in the context of credit hour or state authorization, these two portions of the package miss their mark,” states ACE in today’s letter. “We see no justification for two regulations that so fundamentally alter the relationships among the federal government, states, accreditors and institutions. We believe the outcome of this unprecedented regulatory overreach will be inappropriate federal interference in campus-based decisions in which the faculty play a central role.

The end result will be a curtailment of student access to high-quality education opportunities.”
Since the “Program Integrity” regulations were proposed in June 2010, the CCCU has consistently opposed the provisions that H.R. 2117 will appeal. The CCCU’s August 2, 2010, comments to the Education Department are available here. Last June the CCCU signed on to a letter sent to Rep. Virginia Foxx, R-N.C., chairwoman of the House Education and Workforce Committee’s Subcommittee on Higher Education and Workforce Training, supporting her introduction of H.R. 2117.

A related Senate bill, S. 1297, was introduced last June but has not yet been considered by the Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions.

Updated February 29, 2012: The U.S. House of Representatives passed The Protecting Academic Freedom in Higher Education Act (HR 2117) on Tuesday, February 28, 2012 with a bipartisan vote of 303 to 114.
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About the CCCU:  The Council for Christian Colleges & Universities is a higher education association of 185 intentionally Christ-centered institutions around the world. The 116 member campuses in North America are all fully-accredited, comprehensive colleges and universities with curricula rooted in the arts and sciences. In addition, 69 affiliate campuses from 25 countries are part of the CCCU. The Council’s mission is to advance the cause of Christ-centered higher education and to help its institutions transform lives by faithfully relating scholarship and service to biblical truth. Visit www.cccu.org.

Wednesday, February 22, 2012

Is Christianity a Threat to Civilization?


 
By Dale E. Smith, M.A., LCPC  
Alumnus of CTS 

Many non-religious people believe that Christianity poses a threat to civilization. That Christians are exclusive and claim to be morally better than others. That God, and Jesus if He exists at all, is impersonal, indifferent to or uninterested in the sufferings of humanity, perhaps even unjust and cruel because of the many crimes perpetrated by Christians or other religious faiths throughout history. This is of course, a generalization and bias in its assumptions. There is always danger in generalizing about anything when based upon some facts that are true, but disregarding other facts that are also true.

First of all, many Christians in fact, are some of the most emotionally damaged and needy persons on Earth even though some do not admit it. Jesus did not come to save the righteous, but the flawed (Sinners). The fact that religious people throughout history have committed some of the most heinous of crimes under the self-righteous idolatry of religious moral superiority does not negate the fact that much has also been done in Love toward others. The old adage, "You can't always judge the forest, simply by some of its trees" is true. The proponents for rejecting religion, and especially Christianity, fail to understand or consider the overwhelming positive influence that deeply religious individual people who truly follow as best they can Jesus' teachings have contributed to civilization. In many ways some non-religious persons place their philosophy of life and themselves on a moral pedestal as a false god in itself. They are just as capable or guilty of crimes against humanity and self-righteous arrogance as some marginal or fanatical Christians or other religious faiths have been.

During the past century many secular, humanistic and non-religious ideologies also have caused untold misery, death and destruction. Any honest look at human history will reveal that not only Christians but also non-Christians are both flawed in this respect when religious indifference or fanaticism have become the moral focus rather than the true Gospel of Christ.

In my counseling practice I have noticed one certain fact concerning all persons I talk with. Namely, that whatever their personal, moral, ethical, philosophical, religious, agnostic or atheistic beliefs may be, they invariably always have some need based upon self interest that deludes them into thinking and behaving contrary to their own individual moral values eventually. They are blind to the fact that their human nature is primarily focused upon themselves, their individually or collectively perceived identity and behaviors are resistant to the idea that there is in reality only one absolute morality which is dictated by God. Because of that, they believe that God and life is unfair, that all suffering is bad and to be avoided, and that if only they could change themselves or others in some way all would be well in our world. 

This is understandable considering that this misconception of individual freedom and the right of each individual to create one's own morality has been promoted since the dawn of human history. Even the religion of evolutionary theory is based almost entirely upon such assumptions, since it claims that man evolved and continues to evolve containing within his claimed good nature the inherent so called legitimate tendency of survival of the fittest and his right to self determination. If such assumptions are true, then how well has it worked out in the affairs of the actual perpetual discontentment of civilizations? I submit, not very well. Human history has proved consistently and repeatedly, either between individuals, within a family, community, kingdom, empire or nation the secular ideologies have also failed as much or more than the religious ones. Personal liberty is not dependent on freedom from absolute morality and individual choice, but rather upon a committed struggle of faith toward God's absolute spiritual values of right and wrong as the perfect ideology. Mankind cannot do this on their own. It has been and can only ever be exemplified by the life, death and resurrection of Jesus Christ, the only perfect man and One and only true Son of God. The fact that we humans fail miserably in following such God given absolute and perfect truth in no way negates that truth is a fact and real. If there is any hope for mankind, it certainly cannot be available in our self-conceived or self-centered approaches as has been demonstrated throughout all human history. Why not? Because all material creation as we know it is in fact changing and moving toward decay and death, even the scientific experts agree to that. Sadly, many are yet unconvinced of that reality and falsely believe that man can and will save everything by shear human efforts alone. Thus, so many people believe only in themselves as god and act it out in a multitude of different ways and by different ideological names never realizing their self delusion or powerlessness over reality. 

The disturbing and unjustified idea promoted by some religionists as well as secularists that man can in some way create his own good (Whatever that definition of good he believes exists) if given enough effort or things derived from man's own knowledge, morality, values, ideologies or strength has proven ultimately false in light of actual human historical events. There remains then, only one inescapable truth in which an honest individual performing a rigorous historical and self appraisal can reveal, that being, that Jesus Christ is God and He alone has set the real standards for truth, reality, life and for how to exist correctly with God in our experience as beings. Furthermore, that He alone makes all things happen and quite in spite of us. Once we come to really know God's Grace, believe and accept God's free gift of salvation through His Son Jesus, receive The Holy Spirit from God, then and only then will we be really able to live in freedom of independence within the dependence on God. Then we are free to live as God intended, regardless of circumstances as we know them in this dying World. Then we are free to live eternally and have that Peace and forgiveness and unity beyond human understanding with God even though we fail often in our human efforts to grow towards His perfection. Then we are free to experience and witness what God is doing in and through us to make us become closer to Him and more like Him and because it pleases and glorifies Him. Then we are free to realize that what mankind can never do has already been done for us some two thousand years ago by God through Jesus Christ on Calvary's Cross. And finally then we will be free to know that we know that we are free because The Truth of God in Christ has set us free!