Category Archives: Christianity

December 2, 2011

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The Devil You Know: Syrian Christians Support Assad

Christians have not had a good time in the modern Middle East.  Sadly, that doesn’t seem likely to change as Butcher Assad’s hold on Syria slowly slips.  While Via Meadia is no fan of Iran-enabling tyrants who kill thousands of … Continue reading

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November 28, 2011

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NYT Slimes Romney

Here at Via Meadia, we have written extensively about how reports of impending American theocracy have been greatly exaggerated. Indeed, put into historical perspective, the religious forces acting upon American politics today are far gentler than those of generations past. But it appears that the New York Times remains unconvinced, as evidenced by a recent spate of alarmist editorials about the faith of Mitt Romney.

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Going My Way?

It might be a small change, but it affects a lot of people. Almost ten years after the Vatican issued a directive to make an English language missal which was more in tune with the original Latin, some Catholics are … Continue reading

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November 27, 2011

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Faith Matters Sunday: The Jewish Discovery of Jesus

Years ago I had some friends in a klezmer band in New Orleans; one of the members of the band was an African American musician whose church was so taken with the music that they wanted to produce a klezmer gospel album. This unfortunately never happened, but something almost as remarkable has just been published by Oxford University Press: The Jewish Annotated New Testament. Under the editorship of Vanderbilt professor Amy-Jill Levine and Brandeis professor Marc Zvi Brettler, this edition of the Christian scriptures features commentary and annotation from prominent Jewish scholars who have analyzed the text and the concepts in it based on their own knowledge of Jewish history and thought. The New York Times has the story.

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November 4, 2011

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Apocalypse Watch: Ireland Closes Vatican Embassy, UK To Allow Catholic Royals

The very Catholic Republic of Ireland—also known as the Island of Saints and Scholars, where abortion remains illegal and more than 30% of the people go to mass more than once a week—has decided to close its embassy to the … Continue reading

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October 31, 2011

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Did the Koran Make Them Do It on 9/11?

No, says Philip Jenkins, one of the world’s most serious and best respected students of Christian history.  Jenkins has chronicled as few others the story of Middle Eastern persecution and suppression of Christianity; his analysis of the relationship of modern … Continue reading

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October 12, 2011

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Arab Spring Leads to Second Exodus

As a horrified world watched coverage of Christian demonstrators dying at the hands of Egyptian soldiers this week, it underlined the possibility that the Arab Spring might permanently change Egypt after all. Coptic Christians, who have lived in the Land … Continue reading

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October 2, 2011

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Leftie German Philosopher Endorses God. Sort Of.

Via Meadia blog-sibling Religion and Other Curiosities by Peter Berger (one of the world’s greatest living sociologists) has a terrific post on German philosopher Jürgen Habermas’ recently discovered respect for Judeo-Christian religion.  The intellectual leader of the modern European center-left … Continue reading

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September 27, 2011

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Religious Tolerance In Egypt’s Al-Azhar University

Sheikh Dr. Ahmad Al-Tayeb, the head of one of the most important centers of learning in the Islamic world, wrote a remarkably tolerant article in the Egyptian government daily newspaper Al-Ahram back in June. Translated excerpts of the article recently … Continue reading

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September 25, 2011

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Report From The Middle East: Part One

I’ve just come back from a week of teaching, lecturing and conversation in Israel and the West Bank, and nothing I saw there has led me to change my basic view of the situation. Peace is not at hand in the Middle East because neither the Israelis nor the Palestinians are really willing to accept the only kind of peace they can get.

The only real peace now possible is one in which Palestinians become an independent nation on most of the West Bank and Gaza with “swaps” of land (probably in the Negev) to compensate for land annexed to Israel. Most of historical Jerusalem will go to Israel; Palestinians will get a few scraps of the historical city with some sort of arrangement to cover the Islamic holy places and suburban developments that can more or less plausibly be called Jerusalem. (This is more or less what the Israelis had until 1967 on the western side of historical Jerusalem, though Jews were banned from visiting their holy places.) A few family reunifications may be possible and a handful of aged refugees may go back to pre-1967 Israel, but otherwise there will be no literal “right of return”. There may be some compensation and large amounts of foreign aid will be committed to the new state.

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Persecution Update: 22 Christians Injured as Suicide Bomber Targets Church

[Updated: earlier version stated the victims were killed.  22 are injured; their condition is not known.] A misguided fanatic in central Java wrapped himself in an explosive device, nails and other forms of murderous shrapnel, entered a Christian church and … Continue reading

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September 20, 2011

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The “Christianist” Nightmare: It’s Just A Bad Dream

Recently I posted a short piece saying that the specter of a “Christianist” takeover of the United States is a figment of overheated imaginations, mostly on the left. Every few years a leftie journalist dabbles in right wing websites and obscure theological debates and emerges with horrifying tales of totalitarian Dominionist plots to turn the United States into something like the dystopian world of Margaret Atwood’s Handmaid’s Tale.

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September 19, 2011

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Jesus And Castro Can’t Save Chavez

A few weeks ago, Venezuela President Hugo Chavez announced to the world that his doctors – Jesus, Castro, and “the medical team” – had cured him of cancer. This is a remarkable team, not known for all that many previous … Continue reading

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September 18, 2011

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The “Christianists” Aren’t Taking Over This Week

For decades now, shocked lefty journalists have gingerly ventured into the dark American interior, emerging with terrifying tales of “Christianist” plots to hijack American democracy and install theocratic rule.  There’s an endless appetite for these stories on the secular left, … Continue reading

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September 11, 2011

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Persecution Spotlight: Christians in Iraq

On this tenth anniversary of 9/11, Via Meadia reflects on one the most painful unintended consequences of that day – the decimation of Iraq’s once significant minority religious groups. Before the invasion of Iraq – which, despite the changing rhetoric used to justify it, would not have happened without the 9/11 attacks – about 1.5 million Iraqis were members of a non-Muslim faith. Mostly Christians, along with some lesser-known groups like Mandaeans and Yazidis, these unfortunates have been victim to determined campaigns of sectarian cleansing by bands of both Sunni and Shiite thugs.

This campaign of extermination and intimidation has largely worked. Large scale bombings of churches and Christian-owned liquor and video stores, assassinations of clergy and local leaders, and kidnapping and rape of young women have taken their toll, including several high profile attacks this past month. Comprising at least 5% of Iraq’s population before the 2003 invasion, well over half of these Christians and others have fled their ancestral homes. As the country has stabilized in the past few years, the toll of violence against minorities and stream of refugees has continued. Even as the Shia-dominated Iraqi government has enhanced its control, it has done little to rein in the targeting of weak Christian, Mandean, and Yazidi communities.

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