Tuesday, July 20, 2010

Palin Calls Planned Islamic Center Near Ground Zero a 'Provocation'

For those who aren't yet aware, a new Islamic community center is being built and facilitated near Ground Zero where the Twin Towers used to be. The Cordoba Project, framed and named through inspiration from the YMCA and JCC (Jewish Community Center) formats in these respective traditions and called Cordoba after the Spanish city in the middle ages that fostered fruitful relations between all the Abrahamic faiths, is to be a community center designed to serve the local community and reach out to neighboring religions and cultures in the spirit of dialogue and collaboration toward equality, justice, and peace. It's really about improving Muslim-West relations.

Imam Feisal Abdul Rauf is the chair of the Cordoba initiative and founded the American Society for Muslim Advancement, which was the first U.S. program focusing on bring together Muslims and non-Muslim through the avenues of academia, policy, current affairs, and culture.

However, though the Cordoba Project is actually a force for good, truth, and justice dedicated to fostering greater understanding across communities, cultures, and religions, Sarah Palin has denounced these efforts as "provocation" and against the "interests of healing" (The Hill, 7/18/10).

I believe Palin has grossly misunderstood the intentions and possibilities of the Cordoba initiative. Rather than spreading rumors and distorted tropes, perhaps she could gain a bit more insight through seeking to better understand and learn from the principles and actions of this very important and peace-making project.

For more, read the whole article by Ben Geman at The Hill.

Serene Jones' Open Letter to Glenn Beck

Feminist theologian and president of Union Theological Seminary, Serene Jones, has written an open letter to Glenn Beck as a response to Beck's advocacy to his audience to steer clear of churches and synagogues that use the term "social justice" in their communications.

The main gist of the letter is an announcement that Bibles are being sent to Beck with the many references to social justice highlighted in the text and an explanation as to why these Bibles are being sent - to inform him and his audience that human rights and social action are part and parcel of the biblical tradition.

Read Jones' open letter at the Huffington Post.

Friday, July 9, 2010

Conservative Christian Case for Separation of Church-State

Jimi Jobin, an alumnus of the evangelical Liberty University and pastor of Terra Nova Faith Community in Las Vegas, has written an article giving a very convincing argument as to why conservative Christians should uphold and celebrate our forefathers' constitutional inclusion of religion-government separation.

Jobin makes the overarching point that the American colonists and our founders experienced time after time church-sponsored or run states (e.g. The Holy Commonwealth of Massachussetts - Puritans/Congregationalists, southern states - Anglican, Pennsylvania - Quakers) and the oppression and persecution that this most often elicited. So, they made sure that this wasn't going to occur when they were outlining and formulating the Constitution for the Union and thus included the first clause (no establishment clause) of the 1st Amendment.

It's a very compelling and informed open letter, and shows that there are some conservative Christian brothers and sisters who do recognize the importance of the separation between church and state. We should never keep religion out of public life, but it has no place in our governing structures, for sure.

Read the article at Religion Dispatches.

Monday, July 5, 2010

John Dominic Crossan Speaking in Australia

For those interested in New Testament studies and historical Jesus scholarship, bible scholar and member of the Jesus Seminar, John Dominic Crossan will be speaking in Carlton, Victoria, Australia from Tuesday August 31 - Friday September 3, 2010. This event is sponsored by the Progressive Christian Network of Victoria.

Dr. Crossan's lectures will address three fundamental questions:

1) What does it mean that, before Jesus ever existed, there was already a human being in that Mediterranean world whose titles were Divine, Son of God, God Incarnate, and God from God?

2) What is the difference in content when Caesar and Christ are both proclaimed as "Savior of the World"--if we have only one world, why two Saviors?

3) Finally, is the God of the Christian Bible violent or non-violent? And, if both, do we conflate those twin visions or--and how--do we decide between them?

Though I won't be able to go, simply the content of these questions to be addressed leads me to believe that these lectures and discussions will be very intriguing and informative concerning early Christian thought, ancient near-eastern culture, and the personalities of Jesus and Paul.

Click here to read more about event details.