Saints Soter and Caius, Bishops and Martyrs, (174 and 296)
St. Leonides, Martyr, (202)
St. Agapitus of Rome, Bishop, (536)
St. Anselm of Canterbury, Bishop, 1109
Saints Simon Barsabae and Companions, Martyrs, (341)
St. Anastasius of Antioch, Bishop, (599)
“Negligentiae mihi esse videtur, si, postquam confirmati sumus in fide, non studemus quod credimus, intelligere.”
“I hold it to be a failure in duty if after we have become steadfast in our faith we do not strive to understand what we believe.”
— St. Anselm of Canterbury
St. Marcellinus, Bishop, (374)
St. Marian, Abbot, (488)
St. Caedwalla, King, (689)
St. Leo of Rome, Bishop, (1054)
St. Ursmar, Abbot and Bishop, (713)
St. Alphege of Canterbury, Martyr, (1012)
At least that’s the way it is in Turkey – the long time EU aspirant, that touts its facade of democracy and its religious freedom, but does nothing to engender those values in its people or national consciousness. From the LA Times and elsewhere: 3 killed in attack on Bible publisher in Turkey:
Five youths — all with notes that say, ‘They are attacking our religion’ — are held at the scene.
ISTANBUL, Turkey — In a gruesome attack that sent shockwaves through Turkey’s tiny Christian community, assailants Wednesday slit the throats of three men at a publishing house that distributes Bibles and other Christian literature.
Five youths were detained at the scene in the conservative eastern city of Malatya, Turkish authorities said. One news report said the suspects carried notes indicating their motive was right-wing nationalism.
Turkey’s sometimes hostile stance toward its own religious and ethnic minorities has been a persistent source of concern to Western governments as the country presses ahead with its campaign for European Union membership.
Although the government officially preaches tolerance, it historically has failed to rein in virulent ultra nationalist groups. Authorities were accused of ignoring repeated death threats against Hrant Dink, an ethnic Armenian newspaper editor who was gunned down outside his offices in Istanbul in January. Prosecutors later said a teenager confessed to the shooting.
At the Zirve publishing house in Malatya’s city center, police discovered the three victims bound hand and foot and tied to chairs with their throats cut. Two were dead; the third died later at a hospital…
And speaking of freedom, the Young Fogey points to an article on our country’s efforts in Iraq and how our “Christian” President has brought pain and suffering to the Christians of Iraq.
From Asia News: Islamic group in Baghdad: —Get rid of the cross or we will burn your Churches—.
In the Dora quarter threats continue to be made against Christians. In the last two months Christian parishes have been forced to give in to extremist pressure, only the Church of Sts Peter and Paul has withstood so far. A fatwa forbids the practice of Christian ritual gestures.
—Get rid of the cross or we will burn your Churches—. This is the threat aimed at the Chaldean Church of Sts Peter and Paul, located in the ancient Christian quarter of Baghdad, Dora. Local sources say an unknown armed Islamic group is behind the threats which are inseminating terror in the capital. The Arab website Ankawa.com and Aina news agency speak of a campaign of persecution in act in the area. Even Mosul, a Sunni stronghold, the Christian presence is being gravely threatened.
Msgr. Shlemon Warduni, Chaldean auxiliary bishop of Baghdad, tells AsiaNews —in the last 2 months many Churches have been forced to remove their crosses from their domes—. In the case of the Church of St. George, assira, Muslim extremists took the situation into their own hands: they climbed onto the roof and ripped out the cross…
Well maybe they’re just not his kind of Christians…
The Young Fogey also points to the following LRC Commentary: Does Anybody Care About the Christian Arabs?
Short answer, NO!
If you are a Christian in the Middle East, whether in Israel or the Muslim lands, you may not practice your religion.
Any Christians proselytizing Jews or Muslims in Israel proper? Nope, forbidden.
Anyone reading bibles, wearing crosses, or praying in public in Saudi Arabia, Turkey, Iraq, Egypt? Nope, forbidden.
Have a Church and want to keep it, sorry, forbidden – it is being converted into a mosque (most especially in Turkey and the Turkish controlled areas of Cyprus.
Israel – allies and friends? Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Turkey – partners? Iraq – bastion of freedom and democracy?
From The State: Justices affirm ban on partial-birth abortions:
The Supreme Court Wednesday broke new ground in upholding federal restrictions on abortion, with President Bush’s two appointees joining a court majority that said Congress was exercising its license to —promote respect for life, including the life of the unborn.
—The court’s 5-4 decision upholding the Partial Birth Abortion Ban Act passed by Congress in 2003 marked the first time justices have agreed a specific abortion procedure could be banned, and the first time since the landmark Roe v. Wade decision that justices approved an abortion restriction that did not contain an exception for the health of the woman.
—The government may use its voice and its regulatory authority to show its profound respect for the life within the woman,— wrote Justice Anthony Kennedy. He said the ban on the controversial method of ending a midterm pregnancy was valid because other abortion procedures were still available to a woman. It provides an exception to save the woman’s life…
While it isn’t a panacea for the ills that have been created since Roe v. Wade, this is the beginning of some kind of common sense.
The most interesting comments I’ve heard are from the abortion fanatics out there, pandering by saying women’s health will be put at risk.
I’m wondering, how? Is Doctor Kildare still delivering babies? You mean we can’t save a mother and a 5, 6, 7, 8, or 9 month old baby?
I really do not believe anything these folks say about health. They simply want to use dead babies as score sheets. Twenty dead in the last hour, twenty victories.
The key is that a baby can’t be killed when medical technology has shown us that many, if not all of these infants can be saved.
You’re giving birth by one or another means to a child and killing it just as it’s partially born, a child that, if placed in an incubator and properly cared for under today’s technology would live. I’d wonder, why make the choice to kill?
Now to me all life is sacred, from conception onward, but even if you’re a complete dolt, and can’t reason beyond the obvious, you have to see that this is nothing more than murder for the sake of murder.
More on this issue from the Pro-Life Action League and Priests for Life. A lot more screaming elsewhere.
Blogged with Flock
St. Apollonius the Apologist, Martyr, (185)
Saints Elutherus and Companions, Martyrs, (200)
St. Molaisse, Bishop, (639)
St. Anicetus, Bishop and Martyr, (165)
St. Innocent, Bishop, (350)
Saints Mappalicus and Companions, Martyrs, (250)
…badges.
There’s been some discussion recently about a ‘voluntary’ blogging code of conduct (I can get a badge and add more bling to my sidebars). Here’s a perspective from the Index on Censorship.
Now I’m all for manners and civility in the blogsphere. For me it comes down to this. If you want a civil blog, and your com-boxes to contain civil discourse, no badge or code is going to do it. You have to manage your blog. Isn’t that the thing that makes for a great blog, the writers involvment?
Sure, if you want to write a few tidbits here and there about your personal adventures that’s fine – for your and perhaps grandma’s reading enjoyment. But if you, in any way, choose to be serious, you’ll be involved. You’ll write on some sort of regular schedule, prune the comment spam (better yet, use Akismet), and monitor AND respond to your com-boxes.
What you say? You’re Arianna Huffington and you can’t manage the whole thing (we should all have this problem) by yourself. Well then, get yourself down to your local geek, writers, or politicians watering hole and hire a few folks to help you out.
Unfortunately it would appear that some desire cover, just in case they have to unceremoniously delete someone’s snarky commentary. Look, friend, I’m a member of the state, and we don’t put up with that, and because of our laws, I’ve got to delete you.
Uh, yeah. But only if you need a state (read any organized community) to act as cover for your lack of personal standards, courage, fortitude, or management ability.
Don’t you just hate it when a non-system evolves into a system?
All over the place, but this from Reuters: Gunman kills 32, self, in worst U.S. college massacre.
Gun control, people control,
parent beratting, immigrant rating,
liberal baiting, education failing,
fault of religion …or not.
If and until we all come to the conclusion that it is indeed the fault of each and every one of us, that it is our weakness and the dispossesion with which we regard each other that lies at the heart of such crimes, there will be no end in sight.
Our only hope lies in One who sees past what we are to what we can be.
Lord Jesus, grant them eternal rest.
Grant healing to all those affected.
Fill our hearts with contrition.
Have mercy on us in our sinfulness.
Do not delay any longer.