Smoky Mountains Sunrise

Monday, January 3, 2011

The Alexandria Church Bombing: The Plot Thickens

By Baron Bodissey

On New Year’s Eve a car bomb exploded outside a Coptic church in Alexandria, Egypt. 21 people were killed, and more than 100 were injured. All of the dead were Christians, as were all but a few of the injured.

President Hosni Mubarak was quick to condemn the “attack against Muslims and Christians”, a characterization of the event that was echoed by President Obama. The sophistication and scope of the attack were downplayed, with the Egyptian government insisting that a lone suicide bomber was responsible, rather than a remotely-detonated car bomb. When the Pope condemned the attack, the imam of Al-Azhar University accused him of interfering in Egypt’s internal affairs.

Today brought two new developments: evidence that there was careful advanced co-ordination for the blast, and reports by witnesses that the security detachment guarding the church abruptly departed about an hour before the bomb exploded.

Top Ten Anti-Christian Events in 2010

Defend Christians.Org, a ministry of the Christian Anti-Defamation Commission, has just released its annual top ten list of anti-Christian acts in America for 2010. The surprising list is selected through an online poll of Christians and people of good will who are part of Defend Christians.Org.

"The poll results demonstrate a double standard is being applied against Christians and their faith, values and liberty," said Dr. Gary Cass, Chairman and CEO. "If these same types of actions were taken against other groups one would call it bigoted. We are exposing the shameful behavior of bashing Christ and biblical values for what it is, "Christophobia;" the irrational fear and hatred of Christ and His Word."

"Every year the list of attacks grows as godless secular values are inflaming the minds of many against Almighty God, Jesus Christ and Christianity. Most of the attacks are merely rhetorical. Increasingly they are becoming codified into policies that encroach on Christian's academic freedom and liberty of conscience. Freedom of speech is denied to Christians while they are slandered by radical organizations. In extreme cases the hatred boils over into violence," says Rev. Cass.

The 2010 Top Ten List include...
1. The Employment Non-Discrimination Act; a proposed federal bill that would force ministries, including churches, to hire people who oppose their beliefs or who live in open defiance of their values.
3. Julea Ward and Jennifer Keeton are two Christian students expelled from their respective Master's programs in counseling at two different universities because they wouldn't deny their faith and affirm the validity of the homosexual lifestyle.
5. Christians are denied their civil rights and falsely arrested for disorderly conduct at an annual Arab festival in Dearborn, Michigan for peacefully sharing the gospel. This happened the previous year, too. The Christians were acquitted both times of all charges.
9. The Southern Poverty Law Center, a liberal ACLU-like organization, has continued to label many mainstream Christian organizations that promote traditional marriage as "hate groups" and "anti-gay" in lists that include violent racists groups.
For the complete list visit www.DefendChristians.org.

Sunday, January 2, 2011

Margaret Thatcher on 'The Moral Foundations of Society'

Margaret Thatcher was born in 1925 and went on to earn a degree in chemistry from Somerville College, Oxford, as well as a master of arts degree from the University of Oxford. For some years she worked as a research chemist and then as a barrister, specializing in tax law. Elected to the House of Commons in 1953, she later held several ministerial appointments. She was elected leader of the Conservative Party and thus leader of the Opposition in 1975.

She became Britain’s first female prime minister in 1979 and served her nation in this historic role until her resignation in 1990. In 1992, she was elevated to the House of Lords to become Baroness Thatcher of Kesteven. The first volume of her memoirs, The Downing Street Years, was published in 1993 by HarperCollins. 

In November 1994, Lady natcher delivered the concluding lecture in Hillsdale Center for Constructive Alternatives seminar, “God and Man: Perspectives on Christianity in the 20th Century” before an audience of 2,500 students, faculty, and guests. In an edited version of that lecture, she examines how the Judeo-Christian tradition has provided the moral foundations of America and other nations in the West and contrasts their experience with that of the former Soviet Union.

The Moral Foundations of the American Founding

History has taught us that freedom cannot long survive unless it is based on moral foundations. The American founding bears ample witness to this fact. America has become the most powerful nation in history, yet she uses her power not for territorial expansion but to perpetuate freedom and justice throughout the world.

For over two centuries, Americans have held fast to their belief in freedom for all men—a belief that springs from their spiritual heritage. John Adams, second president of the United States, wrote in 1789, “Our Constitution was designed only for a moral and religious people. It is wholly inadequate for the government of any other.” That was an astonishing thing to say, but it was true.

What kind of people built America and thus prompted Adams to make such a statement? Sadly, too many people, especially young people, have a hard time answering that question. They know little of their own history (This is also true in Great Britain.) But America’s is a very distinguished history, nonetheless, and it has important lessons to teach us regarding the necessity of moral foundations.

John Winthrop, who led the Great Migration to America in the early 17th century and who helped found the Massachusetts Bay Colony, declared, “We shall be as a City upon a Hill.” On the voyage to the New World, he told the members of his company that they must rise to their responsibilities and learn to live as God intended men should live: in charity, love, and cooperation with one another. Most of the early founders affirmed the colonists were infused with the same spirit, and they tried to live in accord with a Biblical ethic. They felt they weren’t able to do so in Great Britain or elsewhere in Europe. Some of them were Protestant, and some were Catholic; it didn’t matter. What mattered was that they did not feel they had the liberty to worship freely and, therefore, to live freely, at home. With enormous courage, the first American colonists set out on a perilous journey to an unknown land—without government subsidies and not in order to amass fortunes but to fulfill their faith.

Westminster Cathedral Choir - 'Coventry Carol'


The choristers of Westminster Cathedral  sing "Coventry Carol" which dates from the 16th Century. The carol was performed in Coventry as part of a mystery play called The Pageant of the Shearmen and Tailors.

The play depicts the Christmas story from chapter two in the Gospel of Matthew. The carol refers to the Massacre of the Innocents, in which Herod orders all male infants under the age of two in Bethlehem to be killed. The haunting lyrics represent a mother's lament for her doomed child. It is the only carol that has survived from this play.


From the Pastor - 'The Light of the World'

A Weekly Column by Father George Rutler


From the roof of our church at 3:41 am on the Winter Solstice, I did not see many others on Murray Hill watching the lunar eclipse. The magnificent coppery red color of the moon was an effect of the Sun’s light cast from the edges of the Earth’s circumference, like all her sunrises and sunsets reflected at the same time. The last time this happened was 1638, and some of the babies I have recently baptized may see it again in 2094, if they live long enough and stay up late enough.

The Wise Men “followed a star,” of what kind we do not know. These erudite astronomers may have seen a unique event, or they may have been inspired to read a portent into some ordinary configuration. As good scientists, they followed their hypothesis until they reached their conclusion in Bethlehem: “I am the light of the world; he who follows me will not walk in darkness, but will have the light of life” (John 8:12). Like a bad scientist, the Edomite client king Herod tried to destroy that Light because it threatened the derivative fluorescence of his own ego.

There are many Herods in our time. In his World Peace Day message, Pope Benedict XVI said: "At present, Christians are the religious group which suffers most from persecution on account of its faith." He cited attacks on Christians particularly in Asia, Africa, the Middle East and the Holy Land: “This situation is intolerable, since it represents an insult to God and to human dignity.”

All wise men must outwit Herod wherever he is, confident that “The light shines in the darkness, and the darkness has not overcome it” (John 1:5). That light is celebrated on the Feast of the Epiphany. It is the feast of the Wise Men who followed the star, but it is a multi-layered feast recalling also the other “Epiphanies” or “showings” of the Light of the World in the Luminous Mysteries:  Our Lord’s Baptism, the Wedding at Cana, the Proclamation of the Kingdom, the Transfiguration, and the Institution of the Eucharist.

Pope Gregory XIII improved the Julian calendar with his own more accurate Gregorian calendar in 1582, using his own astronomers led by the Jesuit Christopher Clavius who remarkably calculated the solar year without even using decimal points. But it was the virtue of faith that enabled those men to understand the source of the light they measured. When that faith fades, creatures are worshiped instead of their Creator, as with one nouveau eclectic church in our own city which now “celebrates” the Winter Solstice.  “[T]hey supposed that either fire or wind or swift air, or the circle of the stars, or turbulent water, or the luminaries of heaven were the gods that rule the world. . . . [L]et them know how much better than these is their Lord, for the author of beauty created them” (Wisdom 13:2-3).


Fr. George W. Rutler is the pastor of the Church of our Saviour in New York City. His latest book, Coincidentally: Unserious Reflections on Trivial Connections, is available from Crossroads Publishing.