March 18th 2009

Both Suspects In ‘Exorcism’ Child-Murder Case Indicted

Toddler beaten, slammed into objects, bitten and strangled

HENDERSON — A couple who told authorities they were trying to rid a toddler of demonic possession when she died, have been indicted for her murder — a murder that included the child being beaten with a hammer, slammed into stationary objects and finally strangled.

KMOT, Dec. 4, 2008 report

A Rusk County grand jury handed up the capital murder indictments this week against registered sex offender Blaine Keith Milam, 19, and Jessica Bain Carson, 18, the Dec. 2, death of the woman’s 13-month-old daughter Amora Bain Carson.

Carson and Milam called 911 from a home at 13717 County Road 2125 shortly after 10:35 the morning of Dec. 2, and said the child was not breathing.

An arrest affidavit states Milam performed an exorcism of the demons purportedly possessing their child.

The affidavit continues to state after Milam killed the child with Carson looking on, the couple “drove to Henderson to pawn some items to pay for an exorcism.”

Officials said Milam and Carson told detectives they decided to hire a priest after the exorcism went badly.

However, there has been no information of any clergy being called to the home found in the case.

Detectives said at the time Carson and Milam beat the child multiple times with a hammer then bit the child more than 30 times.

The indictments against the couple state the defendants also caused the child’s death by striking her against objects and by strangulation.
[...]

Both Milam and Carson remain jailed on $2 million bonds.

- Source: Kenneth Dean, Both Suspects In ‘Exorcism’ Child-Murder Case Indicted, Texas, USA, Mar. 14, 2009 — Summarized by Religion News Blog

 

 

Both Suspects In ‘Exorcism’ Child-Murder Case Indicted


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January 15th 2009

Catholics ordered to keep quiet over Virgin visions



ReligionNewsBlog.com • Item 23153 • Posted: Tuesday January 13, 2009


- Source: Catholics ordered to keep quiet over Virgin visions, Jerome Taylor and Simon Caldwell, Independent (UK), Jan. 13, 2009 — Summarized by Religion News Blog

Claims will first have to be investigated

Catholics who claim they have seen the Virgin Mary will be forced to remain silent about the apparitions until a team of psychologists, theologians, priests and exorcists have fully investigated their claims under new Vatican guidelines aimed at stamping out false claims of miracles.

The Pope has instructed the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, formerly the Holy Office of the Inquisition, to draw up a new handbook to help bishops snuff out an explosion of bogus heavenly apparitions.

Benedict XVI plans to update the Vatican’s current rules on investigating apparitions to help distinguish between true and false claims of visions of Jesus and the Virgin Mary, messages, stigmata (the appearances of the five wounds of Christ), weeping and bleeding statues and Eucharistic miracles.

Monsignor Luis Francisco Ladaria Ferrer, a respected Spanish Jesuit archbishop, has been placed in charge of drawing up the handbook, known as a “vademecum”, which will update the current rules set in 1978.

According to Petrus, an Italian online magazine which leans towards conservative elements in the Vatican, anyone who claims to have seen an apparition will only be believed as long as they remain silent and do not court publicity over their claims. If they refuse to obey, this will be taken as a sign that their claims are false.

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October 9th 2008

Student accuses teacher of being a witch; tries to set her on fire

Students had been reading a book about the Salem witch trials

FERNDALE — A 20-year-old man is facing an assault charge after allegedly accusing his English literature teacher of being a witch and then pouring liquid on her. The man also threatened the teacher with a cigarette lighter and cigarette.

Darin Najor of Ferndale is charged with assault and battery, a 93-day misdemeanor in the Sept. 11 incident at Taft Educational Center where he attends adult education classes, Ferndale Police Lt. William Wilson said today. The students had been reading Arthur Miller’s “The Crucible” regarding the Salem witch trials.

“This apparently occurred after a class discussion on witchcraft, and what people used to do with witches,” said Wilson. “After one class, he asked his teacher if she believed in witchcraft and what was done, and she said no. The next thing she knew, he came up behind her and poured some liquid on her out of a bottle and ignited a cigarette lighter, as if he was going to light her on fire.”

The liquid later proved to be a nonflammable substance, Wilson said, and the teacher was not injured in the incident.
[...]

Najor was committed to a hospital for 72-hour observation and later released from the hospital. He appeared Tuesday for arraignment on the assault charge, complained of not feeling well and was placed back in an area hospital for observation, police said.

Najor has been expelled from the school, Detective Ken Denmark said.

- Source: Student accuses Ferndale teacher of being a witch and tries to set her on fire, Mike Martindale, Detroit News, Oct. 9, 2008 — Summarized by Religion News Blog

“The suspect later told us he was trying to kill the witch by pouring holy water over her head,” said Ferndale Detective Ken Denmark. “We confiscated two lighters from him and he was committed for psychiatric evaluation.”

The suspect, Darin Najor, 20, faces a pretrial hearing Oct. 23 in Ferndale 43rd District Court on a misdemeanor charge of assault and battery. He was arrested and posted bond in the incident on Monday.
[...]

The English teacher told police she had a discussion with Najor the day before the incident about “The Crucible,” an assigned play by the late Arthur Miller set in 1692 that deals with events that led to the Salem witch trials.

Najor asked the teacher if she believed in witchcraft, police said. The teacher told him she did not believe in witchcraft and explained that the events in the play were a metaphor for unjust persecution, police said.

“The suspect threw his homework papers on the floor and declared it was all blasphemy,” Denmark said. “The next day he came up behind her chanting what sounded like religious verses while she was working at her desk.”

He poured a liquid over her head and was holding a green barbecue lighter, she told police.

“He said he was trying to purify the witch,” Denmark said.

- Source: Man accused of assaulting ‘witch’ at Taft, Michael P. McConnell, Daily Tribune, Oct. 9, 2008 — Summarized by Religion News Blog

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August 1st 2008

Solar Eclipse Friday to Fascinate Millions

 

ecilpseRobert Roy Britt
Senior Science Writer
SPACE.com
Thu Jul 31, 10:32 AM ET

A total eclipse of the sun Friday should fascinate millions of lucky skywatchers in Greenland, Siberia, Mongolia and China.

If the weather cooperates, people along a narrow path who venture out and look up will see stars during the day as the sun is gradually devoured and ultimately  blotted out by the moon.

Unlike ancient times, when eclipses were viewed as bad omens in many cultures, fewer people should be expecting doom this time around. Still, myths persist, especially in remote regions, so it’s likely there will be some banging on pots and other creative tactics employed to drive the “evil spirits” away.

Billions of people along the path, including most of Europe and Asia, have a chance to see an interesting but much less foreboding partial eclipse. The northern half of Maine and the Canadian Maritime Provinces will be graced with a partial eclipse at sunrise.

Myth and mystery

Solar eclipses occur when the moon moves in front of the sun. This can happen only at the time of a new moon, when the moon is between Earth and the sun. When the three objects align perfectly an eclipse occurs.

Before there was a scientific explanation for eclipses, myth and mystery was pervasive.

Many cultures thought a demon or dragon was devouring the sun.

In ancient China, “any unusual phenomenon involving celestial bodies was noted for potential omens, either good or bad, that might befall the current Emperor,” according to Sten Odenwald of the department of physics at Catholic University. An eclipse occurred in 2134 B.C., but was not predicted by Hsi and Ho, who were believed to have been two astrologers who served the Emperor Chung K’ang.

“By some accounts, the two astrologers were negligent in their duties and did not foretell the event for the Emperor,” Odenwald writes in a historical article published by NASA. “They were summarily beheaded for their negligence of duty.”

The ancient Chinese banged pots and drums to shoo the frightful sun-eating character away, according to the Exploratorium Science Center in San Francisco. In India, people would immerse themselves in water to help the sun fight the dragon.

Even nowadays many myths persist. In Egypt, as one example, children are often kept indoors with windows covered or shades drawn during an eclipse.

Prior to a total solar eclipse in 2006, one Indian paper advised pregnant women not to go outside during the eclipse to avoid having a blind baby or one with a cleft lip. Food cooked before the eclipse was to be thrown out afterward because it would be impure and those who are holding a knife or ax during the eclipse would  cut themselves, the Hindustan Times added.

In Togo, authorities prior to the 2006 solar eclipse called on villagers to stay home. “Please, do not go out and keep your children indoors on solar eclipse day,” Togo’s minister for health said in a message broadcast on state television.

Risk of eye injury

Eclipses can indeed be dangerous.

Despite myths and rumors, a total solar eclipse is safe to watch during the darkness of totality, when no rays of the sun are passing to your eyes. The corona, or atmosphere of the sun, is often partly visible when the moon blocks out the main disk of the sun. Viewing the corona during totality also is safe.

However, looking directly at the sun, even during a partial eclipse, will damage your eyes unless you wear proper eye protection. It is extremely dangerous to eyesight to look directly at an eclipse at any stage expect during totality.

Glasses designed specifically for eclipse viewing are recommended, or a handful of indirect viewing methods can be used:

With masking tape, cover all but a 1/2-inch square of a small mirror. Project the sun onto a shaded wall. Or with a pencil, poke a small hole in a piece of paper. Let sunlight fall trough the hole onto a second sheet of white paper about a foot below.

Webcast planned

For those not fortunate enough to be in the eclipse’s narrow path, a live webcast is planned.

NASA, in partnership with the Exploratorium and the University of California, Berkeley, will transmit live images on NASA TV. The coverage, originating in China and reliant on good weather, runs from 6 a.m. to 8:15 a.m. ET.

The period of total eclipse, or totality, will occur from 7:08 a.m. to 7:10 a.m. ET.

The Science Behind the Eclipse Galleries: Solar Eclipse in 2005 and 2006 Viewer’s Guide to the Aug. 1 Solar Eclipse Original Story: Solar Eclipse Friday to Fascinate Millions Visit SPACE.com and explore our huge collection of Space Pictures, Space Videos, Space Image of the Day, Hot Topics, Top 10s, Multimedia, Trivia, Voting and Amazing Images. Follow the latest developments in the search for life in our universe in our SETI: Search for Life section. Join the community, sign up for our free daily email newsletter, listen to our Podcasts, check out our RSS feeds and other Reader Favorites today!

 

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June 6th 2008

New Mexico Compound’s Enraptured Believers

New York Times, USA
May 7, 2008
Neil Genzlinger
www.nytimes.com

There is much to make the jaw drop in “Inside a Cult,” a timely documentary about the Strong City sect in New Mexico being shown on Wednesday on the National Geographic Channel.
But by its end you may feel that the most stunning thing is that this film exists at all. Why would these people have let a documentarian get so close to their exceedingly eccentric world?

 

The cult consists of about 50 followers of Michael Travesser, a gaunt, scraggly man who says he is the Messiah (something he says God revealed to him back in 2000, when his name was Wayne Bent).

The film is no archival cut-and-paste job; Ben Anthony, the director and cinematographer, was admitted to the group’s compound and invited to interview both leader and followers.

His camera catches one incredible detail after another: it was God’s will that Mr. Travesser, 66, sleep with other men’s wives, including his own daughter-in-law, and that assorted young women and under-age girls lie nude with him. As the interviewees talk about such things, you might find yourself thinking, “These people obviously didn’t understand the power of the medium or how insane they would sound on film.” But think again: the cult is thoroughly media-savvy, maintaining an extensive Web site (strongcity.info) full of video and blogs.

That Web site is now replete with denunciations of this film, first seen on National Geographic last month. (A version was broadcast in England late last year.) The filmmakers, the group says, selectively edited interviews and distorted its beliefs, including misrepresenting what it said would happen last Oct. 31, depicted in the film as some kind of end-of-the-world Judgment Day.

Sure, there is a point of view in the documentary, as evident from Mr. Anthony’s excessive use of close-ups of cult members’ vacant stares. But even if the film is, say, only 10 percent accurate, it’s an alarm bell, especially after the recent accounts involving the much larger, polygamist sect in Texas.

The authorities in New Mexico, at least, seem to have heard the alarm: two weeks ago they came in and removed three minors from the compound, and on Tuesday they arrested Mr. Travesser on three charges of criminal sexual contact, The Associated Press reported.

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June 6th 2008

The pot calling the kettle black?

Kirk Cameron: Scientology is kooky

GROWING PAINS star KIRK CAMERON has hit out at TOM CRUISE’s Scientology religion – warning people not to get caught up in the faith as it has similar qualities to a “cult”. The former teen idol turned to Christianity after his time on the hit U.S. TV series…

He tells America’s OK! magazine, “I think Scientology is kooky. I think L. Ron Hubbard had some imaginative ideas, but the bottom line is that it’s false, not real, and my advice to people is don’t get mixed up in cults and false religions but seek out the true and living God and try to honour him with all your heart. You can do that by reading the Bible.”
- Source: ContactMusic.com, May 28, 2008

Read more from this story at ReligionNewsBlog

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June 6th 2008

Amish in trouble for not following outhouse rules

AP, via the Port Clinton News Herald, USA
May 25, 2008
www.portclintonnewsherald.com

EBENSBURG, Pa. (AP) — Members of a small, isolated Amish community are refusing to follow state code in their handling of waste from a school’s two outhouses, citing their religious convictions.

The Amish property owner said he is even willing to go to jail to defend his beliefs. Local officials aren’t eager to go to that extreme, but are in a quandary over how to assure the laws are applied uniformly and the raw sewage doesn’t contaminate water supplies.

Waste from the outhouses has been collected in plastic buckets, then dumped onto fields. The county is demanding the Amish install a holding tank and contract with a certified sewage hauler for disposal.

A district judge last month found Andy Swartzentruber, on whose land the outhouses sit, and school elder Sam Yoder in violation of state sewage disposal law. They have until Tuesday to pay more than $500 each in fines or to appeal the ruling.

“I’d rather go to jail, and abide by our religion,” Swartzentruber told The Associated Press one recent afternoon while taking a break from tilling a field.

Local officials say putting the men in jail won’t solve anything.

“That’s a huge sacrifice. I believe in their sincerity,” said William Barbin, attorney for the Cambria County Sewage Enforcement Agency. “But I still have to find a way to solve the problem.”

Judge Michael Zungali, who issued the initial ruling, said he hasn’t decided what to do if the farmers don’t comply — but might impose community service instead of jail time.

Swartzentruber and Yoder represented themselves last month in court, where Yoder also said he would not pay the fine or appeal, county officials said. Because the Amish do not have phones in their homes, Yoder could not be reached for comment.

The men are members of the Swartzentruber Amish, one of the Christian sect’s most conservative groups. Their only Pennsylvania settlement is the one here, about 70 miles east of Pittsburgh.

Home to 30 families, the Swartzentrubers relocated from Ohio about a decade ago, a relatively recent community compared with the much larger and more well-known Amish population in south-central Pennsylvania.

The Swartzentrubers number only about 8,000, or fewer than 5 percent of the roughly 220,000 Amish in the United States, according to Donald Kraybill, an Amish expert at Elizabethtown College. More than half of their settlements are in Ohio.

While all Amish shun the modern world, the Swartzentrubers are known for their more austere restrictions on technology, more severe limits to interaction with the outside world and more rigid notions of the separation of church and state, Kraybill said.

Yoder and five other Amish men laid out their beliefs in a handwritten letter to the sewage enforcement agency in January.

“We feel this sewage plan enforcement along with its standards is against our religious (beliefs),” they wrote. “Our forefathers and the church are conscientiously opposed to install the sewage method accordingly to the world’s standards.”

Other than the sewage issue, local officials say relations with the Swartzentrubers have generally gone well, other than the occasional citation for not having warning markers, like orange triangles, on their horse-drawn buggies.

Permit disputes with the Amish are most common in areas where they are relative newcomers, but usually get resolved, said Herman Bontrager, an insurance company executive from Lancaster County who is a member of the National Committee for Amish Religious Freedom.

“The position of not wanting to abide by code and cooperate with legal authority, that’s a pretty rare position,” he said. “Most Amish find ways to do that.”

Among the Amish, church guidelines can be interpreted differently from congregation to congregation — and how disputes are resolved can also differ greatly from community to community, Kraybill said.

“There’s a lot of different outcomes — sometimes accommodations on both sides, sometimes someone goes to prison,” he said.

Kraybill said he was unaware of any similar dispute over sewage disposal in Ohio. In Morristown, N.Y., the Swartzentrubers are involved in a court fight over state building codes.

Andy Swartzentruber’s troubles began in October 2006 when residents complained anonymously that the schoolhouse and outhouses were erected on his property without permits. Residents said they worried about potential water contamination.

An inspection found plastic buckets collecting waste in the outhouses, and Swartzentruber told sewage officials the waste was disposed of by being dumped onto his fields, according to sewage agency documents.

County officials said they want to work something out with the Amish. If they choose, they can propose building their own holding tank, as long as it can be shown to meet construction standards.

“People respect their religious beliefs,” township supervisor Giles Dumm said. “Nobody’s coming down on them about that.”

But, he said, “it’s not fair to the rest of the community if some people have to abide by the sewage laws and some don’t.”

Agency, state and township officials have met with Swartzentruber and other local Amish at least seven times since October to discuss permit requirements.

If the stalemate continues, county officials said, another option may be seeking an injunction to prohibit use of the school or the outhouses.

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June 6th 2008

Israel: US tourist diagnosed with Jerusalem Syndrome jumps off building

Ynetnews, Israel
May 25, 2008
Ahiya Raved
www.ynetnews.com

A 38-year old American tourist diagnosed as suffering from ‘Jerusalem Syndrome‘ jumped off a 13-feet walkway on Friday night at the Poria Hospital in Tiberias. He broke several ribs, one of which punctured a lung, and also smashed a vertebra in his back. The man was placed in the intensive care unit.

The tourist was evacuated to the hospital along with his wife by the physician accompanying their tourist group. The couple told the medical staff they were devout Christians who had arrived in Israel 10 days earlier to tour various holy sites. Over the past few days the husband began feeling anxious and suffered from insomnia. He roamed the hills surrounding the guest house he was staying at, muttering about Jesus.

Dr. Taufik Abu Nasser, a senior psychiatrist at Poria, said the man underwent a series of tests in the emergency room, including a psychiatric examination and blood tests to determine whether he had used hallucinogenic drugs.

“Then at some point, after he’d calmed down, he suddenly got up and left the ward,” recalled Dr. Abu Nasser. “There’s a walkway connecting the emergency room to the other wards, and he just climbed the wall next to it and jumped from a height of over 13 feet to the ground level.”

According to the doctor, the man is most likely suffering from the rare yet well-documented ‘Jerusalem Syndrome.’

“This psychotic state is brought on by visits to Jerusalem or the Galilee. It induces a state of religious ecstasy which overcomes the tourists. They feel euphoric at being surrounded by so many holy sites,” explained Dr. Abu Nasser.

“This state is characterized by megalomania and delusions of grandeur. Those afflicted often believe they are the Messiah, Jesus or the Mahdi, depending on their religion and sect. They attempt to reconcile Jews and Palestinians, speak to God and genuinely believe he answers them.”

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June 6th 2008

Blind boy killed by religious teacher for not learning the Koran

AFP, via News.com.au, France
May 30, 2008
From corrsepondents in Multan, Pakistan
www.news.com.au

A blind seven-year-old student at an Islamic school in eastern Pakistan has died after his teacher punished him for not learning the Koran, police said today.

Muhammad Atif was hung upside down from a ceiling fan and severely beaten by his teacher, Qari Ziauddin, at the seminary or madrassa in Vihari, near Lahore on Thursday, they said.

Pakistani Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani had ordered in inquiry into the death, an official statement said.

“The Prime Minister has expressed his deep sorrow and concern over the tragic death of Muhammad Atif, who reportedly died as a result of corporal punishment by his teacher,” the statement said.

Police said the teacher had been arrested on charges of torturing and murdering the boy.

“Qari Ziauddin, who teaches Koran to boys in Qari Latif Islamic school, hanged Atif upside down with a ceiling fan in the school after beating him with sticks, which caused his death,” local police official Akram Niazi said.

The teacher also failed to take the boy to hospital after he fell ill and his condition deteriorated, he said.

Police said a postmortem examination report also confirmed physical torture as the cause of death.

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April 28th 2008

Muslim cleric tells Christian women to wear veils

The Australian, via News.com.au, Australia
Apr. 26, 2008
Natalie O\’Brien
www.news.com.au

Outspoken Muslim cleric Taj al-Din al-Hilali says the Bible “mandates” the wearing of the veil by Christian women.

Writing in a new book, Sheik Hilali, who lost his job as mufti of Australia after comparing scantily clad women to uncovered meat, argues that the Bible and the Koran make similar demands of a woman’s modesty.

Sheik Hilali, who remains the head of Australia’s largest mosque, in the southwestern Sydney suburb of Lakemba, says the purpose of the book is to show the commonalities of Islam with the Jewish and Christian faiths when it comes to women’s modesty and clothing.

In the soon to be published The Legitimacy of the Veil for Women of the Scripture – Evidence of the Veil in the Bible, the cleric points to references in the Old and New Testaments to women wearing a veil.

“Through this I hope to raise awareness and understanding and eliminate apprehensions and misunderstandings about the veil,” he writes.

The Anglican Bishop of South Sydney, Robert Forsyth, challenged Sheik Hilali’s comments about the veil being “mandated” in the Bible, saying they were misleading.

“The New Testament does call upon people to dress modestly,” he said. “But there is no understanding that women are commanded to wear the veil. But it is mandated that you should dress appropriately for your social context.”

Sheik Hilali also says the Virgin Mary is often depicted with a veil covering her head.

“The veil upholds the modesty and protects the dignity of women, whether Muslim or non-Muslim,” he writes. “Wearing the veil creates the most realistic similarity with the Virgin Mary, the mother of Christ.”

Sheik Hilali caused an uproar with a Ramadan sermon in 2006 in which he talked about immodestly dressed women being like “uncovered meat” and made remarks about Sydney’s notorious gang rapes.

He has used the book to hit back at criticisms of his comments, which were given during a lesson to Muslim men and women on theft and adultery, and which he says were misinterpreted with “ill-intent” and with the intention to “slander” him.

He has included an “explanatory statement” to clarify his position, saying that rape is a heinous crime and the perpetrator deserves the maximum punishment. He also says women in Australia, or any Western society, have absolute freedom to wear whatever they like.

“The Muslim has no right to impose the rules of his religion on others. My religious duty is to advise the Muslim woman to be modest and to wear the Islamic dress. It is her choice whether to comply or not.”

He said his comments about uncovered meat were drawn from an analogy used by the Arab writer Al-Rafii that uncovering flesh publicly may be degrading to the woman and may make her vulnerable to those with a diseased heart.

“Through these words I wanted to protect women from rapists who have lost their humanity, lost their minds and religion.

“Whilst I believe that the rapists are responsible for their crimes, I wanted to protect my daughters by encouraging them to adopt all available lawful means of protection,” he writes.

Sheik Hilali concedes that the uncovered meat example was not correct or appropriate for the Western mentality.

“I did not mean this analogy to denigrate immodestly dressed women; rather I meant to denigrate those men who set aside their humanity and turn into predators.”

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April 28th 2008

What Sheik al-Hilaly said

The Australian, Australia
Oct. 27, 2006 Transcript
www.news.com.au

[• Warning: Offensive comments by an Australian Muslim leader. See this report. - RNB ]

This is an edited transcript, by SBS translator Dalia Mattar, of Sheik Taj Din al-Hilali’s speech.

“Those atheists, people of the book (Christians and Jews), where will they end up? In Surfers Paradise? On the Gold Coast?

“Where will they end up? In hell. And not part-time. For eternity. They are the worst in God’s creation.

“Who commits the crimes of theft? The man or the woman? The man. That’s why the man was mentioned before the woman when it comes to theft because his responsibility is providing.

“But when it comes to adultery, it’s 90 per cent the women’s responsibility. Why? Because a woman possesses the weapon of seduction. It is she who takes off her clothes, shortens them, flirts, puts on make-up and powder and takes to the streets, God protect us, dallying. It’s she who shortens, raises and lowers. Then it’s a look, then a smile, then a conversation, a greeting, then a conversation, then a date, then a meeting, then a crime, then Long Bay jail. (laughs).

“Then you get a judge, who has no mercy, and he gives you 65 years.

“But when it comes to this disaster, who started it? In his literature, scholar al-Rafihi says: ‘If I came across a rape crime – kidnap and violation of honour – I would discipline the man and order that the woman be arrested and jailed for life.’ Why would you do this, Rafihi? He says because if she had not left the meat uncovered, the cat wouldn’t have snatched it.”

“If you take a kilo of meat, and you don’t put it in the fridge or in the pot or in the kitchen but you leave it on a plate in the backyard, and then you have a fight with the neighbour because his cats eat the meat, you’re crazy. Isn’t this true?

“If you take uncovered meat and put it on the street, on the pavement, in a garden, in a park or in the backyard, without a cover and the cats eat it, is it the fault of the cat or the uncovered meat? The uncovered meat is the problem.

“If the meat was covered, the cats wouldn’t roam around it. If the meat is inside the fridge, they won’t get it.

“If the meat was in the fridge and it (the cat) smelled it, it can bang its head as much as it wants, but it’s no use.

“If the woman is in her boudoir, in her house and if she’s wearing the veil and if she shows modesty, disasters don’t happen.

“That’s why he said she owns the weapon of seduction.

“Satan sees women as half his soldiers. You’re my messenger to achieve my needs. Satan tells women you’re my weapon to bring down any stubborn man. There are men that I fail with. But you’re the best of my weapons.

“The woman was behind Satan playing a role when she disobeyed God and went out all dolled up and unveiled and made of herself palatable food that rakes and perverts would race for. She was the reason behind this sin taking place.

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April 28th 2008

Faithful gather as remains of Stigmata Saint go on display

The Guardian, UK
Apr. 24, 2008
John Hooper in Rome
www.guardian.co.uk106572037.jpeg

Tens of thousands of worshippers gathered this morning at the shrine of the 4142941884.jpegRoman Catholic saint and mystic Padre Pio to be among the first to view his exhumed body.

More than a million people are expected to file past a glass casket holding his restored corpse between now and the end of the year. Catholic practices allow for the remains of saints to be exhumed, checked for their state of deterioration, and put on display as relics for veneration.

Padre Pio’s body is unusually central to the cult that surrounds him, and exceptionally controversial. For believers, the visible evidence of his sanctity were the stigmata – the wounds of Jesus on the cross – that first appeared in 1910.

But according to a book published last year, Padre Pio acquired carbolic acid from a local pharmacist that may have been used to create his wounds. His body was exhumed on March 3 and its condition has been variously described as “fair” and “almost intact”.

A team of biochemists and other experts has been working since then to get it into a fit state for display. An unanswered question to be resolved today is whether Padre Pio’s face will be covered by a wax mask sent from Madame Tussauds museum in London.

Reports from the vast church built to his memory at San Giovanni Rotondo near the Adriatic coast said at least 15,000 were expected to attend a service celebrated by the Vatican cardinal whose department oversees the making of saints.

Capuchin friars bustled to and fro, directing the faithful down one of three routes – one for the disabled, another marked green for those who had reserved, and a third marked red for those who had not. Italy’s public broadcasting service, RAI, was to transmit the mass live.

Though still known to millions of Catholics around the world simply as Padre Pio, the Capuchin friar was made a saint by the late Pope John Paul II. He was credited by his fellow friars with more than 1,000 miraculous cures and interventions.

But until his death in 1968, the church authorities remained deeply sceptical of the claims made on Padre Pio’s behalf. It was only the sheer momentum generated by his devotees that prompted a rethink.

Another adherent to the cult surrounding the mystic friar emerged this week. Carlo Ancelotti, the AC Milan coach, said he sometimes prayed to the saint from the bench.

Maria Stella Candela, who arrived in San Giovanni Rotondo from Trapani, Sicily, told the Ansa news agency: “My 37-year-old son is sick. He has a tumour. I pray – I have always prayed – to Padre Pio. And now I am here to pray some more.”

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April 28th 2008

Camp officials accused of dragging girl; Mother testifies about incident

Caller-Times, Corpus Christi, Texas, USA
Apr. 24, 2008
Mary Ann Cavazos
www.caller.com
One of two San Antonio-based boot camp officials accused of dragging a 15-year-old girl behind a van in Banquete described the teen as lazy and defiant, the girl’s mother testified Wednesday.

Charles Flowers, 47, and 21-year-old Stephanie Bassitt of Love Demonstrated Ministries boot camp are charged with aggravated assault. They are accused of using a rope to tie camper Siobahn McClintock to a van on June 12 and dragging her behind it.

The Christian boot camp is a program in which girls and young women spend time at the camp’s San Antonio facility and its site in Banquete.

Siobahn’s mother, Frances McClintock, said Flowers told her he had to “get creative” with her daughter to make progress. He explained when Siobahn fell behind on a morning run he left her with Bassitt and came back with the van.

When he returned, he had Siobahn hold onto a rope tied to the van while he drove no more than 5 miles per hour down the road. McClintock said he told her he made sure Siobahn stayed in the grass.

But McClintock said after hearing her daughter’s account she pulled her out of the camp.

Photos taken of the girl, now 16, showed she had scrapes all over her body and a bruised and swollen face.

“I couldn’t believe what I was seeing. I was in shock,” she said.

McClintock said since the incident her daughter has been diagnosed with post traumatic stress disorder and no longer wants to attend church or participate in her high school’s Reserve Officers’ Training Corps.

“She’s lost faith in a lot of things because of what happened to her,” she said.

Defense attorneys argued the Floresville teen had actually quit the school’s program months before even going to camp after she cursed at her instructor.

Testimony in the trial will continue today in 347th District Judge Nelva Gonzales Ramos’ court.

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April 28th 2008

“Control Freak” Televangelist

Kenneth CopelandCBS News, USA
Apr. 22, 2008
www.cbsnews.com

As the Televangelist Kenneth Copeland continues to defy a Senate Finance investigation, internal ministry documents shed new light on how Copeland runs his $100 million church.

Church bylaws obtained exclusively by CBS News say Copeland is “empowered to veto any resolution of the Board” concentrating all key decision-making power in the televangelist.

The bylaws indicate the president of the board is Copeland but Copeland’s family members also play a critical role. His wife is the vice president. The senior pastor, secretary and treasurer roles are filled by Copeland’s son-in-law. The operations vice president and CEO slots are both filled by Kenneth Copeland’s son, John. Other documents previously obtained by CBS indicate in addition to family members there are ten other members of the church’s board.

“My first reaction was that Kenneth Copeland was a control freak,” says William Josephson, the former head of New York State’s Charities Bureau after reviewing the Kenneth Copeland Ministries bylaws.

“Because control is vested in him and his family to the exclusion of any alternative source of authority and it is very unusual,” Josephson tells CBS News.

And the many donors to Copeland’s ministry have no say in how the ministry functions. According to the bylaws the church “shall have no class of membership entitled to vote.” Josephson says that with the exception of Catholic parishes, this is also unusual. “Most churches are congregational and the authority comes from the congregation. They are the ones who approve who becomes the pastor and who succeeds the pastorate.”

Another ministry document filed with officials in Tarrant County, Texas, indicates the church spent $28 million on salaries in 2006. $13.3 million went to administrative staff. Former employees tell CBS News the Copelands have about 500 employees on staff at their sprawling Ft. Worth, Texas, compound. In a prior broadcast Copeland said his ministry takes in about $100 million a year in revenue, leaving the unanswered question of what the church does with the remaining cash flow.

Copeland has refused to provide Senate investigators with any of these financial details.

Kenneth Copeland Ministries CEO John Copeland recently went to the local IRS office to offer cooperation should the IRS conduct a church-tax inquiry. Copeland has said repeatedly that it is the responsibility of the IRS to police church-tax issues and not the business of Congress.

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April 10th 2008

Pastor offered me R10 000 to sit in a wheelchair…. stand up and walk

Sowetan, South Africa
Apr. 4, 2008
Getrude Makhafola and Tebogo Monama
www.sowetan.co.za

Nigerian preacher and healer Pastor Chris Oyakhilome has been accused by a member of his own church of staging miracle healing sessions.

Some of his followers have said that he has been hiring people to pretend to be sick and disabled and then “be healed” during his television shows and public prayer meetings.

A man who did not want to be identified for security reasons said: “I was offered R10 000 [$1,287.20] to rehearse and pretend to be in a wheelchair three weeks before the all-night prayer called Night of Bliss at the Johannesburg Stadium.”

Last weekend Pastor Oyakhilome hosted an all-night prayer at the stadium. The source told Sowetan that he started attending Christ Embassy church in Randburg last year.

He was recruited by one of the pastors and told he would be paid if he helped to draw crowds. “The pastor told me that they were looking for people to work for the church.

He said that I was going to sit in a wheelchair and be wheeled around while pretending to be physically ill. I would then stand up and walk as soon as Pastor Chris stopped praying for me.”

The source also said that the people who are “healed” every time on stage are actually trained weeks before.

“Even children who are healthy are whisked around in wheelchairs. Some use crutches. “Everyone is allocated a person who tells the congregation about your background, your specific illness and suffering. “The pastor then raises his hands and places them maybe on your legs if you cannot walk, and a few seconds later you get up and walk around the room,”the source said. He said he called the church the day after their offer and turned them down.

“I just told myself that using the word of God to lie to desperate people is immoral, so I refused to take up their offer,” said the source.

A woman who went to the all-night prayer service, said: “When he started healing people, I did not see him call anyone from the audience. The people that he ‘healed’ came from a certain section of the audience and it looked like he came with them especially for the event.

“I saw a lot of people in wheelchairs leaving the venue who had not been healed. It was very sad.

”Lerato Moeketsi told Sowetan she was a loyal follower of the church and was disappointed that she could not make it into the stadium. “I had to turn back because the stadium was full. “There was no way I could go through to receive his blessing,” she said.

Thousands of followers jostled for space at the stadium.

The seriously ill, mostly disabled and in wheelchairs, went to the service in the hope of being healed by Pastor Chris’s powerful prayer. Another woman, Tshinanne Nemutudi, said she went to the all-night prayer service because she believed in Pastor Chris.

“I trust him the way I trust Jesus and God. ”She said she had problems with her ankle but Pastor Chris had healed her. “While he was praying, he said we should all touch our body parts that needed to be healed. He said that if we believed then we would be healed.”

Oyakhilome ’s website describes him as a pastor, teacher, healing minister, television host and best-selling author whose career spans 25 years.

He runs the church with his wife, Pastor Anita, who is the director of Christ Embassy’s international office and also preaches at the Christ Embassy churches in the United Kingdom.

Pastor Chris also hosts a religious programme on TV called Atmosphere for Miracles. At the Randburg branch, brother Onyeka Liozo said what the source and the followers said “was rubbish”. “We have a healing school in Randburg. People ask and get healed.

People must stop lying about this holy crusade,” said Liozo. He said that people come from outside South Africa for help.

Pastor Chris is both controversial and mysterious. The press is barred from taking pictures at his healing services.

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March 31st 2008

Russian doomsday cult calls credit cards satanic

Reuters, via Stuff.co.nz
Apr. 1, 2008

http://www.stuff.co.nz

A Russian doomsday cult sheltering in a bunker say credit cards and food packaging bar codes are satanic, the official negotiating the release of children from the group said.

Around 30 followers, including four children, from across Russia and neighbouring Belarus met last October and barricaded themselves into a hillside to escape an apocalypse their preacher says is looming in either April or May.

“For us right now, what’s most important is the children,” said Alexander Yelatontsev, an official from Russia’s Penza Oblast region, who has been the chief point of contact for the cult since the siege began.

“They have burned their passports and say that all plastic (credit) cards and strip codes on food packaging are the work of Satan,” he told reporters.

Yelatontsev said the people underground were in contact with him regularly, and would accept food only if it had not been processed with modern factory equipment.

“Right now they are asking for a cow so that they can have fresh, boiled milk that is not processed,” he said.

He said progress was slow but local authorities were negotiating with the group to leave their refuge.

“In as much as their beliefs have been formed over a long period of time, convincing them to come out is not going to happen quickly,” he said.

Local residents said the bunker was a pre-revolutionary convent, with a well, a kitchen and areas for sleeping and praying.

On Friday the entrance to the bunker partially collapsed after rain and melting snow soaked the muddy hillside and the ground gave way.

Seven women were isolated from the rest of the group by the mudslide, and had to emerge from their shelter and seek refuge in a nearby home. The bunker is near the village of Nikolskoe, 750km southeast of Moscow.

Russian authorities said the splinter sect of the Russian Orthodox church was formed by preacher Pyotr Kuznetsov, who convinced members the world would end in April.

Kuznetsov did not join his followers underground, saying God had given him different tasks. He was arrested but psychiatrists determined he was unfit to stand trial.

Kuznetsov was freed temporarily from a psychiatric hospital to return to Nikolskoe to be with the women who left the bunker.

ReligionNewsBlog.com • Item 21009 • Posted: Monday March 31, 2008


Click here... More articles on this topic: True Russian Orthodox Church, Pyotr Kuznetsov

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March 31st 2008

Chaos and death at faith-healing mission

The Star, South Africa
Mar. 29, 2008
Thabiso Thakali
www.thestar.co.za

It was to be a night of faith-healing miracles – but the death of one person and pandemonium outside the Johannesburg Stadium marred Pastor Chris Oyakhilome’s “night of bliss” on Friday.
The man who died was said to have been sick and was brought by relatives to be healed. A woman said he was her uncle and had died in her arms. She was too traumatised to speak about his death.

Police described the crowd at the stadium – where entry was free – as “overwhelming” and traffic in the Doornfontein precinct was gridlocked through the afternoon.

Entrance gates swung back and forth as thousands of believers pushed and scuffled with marshals and police in an attempt to force their way into a stadium that was already full to the rafters.

Outside, the physically disabled were lined up in their wheelchairs and the elderly and children looked helpless.

Some chose to sleep on the ground with blankets outside the gate as spontaneous shouts of praise were heard reverberating inside in anticipation of the faith healing.

Outside the stadium, some believers lost patience with the marshals who barred their way. Some chose to scale the fence to make their way into the venue which had a massive stage erected in the centre of the pitch.

Among those who couldn’t make their way inside was Elizabeth Seshabelo, 80, of Naledi in Soweto. She had hoped that Pastor Chris would heal the pain in her left hand that has plagued her for 32 years.

“I still have faith that, God-willing, my hand will function properly before midnight,” she said.

She had not heard of Pastor Chris until two weeks ago when her daughter told her of his miracle healing.

“I can feel it inside that he is sent to us by God,” she said.

Amanda Kyzer, 55, didn’t need any prompting to come to the stadium.

“Three years ago my grandchild was born weighing only 680 grams. She was set for a brain operation, but I took her to The Dome where Pastor Chris was praying for people like her and she miraculously became calm and cool,” explained Kyzer.

“She is now four and a normal child even though her speech is not yet perfect.”

Pastor Chris is a founding member of the Christ Embassy church.

According to media reports, his ministry has grown from a fellowship of a few hundred to an international ministry.

He is both controversial and mysterious and refuses press interviews. Photographers are barred from taking pictures at his healings.

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March 31st 2008

Missing N.Y. Pastor Found in Ohio Strip Club

ABC News, USA
Mar. 28, 2008
David Schoetz
www.abcnews.go.com

A pastor whose disappearance from a small town in upstate New York triggered a search by police and the FBI was found earlier today inside an Ohio strip club. Police said that when the Rev. Craig S. Rhodenizer, 46, was confronted by an officer, he began crying and said he couldn’t remember anything about the 36 hours he was missing.

But dancers at the club remembered Rhodenizer. They told investigators that Rhodenizer spent two hours drinking, soliciting dances and making threatening comments. He also said he wanted to take the dancers back to his motel, according to the police report. In his car was a bottle of Bacardi rum.

Sgt. Frank Previte, an investigator with the Lewiston Police Department, told ABC News it was one of the most bizarre cases he’s seen.

“They questioned him a bit. He was very distraught, crying and hysterical,” Previte said. “He did not know where he was.”

Rhodenizer was discovered more than 400 miles from his Lewiston, N.Y., home by police in Riverside, Ohio, who were checking out-of-state license plates of cars parked at the club in a high-crime section of the city.

When officers ran the New York license plate on Rhodenizer’s Toyota Camry, the check showed the pastor as a missing person being sought by New York police and FBI. Riverside police called authorities in Lewiston and were instructed to approach Rhodenizer.

The pastor broke down when police asked if he was Rhodenizer, crying and asking about the welfare of his wife and son, according to a Lewiston police report.

Ohio police took Rhodenizer to a hospital and towed his car.

Previte was relieved the search for Rhodenizer ended safely for the pastor, even if it was under unseemly circumstances.

“Regardless, we don’t have any indication that a crime has been committed,” Previte said. “And I don’t see that changing.”

Susan Rhodenizer, the pastor’s wife, told ABC News that the family is making arrangements for her husband to return home.

“This was very much a stress-induced emotional crisis,” his wife said. “He’s never had any of this, historically.” The family intends to seek ongoing mental health treatment for Rhodenizer.

Susan Rhodenizer reported her husband missing Wednesday after he said he was going to a Best Buy 30 minutes away to have a computer repaired. The family was scheduled to go on a vacation Thursday.

New York authorities initially feared the pastor may have been kidnapped and the FBI joined the search. They picked up a cell phone signal placing Rhodenizer in northern Pennsylvania Wednesday night, once at 9 p.m. and again at 9:30 p.m. Previte said there was no cell phone or credit card activity throughout Thursday.

Rhodenizer is the pastor of St. John’s Lutheran Church in the Village of Lydonville.

Police said the pastor did not have any relevant criminal history. “In our check into his background, we could not come up with anything that indicated this was stress-incuded,” Previte said.

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March 27th 2008

Pastor gets 4 years for sex assault on woman

Toronto Star, Canada
Mar. 27, 2008
Peter Small
www.thestar.com

A Toronto pastor who sexually assaulted and deliberately impregnated a parishioner, threatening her with evil spirits unless she yielded to his demands, has been sentenced to four years in prison.

Rev. Frank Seeko Lawrence “grossly abused his position as pastor and spiritual healer by threatening a vulnerable and trusting young woman,” Superior Court Justice Edward Belobaba said yesterday.

On Jan. 10, a jury convicted the 59-year-old man of sexually assaulting the victim, while acquitting him of assaulting and threatening to kill her. Jurors also acquitted the father of 11 of sexually assaulting another woman by whom he also fathered a child.

Belobaba ruled that the jury’s verdict means the pastor of Toronto Mount Zion Revival Church is guilty of fondling and touching, as well as five to 10 instances of forced sexual intercourse, between April and December 2003, when the victim was 24. The Toronto-born woman, who cannot be named, gave birth to a girl as a result.

“He fully intended to make her pregnant and he succeeded in doing so,” the judge said. Belobaba quoted Lawrence as once asking the woman, “What is taking you so long to get pregnant?” and warning her, “If you’re using any birth control, the spirits will know.”

The victim’s mother brought her to Lawrence for spiritual healing when she was 17. He gave her “spiritual baths,” for which he charged $150, to get rid of evil spirits.

In early 2003, she argued with her mother, left home and began renting a room in Lawrence’s house.

A month later the sexual assaults began. “He took advantage of her belief in curses … and he threatened her with evil spirits if she didn’t acquiesce to his sexual advances,” the judge said.

Outside court, defence lawyer Anthony Robbins said he would be seeking bail today pending appeal. “My client is innocent. I cannot comment on the reasonableness of the sentence,” he said.

By way of mitigation, the judge noted that Lawrence has no criminal record and is much loved and admired by his parishioners, to whom he is “generous and compassionate.” Nine female and two male supporters were in court yesterday.

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March 27th 2008

Faith, medicine collide, and a young girl dies

Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel, USA
Mar. 26, 2008
Bill Glauber
www.jsonline.com

Children don’t often die like this in the United States.

But on Sunday in the Town of Weston, near Wausau, 11-year-old Madeline Kara Neumann died of diabetic ketoacidosis, a treatable though serious condition of type 1 diabetes in which acid builds up in the blood.

Neumann’s parents said they didn’t know she had diabetes. They didn’t take her to a doctor. They prayed for healing.

The common course of medical treatment for the disease involves injections of insulin and intravenous fluids, said Omar Ali, assistant professor of pediatric endocrinology at the Medical College of Wisconsin in Wauwatosa.

“A fatal outcome would be unusual these days in the United States,” Ali said.

The death of the girl has shocked the community and raised profound moral and legal questions over when medicine should trump faith, especially when the life of a child is at stake.

There is no indication authorities knew of the girl’s dire medical condition before her death. Local police are investigating the case and have said they could forward their results to the Marathon County district attorney’s office. The Marathon County Department of Social Services has also launched an investigation.

Authorities said Wednesday that the Neumanns’ three other children – ages 13, 14 and 17 – were being interviewed by Social Services and law enforcement and were being checked by a physician.

“The reaction is sadness, and I think a little bit (of) amazement,” said Dean Zuleger, administrator for the Village of Weston. “I haven’t seen a lot of what I would see to be knee-jerk judgment. There is a general sense of grief and sadness. Because I know the family a bit there is a great deal of concern for their well-being.”

Zuleger said the girl’s parents, Dale and Leilani Neumann, are well-known in the community. They moved there from California two years ago and run a popular coffee shop.

“I probably had seen the little girl sometime during the winter,” Zuleger said. “She appeared to be a vibrant little 11-year-old. I know some folks who were at some of the birthday parties said she appeared to be fine. I don’t know how the onset of this diabetes affects kids. By all indications based on our knowledge of the family they aren’t weird or peculiar or fanatic or anything like that. Everything appeared to be normal.”

 

 

ABC News report.

Reached by telephone at her home, Leilani Neumann said the family did not know 11-year-old Kara had the disease before her death.

“It was something that came on suddenly,” she said. “She went to birthday parties recently, she went sledding for two hours, she was perfectly fine until the last few days. We ask if people can pray for us and give us our privacy as we grieve our daughter.”

Leilani Neumann told The Associated Press that the family does not belong to any organized religion or faith but believes in the Bible and said that healing comes from God.

There were also two postings under her name on the Web site AmericasLastDays.com, which is operated by Unleavened Bread Ministries, an evangelical ministry that focuses on the apocalypse.

‘They aren’t crazy people’

It was Sunday at 2:33 p.m. when Everest Metro Police said they first learned of the girl’s condition. A call came into the dispatch center from a family relative who lived in California, said Police Chief Dan Vergin.

Vergin said the relative notified authorities “that the child was ill, and due to religious reasons the family would not take the child to the hospital.”

Officers were dispatched to the home, and a second call – this time from the family’s residence – was placed to 911, Vergin said. The caller said the girl was not breathing and did not have a pulse, Vergin said.

Officers and emergency service personnel went into the house and found the girl in a family-room area lying on a futon mattress on the floor, Vergin said.

“The mother and father were praying over her at that time,” Vergin said.

The girl was pronounced dead at St. Clare’s Hospital and through an autopsy it was determined she had diabetic ketoacidosis, Vergin said.

“The doctor who did the autopsy and others have said she would have been showing signs for about six months, and she would have been symptomatic, very thirsty, lots of urination, dry skin for the last week,” he said. “They felt she would have been quite ill.”

Vergin said that during an interview with detectives the parents said “they believed even though they knew she was ill, they had enough faith and prayer that God would heal her.”

“They said it was the course of action they would take again,” Vergin said. “They firmly believe even if they had taken her to a doctor, if this was the time God had chosen for her to die, she would die regardless of medical interference.”

“This is not their defense, they aren’t crazy people,” Vergin added.

Difficult issues

Vergin said the death of the girl brings up difficult issues.

“At what point do religious beliefs take over for medical help? And the flip of the coin is at what point are the parents responsible for the health and welfare of their children,” he said. “These people truly believed their prayer and faith would heal their daughter. They have no question about that.”

Police and courts have grappled with such issues for decades.

Norman Fost, professor of bioethics and pediatrics at the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health in Madison, said the First Amendment to the Constitution gives citizens the right to practice religion.

“A Jehovah’s Witness can refuse life-saving blood transfusion based on their religious belief,” he said. “They’re protected. But they can’t refuse it for their child . . . the First Amendment extends to their own behavior but not their children’s.”

Under Wisconsin statutes, parents can’t be accused of abuse or neglect if the sole reason for the injury is that they relied on prayer, Fost said. But Robyn S. Shapiro, an attorney who is professor of bioethics and director of the Bioethics Center at the Medical College of Wisconsin, said abuse or neglect can include “failure to appropriately respond or supply medical care to your kid.”

“What else did they do, what else did they know about, what did they see, why didn’t they figure it out?” Shapiro said.

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March 26th 2008

Pastor back behind bars

London Free Press, Canada
Mar. 21, 2008
Jane Sims
lfpress.ca

A pastor already on trial for assault and sex offences is back in hot water and behind bars.

Royden Wood, 57, the former pastor of the now-defunct Ambassador Baptist Church, was arrested Tuesday and charged with two counts of breaching his bail conditions.

He’s accused of failing to comply with a residency condition and for communicating with a person he was not to contact.

Wood, his glasses perched on his nose and in blue jeans and a button-up blue shirt, appeared in court yesterday.

He politely asked for a bail hearing today so he could continue to work on his defence for his trial that continues March 31.

He asked duty counsel Brian Farmer to give a message to his wife, seated in the public pews.

Wood is defending himself without a lawyer in Superior Court. He is charged with 10 counts of assaulting three boys who were pupils at the church’s alternative school from 1985 to 1987.

He also faces three sex-related charges involving two females and breast-fondling.

During the trial, there have been revelations of bizarre behaviour and teachings at the church at Adelaide and King Streets that closed last fall.

Witnesses have told of Wood’s “affection program” aimed at having members getting to know each other so they could take their Christian message out into the community.

Couples were encouraged to date spouses of other members.

There are allegations Wood would undo women’s bras in church and comment on breast sizes. Wood was charged in September 2005.

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March 26th 2008

Russian Doomsday Sect Members May Leave Cave on Orthodox Easter

Bloomberg, USA
Mar. 26, 2008
Patrick Henry
www.bloomberg.com

March 26 (Bloomberg) — Members of a Russian doomsday sect may emerge on April 27, Orthodox Easter, after spending about six months in a cave near the city of Penza, a regional official said.

Law enforcement officials enlisted the help of sect leader Pyotr Kuznetsov to contact the 35 people holed up in the cave, Penza Deputy Governor Oleg Melnichenko said today in comments posted on the government’s Web site. Penza is located about 650 kilometers (400 miles) east of Moscow.

The sect members, including four children, entered the cave in November to await the end of the world. Kuznestov did not join them, the government said.

After a psychiatric evaluation, Penza authorities declared Kuznetsov mentally incompetent, the Interfax news service reported.

Previously, Kuznetsov was charged with inciting religious hatred and creating a religious group that practices violence against its members and incites them to ignore their civic duties, the news service said.

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March 26th 2008

Death of child may put Oregon faith healing law to test

The Oregonian, USA

Mar. 22, 2008

Jessica Bruder and Dana Tims

www.oregonlive.com

 

 

 

The case of a 15-month-old Oregon City girl who died for lack of medical treatment could become the first test of a state law that disallows faith healing at the expense of a child’s life.

 

Ava Worthington died March 2 at home from bacterial bronchial pneumonia and infection, according to Dr. Christopher Young, a deputy state medical examiner. He said both conditions could have been prevented or treated with antibiotics.

 

The child’s breathing was further compromised by a benign cyst that had never been medically addressed and could have been removed from her neck, Young said.

 

Child-abuse detectives recently referred investigative findings to prosecutors, who are evaluating the case in light of a law passed in 1999 after several faith-healing deaths of children.

 

“This is the first time that they could be taking a shot at interpreting the law,” said state Senate President Peter Courtney, who carried the contentious bill on the Senate floor nearly a decade ago. He said the Worthington case is giving him “flashbacks.”

 

“Kids were dying. Kids were suffering,” he said. “Kids who have no choice over these things.”

 

If prosecuted, Ava Worthington’s parents would be the first members of Oregon City’s Followers of Christ, a fundamentalist Christian denomination, to face criminal charges for failing to seek medical treatment for a gravely ill child.

 

Of dozens of children buried since the 1950s in the Followers of Christ Church cemetery south of Oregon City, at least 21 could have been saved by medical intervention, according to a 1998 analysis by The Oregonian. None of the deaths from that era, including the high-profile case of an 11-year-old boy who died from untreated diabetes, resulted in prosecution.

 

The Followers of Christ deaths prompted a firestorm in the 1999 state Legislature over religious freedom, parental rights and the state’s responsibility to protect children. After months of debate, legislators passed a compromise bill that emerged in the final days of the session and was quickly signed into law by Gov. John Kitzhaber.

 

Since the law passed, Courtney and others said they haven’t heard of any Oregon cases involving children who died because their parents chose prayer over medical care. “I really thought we’d resolved it,” he said.

 

The 1999 law eliminated Oregon’s “spiritual-healing defense” in cases of second-degree manslaughter, first- and second-degree criminal mistreatment and nonpayment of child support.

 

Greg Horner, Clackamas County chief deputy district attorney, said it’s too early to know what, if any, charges the parents could face. “We are reviewing the case, and our investigation is progressing,” Horner said.

 

A private family

 

Horner, along with officials at the Clackamas County Sheriff’s Office and the state medical examiner’s office, declined to identify the parents, disclose whether other children are in the home or discuss details of the investigation.

 

According to property and other public records, Carl Brent Worthington, 28, and Raylene Marie Worthington, 25, own the single-story home in the 21600 block of South Crestview Drive where Ana Worthington died. Attempts to reach the Worthingtons at their home were unsuccessful.

 

Neighbors up and down the dead-end Oregon City street said they knew something had occurred when at least 100 cars and trucks claimed every parking space on the street for three to four days straight.

 

“Both before and after her death, folks were down there around the clock,” said Ron Sherk, a 35-year-resident of the quiet neighborhood. “At all hours of the day and night, people just kept coming and going.”

 

Sherk said he knows many of his neighbors, but he had never seen Ava’s parents outside their house.

 

“They were very private people,” he said. “But this is terrible. It’s a tragedy, especially since her condition was apparently so very treatable.”

 

A few doors away, Dick Ellis, another longtime area resident, said he spoke with Ava’s parents three days ago, when he returned their wandering kitten.

 

“They both seemed very nice and were extremely pleased to get their kitten back,” said Ellis, a retired Clackamas County corrections officer. “I’m not one to judge anyone else, so I can’t really say what should or shouldn’t happen at this point.”

 

At nearby Carus Cemetery, owned by the Followers of Christ Church, fresh earth marked the spot where Ava was buried. Two large memorial ribbons lay against a fence next to the gravesite. Adjacent to the site is a grave marker for “Baby Boy Worthington,” dated 2001.

 

Officials declined to comment on how the boy was associated with the family and how he might have died.

 

Church traditions

 

The Followers of Christ meet in a beige one-story building marked only by a small, hand-lettered sign near the entrance to a large parking lot.

 

Although several vehicles were parked in the church’s lot along Molalla Avenue on Friday afternoon, no one answered the doors. Telephone calls to the Followers of Christ also went unanswered.

 

The Followers of Christ Church came to Oregon early in the 20th century. According to church tradition, when members become ill, fellow worshippers pray and anoint them with oil. Former members say those who seek modern medical remedies are ostracized by the group.

 

A former church member, who declined to be identified for fear of retribution at his place of employment, still associates with Followers of Christ at work and in the community. He said church members, which he estimated at 2,300, meet Thursday and Sunday nights to sing hymns accompanied by a pianist, with no formal preacher.

 

The church still practices faith healing, he said, though members became even more secretive after the unwanted attention of the late 1990s and the Legislature’s removal of faith-healing protections.

 

“It certainly was our fervent hope that changing the laws in 1999 would change the behavior of the Followers of Christ,” said Rita Swan, president of Iowa-based Children’s Healthcare is a Legal Duty.

 

She expressed dismay at the thought of parents who rely on prayer to heal children suffering from easily treatable medical conditions:

 

“It means that they’re very stubborn people who have decided it’s more important to act out their religious beliefs than protect the life of their flesh and blood child.”

 

Sidebar: Faith healers and Oregon law

 

1995: Lobbied by the Christian Science Church, legislators introduce a religious defense to Oregon’s homicide statutes, protecting parents who try to heal their children solely with prayer. Parents who could prove to a judge or jury that faith governed their actions became immune from criminal liability, just as others could assert a claim of self-defense or extreme emotional disturbance.

 

1997: Again at the behest of Christian Scientists, Oregon legislators add religious shields to the state’s first- and second-degree manslaughter statutes.

 

1998: Citing legal immunities for faith healers, the Clackamas County district attorney declines to prosecute the parents of an 11-year-old diabetic boy who died after the couple withheld medical treatment in favor of prayer. Her decision, which conflicted with the state attorney general’s interpretation of the law, sparked a statewide controversy.

 

1999: After months of debate, legislators dissolved parents’ legal defense for treating sick children only with prayer. The new law eliminated religious protections in cases of second-degree manslaughter, first- and second-degree criminal mistreatment and nonpayment of child support.

 

• Original title: Child’s death may put faith law to test

 

 

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When Prayer Fails: Faith Healing, Children, and the Law
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March 26th 2008

Loving Jesus, fearing the neighbors in Ariel

Ha’aretz, Israel

Mar.c 24, 2008

Yair Ettinger

www.haaretz.com

 

Police and sappers were once again dispatched to Ariel’s IDF Street during the Purim holiday Friday morning. A few minutes earlier, a man had knocked on the door of the Leibovitz family home and left a cardboard box with the boy who answered the door. “It’s mishloach manot, a Purim gift basket,” explained the visitor before disappearing.

 

The boy and his older brother trembled with fear. Their parents, who were out of town, ordered the boys by phone to get away from the package and call the police. In another residential building, 50 meters away, a bomb planted in a Purim gift basket had exploded the day before.

 

“This is not hysteria; it is alertness,” police told the two boys after they finally opened the box to reveal candy and other treats from the ultra-Orthodox Chabad movement in honor of the holiday.

 

This is only one example of the tension that has gripped city residents after the booby-trapped gift basket injured a boy on Thursday. Those who were most frightened were members of a tiny, almost secretive community that operates in that Ariel building, among other sites in Israel; the “Messianic Jews.” The group had experienced occasional harassment in the form of hostile fliers and demonstrations against Christian missionary groups. But the police investigation into the explosion indicates that they now must also fear religious-based terror.

 

While sappers dismantled the Chabad package in the neighboring building, several members of the Messianic Jewish community were cleaning up the apartment where the bomb had gone off a day earlier: shattered windows, a splintered dining room table, holes in the walls and the ceiling, and dried blood stains. They refused to speak to the press, and only one person agreed, despite his friends’ protests, to permit Haaretz to enter the scene of a crime motivated by untold loathing.

 

“The same people who hounded that family might find me tomorrow,” one man said, describing his fear and reluctance to be identified. He comes to this home weekly to meet and pray with about 20 other men and women. Most are from the United States, but some are from the former Soviet Union and others, like the man who spoke to us, are native Israelis. He said he was a member of several religious cults before he “saw the light” while reading the New Testament seven years ago.

 

Only half of the local community is from Ariel, he said, adding that there are a few thousand Messianic Jews in Israel who “believe in the Torah of Israel and the God of Israel, and that Jesus, who was a Jew, had no intention of creating a new religion. We accept Jesus as the Messiah. We accept the Old Testament and the New Testament as its continuation.”

 

The parents of the boy who was wounded in the explosion immigrated to Israel under the Law of Return; as Jews; before they founded the congregation in Ariel. The congregation meets weekly on the two upper floors of a typical residential building. But surveillance cameras, installed two years ago after antagonistic fliers were distributed in the area, bear witness to the threat the members feel. The family that received the bomb in a gift basket lives in one wing of the complex. Another wing, which has a wooden floor, plastic chairs and tables, and locked shutters, is dedicated to the group’s weekly meetings. A wall hanging embroidered with the phrase “Peace in Israel” is flanked by a bulletin board and a schedule of events.

 

“The events that take place here are not underground; it’s an open thing,” the speaker explained.

 

Is it a mission?

 

“That depends on the nature of the people involved. Some tend to tell others about their beliefs, and others don’t. I think it’s very positive to tell, but I can’t persuade you to accept our belief. This is an intimate, family place.”

 

“As a congregation, it was nice to remain anonymous until now. But here you can see how many people hate and fear us,” he said. “We are not a cult. We see ourselves as law-observing Jews and Israelis. One of our most important values is loyalty to the state of Israel, obeying the law and serving in the army. Many congregation members, including the brother of the boy who was hurt, serve in elite combat units.”

 

The Ariel congregation had intended to celebrate Purim on Saturday, the day of their weekly meeting. Instead, they held a prayer service at the Schneider Children’s Medical Center, where the wounded boy is hospitalized. “People from other congregations came and brought food. We sang and prayed together. While this is very difficult and unpleasant, hardships strengthen and unite people. It strengthens the parents to continue fearlessly. We told them that hate is vanquished by love.” 

 

Messianic Jews‘Messianic Jews’ are Jewish people who have accepted Jesus Christ as their Messiah, Savior and Lord.They are sometimes referred to as “Fulfilled Jews” – a reference to the idea that they consider the Jewish prophecies regarding a promised Messiah to have been fulfilled in Jesus.Research resources on Messianic JewsCommentary/resources by ReligionNewsBlog.com 

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March 25th 2008

LEWIS BLACK’S SHOW GETS UGLY

This is an original story from the Catholic Defense League. Bill Donahue is in my opinion a loud mouth bigot in the style of Archie Bunker and should be dismissed as such. He would censor what everyone would be able to watch solely on the basis of it doesn’t meet his stringent requirements of not making the Catholic Church look ridiculous. It is hard, I’m sure, to provide intelligent programming that does not do that. He also does not realize that the network this show aired on is “Comedy Central”, is a comedian making fun of his religion so detrimental to that religion? If it is then he and others of “faith” need to take a close look at what they believe!

LEWIS BLACK’S SHOW GETS UGLY

March 13, 2008

Bill DonahueLast night, Comedy Central aired the first show in a new series, “Lewis Black’s Root of All Evil.” Black played a judge ruling on who was more evil—the Catholic Church or Oprah Winfrey. Click here for a partial transcript.

Catholic League president Bill Donohue raised questions about it today:

“No group in the U.S. sexually molests minors more than public school teachers; their rate is estimated to be 100 times that of Catholic priests (see the work of Dr. Charol Shakeshaft.) Moreover, the teachers unions still make it near impossible to fire a molesting teacher. Yet it wasn’t the public school industry that was labeled evil by the show, it was the Catholic Church.

“Radical Muslims behead their enemies, real and contrived, terrorize non-combatants, run planes into buildings, shoot nuns in the back, kidnap and kill bishops, burn churches to the ground, legally murder those who want to convert, but no one associated with Lewis Black’s show has the guts to get them. So instead they rip the Catholic Church for its role during the Inquisition. And that role, if truth be told, was miniscule compared to the role of the civil authorities. Indeed, the role of the Catholic Church back then, as compared to the role of radical Muslims today, was positively angelic.

“The worst part of the show was the assault on Our Blessed Mother and Pope Benedict XVI. This is a direct quote: ‘The Catholic Church is also evil because it has such a grip over the mindless masses that they’ll wait in line, thousands of them in the rain for hours, just to get a glimpse of a pork rind in the shape of the Virgin Mary…God impregnated Mary. We have a whole religion based on one woman who really stuck to her story.’ The pope was called ‘a hypocrite in his Prada loafers and his ball gown. How can he condemn homosexuality when he dresses like he is on his way to nickel cosmo night at the Veiny Shaft Tavern?’

“The only thing connecting this wild-swinging tirade was hate.”

Contact Comedy Central’s President at michele.ganeless@comedycentral.com

Copyright © 1997-2008 by Catholic League for Religious and Civil Rights.
*Material from this website may be reprinted and disseminated with accompanying attribution.

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March 25th 2008

Russian doomsday cultists fire on police

Members of a doomsday cult who have shut themselves up in caves beneath a Russian hillside to await the end of the world have shot at police to drive them away.

Around 30 people, including some children, have barricaded themselves into the caves dug out of a hill in the Penza region of central Russia.

They say the world will end on May 28.

The Kommersant newspaper quoted a policeman as saying the shots were fired after he had tried to help cave dwellers who said melt water had dislodged earth in the caves and they were afraid of being buried alive.

“No police were injured in the shooting,” an interior ministry spokesman told Kommersant.

The newspaper did not say how many shots were fired or with what type of weapon, and a regional interior ministry spokeswoman declined to give details.

The authorities are currently prosecuting the group’s spiritual leader for stirring up religious and national hatred through his books.

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March 25th 2008

Beat up infidel tourists, says radical cleric

The Australian, Australia
Mar. 24, 2008
Natasha Robinson
www.news.com.au

Islamic cleric Abu Bakar Bashir has returned to his hardline rhetoric with a call for followers to beat up Western tourists and for young Muslims to die as martyrs.

In the sermon, organised by an Islamic youth organisation and delivered a few kilometres from the home village of convicted Bali bombers Amrozi and Mukhlas, Bashir likened tourists in Bali to “worms, snakes, maggots”, and specifically referred to the immorality of Australian infidels.

The address was caught on video by an Australian university student.

“The youth movement here must aspire to a martyrdom death,” said the cleric, who was convicted of conspiracy over the 2002 Bali bombings that killed 202 people, including 88 Australians, but was later cleared and released from prison.

“The young must be first at the front line – don’t hide at the back. You must be at the front, die as martyrs and all your sins will be forgiven. This is how to achieve forgiveness.”

Observers said the sermon’s content was a clear indication of what many terrorism academics have noted – that the accused spiritual head of Jemaah Islamiah has been emboldened by his release from prison last year after serving 26 months for conspiracy in relation to the Bali blasts.

“Immediately after Abu Bakar Bashir was released from incarceration he was very cautious in spreading hatred,” said Rohan Gunaratna, head of the International Centre for Political Violence and Terrorism Research at Singapore’s Nanyang Technological University.

“The remarks show that Abu Bakar Bashir has gone back to the pre-incarceration period where he was in a very similar way urging JI members, encouraging JI members to move in the direction of violence, especially violence including terrorism.”

The sermon was organised by the youth group Persatuan Pemuda Islam Pantura (Java North Coast Islamic Youth Group) and delivered on October 22 last year.

It was captured on videotape by Darwin-based political science PhD student Nathan Franklin, who was conducting research at Islamic boarding schools in east Java.

Bashir’s address was observed by the village’s police chief and a horde of plainclothes Indonesian police officers. It was also attended by relatives of Amrozi, who travelled to the sermon from the Bali bomber’s former Islamic boarding school on the village’s outskirts.

The cleric has warned of retribution should the Bali bombers be executed by firing squad.

During the sermon, Bashir talked of a previous visit to Australia, claiming that he had wanted to see the “beauty of the ocean” but was told by a friend there was “one condition” of a visit to the beach.

“He said if you enter that area you must be completely naked,” Bashir told the crowd of about 300 hearing his sermon.

Bashir likened non-Muslims to crawling animals. “Worms, snakes, maggots – those are animals that crawl. Take a look at Bali … those infidel tourists. They are naked.”

He called for signs to be erected across Indonesia warning tourists they were entering a Muslim area, and directing they cover up appropriately. But in east Java, he urged the Islamist youth to “beat up” foreigners.

“God willing, there are none here,” Bashir said. “If there were infidels here, just beat them up. Do not tolerate them.”

Bashir has never sought to hide his support for the Mujahideen, or holy warriors, who seek to wage jihad and die as martyrs in defence of Islam. However, he has in the past been careful to distance himself from the Bali bombings, praising the bombers’ intention but not their method.

Mr Franklin, who is completing a doctorate in political science specialising in Indonesian politics, agreed that Bashir’s radical address proved the cleric had been emboldened by his early release from prison and was seemingly intent on attracting greater publicity for his cause.

“Going to jail, serving a very light sentence, and becoming a media icon – it’s the best thing that’s happened to him,” Mr Franklin said.

He said Bashir sensed his opportunity for greater power and influence as Indonesia increasingly moved away from secularism towards Islamic law.

The PhD student will screen extracts of the Bashir video, which has been sub-titled, at Charles Darwin University in Darwin on Friday as part of an academic talk on how the sermons give inspiration to the radical Islamist cause to create a Caliphate, or greater Islamic state.

Dr Gunaratna said the radical nature of Bashir’s current sermons showed that Indonesia’s legal system was still not equipped to police terrorism.

“The very fact that Abu Bakar Bashir is spreading hatred and ideological extremism is testimony to the fact that Australia has failed in engagement with Indonesia to build a robust Indonesian counter-terrorism legislation,” Dr Gunaratna said.

Bashir’s address contained many direct challenges to Indonesian secularism. The cleric urged his supporters to reject the laws of the nation’s parliament and said following state laws that contradicted Islamic Shariah law was an act of “blasphemy”.

“Don’t be scared if you are called a hardliner Muslim,” Bashir said. “It must be like that. We can’t follow human law that is in conflict with Allah’s law.”

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March 23rd 2008

Spare the rod and spoil the …

The Sydney Morning Herald, Australia
Marc. 24, 2008
Tim Elliott
www.smh.com.au

In 1999 Matthew Klein had a revelation. Fed up with mainstream Christianity, the then 30-year-old industrial chemist, his wife and two young children went to live on a nine-hectare commune at Picton run by a Christian sect called the Twelve Tribes. “I wanted to be a good Christian, and I admired what I thought was this group’s commitment.”

Klein sold his house and business, emptied his bank account and surrendered it all to the “community”, whose members were only known by biblical names. “When you join you abandon your ‘worldly name’ and adopt a Hebrew one,” he says.

“I became Lev Qadash, which is Hebrew for ‘dedicated heart’.”

But it wasn’t long before Klein began noticing “odd things” about the group. He knew that the 60 or so members weren’t allowed to marry outsiders or to vote, and that they had no access to newspapers, magazines or TV. But questioning the elders was also strictly prohibited. “We were told that reasoning was the same sin as witchcraft,” he says.

Then there were the “ridiculously long” work hours. “The group owns bakeries and cafes and operates a restaurant at the Royal Easter Show. Sometimes you were working 20-hour days, for no pay. There’s plenty of money coming in, but no one who works there ever sees any of it.”

Most disturbing of all, however, was the child discipline. In an effort to keep their minds pure, Twelve Tribes children aren’t allowed to have toys, play games or make-believe. If a child disobeys these rules or fails to respond to an adult, he or she is hit on the bare bottom or hand with a 45-centimetre, reed-like stick, one of which is kept above the door ledge in every room.

“One spanking generally consisted of three to six hits,” Klein says, with the rod regarded as “an instrument of love, not punishment”.

“One day I left my two-year-old boy with an elder while I went and worked. When I came back, I asked how it went and he said, ‘We had a few problems but we got over them’. He said that my boy wouldn’t come to him so he’d spanked him. When he still wouldn’t come, he spanked him again. I asked him how many times that happened and he said, ‘About 10 or 12′. So he’d hit my boy about 60 times in the course of the day.”

It was then that Klein realised something was “majorly wrong”. But such was the sect’s power that he spent another year with group, during which time he and his family were moved to a community in Canada, to avoid the attention of his parents. “That’s what they do: if you talk out against them, you get cut off from family members who are still in there. And if you kick up too much of a stink, they just move you overseas.”

Klein finally left in 2001, and has since regained custody of his children. But he hasn’t seen his wife for seven years. “The kids wonder why she doesn’t get in touch. I’m not even sure where she is.”

FOUNDED in 1976 in Chattanooga, Tennessee, by a former high school guidance counsellor, Elbert Eugene Spriggs (”Yoneq”), Twelve Tribes now has 3000 members worldwide, with communities in the US, Canada, Argentina, Brazil, France, Germany, Spain and England. Australia has three, including at Katoomba, where the Twelve Tribes recently bought a $1.7 million property that it is converting into a Common Ground cafe.

Following a hybrid of Judaism and Christianity, the group’s aim is to re-create the 12 tribes of Israel, thereby ushering in the return of Yashua (Jesus), who will arrive like “a King coming for his Bride when she is fully prepared for Him”. Members claim to use the Old Testament as a blueprint for their lives, but guidance also comes from Spriggs’s prolific and frequently bizarre teachings, many of which, it is said, come directly from God. (Spriggs claims the Lord first spoke to him while he was working at a carnival in 1969.)

Spriggs’s teachings include assertions that “submission to whites is the only provision by which blacks will be saved”, and that the civil rights leader Martin Luther King was “filled with all manner of evil” and “deserved to be killed”.

BUT it is the Twelve Tribes’ attitude towards children that has proved most controversial. Harsh discipline is one of the group’s central tenets, as detailed in its 267-page Child Training Manual, copies of which have been handed out to parents at Picton. Written by Spriggs, the manual codifies when, why and how to hit children, saying “you must make it hurt enough to produce the desired result” and that “stripes or marks from loving discipline show love by the parent”.

Peter Baker (”Nathaniel”), an elder of the Picton community, would not answer questions about the manual. But he defends the Twelve Tribes, saying “we are devoted believers in Jesus Christ”. Baker, who came to the Twelve Tribes from the Exclusive Brethren, says no staff get paid, explaining that members “work only for love, like the disciples of old”. They don’t vote, he says, “because we look forward to the Kingdom of God coming to Earth, so we don’t involve ourselves with government business”. As for the sticks, “we have found them to be more effective than wooden spoons.”

Yet others say the community is a law unto itself. “Once, when I was making some food in the kitchen, I saw an eight-month-old boy being repeatedly hit with a stick for 40 minutes by his mother,” George, a former member from Picton, says. “All because the kid kept dropping a lid that she’d given him.”

David Pike, a former member from the tribe of Mannasah, in the US, told of seeing a two-year-old “switched” for eight hours “because she didn’t want to eat a bowl of millet, which is what they eat all the time. I also saw young boys who couldn’t sleep on their backs because their buttocks were so welted and bloody.”

The group has been embroiled in several high-profile scandals overseas, with members in the US recently convicted of child-sex offences and child labour violations. In 2000 two members in France were sentenced to six years in jail for negligence after their 19-month-old son died of malnutrition.

“It’s particularly harmful to children because there is no one who can be an advocate for them outside the system,” Ros Hodgkins, a counsellor who has treated former Twelve Tribes members, says. “And by claiming to have the sole path to salvation, the group exerts considerable power over members.”

Other control mechanisms include the systematic informing by wives on husbands and children on parents. “If you don’t inform on your family, you’re told you don’t love them and you won’t receive salvation,” a former member, Michael Curry, says.

Curry, who now runs a picture-hanging business in Coogee, spent a year with his wife and daughter at Picton, but left in 2001. “My wife and daughter stayed inside – they were totally brainwashed, and I couldn’t convince them to leave. I haven’t seen my wife for seven years. I’ve heard that she’s living with them in America and has remarried someone from the Tribes. My daughter would be 22 now. I saw her a few years ago at the group’s cafe at the Royal Easter Show, but she told me that I was evil and to get away from her.”

THOUGH numerically small, the Twelve Tribes is remarkably well resourced, especially in the US, where it operates furniture stores, leather shops, soap and candle factories, wholefood outlets, cafes, bakeries and several building businesses, the biggest of which, BOJ (Builders of Judah) Construction, specialises in nursing homes. A former member in the US says BOJ grosses $US15 million ($16.6 million) a year, most of which is used to finance the sect’s property acquisitions.

In Australia, Twelve Tribes has run a range of businesses, from demolition, plumbing and painting to import-export, plus several Common Ground cafes, mobile versions of which have made appearances at events such as the Royal Easter Show, the Woodford Folk Festival and the Sydney Olympics. (”They recruit at some very reputable places,” Hodgkins says.)

The group’s holding company, The Community Apostolic Order, has assets worth $4.55 million but claims tax-exempt status as a charitable institution. Though “members’ equity” is at $2.8 million, only one former member the Herald spoke to had managed to recoup anything on leaving, and only after threatening legal action.

Each Twelve Tribes “community” sends a 10 per cent tithe to the US which is spent on evangelical pamphlets or “freepapers”, and on purchases such as the Avany, the Tribes’ 38-metre private yacht, which features Limoges porcelain, spas and handcrafted mahogany finishings.

“This is one opulent boat,” David Pike, who worked on the Avany’s restoration, says. “We used to take it for evangelical tours to Savannah and ask people for donations, until the Coastguard told us that was illegal.”

The US cult investigator Rick Ross has called Spriggs a “jet-set cult leader. There is no question he controls millions of dollars. Where is it? Only [Spriggs] knows.”

When Zeb Wiseman, a son of the Twelve Tribes second-in-command, Charles “Eddie” Wiseman, defected in 2001, he told of Spriggs’s extravagant lifestyle, travelling by chauffeured car and going on shopping junkets with his wife. Spriggs is thought to travel almost constantly, staying in homes in the US and France.

“But the houses are always in someone else’s name,” Pike says.

Pike insists, however, that Spriggs is “not doing it to get rich. He actually believes God speaks to him, that he is doing God’s will and building the Kingdom and gathering the Bride and the Chosen Ones to bring about the return of the Messiah.”

Both Klein and Curry complained to the Department of Community Services about the group’s treatment of children. “But they said they can’t do much because it’s hard to get evidence,” Curry says. Klein says approaching the authorities about the group’s work practices proved similarly fruitless: “They wanted stuff that I couldn’t give them like official names of the companies and directors.”

So the group keeps operating.

“There are lots of families who’ve been ripped apart,” Klein’s mother, Maree, says. “And they can’t speak out, because they’re scared of losing contact. They’re still hoping their kids will come home one day.”

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March 21st 2008

Buddhist sect, woman reach settlement over ‘purification’ sex assault by priest

Mainichi Daily News, Japan
Ma. 30, 2008
mdn.mainichi.jp

CHIBA — A woman has received a 1 million yen payout from a Buddhist priest who indecently assaulted her during what he called a “purification ritual” in a settlement mediated by the Chiba District Court.

The 36-year-old woman received the cash payment from the 75-year-old former head priest of the Komeizan Saizenji Temple in Isumi, Chiba Prefecture.

In return she dropped a lawsuit she had filed against the priest and the Tendai Buddhist sect to which he belongs.

“He has resigned as head priest and has repented, so we decided to come to a settlement,” the woman’s lawyer said.

Tendai officials were unavailable to comment on the case.

On four different occasions from December 2005 to May 2006, the old priest performed indecent acts on the woman, using the excuse of her needing to undergo purification to rid her body of eczema that was plaguing it and feeling her up.

In May last year, the woman sued both the priest and the Tendai sect, seeking 7 million yen in compensation. The priest resigned on Jan. 31. The woman agreed to end her litigation against Tendai as part of the settlement.

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March 17th 2008

They sought help, but got exorcism and the Bible

A secretive ministry with direct links to Gloria Jean’s Coffees and the Hillsong Church has been deceiving troubled young women into signing over months of their lives to a program that offers scant medical or psychiatric care, instead using Bible studies and exorcisms to treat mental illness.

 

Promotional video for 25th anniversary of Mercy Ministries. (No endorsement implied).

Government agencies such as Centrelink have also been drawn into the controversy, as residents are required to transfer their benefits to Mercy Ministries. There are also allegations that the group receives a carers payment to look after the young women.

Mercy Ministries says 96 young women have “graduated” from its program since its inception in 2001. But many have been expelled without warning and with no follow up or support.

Three former residents who have felt the full force of Mercy’s questionable programs are blowing the whistle on its emotionally cruel and medically unproven techniques, detailing abuse including exorcisms, “separation contracts” between girls who became friends, and harsh discipline for those who broke the rules.

Naomi Johnson, Rhiannon Canham-Wright and Megan Smith (Megan asked to use an assumed name) went into Mercy Ministries independent young women, and came out broken and suicidal, believing, as Mercy staff had told them repeatedly, that they were possessed by demons and that Satan controlled them.

Only careful psychological and psychiatric care over several years brought them back from the edge.

Taking in girls and women aged 16 to 28, Mercy Ministries claims to offer residents support from “psychologists, general practitioners, dietitians, social workers, [and] career counsellers”. These claims are made on its website, and the programs are promoted through Gloria Jean’s cafes throughout Australia.

But these former residents say no medical or psychological services were provided – just an occasional, monitored trip to a GP, where the consultation takes place in the presence of a Mercy Ministries staff member or volunteer.

Instead, the program is focused on prayer, Christian counselling and expelling demons from in and around the young women, who say they begged Mercy Ministries to let them get medical help for the conditions they were suffering, which included bipolar disorder, anxiety disorders and anorexia.

When the Herald asked Mercy Ministries representatives whether they told young women that the symptoms of their mental illness or eating disorders were due to demonic activity and that residents were forced into exorcisms, they offered no denial.

“Mercy Ministries staff address the issues that the residents face from a holistic client-focused approach; physical, mental, emotional. The program is voluntary and all aspects are explained comprehensively to the residents and no force is used,” the executive manager of programs, Judy Watson, said in response.

Throughout its website, decorated in hot pink tones with images of happy young women who have been “saved”, Mercy claims to offer its residential programs free. Yet the services are not free – young women on unemployment benefits are “asked” to sign them over to Mercy, while others are asked to make a donation for expenses.

Mostly funded by Gloria Jean’s Coffee – which said last night it did not plan to change its sponsorship arrangements – and supported by the Hillsong Foundation, Mercy Ministries says it has a 90 per cent success rate, but when asked to provide evidence of the program’s outcomes, Ms Watson said that research was under way and not yet available.

Not only does Mercy Ministries appear unconcerned by the allegations, it is mounting an aggressive expansion campaign. Peter Irvine, its former managing director, now director of corporate sponsorship, confirmed it was opening houses in Adelaide, Perth, Townsville, Newcastle, Melbourne and another Sydney house, in the southern suburbs.

Ms Johnson spent nine months in the Mercy Ministries house in Glenhaven before she was expelled. Close to committing suicide and her eating disorder worse than ever, she was admitted to a psychiatric unit and has spent three years trying to recover from her ordeal.

Ms Canham-Wright and Ms Smith tell similar stories from their time in the Sunshine Coast house, and all continue to suffer from the effects of Mercy Ministries’ unconventional program.

They are concerned that as more houses are due to open, more women will be put at risk, partly because there is a desperate shortage of affordable services for people with mental illness.

“This could be really dangerous .. Mercy has the potential to be inundated with people … [who will] fall for the advertising and out of desperation reach for Mercy,” Ms Johnson said.

“Here in Perth people with eating disorders are very limited when it comes to treatment. When you reach 18 there are no government-funded inpatient treatment options for anorexia, except for a general public psychiatric ward where there is no expertise on these issues.”

The federal Minister for Human Services, Joe Ludwig, said the Government would investigate. “I am very concerned about these serious allegations, and I have asked Centrelink to investigate its payment arrangement,” he said.

The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission, the NSW Health Care Complaints Commission and the Queensland Office of Fair Trading have also indicated they will investigate if they receive complaints from the women.

Allan Fels, dean of the Australia and New Zealand School of Government and former chairman of the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission, said if Mercy Ministries had made false claims about its services it would be in breach of the law and could face injunctions, damages and fines. “Both the federal Trade Practices Act and the relevant state fair trading acts would seem to apply to the situation since income is being received by Mercy Ministries. Both laws prohibit misleading and deceptive conduct.”

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March 14th 2008

Dozens blinded in India looking for Virgin Mary

Telegraph, UK
Mar. 11, 2008
Sarah Herman
www.telegraph.co.uk

At least 50 people have lost their sight after staring at the sun hoping to see an image of the Virgin Mary, according to reports.

Alarmed health authorities in India’s Kottayam district have set up a sign dispelling rumours of a miraculous image in the sky and warning of the dangers of looking into direct sunlight.

Forty-eight cases of sight-loss, allegedly caused by photochemical burns on the retina, have been recorded at St Joseph’s ENT and Eye hospital in the region since Friday.

Despite warnings, and the potentially harmful effects of their actions, believers are allegedly still flocking to a hotelier’s house in Erumeli near where the divine image is said to have appeared.

“All our patients have similar history and symptoms… They have developed photochemical, not thermal, burns after continuously gazing at the sun,” Dr Annamma James Isaac, the hospital’s ophthalmologist said.

Even churches in the area have disowned the miracle after health officers and doctors approached the clergy.

The house where the miracle is said to have occurred has apparently been the subject of rumours for months.

The hotelier, who has since moved, had claimed that statues of the Virgin Mary in his house have been crying honey and bleeding oils and perfumes.

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March 13th 2008

Preacher stirs up colleges with doomsday message

TUSCALOOSA, Ala. — Bible in hand, Micah Armstrong strides into the middle of a small group of students at the University of Alabama and starts preaching.

You’re going to hell if you drink beer, he says. You’re going to hell if you curse. You’re going to hell if you smoke dope, masturbate, fornicate, watch a Hollywood movie, listen to rap, read “Harry Potter” books or attend most Protestant churches, Armstrong says.

 

 

Micah Armstrong and his wife (name unknown) preach at the University of Central Florida during the last week of November of 2006. They have radical Christain ideals based on the bible and believe almost everyone will be condemned to hell. They also believe they are “Christ-like”..

Homosexuals are hellbound, too, he says. So are women with low-cut tops, short hair, pants or jobs.

“Women have two places: In front of the sink and behind the vacuum,” Armstrong proclaims.

“Ooooh,” moans the crowd, now swelled to at least 250 people.

Armstrong springs forward on one foot, thumping his Bible as he lands. “Yeee-ah,” shouts a heckler, mimicking Howard Dean’s campaign scream and dressed like Armstrong with a low-slung cap, backpack and suspenders.

And the show goes on. For four hours.

Known to a reluctant flock as “Brother Micah,” Armstrong holds a near mythic status on college campuses across the eastern United States. He’s spent the last two years visiting a circuit of 28 schools, preaching a fire-and-brimstone message of repentance to anyone who will listen.

“If you don’t believe your sin will get you sent to hell you don’t fear God. If you don’t fear God, you don’t know God,” he told students during a stop last week at Alabama, often ranked among the nation’s top party schools.

Next, Armstrong says, it’s back to the University of Mississippi. He’s also been to Florida State, Cincinnati, Georgia Southern, Central Florida, North Carolina and Florida Atlantic, to name a few.

Armstrong’s harangues sometimes provoke debate, sometimes laughter. Shouting matches between Armstrong and offended students are frequent. So are questions — some serious, some, well, not so serious.

“Brother Micah, can God microwave a burrito so hot he can’t eat it?” a student with dreadlocks called from the crowd.

“Chuck Norris can!” someone screeched, prompting a roar.

Micah just kept preaching.

“You say sorority girls are whores,” another guy called from the throng. “Is there one in particular I could go to?”

Armstrong paused, rubbed his face and kept preaching.

You can question Armstrong’s theology all you want, and many do. Critics say Brother Micah claims to be sinless and is so focused on scaring hell out of people that he has forgotten the things they see in God — love, forgiveness, charity.

“I’m a pretty strong believer, and it bothers me that he’s out here turning people away,” said graduate student Jeremy Yarbrough, 29.

Armstrong, 40, and his wife, Elizabeth, attend a church near Tampa, Fla., when they can, but home is a camper. They say a few churches and supporters fund their open-air preaching, which is primarily in the Southeast but extends into the nation’s midsection.

“Our whole purpose is to spread the gospel,” Armstrong said. Originally from Louisville, Ky., he was a street preacher in Miami’s South Beach before hitting the road.

“He’s been everywhere. He’s a cult figure,” said Sally Linder, a spokeswoman for Ohio University, where Armstrong made a stop last year.

Armstrong — who adopted the name of the biblical prophet Micah — is reserved during an interview. He said he’s purposely outrageous at times to draw a crowd, then tones down the rhetoric, sits down and talks to people.

“People say, ‘Oh, they’re making fun of you. They’re not listening.’ But they do listen,’” Armstrong said.

He’s right. Many in the crowd at Alabama brought Bibles with them, thumbing through pages to check out verses as he spoke. Others left discussing faith in a way normally reserved for religion classes.

A delivery worker, who spent nearly 30 minutes out of his truck listening to Armstrong, said the preacher is at least making people think, whether they like him or not. “There’s good in it,” he said.

Avery Dame doesn’t like Armstrong’s message, yet the junior loves what his visits do for the campus. “It’s the one time people care about something. He’s such a big jerk everyone kind of unites against him,” Dame said.

Maybe, but they love the act.

“I love you sinners enough to rebuke you,” he said. “I don’t want you to go to hell.”

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March 12th 2008

Kansas top court OKs picketing at funerals

TOPEKA, Kan. — The Kansas Supreme Court effectively ended a law banning picketing at funerals, ruling Tuesday that it was unconstitutional for legislators to require a court to uphold the law before it could be enforced.

That “judicial trigger” was intended to prevent the Westboro Baptist Church from collecting damages from the state after a successful appeal of the law.

The law was passed in response to the sect’s picketing of military funerals; the Rev. Fred Phelps and his followers claim U.S. combat deaths are God’s punishment for the nation’s tolerance of homosexuality.

Ruling on a law before it can be enforced usurps power from the Legislature, Justice Marla J. Luckert wrote in the unanimous ruling.

“Courts do not have jurisdiction over purely hypothetical questions associated with nonexistent issues,” she wrote.

The court did not address the merits of the 2007 law, which bars protesters from being within 150 feet of a funeral one hour before, during or two hours after a service ends. It also makes it unlawful to obstruct any public street or sidewalk.

The law also allows families to sue if they feel protesters defamed the dead. That single provision survives after the court’s ruling.

The federal government and at least 37 states have enacted such laws in response to Phelps and his church.

Within hours of the ruling, state Rep. Raj Goyle urged a House panel to pass a bill that’s the 2007 law without the court trigger; he also added language allowing people to sue for emotional distress. A hearing is planned next week.

“The court’s ruling was strictly about a legal technicality, not the restrictions on protesters which we believe are constitutional,” said the Wichita Democrat.

Shirley Phelps-Roper, daughter of Fred Phelps and attorney for his Westboro Baptist Church, said the Kansas high court’s ruling was “surprising, but it’s lovely.”

“They didn’t need to invite the Legislature to take another run at what is a lost cause,” Phelps-Roper said. “Nothing they put their hands on impacts us, so why keep messing with it?”

Gov. Kathleen Sebelius urged legislators to respond quickly, noting the bill last year had broad support and “protecting the privacy of grieving Kansas families, as they mourn the loss of a loved one, remains a high priority.”

“I’m appalled with those who choose to add grief to the families of our brave soldiers and other fallen Kansans. I look forward to signing a constitutionally sound measure as soon as the Legislature gets it to me,” she said.

Phelps and his church, long known for a public campaign against homosexuality, began picketing soldiers’ funerals in June 2005 and have protested at some 330 funerals in 47 states.

Westboro Baptist Church
Fred Phelps The Westboro Baptist Church is a hate group masquerading as a Christian church. Led by Fred Phelps, members of this church — who have deluded themselves into thinking that they are followers of Jesus Christ — target homosexuals with messages of hate. The group’s extremist views and despicable behavior mark it as a cult of Christianity.

AP, via Deseret Morning News, USA
Mar. 12, 2008
Carl Manning
deseretnews.com

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March 12th 2008

Scientology group stops guidebook mailings

Highland Beach – A group that sent out thousands of unsolicited copies of a guidebook promoting Scientology precepts is ending the practice after receiving hundreds of complaints from elected officials.

Scientology founder L. Ron Hubbard wrote the 64-page, soft-cover book titled The Way to Happiness: A Common Sense Guide to Better Living.

“The mailing is not going to be sent out like this again due to some complaints of recipients about ‘using’ their logo or photograph without consent,” Joni Ginsberg, executive director of The Way to Happiness Foundation International, wrote in an e-mail.

While the booklet promised happiness, it caused discontent in the Highland Beach Town Hall. Employees discovered 20 booklets when cleaning up outgoing Mayor Harold Hagelmann’s office last week.

Hagelmann doesn’t know how 20 books with Scientology-related philosophies and with his name written across the front got into his inbox six months ago. He said he didn’t ask for them and didn’t hand them out.

In fact, he knows little about the religion, other than he’s heard that many celebrities have joined.

“A lot of movie stars belong to that, but I’m not a movie star, I’m only a mayor,” Hagelmann said.

Besides the mayor’s name on the front, the booklets have the town’s address on the back, inviting the reader to contact Hagelmann at Town Hall if they have any questions. They also have an image of the Florida state flag. They sat in his office collecting dust for months without him bothering to throw them away.

Boca Raton Mayor Steven Abrams also received 11 copies of the happiness guide, along with a DVD, in September.

“It’s junk mail,” Abrams said. “As mayor, your name appears in all kinds of places you aren’t aware of.”

Word of the booklet confused Highland Beach officials who thought that the mayor might be distributing religious literature in Town Hall. The rumors were soon quashed, but speculation about where the literature came from continued.

“I was dumbfounded,” said Commissioner Doris Trinley. “I don’t begrudge anyone their religion. However, I do take serious umbrage with saying on the back of the book to contact the town of Highland Beach.”

The back of the booklet said that the material: “Does not infer connection with or sponsorship of any religious organization.”

The Way to Happiness Foundation International, based in Glendale, Calif., does not identify itself as a religious organization. It does, however, share the philosophies of the church of Scientology.

“The foundation is definitely something that the church is supporting. We encourage their activities,” said Karin Pouw, church of Scientology spokeswoman.

South Florida Sun-Sentinel, USA
Mar. 11, 2008
Rachel Hatzipanagos
www.sun-sentinel.com

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March 12th 2008

Vatican Lists Seven Social Sins

March 10 (Bloomberg) — The Vatican has put together a list of seven “social’’ sins that includes excessive wealth, drug abuse, littering, genetic tampering and creating poverty.

Echoing the concept of the seven cardinal vices — set to paper by Pope Gregory I in the sixth century — the new list adds a social dimension, Bishop Gianfranco Girotti, head of the Apostolic Penitentiary, said in an interview yesterday with the Vatican’s official newspaper l’Osservatore Romano.

“You offend God not only by stealing, taking the Lord’s name in vain or coveting your neighbor’s wife, but also by wrecking the environment, carrying out morally debatable experiments that manipulate DNA or harm embryos,’’ said Girotti, who is responsible for the body that oversees confessions.

Pope Benedict XVI has spoken out on social issues throughout his three-year papacy. He backs a current political initiative to outlaw abortions after 90 days and encouraged Catholics to abstain from a 2005 referendum on easing restrictive laws on fertility treatments, which failed to achieve the 50 percent participation level to make the vote to change the law binding.

The seven social sins are:

1. “Bioethical’ violations such as birth control

2. “Morally dubious’’ experiments such as stem cell research

3. Drug abuse

4. Polluting the environment

5. Contributing to widening divide between rich and poor

6. Excessive wealth

7. Creating poverty

The original deadly sins:

1. Pride

2. Envy

3. Gluttony

4. Lust

5. Anger

6. Greed

7. Sloth

Bloomberg, USA
Mar. 10, 2008
Flavia Krauses-Jackson
www.bloomberg.com

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March 12th 2008

Santeria leader fights animal sacrifice ban

EULESS – The room was set up with benches and shrines, the herbs, dried coconuts and eggshell chalk laid out on a table. With the preparations done, 10 church members sat by the pool behind the red-brick home on the cul-de-sac and drank beer.

The next day, they would sacrifice a chicken to initiate a new member, using the energy in its blood to communicate with the spirits, known as orishas.

But then Euless police knocked on the door.

The officers explained to the priest, Jose Merced, that killing animals of any kind is illegal within the city limits. And Mr. Merced tried unsuccessfully to explain that animal sacrifice is as essential to his religion, Santeria, as the Eucharist is to Catholicism.

Now, Mr. Merced has filed a federal discrimination lawsuit against the city, thrusting the African-Caribbean religion and the quiet suburb into the spotlight. And Mr. Merced has a U.S. Supreme Court case supporting Santeria animal sacrifice, indicating that Euless might have to compromise.

“It appears that city officials are either deliberately defying the Supreme Court justices on this ruling or they’re simply confused,” said Ernesto Pichardo, head of the Santeria religion in the U.S. and the plaintiff in the 1993 Supreme Court case.

Euless officials declined to present their side of the story, saying they wouldn’t comment on their dispute with Mr. Merced, the intentions of their ordinance or the Supreme Court case because of the pending lawsuit.

SanteriaThe city’s code says the law against slaughtering animals is intended to promote “the health, safety, morals and general welfare of the city,” “to protect property values” and “to enhance the quality of life of persons, pets and other animals.”

The dispute has left many residents in the Dallas-Fort Worth area wondering: What is Santeria? How did it get to Euless? And where do you draw the line between religious tolerance and a community’s right to ban the killing of animals?

Long path to U.S.

Santeria, also known as Lukumi, originated among the Yoruba people in southwestern Nigeria thousands of years ago and came to the Caribbean through the trans-Atlantic slave trade.

It arrived in South Florida during the Cuban exodus of the 1960s. High priests, or obas, like Mr. Pichardo estimate that there are 3 million to 4 million followers in the U.S.

“This is not drinking blood, and we don’t sacrifice children,” Mr. Pichardo said. “It is an African religion that has its own central dogma, its own bible. It is a pre-Christian religion. It has its own ceremonies. It has its own rituals.”

But like other African religions that followed the slave trade, such as voodoo and macumba, the practice of Santeria takes place outside the public eye, through home worship instead of in a central temple.

“We don’t do it in a church because due to the trans-Atlantic slave trade and the diaspora, they totally pulverized those kinds of religious and social structures,” Mr. Pichardo said.

Believers in Santeria came to Euless for the same reason many others did – its proximity to Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport and higher-paying jobs with the airlines.

Mr. Merced arrived from Puerto Rico in 1990. He says at least four other Santeria families live in Euless, and he estimates that there could be as many as 6,000 followers in North Texas.

“There’s some in Bedford and there’s some in Hurst, and some are in Fort Worth,” Mr. Merced said. “They’re everywhere. They’re just scared of getting in trouble.”

The complaints started after he became the only Santeria oba in the region in 1999 and started performing rituals and holding gatherings at his house. Neighbors began complaining to police about cars blocking driveways, loud chanting, animal cries and smells.

There have been many ceremonies at the house, but Mr. Merced says he’s conducted just two animal sacrifices in the area, using chickens and goats.

The offerings are an essential part of the religion, considered so sacred that Santeria would cease to exist without them. Santeria teaches that the orisha spirits, which emanated from God, can manifest themselves only through the energy contained in blood, which opens a channel of direct communication with the orishas.

The blood is also an essential part of what makes a priest a priest.

“If you were to remove animal offerings from ordination rites, [Santeria] would not have priests,” Mr. Pichardo said.

“Can we remove the ritual symbolic cannibalistic act of drinking wine as Jesus Christ’s blood?” he asked. “You do that, you do not have the ability of conducting a Christian Mass.”

After the ritual, the animals are cleaned, cooked in a stew and eaten during a feast.
Diversity in Euless

Euless isn’t some hayseed Podunk, ignorant of other cultures. This is a town that rallies around its high school football team’s dancing of the haka – a Polynesian war dance that involves chanting, chest-thumping and tongue-flailing.

The city of about 50,000 people has one of the highest concentrations of Tongans in the U.S. and a large percentage of Mexican immigrants. Almost 40 languages are spoken in its elementary schools.

“We are not narrow-minded, and we certainly are not insensitive to other cultures,” said Betty Fuller, whose husband is related to the town’s founders who migrated to Texas after the Civil War.

Ms. Fuller lives four houses down from the house where Mr. Merced performs the Santeria rituals. She said she believes they’re entitled to their religious beliefs but shouldn’t be sacrificing animals in a neighborhood. Years ago, her husband’s ancestors slaughtered pigs and chickens for food on the very same land.

“You would wring a chicken’s neck and have it for Sunday dinner, and that was perfectly fine,” Ms. Fuller said. “That was back in the ’30s and ’40s, when there were only 200 people living in Euless.

“This is not out-in-the-country Euless anymore.”


Legal debate

After the police confronted him last May, Mr. Merced brought another Santeria priest from Puerto Rico to meet with city officials.

He said the sacrifice is done humanely with a single puncturing of the carotid artery with a 4-inch knife. After cooking, the remains are thrown in the trash.

“If you go to a store and buy a rotisserie chicken, you eat the meat, where do you put the bones?” Mr. Merced asked. “Does Kentucky Fried Chicken have a special place to put the bones?”

But city officials again told him that any killing of animals was prohibited.

Mr. Pichardo, the head priest in the U.S., has been down this road before. In 1992, he went before the Supreme Court to challenge an ordinance in Hialeah, Fla., prohibiting the sacrifice of animals but making exceptions for other killings, such as fishing, hunting and the euthanasia of pets.

With all nine justices concurring, the Supreme Court ruled that the law was “gerrymandered” to target Santeria.

Mr. Pichardo said Mr. Merced’s lawsuit involving Santeria animal sacrifice is the first he’s aware of since the high court decision.

But that ruling may not provide a clear victory for Mr. Merced, religious law experts said. Euless’ ordinance has been on the books since 1974 and wasn’t created in response to Santeria followers.

Kelly Shackelford, head of the Plano-based Liberty Legal Institute, said the suit would probably come down to whether the city enforces its ban with no exceptions.

“If in the city, you literally cannot kill animals for any reason, you can’t kill them,” he said. “But if they allow any other exemption for the killing of animals, then they’re dead on arrival.”

Euless’ ordinance does make exceptions for rodent control. It also says the city can kill any animal that has rabies or attacks another animal or person.

But the city also allows animals to be euthanized at the local shelter for other reasons.

And large gatherings around the cooking of livestock are not that uncommon in Euless.

Since immigrating to Euless in the early 1980s, the Tongans have celebrated holidays by roasting pigs in a tradition similar to Hawaiian luaus.

The festivals by members of the Tongan First United Methodist Church on Main Street sometimes involve as many as 15 pigs, said the Rev. Alex Latu. Because few people have freezers large enough to fit a whole hog, sometimes “they go and buy them live and kill it in the back yard,” he said.

Mr. Latu said city officials have expressed concern about outdoor roasting only during severe droughts. Tongans have complied with the burn bans, he said. Pig roasting is a cultural tradition, not a religious one.

“We just learn as a minority to cope and work with the community, not to stay and hide within our own little four corners,” Mr. Latu said.

He said he’s never heard of Santeria. He has no problem with people with different beliefs, but he said he generally associates animal sacrifice with cults.

“It’s a little bit strange,” he said. “If that’s what they use for their religious rituals, it’s OK. I don’t know if it will affect the whole community in the future. From time to time, those kinds of religions turn out to be something else. I think they might want to have the city look at it.”

Sidebar: ANIMAL SACRIFICE IN WORLD RELIGIONS

Animal sacrifice has been used in nearly all the world’s major religions at some time.

• The Old Testament is rife with references to the sacrifice of rams. Jews abandoned the ritual after the temple where sacrifices were performed was destroyed. The Torah commands that sacrifices must be done in a place commanded by God, and no sacrifice can take place until a new one is designated.

• Many Muslims commemorate the end of the Hajj by sacrificing a sheep in honor of Abraham’s willingness to slay his son at God’s commandment and God’s providing of a ram instead. The holiday, known as Eid al-Adha, was celebrated last week.

• In Christianity, the crucifixion of Jesus replaced animal sacrifice under the belief that Jesus was the Lamb of God and his ultimate sacrifice redeemed the world of its sins. This sacrifice is commemorated in Mass with the sacrament of the wafer and wine.

Original title: Santeria leader fights Euless ban

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February 27th 2008

Polygamist sect leader Warren Jeffs pleads not guilty

Polygamist sect leader Warren Jeffs pleaded not guilty Wednesday to sex charges stemming from teh arranged marriages of two teanage girls to older men.Jeffs, the leader of the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, was convicted in Utah last year of rape as an accomplice in the arranged marriage of a 14-year-old girl and her 19-year-old cousin. It was his first court appearance in Arizona, where prosecutors filed charges against him even before he faced charges in Utah.

Jeffs, flanked by three law enforcement officers, wore an orange and white striped jail uniform and ankle and wrist cuffs. He had a slight smile when he walked into the courtroom and talked in hushed tones with his lawyers.

The only thing he said during the hearing was “yes” when Superior Court Judge Steven Conn asked him if he was Warren Jeffs. Otherwise, he sat quietly with his hands folded in his lap.

The Arizona charges stem from the arranged marriages of a man in his early 50s to his 17-year-old relative and the marriage of the same teenagers that led to the Utah conviction.

Prosecutors in Arizona said that doesn’t prevent them from bringing charges here.

Jeffs’ lawyer, Mike Piccarreta, entered the not guilty plea on his behalf. Piccarreta plans to ask Conn for a change of venue, saying Kingman is too close to St. George, Utah, the site of Jeffs’ first trial, for him to get a fair trial here.

“If people want to give Mr. Jeffs a fair trial, we have to hold it in an area as far away as practical from the other case in Utah,” Piccarreta said Tuesday, when Jeffs was returned to Kingman from Utah, where he had begun serving his prison term for his conviction there.

Jeffs is charged in Arizona as an accomplice with four counts of incest and four counts of sexual contact with a minor in an indictment issued last year. He also was arraigned on two additional counts of sexual conduct with a minor and one count of conspiracy to conduct sexual conduct with a minor from a case filed in 2005.

Mohave County Attorney Matt Smith has said the trial should be held in his county because that’s where the crimes allegedly occurred.

Conn ordered Jeffs held in the Mohave County jail without bond and scheduled a hearing for March 19. He was returned to Kingman on Tuesday from Utah, where he had begun serving his prison term for his conviction there.

The Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints is based in Colorado City, Ariz. and nearby Hildale, Utah.

The mainstream Mormon church, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, renounced polygamy more than a century ago, excommunicates members who engage in the practice and disavows any connection with the FLDS church.

Jeffs was a fugitive for nearly two years and was on the FBI’s Most Wanted list when he was arrested during a traffic stop outside Las Vegas.

AP, via the Kansas City Star, USA
Feb. 27, 2008
Amanda Lee Myers
www.kansascity.com

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February 7th 2008

Haggard prematurely leaves rehab, New Life Church says

Original Story

By Kevin Flynn, Rocky Mountain News (Contact) Originally published 07:32 a.m., February 6, 2008
Updated 04:50 p.m., February 6, 2008

Ted Haggard

 

The team appointed to oversee Ted Haggard’s “spiritual restoration” after scandal forced him to end his ministry at New Life Church has agreed to his request to end their oversite of his recovery program.

New Life Church issued a statement Tuesday saying it believes the termination of the relationship is premature, but would not say why. Earlier in the process, church leaders had said they assumed that Haggard’s recovery could take several years.

The Colorado Springs evangelical congregation that Haggard founded also said it remains convinced that he should not return to any church ministry.

A year ago, Haggard voluntarily entered into an arrangement with a team of “overseers” to guide what it called his “spiritual restoration” following a scandal that rocked the 14,000-member church community over Haggard’s admitted “sexual immorality.”

While Haggard never specified, a Denver man accused him of engaging in sex with him.

Haggard is now living in Phoenix and will remain as a member of Phoenix First Assembly of God. There, Pastor Tommy Barnett will maintain what New Life called an “accountability relationship.” Barnett had been one of the overseers.

“New Life Church recognizes the process of restoring Ted Haggard is incomplete and maintains its original stance that he should not return to vocational ministry,” the church said in a statement. “However, we wish him and his family only success in the future.”

Haggard resigned in November 2006 as president of the National Association of Evangelicals and was fired as pastor of New Life Church after he admitted to purchasing drugs and “sexual immorality” involving a gay male escort.

The man publicly alleged that Haggard had paid him for sex over a three-year period and sometimes took methamphetamine during the encounters. Haggard admitted paying Mike Jones for a massage and for the drug, but denied having sex with Jones or taking the drug.

A year ago, one of his overseers In February, one of Haggard’s spiritual advisers said Haggard has emerged from three weeks of intensive counseling convinced “he is completely heterosexual” and committed to his marriage.

flynnk@RockyMountainNews.com

or 303-954-5247

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February 5th 2008

Ex-priest jailed for crucifying nun in exorcism

A former Romanian Orthodox priest has been jailed for seven years for fatally crucifying a young nun during an “exorcism“.

Twenty-three-year-old Irina Cornici was bound and chained to a cross before being starved and denied water for days.

She died of dehydration, exhaustion and suffocation.

Ms Cornici believed that the devil was talking to her, and had previously been treated for schizophrenia. Daniel Corogeanu, the former priest, and four nuns decided in 2005 to undertake the exorcism.

Corogeanu was convicted of murder and sentenced alongside the four nuns in September 2007, but was freed while an appeal took place.

Following the appeal’s failure he was picked up by police in the remote north-eastern part of the eastern European country.

Upon arrest he said he would serve his term if God willed it, according to national news agency Rompres.

While the Romanian Orthodox Church regularly performs exorcism rituals it denounced his methods as “abominable”, and has promised to take steps to prevent anything similar happening in the future, including psychological screening for potential clergy.

Corogeanu had in fact dropped out of training for the priesthood half-way through, but a shortage of suitable candidates meant that he still served as a priest in the Holy Trinity convent, north-east Romania.

He has since been defrocked and the four nuns excommunicated.

Telegraph, UK
Jan. 31, 2008
Tom Chivers and agencies
www.telegraph.co.uk

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February 5th 2008

Autopsy shows suffocation in exorcism death

ODESSA — A woman whose husband said died while he was performing an exorcism on her suffocated, officials said on Monday.

Susan Kay Clark was apparently not strangled, Ector County Sheriff Mark Donaldson said of results of a preliminary autopsy that showed she died of suffocation.

Jan David Clark, 60, of Odessa, was arrested Friday after authorities went to his home and found his wife’s body wrapped in a sheet with a cross and sword on top of it on the floor of the master bathroom.

Jan David Clark told investigators he had his wife pinned on the floor of the bathroom when she died. Clark said he was trying to exorcise demons from her body when they entered him and caused her to die, probable-cause documents say.

No pillows were found in the bathroom, Donaldson said.

A woman who answered the phone on Monday at the Odessa home of Susan Clark’s daughter, Rhonda Carrigan, said the family wished to be left alone.

Jan David Clark has been charged with murder and remained in the Ector County jail Monday on $300,000 bail. He has requested an attorney be appointed to represent him, Donaldson said.

Authorities went to the Clarks’ home before dawn Friday after being told that Clark had called a friend and said his 59-year-old wife was dead.

A full autopsy report on Susan Clark is pending by the Tarrant County Medical Examiner’s Office.

AP, via the Houston Chronicle, USA
Feb. 4, 2008
www.chron.com

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February 5th 2008

Judge halves amount of damages Westboro church must pay

A federal judge in Baltimore substantially reduced Monday the amount of damages a Kansas-based anti-gay group and three of its leading members must pay for their protest at a Marine’s funeral in Westminster.

In a 52-page decisionPDF file, U.S. District Judge Richard D. Bennett affirmed the jury’s verdict in favor of the father of Lance Cpl. Matthew Snyder. Albert Snyder successfully sued the church for emotional distress and invasion of his family’s privacy after Westboro Baptist Church members waved signs decrying homosexuality at his son’s funeral in March 2006.

“There was more than sufficient evidence to support the jury’s verdict that [Westboro’s] conduct before, during and after the funeral of Matthew Snyder was outrageous [and] highly offensive to a reasonable person,” Bennett wrote.

But the judge also more than halved the $10.9 million award announced in October to $5 million, noting constitutional concerns of appropriateness. He held up the jury’s compensatory damage award of $2.9 million but reduced the total punitive damages to $2.1 million.

Bennett cited Supreme Court precedent requiring the judge to weigh the nature of the harm suffered by Snyder against the financial resources of Westboro and its members to finance a large damage award.

A pending appeal before the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 4th Circuit by Westboro to overturn the verdict remains in limbo. First, Bennett, the trial judge, must decide how much of a bond the church and its members will have to post while the appeal continues. Church members have argued that they should not be required to post a bond during the appeals process.

A hearing on the issue is scheduled for March 6, according to one of the defendants, Shirley Phelps-Roper.

Westboro church members say they believe soldiers are being killed in Iraq and Afghanistan as punishment for what they say is the nation’s tolerance of homosexuality. There was no evidence that Westboro members targeted the Marine’s funeral because they believed he was gay.

Still, the Phelps family argued during the trial that their often incendiary protests should be allowed under the First Amendment, which guarantees freedom of speech and religion.

Bennett largely rejected that argument, saying, “Quite simply, the Supreme Court has recognized that there is not an absolute First Amendment right for any and all speech directed by private individuals against other private individuals.”

Made up almost entirely of relatives of its founder, Fred Phelps Sr., the fire-and-brimstone Christian group, based in Topeka, has protested military funerals across the country with placards bearing shock-value messages such as “Thank God for dead soldiers.”

Most recently, they announced they would appear at services for deceased Hollywood actor Heath Ledger, who starred in the film Brokeback Mountain, a gay love story.

Several leading constitutional scholars say they believe that Westboro has a good chance of overturning the verdict on appeal based on broad First Amendment protections.

But in his decision Monday, Bennett stood firm.

“Defendants cannot by their own actions transform a private funeral into a public event and then bootstrap their position by arguing that Matthew Snyder was a public figure,” the judge wrote.

Bennett also took time in his decision to quote extensively the courtroom account given by Albert Snyder at the trial.

“He testified that Defendants placed a ‘bug’ in his head such that he is unable to separate thoughts of his son from the Defendant’s actions: “there are nights that I just, you know, I try to think of my son at times and every time I think of my son or pass his picture handing on the wall or see the medals handing on the wall that he received from the [Marine Corps], I see those signs.”

Church leaders argued in court papers that the jury did not take into account their net worth when it imposed an award of more than 10 times their financial holdings.

“The First Amendment prohibits this action from going forward,” Shirley Phelps-Roper said Monday. “It always has and it always will. You can rebel against that law, but that’s why we have appeals courts. So we’re off and running.”

Lawyers for the Marine’s father say they believe the church should be ordered to pay the award immediately or post a bond to secure the judgment during the appeals process. They added that they have evidence produced during discovery for the trial that Westboro members did not tell the truth about their assets.

“Based on the case law, the reduction in the award does not surprise us,” Snyder’s attorney Sean Summers said Monday. “But we’re very pleased with the decision to uphold the jury’s verdict.”

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February 1st 2008

Catholic League president challenges Bill Maher to fight

Original story here.

David Edwards and Nick Juliano
Published: Thursday January 31, 2008

In what could be seen as an effort to resurrect its sister network’s Celebrity Boxing franchise to boost lagging ratings, Fox News aired an interview Thursday with the controversial Catholic League president, William Donahue, who took offense to comments questioning religion from comedian, and prominent athiest, Bill Maher.

That Maher deigned to question the divinity of Jesus Christ — saying he was more skeptical of Christian mythology than that UFOs regularly visit earth — sent Donahue into an apoplectic rage. The 60-year-old Donahue challenged his longtime nemesis Maher to a fist-fight. Fox News host Megyn Kelly offered to televise the fight right there on Americas’ Newsroom.

“Bill Maher … constantly is going after not just religion in general, he really has it out against Christians,” Donahue charged. “I’m at the point right now where I’d love to challenge this guy in a ring … preferably Madison Square Garden. I’m a lot older than he is, but let me tell you something, I’d floor him.”

On Real Time with Bill Maher, which airs Friday nights on HBO, the host and his guests were discussing recent UFO sightings in Texas when Maher made the following observation.

“I think it is much more likely that there could be space ships from outer space, than what a lot of things people believe. People still believe, you know, excuse me I know I may inject religion into every show but UFO’s are a lot more likely than a space god flew down bodily and you know who was the Son of God and you know had sex with a Palestinian woman.”

Maher’s program airs at 11 p.m. Friday, his viewers pay a premium fee to receive HBO, and the comedian has never been shy about his view that religion is essentially a farce, so it’s unlikely any regular viewers were all that offended. That didn’t stop Donahue from attempting to stir up some outrage by issuing a press release which slammed Maher as “America’s number one bigot.”

Donahue has made Maher one of his favorite targets for verbal vitriol, and Thursday’s challenge apparently marked his blood boiling over. Indeed, the Catholic League president alluded to his deep yearning to battle the HBO host just three weeks ago.

“Unlike most non-believers, who are generally content to respect the right of most Americans to believe in God, guys like Maher want a brawl,” Donahue said Jan. 7. “He should be careful what he wishes for because there are those who pine to deliver.”

Whether the fight will happen — and the possibility of Paula Jones and Tonya Harding returning to the ring as an undercard — remains to be seen.

This video is from Fox’s America’s Newsroom, broadcast January 31, 2008.

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January 21st 2008

German historian likens Tom Cruise speech to style of Nazi propaganda minister Goebbels

The long-standing antagonism between Germany and the Church of Scientology escalated over the weekend when a high-profile historian compared Tom Cruise’s performance in a Scientology video with the style of the Nazi propaganda minister, Joseph Goebbels.

Guido Knopp, who has written a number of books on Hitler and his inner circle, said the video, which surfaced on YouTube last week, “inevitably” recalled Goebbels’ speech in a Berlin sports stadium when he asked “Do you want total war?” and the crowd thundered “Yes!”

The Scientology footage shows Cruise, wearing a large medallion and speaking from a podium. “So what do you say, we gonna clean this place up?” he asks. He is greeted by zealous cheers.

“It may be the case that Cruise’s delivery style is not uncommon in certain religious movements in the US,” Knopp told Bild am Sonntag in an interview. “But for Germans with an interest in history, that scene where he asks whether the Scientologists should clean up the world and everyone shouts ‘yes’ is inevitably reminiscent of Goebbels’ notorious speech.”

Parallels with the Third Reich remain highly sensitive here. But Scientology has generated a visceral opposition in Germany – last month security ministers tried to ban it, saying it contravened the constitution – and Knopp’s remarks found few critics yesterday.

Thomas Gandow, of the German Protestant church, who has previously compared Cruise to Goebbels, said the video revealed the actor’s high standing in the organisation: “He is not your average sect member but rather a propaganda minister … I still believe it: Tom Cruise is the Goebbels of Scientology.”

Ursula Caberta, who leads a Hamburg-based research group into the Church of Scientology, said the latest video was “hard evidence” that the group was anti-constitutional.

There was no immediate comment from the Church of Scientology in Berlin, however the organisation’s US headquarters issued a statement in defence of Cruise. “Bild am Sonntag is grossly irresponsible for publishing horrendous and disgraceful claims about Mr Cruise,” it said. “Unlike Bild am Sonn tag and other German anti-religionists, he does not discriminate against any other religion, race or colour.”

The organisation has said the footage came from a meeting four years ago. It was posted on several websites last week, but some took it down after the church claimed copyright. Other footage shows the Oscar-nominated actor speaking above the “Mission: Impossible” theme music. He presents himself and fellow Scientologists as “authorities on the mind”.

“We’re the authorities on getting people off drugs. We’re the authorities on the mind. We’re the authorities on improving conditions … We can rehabilitate criminals. Way to happiness. We can bring peace and unite cultures,” Cruise tells his audience.

But such claims are treated with suspicion in Germany, where there is decades-long scepticism about anything regarded as an ideological movement.

Germany has taken a very distinct stance among European countries towards Scientology, considering it not as a religion but as a commercial organisation.

The Church of Scientology, which is thought to have about 6,000 adherents in Germany, is closely monitored by Germany’s Office for the Protection of the Constitution, which also tracks the activities of neo-Nazis, leftwing extremists and Islamist terrorists. Such scrutiny has prompted criticism from the US state department.

Cruise found himself at the sharp end of German hostility last summer when the defence ministry sought to obstruct the filming of Valkyrie, starring Cruise as the German resistance hero Claus von Stauffenberg.

Although the ban on using military sites was eventually scrapped, ministers criticised the project, citing Cruise’s affiliation with Scientology. Even Berthold Graf von Stauffenberg, the count’s son, joined in, dubbing Scientology a “totalitarian ideology”.

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January 20th 2008

Banned From Church

On a quiet Sunday morning in June, as worshippers settled into the pews at Allen Baptist Church in southwestern Michigan, Pastor Jason Burrick grabbed his cellphone and dialed 911. When a dispatcher answered, the preacher said a former congregant was in the sanctuary. “And we need to, um, have her out A.S.A.P.”

Half an hour later, 71-year-old Karolyn Caskey, a church member for nearly 50 years who had taught Sunday school and regularly donated 10% of her pension, was led out by a state trooper and a county sheriff’s officer. One held her purse and Bible. The other put her in handcuffs.

The charge was trespassing, but Mrs. Caskey’s real offense, in her pastor’s view, was spiritual. Several months earlier, when she had questioned his authority, he’d charged her with spreading “a spirit of cancer and discord” and expelled her from the congregation. “I’ve been shunned,” she says.

Her story reflects a growing movement among some conservative Protestant pastors to bring back church discipline, an ancient practice in which suspected sinners are privately confronted and then publicly castigated and excommunicated if they refuse to repent. While many Christians find such practices outdated, pastors in large and small churches across the country are expelling members for offenses ranging from adultery and theft to gossiping, skipping service and criticizing church leaders.

The revival is part of a broader movement to restore churches to their traditional role as moral enforcers, Christian leaders say. Some say that contemporary churches have grown soft on sinners, citing the rise of suburban megachurches where pastors preach self-affirming messages rather than focusing on sin and redemption. Others point to a passage in the gospel of Matthew that says unrepentant sinners must be shunned.

Causing Disharmony

Watermark Community Church, a nondenominational church in Dallas that draws 4,000 people to services, requires members to sign a form stating they will submit to the “care and correction” of church elders. Last week, the pastor of a 6,000-member megachurch in Nashville, Tenn., threatened to expel 74 members for gossiping and causing disharmony unless they repented. The congregants had sued the pastor for access to the church’s financial records.

First Baptist Church of Muscle Shoals, Ala., a 1,000-member congregation, expels five to seven members a year for “blatant, undeniable patterns of willful sin,” which have included adultery, drunkenness and refusal to honor church elders. About 400 people have left the church over the years for what they view as an overly harsh persecution of sinners, Pastor Jeff Noblit says.

The process can be messy, says Al Jackson, pastor of Lakeview Baptist Church in Auburn, Ala., which began disciplining members in the 1990s. Once, when the congregation voted out an adulterer who refused to repent, an older woman was confused and thought the church had voted to send the man to hell.

Amy Hitt, 43, a mortgage officer in Amissville, Va., was voted out of her Baptist congregation in 2004 for gossiping about her pastor’s plans to buy a bigger house. Her ouster was especially hard on her twin sons, now 12 years old, who had made friends in the church, she says. “Some people have looked past it, but then there are others who haven’t,” says Ms. Hitt, who believes the episode cost her a seat on the school board last year; she lost by 42 votes.

Scholars estimate that 10% to 15% of Protestant evangelical churches practice church discipline — about 14,000 to 21,000 U.S. congregations in total. Increasingly, clashes within churches are spilling into communities, splitting congregations and occasionally landing church leaders in court after congregants, who believed they were confessing in private, were publicly shamed.

In the past decade, more than two dozen lawsuits related to church discipline have been filed as congregants sue pastors for defamation, negligent counseling and emotional injury, according to the Religion Case Reporter, a legal-research database. Peggy Penley, a Fort Worth, Texas, woman whose pastor revealed her extramarital affair to the congregation after she confessed it in confidence, waged a six-year battle against the pastor, charging him with negligence. Last summer, the Texas Supreme Court dismissed her suit, ruling that the pastor was exercising his religious beliefs by publicizing the affair.

Courts have often refused to hear such cases on the grounds that churches are protected by the constitutional right to free religious exercise, but some have sided with alleged sinners. In 2003, a woman and her husband won a defamation suit against the Iowa Methodist conference and its superintendent after he publicly accused her of “spreading the spirit of Satan” because she gossiped about her pastor. A district court rejected the case, but the Iowa Supreme Court upheld the woman’s appeal on the grounds that the letter labeling her a sinner was circulated beyond the church.

Advocates of shunning say it rarely leads to the public disclosure of a member’s sin. “We’re not the FBI; we’re not sniffing around people’s homes trying to find out some secret sin,” says Don Singleton, pastor of Ridgeview Baptist Church in Talladega, Ala., who says the 50-member church has disciplined six members in his 21/2 years as pastor. “Ninety-nine percent of these cases never go that far.”

When they do, it can be humiliating. A devout Christian and grandmother of three, Mrs. Caskey moves with a halting gait, due to two artificial knees and a double hip replacement. Friends and family describe her as a generous woman who helped pay the electricity bill for Allen Baptist, in Allen, Mich., when funds were low, gave the church $1,200 after she sold her van, and even cut the church’s lawn on occasion. She has requested an engraved image of the church on her tombstone.

Gossip and Slander

Her expulsion came as a shock to some church members when, in August 2006, the pastor sent a letter to the congregation stating Mrs. Caskey and an older married couple, Patsy and Emmit Church, had been removed for taking “action against the church and your preacher.” The pastor, Mr. Burrick, told congregants the three were guilty of gossip, slander and idolatry and should be shunned, according to several former church members.

“People couldn’t believe it,” says Janet Biggs, 53, a former church member who quit the congregation in protest.

The conflict had been brewing for months. Shortly after the church hired Mr. Burrick in 2005 to help revive the congregation, which had dwindled to 12 members, Mrs. Caskey asked him to appoint a board of deacons to help govern the church, a tradition outlined in the church’s charter. Mr. Burrick said the congregation was too small to warrant deacons. Mrs. Caskey pressed the issue at the church’s quarterly business meetings and began complaining that Mr. Burrick was not following the church’s bylaws. “She’s one of the nicest, kindest people I know,” says friend and neighbor Robert Johnston, 69, a retired cabinet maker. “But she won’t be pushed around.”

In April 2006, Mrs. Caskey received a stern letter from Mr. Burrick. “This church will not tolerate this spirit of cancer and discord that you would like to spread,” it said. Mrs. Caskey, along with Mr. and Mrs. Church, continued to insist that the pastor follow the church’s constitution. In August, she received a letter from Mr. Burrick that said her failure to repent had led to her removal. It also said he would not write her a transfer letter enabling her to join another church, a requirement in many Baptist congregations, until she had “made things right here at Allen Baptist.”

She went to Florida for the winter, and when she returned to Michigan last June, she drove the two miles to Allen Baptist as usual. A church member asked her to leave, saying she was not welcome, but Mrs. Caskey told him she had come to worship and asked if they could speak after the service. Twenty minutes into the service, a sheriff’s officer was at her side, and an hour later, she was in jail.

“It was very humiliating,” says Mrs. Caskey, who worked for the state of Michigan for 25 years before retiring from the Department of Corrections in 1992. “The other prisoners were surprised to see a little old lady in her church clothes. One of them said, ‘You robbed a church?’ and I said, ‘No, I just attended church.’ ”

Word quickly spread throughout Allen, a close-knit town of about 200 residents. Once a thriving community of farmers and factory workers, Allen consists of little more than a strip of dusty antiques stores. Mr. and Mrs. Church, both in their 70s, eventually joined another Baptist congregation nearby.

About 25 people stopped attending Allen Baptist Church after Mrs. Caskey was shunned, according to several former church members.

Current members say they support the pastor’s actions, and they note that the congregation has grown under his leadership. The simple, white-washed building now draws around 70 people on Sunday mornings, many of them young families. “He’s a very good leader; he has total respect for the people,” says Stephen Johnson, 66, an auto parts inspector, who added that Mr. Burrick was right to remove Mrs. Caskey because “the Bible says causing discord in the church is an abomination.”

Mrs. Caskey went back to the church about a month after her arrest, shortly after the county prosecutor threw out the trespassing charge. More than a dozen supporters gathered outside, some with signs that read “What Would Jesus Do?” She sat in the front row as Mr. Burrick preached about “infidels in the pews,” according to reports from those present.

Once again, Mrs. Caskey was escorted out by a state trooper and taken to jail, where she posted the $62 bail and was released. After that, the county prosecutor dismissed the charge and told county law enforcement not to arrest her again unless she was creating a disturbance.

In the following weeks, Mrs. Caskey continued to worship at Allen Baptist. Some congregants no longer spoke to her or passed the offering plate, and some changed seats if she sat next to them, she says.

Mr. Burrick repeatedly declined to comment on Mrs. Caskey’s case, calling it a “private ecclesiastical matter.” He did say that while the church does not “blacklist” anyone, a strict reading of the Bible requires pastors to punish disobedient members. “A lot of times, flocks aren’t willing to submit or be obedient to God,” he said in an interview before a Sunday evening service. “If somebody is not willing to be helped, they forfeit their membership.”

In Christianity’s early centuries, church discipline led sinners to cover themselves with ashes or spend time in the stocks. In later centuries, expulsion was more common. Until the late 19th century, shunning was widely practiced by American evangelicals, including Methodists, Presbyterians and Baptists. Today, excommunication rarely occurs in the U.S. Catholic Church, and shunning is largely unheard of among mainline Protestants.

Little Consensus

Among churches that practice discipline, there is little consensus on how sinners should be dealt with, says Gregory Wills, a theologian at Southern Baptist Theological seminary. Some pastors remove members on their own, while other churches require agreement among deacons or a majority vote from the congregation.

Since Mrs. Caskey’s second arrest last July, the turmoil at Allen Baptist has fizzled into an awkward stalemate. Allen Baptist is an independent congregation, unaffiliated with a church hierarchy that might review the ouster. Supporters have urged Mrs. Caskey to sue to have her membership restored, but she says the matter should be settled in the church. Mr. Burrick no longer calls the police when Mrs. Caskey shows up for Sunday services.

Since November, Mrs. Caskey has been attending a Baptist church near her winter home in Tavares, Fla. She plans to go back to Allen Baptist when she returns to Michigan this spring.

“I don’t intend to abandon that church,” Mrs. Caskey says. “I feel like I have every right to be there.”

Wall Street Journal, USA
Jan. 18, 2008
Alexandra Alter
online.wsj.com
ReligionNewsBlog.com • Item 20385 • Posted: Saturday January 19, 2008

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January 17th 2008

Bishop Earl Paulk pleads guilty, is fined $1,000

Atlanta Journal-Constitution, USA

Jan. 16, 2008
Chris Quinn
www.ajc.com

Bishop Earl Paulk pleaded guilty to felony perjury in Cobb Superior Court Wednesday.

Judge Frank R. Cox, chief judge of Magistrate Court, sitting in as assisting Superior Court judge, said he fined Paulk $1,000 and put him on probation for 10 years. He ordered Paulk to pay $32 a month in probation fees.

Paulk, formerly a prominent minister, was charged with perjury for lying during a deposition last year in a sexual misconduct lawsuit against him. He turned himself into Cobb County authorities at 8 p.m. Tuesday and was sentenced about 18 hours later.

Cox said District Attorney Pat Head and Paulk’s attorney arranged the sequence of legal events.

Louis Levenson, the attorney for the couple suing Paulk, said the plea should serve as a warning.

“I hope that people will take a page out of this book and see that whatever their religious beliefs or philosophical beliefs that there is no excuse for speaking untruthfully in court,” he said.

Levenson represents Bobby and Mona Brewer, former staff members at what was known as Chapel Hill Harvester Church, which Paulk built into a nationally known ministry. Their suit claims Paulk coerced Mona Brewer into a sexual relationship and used his influence to hide that and other improprieties.

“Earl Paulk was the architect of an entire scheme to protect the kingdom,” Levenson said.

He defined ‘kingdom’ as the church and system of influence Paulk built.

In a deposition taken in the suit, Paulk said Mona Brewer was the only woman he had sex with outside of marriage. A DNA test last year showed Paulk fathered a child by the wife of his brother, the Rev. Don Paulk. That discovery led to the perjury charge.

Paulk claimed in the past that Brewer initiated the relationship.

A staff member at the church referred calls to Joel Pugh, Paulk’s criminal defense attorney.

Pugh did not return calls.

Paulk’s religious celebrity peaked in the 1980s and 1990s with TV appearances and more than 10,000 church members. He was nationally influential among independent charismatic churches.

His fame turned to infamy as he faced a series of allegations of sexual misconduct with many women. Though he no longer leads the church, now called the Cathedral at Chapel Hill. He still participates, speaking briefly. Attendance has dropped dramatically.

The Rev. D.E. Paulk, the Bishop’s son by his sister in law, leads the congregation and speaks openly about his familial and church problems and about forgiveness.

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January 11th 2008

Two resign from ORU board of regents

Tulsa World, USA
Jan. 11, 2008
www.tulsaworld.com


Oral Roberts University Business Regent I.V. Hilliard, co-founder of New Light Christian Center Church in Texas; and Regent Emeritus Benny Hinn, who until recently was a business regent, have resigned from the school’s board of regents, according to a press release.

Hinn wished ORU success, according to the press release, and Hilliard said he remained committed to the school’s vision and new direction.

Hinn’s spending, along with that of other prominent televangelists, is being investigated by U.S. Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa.

Last month, two other business regents resigned: Creflo Dollar, the founder and senior pastor of World Changers Church International in Georgia; and Jesse Duplantis, evangelist and founder of Jesse Duplantis Ministries in Louisiana. Dollar also is being investigated by Grassley.

ORU’s board of regents will meet Monday and Tuesday to look at “organizational activities” and to evaluate “strategic
opportunities,” according to the press release.

“Throughout this ongoing process, the board will seek out opportunities that advance the long-term financial viability of the university as well as ensure that the university will stay true to its founding vision,” the release said.

ORU spokesman Jeremy Burton did not immediately have additional information about the meeting.

The board has yet to make any announcements about whether it will accept an offer of $70 million from the family of Oklahoma City businessman Mart Green or an offer of help from Regent University, which was founded by Pat Robertson, a pioneer in Christian broadcasting.

• For more: Read the latest ORU stories, view the lawsuit and other documents and watch slide shows and video at Tulsa World.

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January 11th 2008

Pastor guilty of sexual assault

Toronto Star, Canada
Jan. 11, 2008
Peter Small
www.thestar.com

A pastor has been convicted of sexually assaulting a parishioner to whom he gave healing baths and naked rubdowns to rid her of evil spirits.

At the same time, a jury of nine men and three women acquitted Rev. Frank Seeko Lawrence of separate counts of assaulting and threatening to kill the woman, now 29, by whom he fathered a child.

They also found him not guilty of sexually assaulting a second woman, now 45, who also had his baby.

It took the jury three days to come to its verdict. At least a dozen of the 59-year-old pastor’s followers and friends waited in the courthouse hallway throughout.

Lawrence admitted in 2005 family court documents to having nine other children, age 8 to 22, by four other mothers, whom he supported on an income of $19,600 a month.

Prosecutor Paul Zambonini, who told the jury that in law there cannot be consensual sex between two people when one is in a position of power, trust, or authority, later praised them for their hard work.

At the time of the sex assault, Lawrence ran his Toronto Mount Zion Revival Church of the Apostles out of the basement of his home.

In dramatic testimony lasting five days, the victim said he gave her black magic baths, for which he charged $150, to rid her of evil spirits, then ordered her to stand up and drip dry while he rubbed her naked body with brown ointment.

Anthony Robbins, Lawrence’s lawyer, said he was disappointed with the jury’s verdict and his client is considering an appeal. He said he disagreed with the Crown’s assertion that sex between the pastor and his parishioner could never be consensual.

“My concern is that the jury found that (the complainant) could not be believed beyond a reasonable doubt in respect of all but one of her allegations,” he said. “It is going to be up to the judge to find which of the numerous (alleged) sexual assaults the jury convicted her on. She claimed constant sexual abuse over a nine-month period.”

The victim testified her mother first brought her to the pastor when she was 17, because she had constant vomiting and splitting headaches. She said that in 2003, when she was in her mid-20s, he allowed her to stay at his home because she was desperate for a place to live. Shortly after, he forced his attentions on her, she testified.

Lawrence returns for a sentencing hearing on Feb. 28.

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January 11th 2008

Millionaire killed daughter after hearing voices

Telegraph, UK
Jan. 11. 2008
Nick Allen
www.telegraph.co.uk

A millionaire insurance executive killed his two-year-old daughter after becoming obsessed with the horror film Bug, the Old Bailey has heard.

Alberto Izaga, 36, shouted “Die, die, die” and “I have to kill her” moments after repeatedly smashing his daughter Yanire’s head against a wooden floor in his £1 million flat overlooking the Houses of Parliament.

He was hallucinating and hearing voices and had become convinced his family were possessed by the devil.

Izaga believed he was “involved in the act of destroying a malign and Satanic entity” when he attacked his daughter, the court heard.

He also believed he was part of a sect based on the philosophies of the Jesuits which was recruiting executives like him and trying to take over the financial world.

The court heard that until his “psychotic” episode Izaga was a devoted and loving father.

He woke up on June 3 last year at 4.30am and began ranting about God and humanity not really existing and calling for the little girl to die.

His hysterical wife Ligia tried to stop him but the madness could not have been predicted, the court was told.

On a ten day holiday in America which ended on May 28, last year, the couple had gone to the cinema in New York and saw the film Bug in which a man and his girlfriend are driven mad by bugs under the skin.

On May 29, he went to Geneva for a conference where he also became affected by a motivational talk by an adventurer.

On June 2, he was back in London but complained he was exhausted and had not slept for 72 hours.

The attack happened the next morning and during his ranting he banged his fists against a pillow saying he couldn’t sleep.

Mrs Izaga heard him say: “I know what I have to do. I have to kill her.”

After help arrived, Yanire was taken to hospital but died two days later.

Izaga had been a brilliant student, athlete and businessman. He was at the height of career working as the top executive at insurance giant Swiss Re based in the “Gherkin” building in London.

Judge Richard Hone told the jury it was “an exceptional case” and that it would be asked to find Izaga not guilty of murder through insanity.

The court was told Izaga had been transferred to a medium secure mental hospital and two psychiatrists were agreed that he was insane at the time of the attack.

The facts of the case were not disputed and Izaga will be sent to a mental hospital under mental health legislation.

Izaga sat in court next to his barrister David Perry QC. He was dressed in suit and tie and wore glasses and was still wearing his wedding ring. His wife and parents were also at court.

Jonathan Rees, prosecuting, said: “If ever a case deserves to be described as truly tragic, this is surely it.

“How else can you describe a case in which a devoted father killed a child he loved in front of her mother.”

Mr Rees said the Spanish-born businessman was considered to be “clever and driven” at work where he was well liked.

At home, he played a full part in looking after his daughter and in family life.

“He was the last person capable of killing another human and least of all his own flesh and blood,” said Mr Rees.

“All agreed, he was totally devoted to her and that the defendant had described his daughter as the most precious person on earth.”

A neighbour said “he was one the nicest men” he had met and “absolutely loved Yanire”.

Mr Rees added: “At 8am on 3rd of June, he killed his daughter in a frenzy. He smashed her head against the floor.”

He said that even with hindsight, it was difficult to see how the attack could have been anticipated or that “he would lose control as he did”.

But doctors were agreed that at the time Izaga was suffering “from an episode of acute mental illness which had a rapid onset”.

Mr Rees said the night before the attack, Izaga had changed the child’s nappy and given her milk.

When she woke at 8am, he had gone to her cot and picked her up and brought her into the living room.

Mrs Izaga, also 36, picked up the injured child, still dressed in her nightgown, put her on a sofa and rang 999.

Part of the attack had been recorded on a neighbour’s voicemail after Mrs Izaga began ringing friends for help.

Her husband could be heard shouting in English and Spanish.

He said: “What about this, what about this? How am I going to sleep? I just want to sleep.”

He also said: “Bitch, this bastard does not die. God does not exist, the universe does not exist, humanity does not exist.”

When police and paramedics arrived half an hour later, Izaga began chanting “Big Ben, Big Ben” for five minutes.

Later, he began to lick the face of a neighbour who came to try and help him.

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January 10th 2008

Sen. Larry Craig tries again

by: Andy Birkey

Thu Jan 10, 2008 at 11:26:06 AM

Lawyers for Sen. Larry Craig will argue that the Minnesota district court that denied his move to have his guilty plea withdrawn erred, according to documents filed Tuesday. Craig, a Republican from Idaho, was arrested in a Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport restroom in June of last year for allegedly soliciting an undercover officer for sex. He was charged with disorderly conduct and pleaded guilty.

The brief argues that Craig pleaded guilty to an erroneous charge. “Appellant’s alleged conduct in this case affected only a single individual — Sergeant Karsnia,” the brief says. “It did not — and could not — affect ‘others’ as the disorderly conduct statute requires, and therefore, does not satisfy that element of the statute.” In other words, because Craig’s behavior only affected Karsnia, singular, and not “others,” plural, he did not violate the statute. The brief argues that a “single person is not enough.”

Lawyers for Craig also argue that Craig’s actions could not have affected Karsnia, because “Karsnia invited the alleged intrusion” of Craig’s hand under the stall divider when Karsnia tapped his foot in response to Craig’s.

Craig’s lawyers also argue that his actions do not rise to the level of “offensive” as outlined in the statute, and that his toe-tapping and hand swiping were all constitutionally protected free speech.

“Facts are resilient, and Sen. Craig’s continued, transparent efforts to escape them don’t change the truth of his behavior in an airport restroom or the fact that he admitted guilt last August,” Patrick Hogan, spokesman for the Metropolitan Airports Commission, told the Associated Press.

WCCO anchor Don Shelby said Tuesday, “I’m tired of talking about Larry Craig, but I can’t resist his latest attempt to get out of his guilty plea. We’re going to have a court case that will parse the word ‘others,’” Shelby said, comparing it to a notable sex scandal of the 1990s. It’s “reminiscent of Bill Clinton’s grand jury testimony, when we couldn’t figure out what the meaning of ‘is’ was.”

Shelby won’t have to worry about a repeat of Craig’s arrest; he’s been avoiding Minneapolis and opting for flights through Denver between Washington, D.C., and Idaho.

Andy Birkey :: Sen. Larry Craig tries again

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December 20th 2007

Idaho man sees ‘mark of the beast,’ cuts off and microwaves hand

HAYDEN, Idaho (AP) — A man who believed he bore the “mark of the beast” used a circular saw to cut off one hand, then he cooked it in the microwave and called 911, authorities said.

Posted: Jan 9, 2008 09:36 AM

The man, in his mid-20s, was calm when Kootenai County sheriff’s deputies arrived Saturday in this northern Idaho town. He was in protective custody in the mental health unit of Kootenai Medical Center.

“It had been somewhat cooked by the time the deputy arrived,” sheriff’s Capt. Ben Wolfinger said. “He put a tourniquet on his arm before, so he didn’t bleed to death. That kind of mental illness is just sad.”

It was not immediately clear whether the man has a history of mental illness. Hospital spokeswoman Lisa Johnson would not say whether an attempt was made to reattach the hand, citing patient confidentiality.

The Book of Revelation in the New Testament contains a passage in which an angel is quoted as saying: “If anyone worships the beast and his image and receives his mark on the forehead or on the hand, he, too, will drink the wine of God’s fury.”

The book of Matthew also contains the passage: “And if your right hand causes you to sin, cut it off and throw it away. It is better for you to lose one part of your body than for you whole body to do into hell.”

Wolfinger said he didn’t know which hand was amputated.

(Copyright 2008 By The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)

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