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New Yorker Mag Cover: Funny or Offensive?

By Lindsay Melvin
July 14th, 2008 at 3:27 pm

 

Does the new cover of  the New Yorker magazine go to far?

 

The cover shows Barack Obama and his wife standing in the oval office, him dressed like traditional Muslim and Michelle resembling a terrorist  with a machine gun strapped across her back.

 

They’re giving each other a fist bump while a picture of Osama Bin Laden hangs on the wall and an American flag burns in the fire place.  

 

According to the AP, the Obama campaign spokesman said the cartoon was "tasteless and offensive".

 

McCain has also condemned it, according to MSNBC.

 

The New Yorker says the over the top cover was meant to be political satire.

 


Snake Handlers

By Lindsay Melvin
July 14th, 2008 at 2:26 pm

The Associated Press has an interesting story about the arrest of a Kentucky pastor who was caught with more than 50 snakes-many of them venomous-that were being used in religious rites.

According to the AP, Gregory James Coots, 36, is the pastor of  Full Gospel Tabernacle in Jesus Name in Middlesboro,  where a Tennessee woman died after being bitten by a rattlesnake during a service in 1995.

Her husband died three years later when he was bitten by a snake in northeastern Alabama.

Handling snakes is practiced in a handful of fundamentalist churches across Appalachia, based on the interpretation of Bible verses saying true believers can take up serpents without being harmed.

The practice is illegal in most states.

Coots was charged Thursday with buying, selling and possessing illegal reptiles.

For those looking to read more about Coots and his family's practice of snake handling, they were featured in the book "Serpent Handlers: Three families and their faith."


Gay doesn’t always mean Homosexual

By Lindsay Melvin
July 2nd, 2008 at 12:45 pm

The Jewish Journal picked up on this whopper of a slip-up.

The American Family Association news site, which is Christian and very conservative, put out a story on American Olympic sprinter Tyson Gay. Apparently, they swapped his last name, "Gay" for "Homosexual."

You can't make this stuff up.  

Here's a a few lines from the story:

Photo

 The story has since been corrected.  

 Good thing it wasn't about Memphis Grizzlie Rudy Gay.  


Funny Religion T’s

By Lindsay Melvin
June 30th, 2008 at 2:24 pm

Not really news but a funny thing I ran across.

There are a slew of comical T-shirts for sale on Beliefnet, including "Jesus is My Homeboy" and for Hindus, "Shiva is My Om Boy."

 Jesus is my homeboy

 


U.S. Religious Landscape Survey

By Lindsay Melvin
June 23rd, 2008 at 7:38 pm

The Pew Research Center’s Forum on Religion & Public Life released part II of its U.S. Religious Landscape Survey today.

The survey of 35,000 Americans has some interesting information on Tennessee.

A story on it will run in the paper Tuesday.

In the meantime here are some interesting tidbits from the report:

 

People who are absolutely certain in their belief in God:

National 71%

Tennessee 84%

Mississippi 91%

Arkansas 84%

 

See religion as very important:

National 56%

Tennessee 72 %

Mississippi 82%

Arkansas 74 %

 

Attend religious services at least once a week:

National 39%

Tennessee 52 %

Mississippi 60%

Arkansas 50%

 

Interpret scripture as literally the word of God:

National 33%

Tennessee 51%

Mississippi  64%

Arkansas  51%

 

Believe there is more than one way to interpret the teachings of their religion:

National 68%

Tennessee 57%

Mississippi 54%

Arkansas 59%

 

Believe many religions can lead to eternal life:

National 70%

Tennessee 63%

Mississippi 59%

Arkansas 63%

 

Source: Pew  Research Center’s Forum on  Religion & Public Life

 


No more weddings for Al Green

By Lindsay Melvin
June 16th, 2008 at 7:47 pm

 

All those Al Green fans hoping to travel to Memphis so the singer and ordained pastor can officiate over their wedding nuptials are out of luck.

The seats at Full Gospel Tabernacle, where Green is pastor, are usually filled with star gazers from around the country.  But Green has put the kibosh on performing weddings.

Green explains, "We destroyed the (waiting) list (because) there were too many people coming from Tokyo, from Seoul, from Arkansas, New York, California," reported Showbizspy.com.

He didn't have time to talk but his publicist says he has 34 interviews pending, his new record has hit top 10 and he's getting a huge BET award next week. Oh yeah, and he's also playing Carnegie Hall and has about three months worth of tour dates coming up.

Sounds like he won't be doing worship services, baptisms or funerals for a while either.


Va. school texts say OK to kill

By Lindsay Melvin
June 16th, 2008 at 7:20 pm

A federal investigation has shown that the textbooks of a school in northern Virginia say it is permissible to kill adulterers and converts from Islam.

 

The U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom, a panel formed by Congress, last year recommended the school be closed because of concerns it promotes violence and too closely mimics the conservative Saudi educational system.

 

 By MATTHEW BARAKAT

McLEAN, Va. (AP) - Textbooks at a private Islamic school in northern Virginia teach students that it is permissible for Muslims to kill adulterers and converts from Islam, according to a federal investigation released Wednesday.

Other passages in the school's textbooks state that "the Jews conspired against Islam and its people" and that Muslims are permitted to take the lives and property of those deemed "polytheists."

The passages were found in selected textbooks used during the 2007-08 school year by the Islamic Saudi Academy, which teaches 900 students in grades K-12 at two campuses in Alexandria and Fairfax and receives much of its funding from the Saudi government.

The academy has come under scrutiny from critics who allege that it fosters an intolerant brand of Islam similar to that taught in the conservative Saudi kingdom. In the review, the panel recommended that the school make all of its textbooks available to the State Department so changes can be made before the next school year.

The U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom, a panel formed by Congress, last year recommended that the school be closed amid concerns that it promotes violence and too closely mimics the conservative Saudi educational system.

The commission made its recommendation last year to close the school even though it had not reviewed the textbooks. Now that some have been reviewed, "we feel more confident that the potential problems we flagged before really are there," said the commission's spokeswoman, Judith Ingram.

School officials have long denied that the academy fosters intolerance. It has acknowledged that some of the Saudi textbooks contain harsh language, but says that the texts have improved in recent years and are revised as needed by the academy before being distributed to students.

School officials and the State Department did not immediately respond to phone calls and an e-mail seeking comment Wednesday.

The commission said it obtained 17 of the academy's textbooks through a variety of channels, including from members of Congress. The texts did appear to contain numerous revisions, including pages that were removed or passages that were whited out, but numerous troubling passages remained, according to the panel:

_ The authors of a 12th-grade text on Koranic interpretation state that apostates (those who convert from Islam), adulterers and people who murder Muslims can be permissibly killed.

_ The authors of a 12th-grade text on monotheism write that "(m)ajor polytheism makes blood and wealth permissible," meaning that a Muslim can take with impunity the life and property of someone believed guilty of polytheism. According to the panel, the strict Saudi interpretation of polytheism includes Shiite and Sufi Muslims as well as Christians, Jews, Hindus, and Buddhists.

_ A social studies text offers the view that Jews were responsible for the split between Sunni and Shiite Muslims: "The cause of the discord: The Jews conspired against Islam and its people. A sly, wicked person who sinfully and deceitfully professed Islam infiltrated (the Muslims)."

More generally, the panel found that the academy textbooks hold the view that the Muslim world was strong when united under a single caliph, the Arabic language and the Sunni creed, and that Muslims have grown weak because of foreign influence and internal divisions.

The commission's findings issued come a month after the Fairfax County Board of Supervisors voted unanimously to extend the academy's lease for its main campus, which sits on county property.

The county conducted its own study of the textbooks last year at the request of Supervisor Gerald Hyland, whose district encompasses the academy.

Hyland and the county never released results of what they had found, but Hyland said in approving the lease that he is comfortable with the school's teachings, though he did so with a qualification.

"I would be less than frank if I didn't tell you that the curriculum does contain references to the Quran, which, if taken out of context and read literally, would cause come concern," Hyland said at the meeting at which the lease was extended.

On the Net:

  • USCIRF Press Release: http://www.uscirf.gov/index.php?optioncom_content&taskview&id2206&Itemid 1

  • Evangelists Hall of Faith

    By Lindsay Melvin
    June 11th, 2008 at 7:23 pm

    The Conference of Southern Baptist Evangelists have inducted two Memphians into the "Evangelists Hall of Faith".

    Bette Stalnecker-Gibson and Don Womack.

    COSBE used its 50th anniversary celebration to inaugurate its first "Hall of Faith" ers.  Chosen were 30 who have dedicated their lives to vocational evangelism.

     


    Another tid bit on Memphis Scientology

    By Lindsay Melvin
    June 11th, 2008 at 6:24 pm

    In a story that ran today about the Memphis Scientology church moving to Collierville, I wasn't able to add this extra information because it came in after deadline.

    Besides wanting to be closer to its flock, the church had outgrown its old mansion location in Central Gardens, according to Scientology headquarters in Los Angeles.

    Although, they would not commit to a number, they said they have several hundred members in Memphis.  

     


    Tornado Turning up Faith

    By Lindsay Melvin
    June 11th, 2008 at 6:08 pm

    After stories about how peoples' faith in God were strengthened after a powerful tornado ripped through Union University's campus on Feb. 5, Tim Ellsworth decided to write a book.  

    It's called "God in the Whirlwind:  Stories of Grace from the Tornado at Union University."

    I have a short article running tomorrow about Ellsworth's collection of faith confirming stories.

     book


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