Category: Religion

  • Rev. Jeremiah Wright has more to say

    Rev. Jeremiah Wright, the fire-and-brimstone race-baiter and former “spiritual advisor” to President Barack Obama, struck a blow for anti-Semitism and against conventional grammar when he said he hasn’t spoken to Obama since he was elected because “them Jews ain’t going to let him talk to me.”

    Wright made the remarks in an interview with the Daily Press of Newport News, Va., after speaking Tuesday night at the 95th annual Hampton University Ministers’ Conference.

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    “I told my baby daughter that he’ll talk to me in five years when he’s a lame duck, or in eight years when he’s out of office,” added the former pastor of Trinity United Church of Christ in Chicago.

    “The Jewish vote, the AIPAC vote that’s controlling him, that will not let him send representation to the Darfur Review Conference, that’s talking this craziness on Israel because they’re Zionists, they will not let him talk to somebody who calls a spade what it is. Ethnic cleansing is going on in Gaza – the ethnic cleansing (by) the Zionists is a sin and a crime against humanity.”

    As reported by The Huffington Post, Wright tried Thursday to skin back his anti-Semitic bombast on the Sirius Radio program “Make It Plain with Mark Thompson,” saying, “Let me just say, like Hillary, I misspoke. Let me just say Zionists,” which he differentiated from “responsible Jewish persons.”

    The White House hasn’t commented on Wright’s remarks.

    This man of God’s original comments were made the same day white supremacist James von Brunn, 88, allegedly shot a security guard at the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, D.C. The guard, Stephen T. Johns, was killed.

    Yesterday von Brunn – who was critically wounded when other security guards returned fire – was charged with murder and killing in the course of possessing a firearm in a federal facility. The FBI is investigating whether the shooting was a hate crime or domestic terrorism, which could lead to additional charges.

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    • Manhattan DA Morgenthau helped boost Sotomayor’s career

      June 12, 2009 at 9:33am

      Upon gradation from Yale Law School in 1979, Sonia Sotomayor, President Obama’s pick to fill a vacancy on the Supreme Court, made a surprising career choice.

    • Catholic bishop: Obama supporters risk their ‘eternal salvation’

      Bad enough to experience earthly doubts about one’s choice for president.

      But Kansas City’s Bishop Robert W. Finn warned yesterday that supporting Barack Obama could jeopardize a Catholic’s eternal salvation, because of what he called the Democrat’s “fanatical” stance on abortion rights.

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      “You make yourself a participant in the act of abortion” if you vote for Obama, Finn said in an interview with KCMO Talk Radio. “That’s gravely wrong. And you mustn’t do it because your eternal salvation is tied up with that important choice.”

      At a time when both parties are aggressively courting Catholic voters, Finn is among a group of at least 70 bishops of the Catholic Church’s 195 diocesan leaders who have urged Catholics to vote on the single issue of abortion, which the church deems a grave sin, according to church commentator Rocco Palmo.

      Others in that category include Cardinals Edward Egan of New York, Francis George of Chicago, Justin Rigali of Philadelphia and Daniel DiNardo of Galveston-Houston.

      But none of those have expressed themselves in such fire-and-brimstone terms.

      A member of the conservative Opus Dei movement, Finn has become a standard-bearer of conservative orthodoxy since being elevated to head the Kansas City-Saint Joseph, MO diocese in May 2005.

      Before being elevated to bishop, he was a priest in St. Louis under Archbishop Raymond Burke, who made headlines himself in 2004 when he forbade Sen. John Kerry from taking communion in the area due to Kerry’s stance on abortion.

      Two weeks after Finn was installed as the head of the midwestern diocese, he demonstrated his take-no-prisoners attitude by dismissing the diocese’s longtime chancellor and vice chancellor, and canceling a nationally known lay education program, according to National Catholic Reporter.

      “Our goal is to get ourselves to heaven and take as many people with us as we can,” he said by explanation.

      Listen to an excerpt from Finn’s interview:

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      2 Comments

      • #1.   curtastrophe 11.06.2008

        Only the Catholic Church could be so narrow minded and wrong about an issue. Obama is not pro abortion, he is pro rights and a womans right to choose. The whole abortion rights issue is not about abortion at all it’s about rights, and a womans right to privacy. Obama is only in favor of abortion if it becomes a health issue or in cases of rape or inscest.

      • #2.   Matt 11.09.2008

        I think what’s really wrong about his statement, has nothing to do with women’s rights or the rights of an unborn child. His view of salvation and what it takes to go to heaven is way out of wack. Even though I don’t support Obama or abortion, if you voted for Obama, it will not send you to hell. That’s as accurate as the doctrine the “Church Lady” had on SNL. Listen to what God says:

        Romans 10:9-10 (9)that if you confess with your mouth the Lord Jesus and believe in your heart that God has raised Him from the dead, you will be saved. (10) For with the heart one believes unto righteousness, and with the mouth confession is made unto salvation.

        God loves you, He did what had to be done as a Just Judge, he gave us what was necessary to pay the price for sin. For sin, any sin big or small, the penalty is eternal death, but like a judge paying your speeding ticket, He gave His Son Jesus to stand in for the sin of the world. That is what salvation is.

        Not trying to republish a bible here, but this is key…
        John 3:15-21
        15 that whoever believes in Him should not perish but[b] have eternal life. 16 For God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son, that whoever believes in Him should not perish but have everlasting life. 17 For God did not send His Son into the world to condemn the world, but that the world through Him might be saved.
        18 “He who believes in Him is not condemned; but he who does not believe is condemned already, because he has not believed in the name of the only begotten Son of God. 19 And this is the condemnation, that the light has come into the world, and men loved darkness rather than light, because their deeds were evil. 20 For everyone practicing evil hates the light and does not come to the light, lest his deeds should be exposed. 21 But he who does the truth comes to the light, that his deeds may be clearly seen, that they have been done in God.”

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      • Bernard Madoff charged with multi-billion securities fraud

        December 11, 2008 at 6:33pm

        Bernard L. Madoff, the founder of Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities and a former NASDAQ governor, was arrested Thursday morning by FBI agents and charged with a multi-billion-dollar criminal securities fraud.

      • Ted Turner Softens Stance on Religion

        This post was archived from createpositivechange.org/. View the original on the Wayback Machine.

      • Congressional showdown with televangelists

        The aptly-named Creflo Dollar Jr. flies a Lear jet between his million-dollar mansion Atlanta and church services in New York City, where he also keeps a $2.5 million apartment.

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        Tampa televangelist Paula White , who has homes in San Antonio, Malibu and New York, bought a Bentley convertible for fellow televangelist Bishop T.D. Jakes for his 50th birthday.

        David and Joyce Meyer spent $23,000 on a marble topped toilet, $30,000 for a conference table and $11,219 for a French clock for the Fenton, Mo. headquarters of their not-for-profit an tax-exempt mission headquarters.

        Such are the earthly rewards of preaching the so-called prosperity gospel, a controversial iteration of Christianity which holds that God rewards the faithful with material, as well as spiritual wealth.

        But now the shepherds themselves are facing a reckoning. Dollar, White and the Meyers are among a half dozen TV evangelists being probed by Sen. Chuck Grassley of Iowa, ranking Republican on the Senate Finance Committee, for possible misuse of donor funds and their tax-exempt status as religious organizations. The other targets are faith healer Benny Hinn of Grapevine, Texas; prosperity preacher Kenneth Copeland of Newark, Texas and Bishop Eddie Long of Lithonia, Ga.

        Yesterday was a showdown of sorts – the deadline in the four-month inquiry to voluntarily submit information to Congress. Four of the six ministries indicated they would cooperate, even if they did not hand over the requested material; Dollar and Copeland, however, were defiant in their refusals.

        Through an attorney, Dollar, a former board member of Oral Roberts University, called the inquiry an “unprecedented inquiry into the religious activities of a church.”

        Copeland, also a former Oral Roberts board member, said through a representative that only the IRS had jurisdiction to question his ministry about finances.

        A leader of the prosperity gospel movement, Copeland is close to former GOP presidential contender Mike Huckabee who appeared on his national television show last fall “for six days of frank discussion on the Biblical perspective of character.”

        When Huckabee’s campaign struggled for cash, Copeland invited him to attend a national ministers meeting at his west Texas headquarters in January. The candidate, a Southern Baptist minister, raised $111,000 in contributions and another million dollars in pledges there, according to the Tulsa World. Copeland denied the appearance was a political endorsement, saying that Huckabee’s campaign simply rented a room, and Kenneth Copeland Ministries did not make a contribution.

        Grassley sent a particularly extensive questionnaire to Copeland, requesting credit card records and information on offshore banking accounts; receipts for planes, and information about whether the ministry used its mineral rights to capitalize a for-profit company. ( The Ft. Worth Star Telegram reports that FAA records show Copeland owns three planes and his ministry has several more).

        But it looks as if the Iowa Republican may have to issue subpoenas if he is going to succeed at forcing the church to render unto Caesar what is Caesar’s.

        A spokeswoman for Grassley said yesterday that the inquiry is a “step-by-step process,” and no decisions have been made about congressional hearings or subpoenas. Grassley has defended the probe, saying he is investigating whether tax-exempt organizations are accountable to their donors, not their religious practice.

        “The allegations involve governing boards that aren’t independent and allow generous salaries and housing allowances and amenities such as private jets and Rolls Royces,” he said when he announced the probe last November. “. . . I have an obligation to donors and the taxpayers to find out more.”

        Kenneth Behr, president of the Evangelical Council for Financial Accountability, an accreditation agency for Christian ministries, called the inquiry “a very big deal,” in an interview with the Tampa Tribune. He said he is not aware of a high-ranking lawmaker ever undertaking such an extensive investigation. “I think he’s picking a fight,” Behr said. “He is not just asking them to come in and talk, he is asking them for everything.”

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        2 Comments

        • #1.   John Laird 04.01.2008

          Jesus,hear my plea ,take these hypocrites vulgar gains and place them in chains. I don’t know if you have that power or your father “God” but surely “Senator Grassley” and the “Senate Finance Committee” do.
          The only people who received prosperity are those “Bible Pimps” by using Jesus and the big Kahuna “God” as their cohorts to steal from these poor blind sheep. They got these bible thumping fools in a suffocating religious illusion so much so, that if these heathens are sent up the river the government better have the army protect them from themselves because they are so mind controlleded the KOOL AID might come flying off the shelf.

        • #2.   Linda Rayborn 04.01.2008

          This article tells us much more about Mike Huckabee, our best hope for the future of the country than it does these tv evangelists. If Mike Huckabee wanted riches and fame, he could certainly have it. He is the most articulate, best motivator, most charismatic figure out there now for conservatives. He could certainly land a big time tv spot and live comfortably much like Gore, basking in the limelight. But Huckabee is running on principles and the sincere desire to make a better country for the future generations. He wants to make a difference and his religious foundation is important only in that it grounds him, making him consistent, strong, calm and collected. Conventional wisdom would have said that Huckabee should have dropped out, like Romney when he realized the odds were not in his favor. But Huckabee was running for the people who supported him and the principles he believed in more than the favor of the GOP elite. THAT is the kind of president we need and deserve!!! As Huckabee often says, “he would rather lose an election than lose the principles that got him into politics in the first place”. May we only hope and PRAY we have another chance to put this man in the White House!!

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      • Obama pastor part of rabble-rousing tradition

        As Sen. Barack Obama’s pastor, the Rev. Jeremiah Wright Jr. is cast as Public Enemy No. 1 by some commentators for his rants against the white establishment, it’s worth remembering that his congregation belongs to a liberal mainline Protestant denomination in America with a long history of offending people.

        The United Church of Christ, a blend of four historic Protestant traditions, traces its origins to the first church to take a stand against slavery in 1700, the first to ordain a woman in 1853, the first to publish an inclusive-language hymnal in 1995 and first to support same-sex marriage in 2005, according to a church website. Its 2004 television ads promoting its open door to blacks and gays was rejected by television networks CBS and NBC, which deemed them too controversial. (Story continues below interactive map.)

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        But even within that tradition, Wright is considered radical. The rebellious son and grandson of Baptist ministers, he was part of a group of black intellectuals such as James Cone, author of Black Theology and Black Power, who believed that blacks shouldn’t have to choose between Malcolm X and Martin Luther King Jr. They preached an Afro-centric Christianity that combined Christian principles with a strong social action agenda.

        When Wright arrived on the rough-and-tumble south side of Chicago in 1972, Trinity United Church of Christ was clearly losing in the competition for young, black men’s hearts to the Nation of Islam and black liberation groups despite its recently-adopted slogan, “unashamedly black and unapologetically Christian.” Over the next three decades, Wright transformed it into a megachurch with almost 8,000 members with dozens of community services, including day care, a credit union and a drug-and-alcohol program. When he retired last month, the church was the denomination’s largest.

        Wright’s screeds against America and white powerbrokers, his post-911 sermon that America had brought the attacks on itself and his praise of Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan are now well known thanks to the constant loop of snippets playing on cable television.
        Less well known is how he also informally advised Chicago’s only black mayor Harold Washington, considered a political role model for Obama, and also, the combative relationships he often had with more doctrinally conservative black ministers in Chicago, described in Obama: From Promise to Power, by Chicago Tribune reporter David Mendell.

        Mendell said that Obama first noticed the church in 1985 because of the “Free Africa” sign that Wright had posted out front to protest apartheid, and quotes Wright describing their open-ended talks about faith, politics, race and social change.

        “Trying to hold a conversation with a guy like Barack, and him trying to hold a conversation with some ministers, it’s like you are dating someone and she wants to talk to you about Rosie and what she saw on Oprah, and that’s it,” Wright said. “… He felt comfortable asking me questions that were postmodern, post-Enlightenment, and that college-educated and graduate school-trained people wrestle with when it comes to the faith … I was not threatened by those questions.”

        Obama credits Wright for his embracing Christianity, and says he took the title of his book, Audacity of Hope from a sermon Wright preached.

        What he doesn’t say is that he used Wright as a sounding board for questions about politics as well as faith. Mendell describes how, in 2002, a dejected Obama went to see Wright after returning from Washington where he attended the annual Congressional Black Caucus conference trying to garner support for his bid for the U.S. Senate.

        “He had gone down there to get support and find out who would support him, and found out it was just a meat market,” the pastor told Mendell. “He had people say, ‘If you want to count on me, come to my room. I don’t care if you’re married. …He was, like, in shock … He comes back shattered. I thought to myself, ‘Does he have a rude awakening coming his way.’”

        Mendell notes that Trinity United is considered by some Chicago blacks to be “the church of elites,” attracting celebrities like the rapper Common, TV talk mogul Oprah Winfrey, as well as academics from the nearby University of Chicago. On Sundays, BMWs and Audis create traffic jams on 95th Street.

        But the church was undergoing its own generational shift. Wright retired last month, and the top post was assumed by Otis Moss III, a Yale-educated former track star whose style is much more like that of the church’s most famous member, than of its former fire-and-brimstone pastor.

        Moss, too, is the son of a Baptist minister – Otis Moss Jr., who preached at Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta and who was a friend of Martin Luther King Jr. But while he, too, is said to connect strongly to young people, his cool, intellectual approach is less likely to catapult him to notoriety on cable television. In 2005, the magazine The African American Pulpit named him one of the “Twenty to Watch” ministers under forty.

        Here’s a video of Wright:

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        • #1.   BGenes 03.20.2008

          That’s not “radical”. That’s racist!

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      • The Butt family, Texas grocery kings

        Texas has Jerry Jones, Mark Cuban, Ross Perot, the Basses and the Hunts. And then there are the Butts.

        Charles C. Butt, 70, chairman and CEO of H. E. Butt Grocery Company, runs one of the largest privately held companies in the U.S. It has been family owned and operated since 1905, when grandmother Florence opened the C.C. Butt Grocery Store in Kerrville, Texas, with a $60 investment.

        More than 100 years later, that mom-and-pop store is now known as H-E-B, employs over 56,000 and has annual revenue of more than $12 billion. It has more than 300 stores in Texas and Mexico and is headquartered in San Antonio. (Story continues below interactive map.)

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        The family is on the Forbes 400 list, which estimates its wealth at $2.3 billion.

        But the Butts are not merely small-town, big-time grocers.

        H-E-B founder Howard Edward Butt who died in 1991 at age 91, was named by John F. Kennedy to the Committee on Equal Employment Opportunity and helped to establish the University of Corpus Christi. He took his mother’s modest investment and expanded it around south Texas and Mexico.

        His namesake and oldest son, Howard Jr., 80, heeded longtime friend Billy Graham’s advice to become a full-time preacher but still retains the title of vice chairman of the company.

        Howard Jr. once spoke at a prayer breakfast hosted by Dwight Eisenhower. He also organized the North American Congress of the Laity, whose honorary chairman was Gerald Ford. He has published numerous books, including one by Random House, Who Can You Trust?

        He preaches, writes and serves as president of the H. E. Butt Foundation, established in 1933. It started out with the goal of eradicating tuberculosis in the Rio Grande Valley, but today mainly supports Laity Lodge Ministries, which offers non-denominational seminars, retreats and camping facilities in the Texas Hill Country.

        The founder’s daughter, Eleanor Butt Crook, 74, is a former schoolteacher like grandmother Florence and mother Mary. She is a public education advocate, a world hunger activist and a director of the LBJ Museum in San Marcos.

        She married William H. Crook, a friend of brother Howard from Baylor University. The late Mr. Crook was an ordained Baptist minister, an adviser to Lyndon B. Johnson and national director of Volunteers in Service to America. In 1968 he was named ambassador to Australia.

        Eleanor’s daughter, Elizabeth Crook, is a novelist, whose first two books were published by Jackie Onassis for Doubleday. Longtime family friend Bill Moyers hosted a New York book party for Elizabeth and LBJ Press Secretary Liz Carpenter gave The Raven’s Bride its title and helped in its publicity.

        Charles, Howard Sr.’s youngest son, is a modern art collector who in 2006 gave $1 million to the McNay Art Museum in San Antonio. Under his leadership, H-E-B contributes five percent of its pre-tax earnings to charity, a practice the family started in the 1930s.

        As part of its community investment program, H-E-B spends almost $500,000 a year for Excellence in Education Awards to recognize Texas public school professionals. H-E-B supports 21 food banks that serve 8,000 organizations in Texas and Mexico.

        Charles, like his sister Eleanor, is an advocate of Texas public education and medical research for which both have been recognized. The Mexican government awarded Charles in 2001 the prestigious Aguila Azteca award, the highest honor given to a foreigner.

        The family’s next generation of grocers include Stephen W. Butt, 53, senior vice president for the upscale Central Market and Howard E. Butt III, 56, senior vice president and general manager of the Mexico division.

        In addition to the usual grocery items, most H-E-B stores carry flowers (with the ability to ship worldwide), have in-house pharmacies (some with clinics), photo processing, mobile phone services and business centers. Help is only a click away for online meal planning and shopping tips, health advice, and life, home, auto and pet insurance. H-E-B also offers online defensive driving courses.

        “Here Everything’s Better” is the company motto.

        The Wharton — and Harvard — trained Charles Butt, head since 1971, carries on his family’s tradition of innovation. H-E-B introduced air conditioned stores in balmy south Texas in the 1940s, a frozen food section and its own brands. Later it opened “supermarkets” that brought together a fish market, butcher shop, pharmacy and bakery.

        In the 1920s Howard Sr. persuaded his mother to sell tobacco and in the 1970s Charles persuaded his father, a Baptist deacon, to sell beer and wine and to remain open on Sundays.

        H-E-B has stood firm on its south Texas ground against national chains like Albertson’s and Kroger and is in step with the Wal-Marts, Targets and Costcos in the “hypermarket” concept — where everything under the sun is sold under one roof. H-E-B Plus is a one-stop shopping destination for groceries, health and beauty products, grills, charcoal, diapers, greeting cards, lawn and garden equipment, music and electronics.

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      • Jerry Springer: The Opera comes to New York

        Jerry Springer: The Opera had its New York debut last night, as part of a two-night only stint at Carnegie Hall.

        The scaled-down production, billed as a concert, was a test to see if American audiences would embrace the controversial show. Although it had a successful run in London’s West End, when the BBC decided to air a TV version of the musical, Christian groups protested loudly. (Story continues below interactive map.)

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        Hundreds of demonstrators assembled outside BBC headquarters the day Jerry Springer: The Opera aired on television. After threats were made to BBC executives, requests for police protection were made. The High Court ended up denying the request of Christian Voice, a Christian evangelical group, to prosecute the director general of the BBC for blasphemy.

        The New York version had a smaller ensemble than the original production and lacked a full set. However, it’s likely that the response from these two shows will dictate whether or not Jerry Springer: The Opera will make the transition to Broadway.

        The Carnegie Hall production was directed by Jason Moore, famous for his work the on Tony-award-winning musical Wicked. Musical direction was done by Stephen Oremus, who has also done Avenue Q. Harvey Keitel stars in the title role, and is joined by Broadway greats Linda Balgord, Lawrence Clayton, Katrina Rose Dideriksen, Max Von Essen, Patricia Phillips, and Emily Skinner. David Bedella is the only original member of the London cast to join the New York ensemble.

        The first act is a colorful, musical portrayal of the Jerry Springer show. Guests include a transvestite, a pole dancer, and two diaper fetishists. The first half of the show ends with a tap-dance number performed by members of the Ku Klux Klan.

        However, the most controversial aspects come in Act II. Jerry is shot, and arrives in the after-life to present a new version of his show, Jerry Springer: In Hell, where he has to try to mediate the long-standing conflict between Satan, Jesus, Mary, Adam, Eve and God. Jesus is wearing a diaper, and says he’s “a bit gay.” Mary is introduced as “the teenage mother of Jesus” and the chorus chants that she was “raped by God.”

        Considering the lyrics, it’s not surprising that Catholic League president Bill Donohue has spoken out about the show, saying: “Never before in its illustrious history has Carnegie Hall been home to Christian bashing, but that is all about to change on January 29 and 30. Incredibly, it is allowing a patently obscene and viciously anti-Christian musical to be performed on its stage. Thus has it got into bed with the bigots, making a mockery of art in the process.”

        An hour and a half before the show’s start time last night, picketers had already arrived with signs that read: “Stop blaspheming our God.”

        The crowd outside didn’t hinder the star-studded audience, which included Keitel’s Taxi Driver co-star Robert DeNiro. Other audience members included Joy Behar, Mario Cantone, Norah Jones, John Leguizamo, and Carson Kressley.

        For unexplained reasons, the finale was dropped from last night’s performance. Nevertheless, the show closed with a standing ovation. Even DeNiro got to his feet.

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