Ephesians 4:32 Be kind and compassionate to one another, forgiving each other, just as in Christ God forgave you.
Showing posts with label Injustice. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Injustice. Show all posts
Friday, August 21, 2009
4 Minute Daily Devotions: Compassion for a Killer
Wednesday, September 24, 2008
Political Cartoon: Holy Hypocrisy
Tuesday, September 16, 2008
Religious Insanity: 3 Pakistani Girls Killed for Wanting True Love
The murders were carried out by relatives, who disagreed with the wishes of the women who wanted to marry men of their own choice.
The 27-member European bloc called for a full investigation into the matter and said it was absolutely essential that those responsible for the killings be brought to justice.
A statement by the current French EU Presidency voiced its deep concern over the extreme forms of violence against women reported in Pakistan.
It urged Pakistan to comply with its international human rights obligations, and in particular the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women, to which Pakistan is party.
The EU also urged the Pakistani government to take steps to eliminate all forms of violence against women.
Labels:
arranged marriages,
equal rights,
fanaticism,
honor killings,
honour killings,
Injustice,
intolerance,
Pakistan,
religious tyranny,
Sharia,
true love,
violence against women,
Women’s Rights
Tuesday, August 26, 2008
4 Minute Devotions: Honor Killings
Podcast version here
Deuteronomy 13:9 You must certainly put him to death. Your hand must be the first in putting him to death, and then the hands of all the people.
They call it “honor killing,” although there’s nothing honorable about it. Young girls in the Middle East who get caught in the wrong company, or young men who convert to another religion, are cast out by family members and sometimes killed. It’s a horrible way of expressing faith and sadly, it’s one that has its roots in the Bible.
People get fanatical about their faith in God and take it to the extreme, so that nothing stands between them and their devotion to their Deity. Their love becomes an irrational zeal and they become obsessed with serving God perfectly, purely, and persistently. If a family member ‘dishonors’ the family faith, they can be tortured, raped, imprisoned, and killed. It’s a horrible aspect of how faith can destroy believers. It’s a wicked way of serving God.
People expect Christians to be holy and perfect, instead of ordinary and sinful. We have no honor, save that of Christ alone. He is the Sacred One who does everything right. He is the Holy Son of God, who serves His Father faithfully, purely, and perfectly. The grace of Jesus allows us to be restored to God through Christ’s good and godly works. There’s nothing that we can do to shield us from God’s wrath. We can only stand behind Jesus and ask Him to make things right for us. His Death completely paid the price of our sins. In our faith, if ever there was an ‘honor killing,’ it took place at Calvary when Jesus went to the Cross on our behalf.
I wish that those other faiths in the world could put an end to these dishonorable killings, but this will only happen if we keep spreading the Gospel through our churches and in our communities. Christ can release them from the burden of their fanaticism. We need to lovingly bring His message of grace and honor to the world.
Prayer: Lord Jesus, there is a lot of injustice and wickedness in the world that is done in the name of religion. Help us, through Your grace, to present a loving witness to the world, so that other people may be attracted to Your words and ways. Grant us opportunities to confront fanaticism with peace, hope, and love. In Your Honorable Name, we pray. Amen.
John Stuart is the pastor at Erin Presbyterian Church in Knoxville, Tennessee. If you would like to comment on today’s message, send him an email to pastor@erinpresbyterian.org.
Saturday, July 26, 2008
Only in Saudi Arabia: Young Woman arrested for...driving.
The source said that police took the woman to the police station where she was released after her parents paid bail.
She will have to be brought to the station for further investigations, according to police spokesman Col. Misfar Al-Joaed. “Police stopped the woman after noticing her driving in the Aziziah district and took her for questioning,” he told Al-Madinah newspaper.
Wednesday, June 11, 2008
Thursday, February 07, 2008
Religious news: Egypt Torturing HIV Sufferers
Human Rights Watch (HRW) decried the "ignorance and injustice" of a case in which a group of arrested men were given HIV tests without their consent.
They were also subjected to anal tests to "prove" their homosexual conduct.
They were also subjected to anal tests to "prove" their homosexual conduct.
Two of the men tested HIV-positive and are now handcuffed to hospital beds for 23 hours a day, HRW said.
"These men have been subjected to anal examination without their consent which amounts to torture," Gasser Abdel-Razek, HRW's acting director of regional relations in the Middle East, told the BBC on Wednesday.
"These men have been subjected to anal examination without their consent which amounts to torture," Gasser Abdel-Razek, HRW's acting director of regional relations in the Middle East, told the BBC on Wednesday.
"Egypt should release the men unconditionally and put a system in place that does not deal with HIV-positive individuals as criminals but as patients who require medical care and attention."
Egypt's Interior Ministry had no immediate comment on the case.
Wednesday, January 09, 2008
Friday is Sex Traffic Awareness Day
Friday is Sex Traffic Awareness Day
www.ReligionAndSpirituality.com
Friday marks the first annual Human Trafficking Awareness day in the United States. A resolution passed by the Senate on June 22, 2007 marked Jan. 11 as a day of awareness and vigilance for the countless victims of Human Trafficking across the globe, Christian Newswire reported Tuesday.
Shared Hope International (SHI) and founder Congresswoman Linda Smith launched assessments in 10 U.S. cities that examine the condition of America's trafficked youth. Most people imagine "human trafficking" occurs in far away countries with troubled and impoverished governments, but SHI reveals that large numbers of U.S. children at the average age of 12 are trafficked locally between U.S. cities and across state lines.
SHI says victims, who are often treated like criminals, should be properly identified and should receive protection and specialized services and urges laws that criminalize traffickers and buyers while protecting victims. Safe homes and services that rescue and restore the children while removing them from the control of the trafficker/pimp are also needed, SHI said.
as reported from www.religionandspirituality.com
www.ReligionAndSpirituality.com
Friday marks the first annual Human Trafficking Awareness day in the United States. A resolution passed by the Senate on June 22, 2007 marked Jan. 11 as a day of awareness and vigilance for the countless victims of Human Trafficking across the globe, Christian Newswire reported Tuesday.
Shared Hope International (SHI) and founder Congresswoman Linda Smith launched assessments in 10 U.S. cities that examine the condition of America's trafficked youth. Most people imagine "human trafficking" occurs in far away countries with troubled and impoverished governments, but SHI reveals that large numbers of U.S. children at the average age of 12 are trafficked locally between U.S. cities and across state lines.
SHI says victims, who are often treated like criminals, should be properly identified and should receive protection and specialized services and urges laws that criminalize traffickers and buyers while protecting victims. Safe homes and services that rescue and restore the children while removing them from the control of the trafficker/pimp are also needed, SHI said.
as reported from www.religionandspirituality.com
Tuesday, June 12, 2007
Another Cuban Crisis
Scottish audio version here
Luke 6:22 Blessed are you when men hate you, when they exclude you and insult you and reject your name as evil, because of the Son of Man. (NIV)
There’s a report out this morning that the Stated Clerk of the PC(USA), Clifton Kirkpatrick, has signed a petition urging the present Whitehouse Administration to lift restrictions on travel to Cuba for missionaries and other church workers. Because of the current political climate, American churches that want to work with congregations in Cuba have to get through a lot of bureaucratic red-tape and accept time restrictions. This is hindering vital missions on the island, especially when the church appears to be under-going a revival.
In this morning’s report from Presbynews, several faith leaders expressed their concerns as follows:
Citing a long, shared history of relationship, interaction with and support of Cuban church partners, the American faith leaders say the recent re-interpretations of U.S. travel regulations and the resulting limitations "are unfair and inappropriate, restrain religious freedom and reflect undue governmental interference in the exercise of religion.”
Their concerns are genuine, but the issues involved are not just one-sided. The Cuban people have been restricted by their own government, too; and throughout the decades of Castro’s dictatorship, the church has been persecuted, oppressed and harassed. In 1998, when Pope John Paul II visited the country, he asked that a Christian leader, Jorge Antuñez, be released from prison. He had been held in captivity since 1993 for demanding reforms in the country. Antuñez was only just released in April, 2007.
If releasing the restrictions on travel to Cuba will help the Cuban churches, then we should pray that our own government will be sympathetic to this inter-denominational petition. But we should also remember those whose travel is restricted in Cuba, especially those pastors who are under house arrest or being badly mistreated by prison guards, according to some Christian ministry reports.
As we celebrate Flag Day this week, perhaps we should remind ourselves of the blessings that our freedom has given to our faith, as well as remembering the plight of those around the world whose loyalty to Christ as their Lord and Savior costs them their homes, their livelihood, their liberty, and sadly, sometimes their lives.
Prayer: Lord Jesus, it is so easy for us to become complacent about what our faith is all about. We don’t realize how hard it is for some people to take up Your Cross and walk in Your path. Help us to recognize that unjust things happen to Christians all over the globe. Give us the heart and determination to support them, their families, churches and Christian communities through being aware of these situations, instead of ignoring this information. In Your Holy Name, we pray. Amen.
Luke 6:22 Blessed are you when men hate you, when they exclude you and insult you and reject your name as evil, because of the Son of Man. (NIV)
There’s a report out this morning that the Stated Clerk of the PC(USA), Clifton Kirkpatrick, has signed a petition urging the present Whitehouse Administration to lift restrictions on travel to Cuba for missionaries and other church workers. Because of the current political climate, American churches that want to work with congregations in Cuba have to get through a lot of bureaucratic red-tape and accept time restrictions. This is hindering vital missions on the island, especially when the church appears to be under-going a revival.
In this morning’s report from Presbynews, several faith leaders expressed their concerns as follows:
Citing a long, shared history of relationship, interaction with and support of Cuban church partners, the American faith leaders say the recent re-interpretations of U.S. travel regulations and the resulting limitations "are unfair and inappropriate, restrain religious freedom and reflect undue governmental interference in the exercise of religion.”
Their concerns are genuine, but the issues involved are not just one-sided. The Cuban people have been restricted by their own government, too; and throughout the decades of Castro’s dictatorship, the church has been persecuted, oppressed and harassed. In 1998, when Pope John Paul II visited the country, he asked that a Christian leader, Jorge Antuñez, be released from prison. He had been held in captivity since 1993 for demanding reforms in the country. Antuñez was only just released in April, 2007.
If releasing the restrictions on travel to Cuba will help the Cuban churches, then we should pray that our own government will be sympathetic to this inter-denominational petition. But we should also remember those whose travel is restricted in Cuba, especially those pastors who are under house arrest or being badly mistreated by prison guards, according to some Christian ministry reports.
As we celebrate Flag Day this week, perhaps we should remind ourselves of the blessings that our freedom has given to our faith, as well as remembering the plight of those around the world whose loyalty to Christ as their Lord and Savior costs them their homes, their livelihood, their liberty, and sadly, sometimes their lives.
Prayer: Lord Jesus, it is so easy for us to become complacent about what our faith is all about. We don’t realize how hard it is for some people to take up Your Cross and walk in Your path. Help us to recognize that unjust things happen to Christians all over the globe. Give us the heart and determination to support them, their families, churches and Christian communities through being aware of these situations, instead of ignoring this information. In Your Holy Name, we pray. Amen.
Monday, March 05, 2007
Wednesday, January 24, 2007
Injustice
John 18:23 "If I said something wrong," Jesus replied, "testify as to what is wrong. But if I spoke the truth, why did you strike me?"
It’s a terrible moment of injustice in Christ’s life. He is standing before His own people, His own religious leaders and they unfairly strike Him for insubordination. They want to show Him who is in control. They want to display their power and authority. They want to humiliate Him for upsetting the status quo and for leading the people astray. In the one holy place where Christ should have received justice, He was abused. Amongst the chosen leaders who could have been given Him mercy, He was shown wrath.
Sometimes we forget that Jesus went through all this in order to save us from our sins. Things happen to us in our own lives that cause setbacks to our plans, our hopes, and our dreams. We think of these things as being unfair, unmerited, and unnecessary. We even wonder why God allows such painful things to happen to us or our loved ones.
We should remember that the real definition of unfairness is injustice. Christ suffered because we are sinful. He was struck because we are shameless. He was battered and bruised, tortured and tormented, crucified and killed because of us. The things He went through were unnecessary, and yet at the same time, absolutely necessary because there was no other way, no other path, no other road than that which led to Calvary to ensure salvation for the world.
I hate to read about Christ suffering, but knowing me, if I had been there in the Sanhedrin, I probably would have struck Him, too. That’s why I need a Savior like Jesus. That’s why I need someone else to take away my sin. Without Him, I am nothing and without His pain, I am powerless to receive God’s grace.
Prayer: Lord Jesus, Only You can redeem us; only You can restore us. In Your Holy Name, we pray. Amen.
It’s a terrible moment of injustice in Christ’s life. He is standing before His own people, His own religious leaders and they unfairly strike Him for insubordination. They want to show Him who is in control. They want to display their power and authority. They want to humiliate Him for upsetting the status quo and for leading the people astray. In the one holy place where Christ should have received justice, He was abused. Amongst the chosen leaders who could have been given Him mercy, He was shown wrath.
Sometimes we forget that Jesus went through all this in order to save us from our sins. Things happen to us in our own lives that cause setbacks to our plans, our hopes, and our dreams. We think of these things as being unfair, unmerited, and unnecessary. We even wonder why God allows such painful things to happen to us or our loved ones.
We should remember that the real definition of unfairness is injustice. Christ suffered because we are sinful. He was struck because we are shameless. He was battered and bruised, tortured and tormented, crucified and killed because of us. The things He went through were unnecessary, and yet at the same time, absolutely necessary because there was no other way, no other path, no other road than that which led to Calvary to ensure salvation for the world.
I hate to read about Christ suffering, but knowing me, if I had been there in the Sanhedrin, I probably would have struck Him, too. That’s why I need a Savior like Jesus. That’s why I need someone else to take away my sin. Without Him, I am nothing and without His pain, I am powerless to receive God’s grace.
Prayer: Lord Jesus, Only You can redeem us; only You can restore us. In Your Holy Name, we pray. Amen.
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