Posted by John Slider on 05/10/2012 at 08:48 AM in Homosexuality, Manhatten Declaration, Religion | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
The nuns who have circulated and signed petitions include sisters from convents and other Catholic institutions across the state.
Over 100 signatures, for example, all of female voters, as verified through iVerifytheRecall, list the same address as a Dominican institution in Sinsinawa, WI, in the southwestern portion of the state. Representatives of that organization could not be reached for comment.
One Catholic official at a school with a large number of signatories stressed that Catholic organizations advocate for the poor and downtrodden, but do not take political positions, and that what their individual members do is up to them alone.
Though many Catholic voters support Walker, and approximatley forty percent of Wisconsin Republican primary voters are Catholic, there is some Catholic opposition to Walker's collective bargaining reforms among those partial to the "social justice" movement within the Catholic Church. Democrats are hoping to tap into that opposition.
Walker is Catholic, as is his most likely Democratic challenger, former congressman and former Milwaukee mayor Tom Barrett, who has been criticized for opposing the ban on federal funding for abortion. Other Democratic candidates--Kathleen Falk, Doug LaFollette, Kathleen Vinehout--appear to be pro-choice.
The Vatican's recent effort to discipline the Leadership Conference of Women Religious (LCWR), the largest organization of American nuns, stresses support for the nuns' "social justice" efforts but concludes that the group is not supportive enough of Catholic teachings on abortion and sexuality.
Many nuns who participate in the Leadership Conference supported "Obamacare" in 2010, according to the New York Times, in opposition to many American bishops who opposed the legislation. The law has recently been used by the Obama administration to force Catholic institutions to provide their employees with insurance coverage for abortifacients and contraceptives, contrary to Church teachings--and to Obama's promises.
Thus far, social issues have not played as large a role in the Wisconsin recall as have questions about union power in state government, but the support of some Catholic nuns for gubernatorial challengers whose policies directly contradict Church teachings has already begun to provoke debate and controversy.
-by Joel B. Pollak (article)
Posted by John Slider on 04/20/2012 at 08:23 AM in Abortion, Liberals, Politics, Religion | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
In a news release on Thursday (April 12, 2012), the USCCB stated that it is calling upon dioceses to pursue a “religious liberty fortnight” from June 21st through July 4th, a special period of prayer for religious liberty. The bishops have published a document entitled, “Our First, Most Cherished Liberty,” in which they assert:
We are Catholics. We are Americans. We are proud to be both, grateful for the gift of faith which is ours as Christian disciples, and grateful for the gift of liberty which is ours as American citizens. To be Catholic and American should mean not having to choose one over the other.
We have been staunch defenders of religious liberty in the past. We have a solemn duty to discharge that duty today…for religious liberty is under attack, both at home and abroad.
The document provides some “concrete examples” of how religious liberty is under attack. Among them are:
In their document, the bishops quote recently retired Cardinal Roger Mahony of Los Angeles, who said, in response to the HHS mandate: “I cannot imagine a more direct and frontal attack on freedom of conscience than this ruling today. This decision must be fought against with all the energies the Catholic community can muster.”
To that end, the bishops urge that the fourteen days- or fortnight- from June 21st- the vigil of the Feasts of St. John Fisher and St. Thomas More- to July 4th, Independence Day, be declared a “fortnight for freedom.”
by Dr. Susan Berry (article)
Posted by John Slider on 04/15/2012 at 09:46 PM in Faith, Government, Health Care, Legislation, Religion | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
MSNBC’s Chris Matthews made comments recently that will certainly be taken negatively by some people who embrace the Catholic faith.
“If you’re really anti-gay, you become a Catholic now,“ he reportedly proclaimed during the ”Presidential Leadership Panel,” an event focusing upon politics in America.
Following the panel discussion, which also featured Civil War expert Harold Holzer and presidential historian Michael Beschloss, Scott Whitlock of the Media Research Center asked Matthews — an admitted Catholic himself — to clarify his comment about Catholics and homosexuality.
“Earlier tonight, you were talking about Nixon and the Southern Strategy and bigotry and things like that you and you said, quote, ‘If you’re really anti-gay, you become a Catholic now,’” Whitlock said. “I was wondering if you were saying that bigots become Catholic now and if you wanted to expand or apologize for that?”
Matthews responded, doubling down on his comment, while simultaneously attempting to tempter it. “I think there are people who have chosen to convert to the Catholic faith because they don’t like the liberal positions taken by their sectarian groups,” Matthews explained. “That’s a fact. So, you can write that down. No, you can write that down.”
Whitlock, though, wasn’t done pushing the issue. “So, you’re saying Catholicism is drawing bigots? Is that what you’re saying?,” he asked.
“I’m saying that some people who are bigoted against gay people have changed religions,” Matthews answered. “Yes. You got it right.”
Posted by John Slider on 02/22/2012 at 06:55 PM in Faith, Homosexuality, Liberals, Politics, Religion | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
The U.S. Military Academy pressured a retired U.S. lieutenant general to withdraw from speaking at a West Point prayer breakfast after Muslims and atheists complained, Fox News & Commentary has learned.
Retired Lt. Gen. William Boykin was scheduled to deliver a speech at West Point on Feb. 8. But late Monday, the military academy released a statement saying he had decided to withdraw from speaking and would be replaced with another speaker.
However, a source close to the controversy told Fox News & Commentary that Boykin was pressured to withdraw.
“It was very clear they wanted General Boykin to withdraw,” said the source who asked not to be identified. “He asked them to rescind the invitation, but they were reluctant to do that so he said he would take them off the hook.”
Theresa Brinkerhoff, a spokesperson for West Point, told Fox News & Commentary that the U.S. Military Academy “did not decide this for him.”
“After a conversation with our chaplain, Lt. Gen. Boykin decided to withdraw,” Brinkerhoff wrote in an email.
Boykin, a former senior military intelligence officer, had been criticized for speeches he made at evangelical Christian churches where he said that American’s enemy is Satan, that God had put President Bush in the White House and that a Muslim Somali warlord was an idol-worshipper. He later issued a written statement apologizing and said he didn’t mean to insult Islam.
However, Boykin became a target for atheists and Muslim groups. They launched a campaign to force the military to remove the retired lieutenant general from the West Point prayer event. “Mr. Boykin’s intolerant views do a disservice to our nation’s longstanding traditions of religious freedom and pluralism and could potentially harm our country’s interests and the security of our troops overseas,” Nihad Awad, executive director of the Council on American Islamic Relations, wrote in a letter to the superintendent of West Point. “By providing a platform associated with West Point, Mr. Boykin’s hate-filled rhetoric would receive a level of credibility and legitimacy it does not deserve.”
Awad called Boykin an Islamophobe. “It gives Islamophobes a platform at the nation’s most prestigious military academy,” Awad told the Associated Press. “And I doubt that they would invite a KKK speaker and claim that they want to expose the students to a variety of opinions.”
CAIR joined VoteVets.org and the Military Religious Freedom Foundation in protesting Boykin’s speech. Mikey Weinstein, the president of Military Religious Freedom Foundation heralded the military’s move as a victory and called Boykin a “vile Islamophobe.”
“We are deeply saddened that it took a public outcry of this magnitude to cause Boykin to pull out from this event, likely under pressure from within the Pentagon,” Weinstein said in a press release. “Our outcry must not stop – all individuals within the command structure responsible for inviting this vile Islamophobe must be held accountable via courts martial.”
Boykin told Fox News & Commentary that he was extremely disappointed in what has happened.
“I came under attack because there are liberal groups, Islamic groups and atheist groups that want to shut me down because I have been very open about my concerns about the encroachment of Sharia – or Islamic law,” he said.
Boykin said he planned on delivering a speech about the importance of prayer in a leader’s life. “It was an ecumenical presentation,” Boykin said. “It had nothing to do with Islam.”
Boykin would not comment on reports that he was pressured to step aside, only to say that he considered the commandant of West Point to be a “good friend of mine – and a very good man.”
Tony Perkins, the president of the Family Research Council, was outraged by the decision.
“This has gone too far,” Perkins told Fox News & Commentary. “This is a troubling trend that we are seeing under this administration.”
Under the Obama Administration both Perkins and Franklin Graham were disinvited from speaking at military prayer services.
“When you talk to military leaders on the base, they don’t like this,” Perkins said. “There seems to be pressure coming from within the administration to sweep Christianity off the face of military bases.”
Boykin said he doesn’t believe the Obama administration has stood with the traditional values of the nation and he said the incident at West Point should serve as a wakeup call to Christians.
“The message is that people of faith and conservative Americans are losing our voice to a very well-organized and very well-funded group of very passionate people – those being the atheists and the Muslims,” Boykin said. “They want to change the nature of our culture – and they are succeeding.”
Perkins pointed to the Obama administration’s policies banning Christian prayers at National Cemetery in Houston and a ban on Bibles at Walter Reed Army Medical Center.
“It’s time Americans realized that while these orders may not have been signed by the president, this environment has been created by him and his policies,” Perkins said.
Boykin accused the Obama administration of not standing with people of faith – “certainly not people of the Christian faith or Jewish faith.”
“If there has been support in this administration for faith it has been more skewed towards the Islamic faith than anything else,” Boykin said.
Perkins said the biggest and most troubling concern is how Boykin has been treated.
“The man they have disinvited is a true American hero who has spilled his own blood on foreign soil for this country,” Perkins said. “He has done so much to defend the ideals and the freedom that American stands for. Yet his own freedoms – that he fought to protect for others – have been taken from him.”
Posted by John Slider on 02/22/2012 at 06:46 PM in Faith, Military, Religion | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
In July the state of New York began issuing marriage licenses to same-sex couples. But one local official did not go along. Laura Fotusky decided to resign as town clerk rather than violate her conscience by facilitating same-sex marriages. Laura, a member of a non-denominational church, said that the Bible “clearly teaches that God created marriage between male and female.”
New York Governor Andrew Cuomo responded to Fotusky’s resignation, saying: “The law is the law, and when you enforce the laws of the state, you don’t get to pick and choose.”
Fotusky told her supervisors that she had a different mandate: “I had to obey God rather than men.”
(From WORLD magazine, August 13, 2011 issue, p. 10)
Posted by John Slider on 12/09/2011 at 09:27 AM in Government, Homosexuality, Marriage, Religion | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
"The Moral Side of the News" is broadcast on WHAS-TV in Louisville, Kentucky at 5:30am on Sunday and on cable Faith-TV at 12:00nn on Sunday. The program is also broadcast on several radio stations in the Louisville area at either 7:00am or 7:30am Sunday, and at 9:30pm Sunday on WHAS Radio 840am.
The program is taped at 1:00pm on Thursdays at the WHAS-TV studios. Persons wishing to view the taping need to contact the Crusade for Children office or one of the panelists.
FRANKFORT, Ky. (AP) -- Democratic Gov. Steve Beshear is scheduled for a rare debate with two well-known Kentucky politicians who want to take his job in the Nov. 8 election.
The 90-minute faceoff, being broadcast statewide on Kentucky Educational Television beginning at 8 p.m. Monday, will give Republican David Williams and independent Gatewood Galbraith a final opportunity to confront Beshear in person.
It will be only the second debate between the three attorneys, and it comes with just more than a week remaining before Election Day.
University of Louisville political scientist Laurie Rhodebeck said the public television debate isn't likely to sway a race in which Williams trails by some 30 percentage points and Galbraith by 50.
"I don't think it will matter because of Beshear's lead and what seems to be the public's entrenched negative view of Williams," Rhodebeck said. "If Williams can make himself likable in 90 minutes that might be helpful."
Williams, the long-time president of the state Senate, is aware of the negative perception people have of him, but he blames it on political opponents who have portrayed him as a bully. Galbraith, a Lexington attorney, is hoping voters will get so turned off by the enmity between Beshear and Williams that they will vote him into office.
WATCH VIDEO: http://www.whas11.com/home/Candidates-for-Ky-Governor-take-stage-for-debate-Monday-night-132975048.html
WATCH VIDEO: http://www.whas11.com/great-day-live/video/Joe-Arnold-dissects-gubernatorial-campaign-ads-131334654.html
Williams criticizes governor for ceremony
SHELBYVILLE, Ky. (AP) — Republican gubernatorial candidate David Williams is criticizing incumbent Gov. Steve Beshear for taking part in a ceremony that marked an Indian company's entry into Kentucky, bringing with it 250 jobs.
Williams told a very small gathering at a Republican rally on Tuesday that the incumbent Democrat should not have participated in the ceremony in Elizabethtown with officials from Flex Films, which is building a $180 million manufacturing plant in the central Kentucky city.
In a news release Friday, the state characterized the event as a blessing ceremony that is traditional in India for new homes, businesses or other facilities.
But Williams told reporters the ceremony featured Hindu priests and prayers and said he would have merely attended, rather than actually participated in, the event.
Williams cited his Christian background. Beshear is the son and grandson of Baptist preachers.
QUESTION: What are your thoughts on the gubernatorial campaign and upcoming election? What are your thoughts on the criticism Gov. Beshear is receiving for participating in the ceremony with Hindu priest?
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (WHAS11)— With Kentucky's unemployment rate hovering well above nine percent, there's a big push to get residents back to work. This is especially true for National Guardsmen and their families.
Private First Class Robert Mattingly of the Army National Guard is struggling to find a stable job.
“I haven’t been able to find a job until I got a seasonal position,” Mattingly said.
He currently works as a packer for an online shopping company for $9 an hour when he is not active with the Army National Guard. He says he needs a better job to support his future wife and family and that's why he came to a jobs workshop held for members of the
Second Battalion 138th Field Artillery Regiment.
Right now, 22 percent of the Second Battalion is unemployed. Workshop organizers say, if guard members move to other states for employment, it could cause a problem during an emergency crisis in Kentucky.
“If the soldiers have to move out of state to seek employment and they're living in Chattanooga or New Brunswick or Detroit or Orlando, they're not readily available to respond,” Philip Miller of Employer Support of the Guard and Reserve said.
Today's workshop drew service members from new recruits to long time vets like Staff Sgt. Mike Hatfield who has been in the guard for 18 years. He is a fire fighter in Bardstown in the civilian world.
“It’s a small fire department,” said Hatfield. “Until the chief and deputy chief all retire I’m pretty much stuck for the next five ten years at the job I’m at now.”
WATCH STORY: http://www.whas11.com/home/National-Guardsmen-struggle-to-find-civilian-employment-133023543.htmlBoehner.
QUESTION: What are your thoughts on this? What about the continuous bickering between Republicans and Democrats in Congress?
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (WHAS11)— Louisville Metro Police Department Chief Robert White spoke about his decision to leave Louisville after almost 9 years at a press conference on Tuesday. White has taken a new job as the police chief in Denver, Colo.
Chief White says while he doesn't think the work in the metro is done, he is confident in the department he is leaving behind.
White says this new job in Denver was an opportunity he couldn't pass up even though he and his wife love living and working here in Louisville.
“Denver absolutely approached me. I had made a commitment that I was not pursuing any other jobs as a police chief… But they approached me and they approached me relatively aggressively and after conferring with my wife and looking at where we were as a police department, I just thought it would be a good time to move on,” he said.
Chief White says his last day will be sometime in early December. He says before he leaves, he wants to thank the people who have supported him, his family and his police department.
White would not comment on a possible successor or who he would like to see in that position.
WATCH VIDEO: http://www.whas11.com/home/LMPD-chief-talks-about-upcoming-departure-133027368.html
Chief White makes his way to Colorado
Louisville, Ky. (WHAS11)- Louisville's Mayor says the process is already underway to find a new chief of police.
Chief Robert White announced Friday he will be taking a new job in Denver, Colorado.
White has been Chief in Louisville since 2003.
One of his goals then, was the same as it is now in Denver, to improve the relationship between police and the community, it has been strained in Denver.
This weekend he was officially introduced in Colorado. “I first wanted to thank the mayor for having the confidence in selecting me..will not disappoint you,” says White.
Chief White says he's achieved everything he could here, and will always remember his time in Louisville. His last day will be sometime in December.
WATCH VIDEO: http://www.whas11.com/home/Chief-White-makes-his-way-to-Colorado-132911848.html
WATCH VIDEO: http://www.whas11.com/community/Ask-the-Mayor-Police-Chief-Robert-White-leaving-Louisville-133007183.html
QUESTION: What are your thoughts on Chief White leaving LMPD? What characteristics do you think the next police chief should have? And what should his/her priorities be coming into the position?
Posted by John Slider on 11/02/2011 at 08:14 PM in Faith, Louisville, Politics, Religion | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Illinois ended its contracts with Catholic Charities this summer after passing a law recognizing same-sex civil unions. The state had informed the organization, an arm of the Roman Catholic Church, that its policy of limiting foster and adoptive parents to heterosexual married couples violates the new civil unions law. Three major Illinois dioceses sued the state, arguing that religious adoption agencies have specific protection under the civil unions law, which is titled "The Illinois Religious Freedom Protection and Civil Union Act." On August 18, a county judge in Illinois rejected the lawsuit of Catholic Charities.
In recent years Catholic Charities has handled twenty percent of the state's foster care and adoption caseload. Now Catholic Charities will need to find other organizations to provide for the 2,000 foster children in its care.
Posted by John Slider on 10/01/2011 at 07:59 AM in Children, Faith, Government, Homosexuality, Justice System, Legislation, Marriage, Religion | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Four Anglican churches in Vancouver lost their buildings when the Supreme Court of Canada declined to hear their appeal. Back in November, 2010, a lower court had ruled that their properties - worth $20 million-belong to the Anglican Church of Canada, not to the local congregations. The four churches, one of which is the largest Anglican church in Canada, left the denomination in 2008 over the blessing of same-sex unions. A spokesperson for the four congregations said, "We've always said from the [beginning] that we might have to choose between our faith and our buildings, and we choose our faith."
Posted by John Slider on 10/01/2011 at 07:54 AM in Civil Rights, Faith, Government, Homosexuality, Justice System, Marriage, Religion | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Posted by John Slider on 05/05/2011 at 05:51 PM in Marriage, Religion | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)