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May 17, 2008

NAACP's new president is not Dallas' Frederick Haynes

9:20 AM Sat, May 17, 2008 |  | 
Bruce Tomaso   E-mail   News tips

NAACPBenjamin Todd Jealous, 35, a human rights activist, was chosen instead by the NAACP's board of directors, meeting in Baltimore.

Jealous is the youngest national leader in the 99-year history of the civil rights organization. Here's the story from Kelly Brewington of The Baltimore Sun.

The Rev. Frederick D. Haynes III of Friendship-West Baptist Church in Oak Cliff had been a finalist for the job.

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The entry "NAACP's new president is not Dallas' Frederick Haynes" is tagged: Benjamin , elect , Frederick Haynes , Friendship-West , Jealous , NAACP , president , Todd


UMC "recovery" church focuses on helping people beat addiction

8:53 AM Sat, May 17, 2008 |  | 
Sam Hodges   E-mail   News tips

The United Methodist News Service has an interesting feature on a church whose pastor speaks of his own recovery experience during "recovery services" that draw on the gospel and 12-step programs. Keep reading:

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How John Hagee came to apologize to Catholics

7:47 AM Sat, May 17, 2008 |  | 
Bruce Tomaso   E-mail   News tips

Wayne Slater, our senior political writer, reports that Deal Hudson, a Southern Baptist turned Catholic, was instrumental in bringing about "the Hagee Catholic Rehabilitation Tour."

Hudson, who is from Fort Worth, supports John McCain. After the Arizona Republican won Hagee's endorsement, Wayne writes, Hudson and others realized that Hagee's prior statements about the Catholic Church could be trouble. Even as the Republicans were celebrating the damage that the Rev. Jeremiah Wright's incendiary statements had done to Barack Obama, they understood that they had their own "pastor problem." The Internet was filled with clips of Hagee calling the Catholic Church "the great whore" and suggesting that the Vatican was complicit in the Holocaust.

So Hudson had lunch with Hagee. Then, last week, he helped arrange a meeting in Washington between the San Antonio televangelist and 13 Catholic leaders. And he helped persuade Hagee to write a letter of apology to one of his most vocal Catholic critics, William Donohue of the Catholic League.

The GOP is counting on strong support in November from conservative evangelical Christians. If the Republicans can also win the support of conservative Catholics -- who don't like Obama's or Hillary Clinton's stance on issues such as abortion, gay rights and embryonic stem cell research -- that could work to McCain's considerable favor.

So getting Hagee to reach out to Catholics, and getting Catholics to accept his apology, could prove to be a huge political win for McCain -- and for Deal Hudson.

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The entry "How John Hagee came to apologize to Catholics" is tagged: apologize , Catholic League , Deal Hudson , John Hagee , McCain , San Antonio , Slater , televangelist


Quote of the Day

6:16 AM Sat, May 17, 2008 |  | 
Jeffrey Weiss   E-mail   News tips

"A transdisciplinary approach aims at the real. It is a realism in a way that any reductionism, always a product of unbound reason, ultimately, is not."

Eric Weislogel, Ph.D., the Executive Director and Vice President of the Governing Board of the Metanexus Institute.

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May 16, 2008

Frederick Haynes update

9:43 PM Fri, May 16, 2008 |  | 
Bruce Tomaso   E-mail   News tips

Channel 11 is reporting on its Web site that Frederick Haynes, senior pastor of Friendship-West Baptist Church, says he isn't getting the NAACP presidency.

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The entry "Frederick Haynes update" is tagged: Frederick , Friendship-West , Haynes , NAACP , president


NAACP still hasn't picked a president

7:32 PM Fri, May 16, 2008 |  | 
Bruce Tomaso   E-mail   News tips

We'd said earlier that it could come today. Looks like an annoucement won't be made until late tonight, or, more likely, Saturday.

As of this writing, Frederick Haynes, senior pastor of Friendship-West Baptist Church, is still very much in the running.

The story I wrote for the Saturday morning paper -- assuming that developments don't overake it before then -- is after the jump.

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The entry "NAACP still hasn't picked a president" is tagged: Baltimore , elect , Frederick Haynes , Friendship-West , NAACP , president


Oprah's `webinars' with Tolle a big hit

1:35 PM Fri, May 16, 2008 |  | 
Sam Hodges   E-mail   News tips


Eckhart Tolle was doing fine as a spirituality author without the help of Oprah Winfrey. Their Web partnership is giving him a much, much bigger audience. Christianity Today has the story.

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Episcopal gay rights group hails California court's decision

12:36 PM Fri, May 16, 2008 |  | 
Sam Hodges   E-mail   News tips


The same-sex marriage decision by the California Supreme Court has found favor with a group of Episcopalians. Episcopal News Service has the story.

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BREAKING NEWS - Minister from Prestonwood Baptist arrested in sex sting

12:10 PM Fri, May 16, 2008 |  | 
Bruce Tomaso   E-mail   News tips

Courtesy: Bryan Police Department
Joe Barron, 52, was arrested in Bryan, Texas, after he drove more than three hours to have sex with a person he thought was a 13-year-old girl, according to police.

He is one of about 20 ministers from Prestonwood Baptist Church, the Plano megachurch.

Here's a story from the Bryan College Station Eagle. Read the Dallas Morning News story here.

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The entry "BREAKING NEWS - Minister from Prestonwood Baptist arrested in sex sting" is tagged: arrested , Baptist , Bryan , minister , Prestonwood , sex sting , Texas


MLK Memorial - made in China??!!

11:58 AM Fri, May 16, 2008 |  | 
Bruce Tomaso   E-mail   News tips

We're building a monument in Washington to the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. This was authorized by Congress in 1996.

But "we're" not really building it at all. In what seems to many to have been a stupefyingly idiotic decision, the sculpture of King is being created by a Chinese artist. In China.

Marc Fisher of The Washington Post writes:

It is simply wrong to have outsourced both the sculpting and quarrying of the granite - and especially to China, a country whose government during Dr. King's lifetime called him a "reactionary running dog" for his advocacy of nonviolent protest.

Moreover, Fisher notes, the foreign sculptor appears to have botched the job. The King he proposes to depict looks like one of those impossibly stiff and imposing figures churned out by Soviet artists during the Stalin era. It shows King standing cross-armed, "in the arrogant stance of a dictator, clad in a boxy suit, with an impassive, unapproachable mien, looking more like an East Bloc Politburo member than an inspirational, transformational preacher who won a war armed with nothing but truth and words."

How, I wonder, did this get so far off the tracks?


Einstein letter ridiculing religion brings hefty auction price

10:44 AM Fri, May 16, 2008 |  | 
Bruce Tomaso   E-mail   News tips

ASSOCIATED PRESS

A 1954 letter in which the physics genius dismissed religious belief as "childish superstitions" and the Bible as full of "primitive legends" sold at auction in London for 170,000 pounds.

Here's the story from The Telegraph.

That much British poundage is about $331,000. Here's how I know. (Don't say you never got anything worthwhile from this blog.)

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The entry "Einstein letter ridiculing religion brings hefty auction price" is tagged: $331 , 000 , 000 pounds , 170 , auction , dismiss , Einstein , God , letter , London , superstition


Death of a Polish Catholic heroine

7:22 AM Fri, May 16, 2008 |  | 
Sam Hodges   E-mail   News tips

Many in Poland are recalling Irena Sendler, a Catholic social worker who saved 2,500 Jewish children from the Holocaust. She has died at 98. Catholic News Service has a story.

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Frederick Haynes could be named NAACP chief today

6:59 AM Fri, May 16, 2008 |  | 
Bruce Tomaso   E-mail   News tips

As Sam Hodges reported in March, the Rev. Frederick D. Haynes III of Friendship-West Baptist Church in Oak Cliff could be the next president of the NAACP.

The group's board is meeting in Baltimore, and an announcement could come today.

The nation's oldest civil rights organization has slipped in prestige in recent years, troubled by infighting, financial difficulties and indifference on the part of many African-Americans. This story about the election, from The Baltimore Sun, suggests that board members have spent much of their time and energy bickering about the selection process, even as they prepare to announce their new president.

James Ragland wrote in March that many wonder why a pastor as successful as Haynes would even want the job:

I talked to several prominent black leaders, including Casey Thomas, president of the local NAACP chapter, state Sen. Royce West, former Dallas Mayor Ron Kirk and National Urban League president and chief executive officer Marc H. Morial. They all said the NAACP needs someone who can stabilize the organization and help refine its message and methods for the 21st century.

That's vitally important for an organization whose last president's term was cut short by infighting and whose financial deficits in recent years prompted the NAACP to cut 40 percent of its national staff and close seven regional offices last summer.

There's a growing sense that the NAACP is drifting. And unless someone with a commanding presence and the ability to unite the disparate internal forces takes the rein, the organization may become less and less relevant.

Dr. Haynes shared a story that illustrates that point. When he told his 15-year-old daughter about the opportunity he had to lead the NAACP, she didn't jump up and down with joy. She didn't express any concern. She was ho-hum.

"Fifty years ago," Dr. Haynes said of the NAACP's top job, "that would have been a big achievement, and a danger for whoever was considered for this post."

Now, it draws a yawn in many quarters. Not good.

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The entry "Frederick Haynes could be named NAACP chief today" is tagged: Baltimore , Frederick , Friendship-West , Haynes , NAACP , president


Quote of the day

5:11 AM Fri, May 16, 2008 |  | 
Bruce Tomaso   E-mail   News tips

"Remember, we're all in this alone."

-- Lily Tomlin

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May 15, 2008

Gay marriage: For every battle 'lost,' doesn't someone win?

7:09 PM Thu, May 15, 2008 |  | 
Bruce Tomaso   E-mail   News tips

Over on his Beliefnet blog, my friend Rod Dreher laments the California Supreme Court ruling that overturned a ban against gay marriage.

"The battle for cultural conservatives," Rod writes, "has been lost."

Well, maybe. But another way to look at it is that the battle has been lost for those who would poke their noses into other folks' business.

I don't want to marry a guy any more than Rod does, but if my neighbor Cedric wants to, how in the world is that my concern? Or Rod Dreher's, or Phyllis Schlafly's, or Pat Robertson's?

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The entry "Gay marriage: For every battle 'lost,' doesn't someone win?" is tagged: battle , Beliefnet , blog , California Supreme Court , conservative , gay marriage , lost , Rod Dreher , ruling


Gospel Music Channel to air Dottie Rambo's last interview

2:13 PM Thu, May 15, 2008 |  | 
Bruce Tomaso   E-mail   News tips

The gospel star died last weekend in a bus crash.

In April, the Gospel Music Channel ran an interview with her. It's believed to be the last one she gave.

The interview, re-edited to reflect "her untimely passing," will be rebroadcast as part of the network's "Faith & Fame" series. It will be shown at 2 p.m. Eastern Time on Saturday, and at 9 p.m. Eastern Time on Monday.

For more information, see the news release after the jump.

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The entry "Gospel Music Channel to air Dottie Rambo's last interview" is tagged: bus , crash , dead , Dottie , Faith , Fame , Gospel Music Channel , interview , killed , Rambo , star


California opens the floodgates -- court strikes down law that restricts marriage to a man and a woman

1:39 PM Thu, May 15, 2008 |  | 
Jeffrey Weiss   E-mail   News tips

The AP has the facts on the California court ruling about marriage:

SAN FRANCISCO - In a monumental victory for the gay rights movement, the California Supreme Court overturned a voter-approved ban on gay marriage Thursday in a ruling that would allow same-sex couples in the nation's biggest state to tie the knot.

Which means my e-box is starting to fill with reaction.

After the jump I'll post reax from the Family Research Council, the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force, Advocates for Faith and Freedom, Unitarian Universalist Association, the American Humanist Association and Integrity. These are what I have so far. And guess what? The positions are exactly what you think they'd be.


Bishop Farrell buying time?

12:52 PM Thu, May 15, 2008 |  | 
Rod Dreher   E-mail   News tips

[Cross-posted at Dallas Morning Views.]

What sense do you make of the news that Bishop Kevin Farrell held a press conference yesterday in which he took no questions, and announced instead that the Mallinson case has been referred to the diocesan review board?

I think Bishop Farrell is buying time.

My informed speculation is this: Bishop Farrell has been gobsmacked by the messes Bishop Grahmann left him to clean up. This Mallinson thing, I'm guessing, blindsided him. And he may not have appreciated Mallison letting his spokeswoman float the easily refuted claim that the St. Sebastian's Angels site was a mere support group for priests struggling with celibacy, and that he (Mallinson) left the group in 2001, after it got pornographic. (As I reported yesterday, the site was never innocuous, and was pornographic and lewd as far back as 1999, when Mallinson contributed and let his photo be displayed there).

So now the bishop, I'm supposing, is trying to buy time to find out who at the chancery knows what.

Had the bishop taken questions, he should have been asked:

1. Why are you referring the Mallinson case to the review board? He is not accused of abuse. No one even alleges that he violated his vow of celibacy.

2. What can the board hope to learn that Auxiliary Bishop Joseph Galante didn't know about Mallinson and his participation in St. Sebastian's Angels years ago, when it became an issue in the local and national media?

3. Why was Bishop Galante satisfied that Fr. Mallinson was able to pursue active ministry despite his participation in SSA, when several other bishops around the country sacked their priests who had been members? Do you share Bishop Galante's confidence?

4. Do you believe Fr. Mallinson's claims about the nature of the SSA website?

5. Will you be personally investigating the SSA website, or contacting those who have copies of the site's material?

6. If the maid finds a Playboy under my son's mattress, and my son tells me he was only reading it for the articles, would you advise me to refer his case to a committee for discernment and adjudication?

OK, I wouldn't have asked that last question. But I would have thought it.

This is a test for Bishop Farrell. Will he handle things the old Grahmann way -- or is there really a new sheriff in town? I hope he doesn't allow himself to get rolled by interested parties protecting turf.