Sunday, November 30, 2008

Bloody' is an offensive word :The Advertising Standards Authority (ASA)


The Sun newspaper has been ordered not to use the word 'bloody' on posters in future. The Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) said it was socially irresponsible to use the word in an advert that appeared in a public place.

The advert appeared on the side of a lorry. It stated "Where the bloody hell were you?" against a background of the Union Jack flag. It showed Great Britain's Olympic gold medal tally of 19 compared to Australia's 14.

A person who saw the lorry parked on a bridge on the M4 motorway objected that the language used was offensive in a public place where it could be seen by children.  more

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Thursday, November 20, 2008

Obama's Spirtuality

Obama has spoken frequently about the importance of his Christian faith. In his 2006 book, "The Audacity of Hope," he wrote that "the historically black church offered me a second insight: that faith doesn't mean that you don't have doubts, or that you relinquish your hold on this world. ... You needed to come to church precisely because you were of this world, not apart from it."

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Wednesday, November 19, 2008

BJP Rajya Sabha Member Balbir K. Punj against Christians

Who killed the 84-year-old swami? Sabyasachi Panda, the Maoist leader who owned up to the killing, said the swami was eliminated for reviving Brahminism. Strangely, Panda turned a blind eye to evangelism. But he divulged an interesting fact—that the Christian Panas (an SC group) provides cadres to the Maoists in Orissa.

read it all from Outloook India.com
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Sunday, November 16, 2008

George Barna: the days of the institutional church are over.

By the year 2010, 10 to 20 percent of Americans will derive all their spiritual input (and output) through the Internet." (3) Who needs the church when you have an iPod? Like any service provider, the church needs to figure out what business it's in, says Barna, a leading marketing consultant to megachurches as well as the Disney Corporation.  We are in the business of life transformation. By eliminating the public means of grace, Barna (like Willow Creek Study) directs us away from God's lavish feast to a self-serve buffet.  If the local church is to survive, says Barna, authority must shift from being centralized to decentralized; leadership from "pastor-driven" to "lay-driven," which means that the sheep are primarily servers rather than served by the ministry. Further, ministry must shift from "resistance" to change to "acceptance," from "tradition and order" to "mission and vision," from an "all-purpose" to a "specialized" approach to ministry, "tradition bound" to "relevance bound," from a view of the people's role as receivers to actors, from "knowledge" to "transformation."  "In just a few years," Barna predicts, "we will see that millions of people will never travel physically to a church, but will instead roam the Internet in search of meaningful spiritual experiences." (7) After all, he adds, the heart of Jesus' ministry was "the development of people's character." (8) "If we rise to the challenge," says Barna, America will witness a "moral resurgence," new leadership, and the Christian message "will regain respect" in our culture.  

Like the nineteenth-century revivalist Charles Finney, George Barna asserts that the Bible offers "almost no restrictions on structures and methods" for the church. (13) In fact, as we have seen, he does not even think that the visible church itself is divinely established.  
In this way, however, the work of the people displaces the work of God. 

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Father Roy Bourge facing excommunication for advocating Ordination of women

Father Roy Bourgeois, 69, a peace activist, ran afoul of Vatican doctrine by participating in an August 9 ceremony in Kentucky to ordain Janice Sevre-Duszynska, a member of a group called Roman Catholic Womenpriests. Recent Popes have said the Roman Catholic Church cannot ordain women because Christ chose only males as apostles.

“Who are we as men to say to women that our call to the priesthood is valid, but yours is not?” Father Bourgeois asked. “As Catholics we profess that the invitation to priesthood comes from God, and I believe that we are hampering with the sacred when we say that women must be excluded from being priests. That invitation is from God.”Church in the World Sphere: Related Content

Saturday, November 15, 2008

Joseph Christopher's evaluation worship and sermon in Gurukul

Joseph Christopher conducted his evaluation worship and sermon on 12th Novemeber, 2008. Worship started with a beautiful invocation song led by N. Among Jamir. As prelude to worship Flute was played by Jacob Jebaraj. Daniel Thambiraj played the Key Board. The theme of the worship was "Unique Covenant for a New Life." The sermon was based on the text Jeremiah 31:31-34. The sermon was divided into four sections: 1) A new loyalty and obedience, 2) A new family and community, 3) a new intimacy and access to God,  and  a new acceptance and freedom. The preacher tried to emphasis the newness of covenant in Jesus. We are living in the age of the new covenant and we we need to realize the newness of the Gospel in the life of the Church. Mr. Joseph Christopher Chitturi is a member of the AELC and we pray that God may bless his ministry abundantly.


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Friday, November 14, 2008

Dr. Monica Melancthon chosen as the Distinguished Alumni 2009 of LSTC

Dr. Monica Melancthon was chosen as one of the 2009 LSTC Distinguished Alumni by the Lutheran School of Theology at Chicago Alumni Board. She will be honored at a banquet at the seminary on February 10 and receive the Theological Education in the Global Church Award. Melancthon is the author of numerous articles in leading international journals. She serves on the Lutheran World Federation and other international organizations. Gurukul is proud of having her in its faculty as the Head of the Department of the Old Testament and professor of women's studies. Other recipients of the 2009 award are the Rev. Dr. Martin Marty, the Rev. Melody Eastman, and the Rev. Dr. Fred Strickert.

We congratulate Dr. Monica Melancthon on this great recognition by her alma mater.

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THE VOICE NEW TESTAMENT



There is a "new" book called 
The Voice which is a revision of the New Testament produced with the help of Emergent church guru Brian McLaren. This is what he has to say about this revision:

"Works like J.B. Phillips’ translation and more recently Eugene Peterson’s The Message have done us a great service. They have given us Bibles with literary style. But unfortunately, they have rendered the whole Bible into one literary style. That is an improvement over tofu-vanilla scholarly translations in many ways, but one of the fascinating things about the Bible is that it is the work of forty-some writers, each with their own unique style. SoThe Voice would do something unique: it would pair writers who write with a distinctive literary style together with scholars who would pay close attention to accuracy in light of our best scholarship."

Some examples of terms used in Voice: Christ is translated  as “Liberating King, ”baptism as “ceremonial cleansing” [since it is derived from evolved from the Hebrew “mikhveh” bath… which was used to cleanse women at the end of the menstrual cycle]  “Son of Man” as “New Generation of Humanity”.  Scripture Interpreter:
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Thursday, November 13, 2008

Saudi Arabia Sponsors UN Inter-faith Conference

World leaders today gathered at the United Nations in New York City to launch a two-day interfaith conference sponsored by Saudi Arabia. 

UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon hailed the Saudi initiative as “truly inspiring”, and said that countries should work to ensure that “our rich cultural diversity makes us more secure – not less.”

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Obama gives hope

JOHN J. THATAMANIL

This year, we all voted with pride for Barack Obama.Much has been said about Obama as a child of a black father and a white mother. What has not been appreciated is his appeal to those of us who are immigrants because of his early years in Indonesia.

Obama speaks to those of us who love this country and have made it our adopted home. Even though Obama is a child of a U.S. citizen and was born in Hawaii, he also feels like one of us because he bears in his memory the sights, sounds and smells of other lands. He has family in every corner of the planet. So do we. We love our new home fiercely, but we cannot imagine how a prosperous and secure American future can be won at the expense of other peoples.

Love for our mother countries is deep, but we do not long to return. When I visit India, I am somehow outed within seconds as an American even before I open my mouth. Is it the directness of my gaze? Is there a confidence or even cockiness in my stride that comes from being raised in the home of the brave?


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Wednesday, November 12, 2008

Celebrations mark 525th anniversary of Luther's baptism

Celebrations mark 525th anniversary of Luther's baptism

Lutheran congregations worldwide are joining in celebrations today for the 525th anniversary of the baptism of protestant reformation founder Martin Luther.

The worldwide “Baptism Festival” on Tuesday, the day after the anniversary of Martin Luther’s birthday on November 10, 1483.  Martin Luther was born in Eisleben and was brought by his parents to be baptised in St Peter Church the day after he was born, according to the customs of the time.

“A developed theology of baptism is a central part of our Lutheran heritage and this festival is a way to emphasise that importance in our home congregations and worldwide,” said the Rev Scott A. Moore, an ELCA pastor serving St Andreas-Nicolai-Petri in Lutherstadt Eisleben and Saints Peter and Paul Church in Volkstedt, Germany.

Luther gave his last sermon at St Peter Church before he died February 18, 1546, in Eisleben.


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Tuesday, November 11, 2008

Realistic Hope and Hopeful Realism: Martin Marty on Niebuhr's influence on Barack Obama

The election of Barack Obama says -- about America and to the world -- that it is open to "realistic hope" and "hopeful realism." Those two two-word phrases paraphrase themes from the mid-century theological great, Reinhold Niebuhr. I mention him because President-Elect Obama is influenced by him and quotes him (as did President Jimmy Carter, the other theologically literate president of our time). Niebuhr is a formidable and sometimes formidably difficult thinker, and some cynics suggest that when politicians quote him, they are just posing Columnist David Brooks checked up and found that Senator Obama could discourse intelligently and expansively about Niebuhr. It is clear to those who know Niebuhr and who read and observe Obama, that he has internalized some Niebuhrian motifs.

I am singling out the combinations of "hope" and "realism" because the nation and the world needs a dose of hope, and hope has been a main theme of Obama the author, who used the word in a book title, and who accurately sensed the need and a hunger for hope. This is as true of a demoralized nation as it is of much of "the world" as it looks on forlornly to a fornlorn America Those of us who have been visited with e-mails from around the world since Tuesday report to each other how consistently correspondents testify to and exemplify a quickening of hope once again.

If "hope" is so manifest also now, after the election, why burden it with the word "realistic?" Or, if you start out with the "realism" that candidate Obama always displayed and will do more so as he begins to come to terms with the presidency in a time whose problems do not need enumerating, though they do get listed by virtually all commenators? Answer: realism can be so realistic that it can breed cynicism, or, as one wag put it recentlry, we observe that "the light at the end of the tunnel has been turned out."

"Realistic hope" is a caution against utopianism, naive idealism, the claiming of bragging rights, or politically "not knowing to come in out of the rain." As author, community organizer, law school professor, state and U.S. senator, and presidential primary candidate, Senator Obama tirelessly invoked and promoted hope--and always coupled his invocation and promotion with cautions We hear it all the time: righting wrongs and charting new courses in a dangerous world and with a destroyed economy allows no chance to relax and sit back.

Niebuhr liked to quote Psalm 2:4, where the Psalmist witnesses to a God who sits in the heavens and laughs, and holds the pretentious and conniving powerful "in derision." Yet he kept reminding us that the same God held people responsible and did not dishonor human aspiration.

So: the election of the first African-American president, a choice that went beyond the wildest hopes of most of adult America is only a part of the "hope" package the nation will be opening in the months ahead. And the election of THIS African-American to the presidency means a turning to a leader who may be young, but wasn't "born yesterday." His reading of Niebuhr and his experience and observation of life as it is lived in complex times will show up in his "realistic" activity. Or am I too hopefully naive even to hope that this will be the case? Realistically: no.


 Ethics Readerr

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Nation: 'No Democracy, No Nationalism, No Secularism' SIMI Leader -Yasin Patel

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Saturday, November 8, 2008

Anjali Lama's Worship and Sermon

Anjali Lama's Worship and Sermon

Anjali Lama conducted her B.D. evaluation worship and sermon in Gurukul chapel on Wednesday, November 5, 2008. The Nepali Invocation was sung by Dn. Aby paul. A Hindi song, written by Sonia John, composed by Sandeep Paramarth and sung by Alice Jose added flavour to the worship. The theme of the sermon was "Christ's Vision of Women as Apostles." There was a choreography on the theme by Sweety Helen. The text used was John 20: 11-18, the resurrected Jesus appearing to Mary Magdalene. The text was enacted by Sonia John, Daiju Joseph, Jeremiah and Belinda. Anjali included some additional material on the story from the Gospel of Thomas. The disciples rejection of witness by Mary was thus strongly communicated. The song, prayers, choreography, enactment made clear the theme. The sermon had two main points: 1) Restoring the vision of Christ by enabling women's agency 2) Restoring the vision of Christ to enable women to become apostles. She strengthened the sermon by narrating her personal experience as a woman in the Church and society. There was a rangoli (alpana) at the entrance of the chapel depicting the Chinese symbol of mutality, Yin-Yang, which conveyed the thrust of the sermon, as commented by the staff  evaluator, Dr. Suneel Bhanu. The sermon was delivered with clarity and conviction. Anjali's reply to the comments from evaluators has been gracious. Anjali is a memebr of Independent Pentecostal Church, Kathmandu, Nepal. She has joined Gurukul as a B. Th. upgrader. She proved herself to be a good student and an able worship leader. We wish her ministry all success.

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Rising poverty and high growth economy


The revised benchmark by the World Bank is the average of the national poverty lines of the worlds’ 15 poorest countries. The ADB’s benchmark is Asia-specific based on surveys from 16 Asian countries. When these benchmarks are used for estimating poverty levels in India, the situation becomes grave and uncomfortable. By using the first poverty line, the estimated number of poor in India during 2004-05 was 456 million or 41.6% of the total population. 

According to the second poverty line, the number of poor in India was 622 million, which is 54.8% of the population. Evidently, these estimates are significantly above the official estimates of 27.5% indicated by the Planning Commission. Among the states, Bihar, Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand, MP, Orissa indicate that around 40% of the population is below the poverty line. 




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Thursday, November 6, 2008

Barack Obama's victory speech

World

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Barack Obama's religion: Intellectual search of faith


Barack Obama's religion: Intellectual search of faith

 In 1981 Barack Obama was 20 years old, a Columbia University student in search of the meaning of life. He was torn a million different ways: between youth and maturity, black and white, coasts and continents, wonder and tragedy. He enrolled at Columbia in part to get far away from his past; he'd gone to high school in Hawaii and had just spent two years "enjoying myself," as he puts it, at Occidental College in Los Angeles. In New York City, "I lived an ascetic existence," Obama told NEWSWEEK in an interview on his campaign plane last week. "I did a lot of spiritual exploration. I withdrew from the world in a fairly deliberate way." He fasted. Often, he'd go days without speaking to another person.


For company, he had books. There was Saint Augustine, the fourth-century North African bishop who wrote the West's first spiritual memoir and built the theological foundations of the Christian Church. There was Friedrich Nietzsche, the 19th-century German philosopher and father of existentialism. There was Graham Greene, the Roman Catholic Englishman whose short novels are full of compromise, ambivalence and pain. Obama meditated on these men and argued with them in his mind.   

more from  Lisa Miller and Richard Wolffe | NEWSWEEK

LifeLine: faith and Spirituality

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Sunday, November 2, 2008

Jose P. Mathew's Worship and Sermon in Gurukul Chapel


Captain Jose P. Mathew, from the Salvation Army, India South Western (Kerala) region, now studying in Gurukul, conducted his evaluation worship and sermon on 29th October 2008. The invocation was led by Jose himself. During the invocation Salvation Army flag, representing victory and authority ( the colours of which symbolized Trinity: bluie - Creator, red - blood of Jesus, yellow -  the work of the Holy spirit), was elegantly carried by the young daughter of Jose. His wife, Alice, a good singer, led the Bhajan which was written by Jose himself and composed by John G. Varghese. It reflected the   theme of the sermon, prophetic mission of building a new community.

The sermon was based on the text, Ezekiel37: 1-10. Jose started his sermon with the story of Colonel Yesudasan, founder of the Salvation Army in Kerala, who brought new life to the marginalized and the downtrodden Dalits of Kerala. Jose P. Mathew lamented that instead of building a community, now the "spiritual mafia" is taking over the church, making the Church, a religion of the market, without any sense of  divine call or  clear vision. Ezekiel is an example of a prophet who had genuine call from God and a clear vision for  the society:  The "dry bones," he saw represented the pathetic situation of the people in the valley. Today the Churches are insensitive to the realities of the valley --  the injustice, poverty, violence against the dalits, women and the marginalized in society. Instead of a people oriented ministry what we have now is a " task oriented and tradition oriented ministry."  "Creating a new community out of dry bones is the mission of the Christians," he said. "Building community is not to convert people from other religions or bring people form other churches. "He quoted Mother Theresa who once told a journalist: I convert Hindus to be better Hindus, Muslims to be better Muslims, and Christians to be better Christians. Mission is liberating people form spiritual and physical bondage. Kingdom of heaven is the place of a liberated community. Jesus' sacrificial work on the cross was laying down his life for building a new community. Jose P. Mathew delivered the sermon in a  clear and convincing manner. He was confident  and proved himself  to be an efficient worship leader.

Jose and his wife  are  experienced ministers in the Salvation Army. Salvation Army always encourages team ministry of the whole family. We pray that Jose and his family would make  the ministry of the Salavation Army  much more effective in India. 

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Saturday, November 1, 2008

George Zachariah in Geneva Consultation on Climate Change

An important international Consultation  on Climate change was  organized by the Lutheran World Federation (LWF) Department for Theology and Studies (DTS) during  2-4 October,2008,  in Geneva. Eminent   biblical scholars, theologians and ethicists like  Dr Sigurd Bergmann who teaches at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology in Trondheim, Norway, Dr Colette Bouka Coula, DWS program officer for Central and Francophone Africa,  Dr Chiropafadzo Moyo from the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Zimbabwe, Dr Christof Hardmeier,  professor of Old Testament from Germany, Rev. Dr Barbara Rossing, who teaches New Testament at the Lutheran School of Theology at Chicago, USA, Dr Christoph Stückelberger of the Geneva-based global network on applied ethics, Globethics, and  Dr James Martin-Schramm of Luther College, Decorah, Iowa, USA,  and Dr. George Zacharia from Gurukul   presented papers. 


Giving an account of what his students heard when they went out to local communities using the LWF survey, Dr George Zachariah, who teaches at the Gurukul Lutheran Theological College and Research Institute in Chennai, India, focused on the spirituality of those displaced from their land and livelihood because of climate change. He argued that many prevailing climate change discourses were an attempt to “absolve the sins of neo-liberal capitalist plunder,” and called for attention to the spiritual resources of subaltern communities that can “decolonize our minds, our faiths, our communities, and our planet.”


Papers presented at the consultation and other related resources are being developed for a book to be published in the Theology in the Life of the Church series in early 2009, as well as a discussion resource for use in local communities. 


read it all  



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Rowan Williams: DOSTOEVSKY, reviewed by A. N. Wilson


As we read Williams’s discussion, and become absorbed not only in his enjoyment of Dostoevsky’s novels, but also in his own wide reading in the patristic literature and immersion in the Eastern traditions of Christianity, we begin to realize that ambiguities and downright contradictions which seem so startlingly “modern” in Dostoevsky’s pages are often matters that have always been inherent in theology. The book thereby combines a rereading of Dostoevsky with an attempt to confront, not merely the storm clouds of the nineteenth century, as Ruskin called the theological crisis of faith, but also our contemporary phenomenon of Darwinian revivalism which believes itself to have answered, or repeated, the destruction of theology’s claims to plausibility.


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