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Archives for November 2010

In the news this week ...

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William Crawley | 18:25 UK time, Tuesday, 30 November 2010

This is my list of the top religion and ethics news stories of the week (so far). The global top news story this week -- the decision by Wikileaks to publish 251,287 leaked United States embassy cables, "the largest set of confidential documents ever to be released into the public domain" -- raises extremely important questions about the ethics of whistle-blowing. Were newspapers such as The Guardian right to co-operate with Wikileaks in publishing this sensitive material? And when if ever does the public hava a right to access confidential diplomatic communications? Use the thread to debate those questions and to add your links to other stories worth noting. If they are interesting, I'll add them to the main page.


Religion stories
Tony Blair defends religion
Should Airports Use Racial And
Bishop Harold Miller's
Not Ashamed
'Radical Muslims' given
German Catholic hotline logs
Report on religious freedom .
Pakistan Christian Convicted of 'Blasphemy'
Scottish Catholic spokesman
Canadian supreme court to rule on .
Pope book opens
On Tolstoy centenary, Russian Orthodox
TV evangelist: I'm being
Bush, on book tour,
Smithsonian Removes Video After


Ethics news
Wikileaks: the ethics of .
Wikileaks: exposure
WikiLeaks: US official compiled dossiers on
Sarah Palin: hunt WikiLeaks founder like
What is a fair wage?
Disabled will suffer from assisted dying law, claim
World
Fifa's Dirty Secrets. (And blog from Tom Giles, Panorma editor).
Disabled will suffer from assisted dying law, claim .
Is Pope Bendict confusing Catholics on condoms and ?
Parents of LGBT young people need


Thinking allowed
Ten Politically Incorrect Truths about
The Model Scientist?
Wanted: A Keynesian

Christopher Hitchens on life, death and life-after-death

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William Crawley | 17:55 UK time, Tuesday, 30 November 2010

Jeremy Paxman's interview with Christopher Hitchens, which was broadcast last night in a Newsnight special, is extraordinarily moving. If you have a chance, do try to watch it and share your reaction here.


Watch the interview .

Michael Behe defends Intelligent Design Theory

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William Crawley | 10:26 UK time, Monday, 29 November 2010

On this week's Sunday Sequence, the American biochemist explained why he believes Intelligent Design Theory is a scientific proposition rather than a religous belief. Behe accepts much that is widely taught within contemporary science -- including common descent and a universe that is billions of years old -- but argues that Darwian explanations of human evolution fail to make sense of the "irreducible complexity" that can be seen in the world.


I speak to him about that claim, and about the scientists who say they can give perfectly good evolutionary accounts of the examples he raises, and we discuss some of the evidence he gave in the 2005 in Dover, Pennsylvania, when Judge John E. Jones found that Intelligent Design Theory was a religious claim rather than science and ruled that it had no place in the state's science classrooms.

Judge Jones is also a committed Christian and was appointed to the federal bench by George W Bush. I also talk to Michael Behe, was was in Belfast as part of a UK speaking tour, about his personal belief that the intelligent designer he says he has found by scientific exploration is in fact 'God'.

Listen to the interview here (scroll through to 1:06:55).


The Presbyterian bailout

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William Crawley | 12:15 UK time, Friday, 26 November 2010

The Presbyterian Church says it expects to be asked by the Executive to contibute considerably more than it has already pledged to a Presbyterian Mutal Society bailout fund. Dr Stafford Carson told Good Morning Ulster that the church has not yet been formally invited to contribute more to the fund, but emphasised that the church would not "drag its feet in terms of getting to a good solution". It has been suggested by some that the church should contrinute more than the £1m it has already pledged to the rescue package. The UK government has pledged £25m in cash and a £175m loan to the PMS. The has also pledged £25m if agreement is reached.

The Presbyterian Church's current £5m refurbishment of its headquarters has angered some PMS savers who think the church has a moral responsibility to contribute more to the rescue package. The pressure on the church to find an additional £4m may now increase as the impact of the UK Treasury's cuts on the Northern Ireland Executive's budget begin to be seen. Stafford Carson's statement today -- that the church has not been formally asked to contribute more -- may prompt the Finance Minister to send a letter in the next few days or weeks thanking the Presbyterian Church for its willingness to be even more generous and asking how generous they are willing to be.

What did the Pope really say?

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William Crawley | 18:35 UK time, Wednesday, 24 November 2010

On last week's Sunday Sequence, while the story of the Pope's " change in policy on the use of condoms in the fight against HIV and Aids was breaking across the world, I advised our listeners to wait for a Vatican clarification. It wasn't at all clear just what the Pope was now saying -- it was "as clear as mud" I suggested to Austen Ivereagh, who tried his best to bring some clarity to a confusing statement. And it wasn't at all clear that the Pope had changed the church's policy on the use of condoms in the fight against Aids at all. The Vatican press office , and now, mid-week, we have , but there remain outstanding questions.

Here's what we know with some confidence. The Pope and the Catholic Church that using a condom for the purposes of artificial contraception is a gravely sinful act. The Pope has now told us that if a male or female prostitute uses a condom in an effort to prevent HIV infection, that person's desire to use a condom may be indicative of a moral awakening on their part. In other words, their effort to protect themselves or their sexual partner is a morally laudatory concern. But it does not follow from this that the Pope believes condoms are "morally justified" even in those cases.

This is where the Pope's statement gets a bit fuzzier. If the prostitute's decision to use a condom is a step in the right direction, because their choice is based on a laudatory concern to block an infection rather than merely to prevent a pregnancy, shouldn't the church encourage all prostitutes to use condoms? And if the use of condoms by a prostitute in an effort to prevent HIV infection can be laudatory, shouldn't the church also encourage all married couples where one of the partners is HIV-positive to similarly use a condom in order to prevent HIV infection while continuing to enjoy sex within their marriage? Some commentators are now speaking as if the Vatican has already said Yes to both of those questions. In fact, the Vatican has -- scrupulously or otherwise -- avoided dealing with these scenarios in recent days.

Why the silence on those key questions? Here's one possible answer. Because the answer is too complicated to explain simply to a mass-media world. An analogy will help. Imagine a criminal who decides to rob a bank using a fake gun rather than a real gun. Robbing a bank is morally wrong in either case, but most people would accept that a bank robber who uses a fake gun is demonstrating more concern for possible victims than a robber who carries a loaded real gun. How, then, should we evaluate the morality of these cases? Both robberies are morally wrong -- they are both grave crimes. Is the use of a fake gun "morally justified" because it is likely to cause less harm? Certainly not. The robber who decides to carry a fake gun rather than a loaded real gun has made a moral choice and he has chosen the lesser of two evils, but he has still committed a morally unjustifed action.

This analogy is, I think, close to what Pope Benedict has now told us about his views on the use of condoms in the fight against HIV. Prostitution is, according to the Pope, a sinful relationship. A prostitute who uses a condom is morally akin to a bank robber who carries a fake gun. The prostitute's use of the condom is not morally "justified"; it is, rather, the lesser of two evils. So, when you see headlines claiming the "Pope says condoms are OK" or "Pope Benedict says condoms may sometimes be morally justified", one can see why a journalist with a deadline would run the story that way, but it does not represent the Pope's view.

Now back to the key scenarios I mentioned earlier. What advice should the Catholic Church offer to bishops and priests, particularly those working in sub-Saharan Africa where 70 per cent of the world's HIV infections are to be found? When they meet a married couple of mixed HIV status and the couple ask if they can continue to enjoy sex as part of their marriage, what pastoral advice should they be given? If the couple's intention is not to prevent pregnancy but to protect each other from infection, they are surely manifesting a morally laudable concern for each other's well-being. In the recent past, for advising these couples that the use of a condom in such morally-fraught circumstances is a step in the right direction. Let's see how the Vatican will respond now to those bishops and priests who feel empowered by Pope Benedict's comments to support a couple's choice to use a condom in those circumstances or to distribute condoms themselves.

But I would not expect the Vatican to now say it is "OK" to use a condom in those cases, even in the case of the prostitute, any more than I would expect the Vatican to announce that the use of a fake gun in a bank robbery is "morally justified". Can you imagine hearing a priest using a homily to recommend to his parishioners that, if they plan to rob a bank in the near future they should use a fake gun rather than a real gun? I suspect the Pope would similarly struggle to imagine himself giving a sermon recommending the use of a condom in any circumstances. From what I can tell, after seven days of journalistic dust has settled on this controversy, the Pope has not changed the Catholic Church's policy on the use or distribution of condoms in the fight against HIV: he continues to believe that to the global HIV crisis and that condoms could, in fact, . Saying that a condom can sometimes be the lesser of two evils is like saying that fake guns are sometimes less evil than real guns: it doesn't follow that you are endorsing the use of fake guns or calling for their widespread distribution in the fight against violent crime.

For what it's worth, that's my reading of this confusing week in the history of Catholic social teaching. But the next clarification from the Vatican could change everything.

In the news this week ...

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William Crawley | 16:55 UK time, Tuesday, 23 November 2010

This is my list of the top religion and ethics news stories of the week (so far).

Use the thread to add your links to other stories worth noting.

If they are interesting, I'll add them to the main page.

We might even talk about them on this week's Sunday Sequence.

Religion stories
Pope's condom views clarified by Vatican.
Pope's condom comments apply to
Cardinal Burke: What the
Church of England bishop suspended
Church of Ireland
Queen set to
Vatican issues
Church of England braced for
Saudi 'Anti-Semitic' Curriculum
Trial date set for
Pope was open, willing to talk about
Anti-Facebook pastor
Nigeria: Islamist Sect Members
Care home chain says Christmas bonuses
4 year-old says he had
Royal Wedding: Westminster Abbey is 'right place'.

Ethics news
The Taoiseach fights for political survival.
The Irish financial crisis: a primer.
South Korea in clash with North.
Religious do not have monopoly on virtue,
Straight couple's civil

Thinking allowed
Watch Christopher Hitchens debate Tony Blair this Friday ().
Atheist Christopher Hitchins debates
What makes a
Intelligent Design:
Alan Turing's papers up for auction.
The boy who was raised a girl.
Interview: Gay Theologian

Presbyterian leader admits to a "bad start" on the PMS crisis

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William Crawley | 17:44 UK time, Monday, 22 November 2010

Two years ago, when the Presbyterian Mutual Society went into Administration, the Presbyterian Church in Ireland made it clear to the press that the PMS was a "separate legal entity" and that it was a mistake to regard the mutual as an agency of the church. They may both have "Presbyterian" in their names, they may even share a website and an email address, but, we were told, it is important not to confuse them. At the time, some members of the PMS regarded this as an attempt by some church leaders to distance themselves and the church from the troubled mutual, even though the church's General Assembly received an annual report from the PMS and openly encouraged congregations and church members to avail themselves of the PMS's services.

On Yesterday's Sunday Sequence, the former moderator who is handling the Presbyterian Church's response to the PMS crisis, Dr Stafford Carson (pictured), gave the clearest signal yet that his church's initial media strategy was a mistake. Here's an excerpt from my interview with Stafford Carson.

Stafford Carson: "Passing the two-year mark, I think it's important to record just how much progress has been made in terms of the overall crisis. You'll recall that we began this whole crisis with nobody really being interesting in us, and the government not paying much attention --"

William Crawley: "You say "us", meaning the Presbyterian Mutual Society?"

Stafford Carson: "Yes."

William Crawley: "Because we started this situation with the Presbyterian Church denying that you were "us"."

Stafford Carson: "We'll of course we probably got off to a bad start on that one. Many of us are both savers and members of the Presbyterian Church ..."

Listen to Sunday's programme in full here.

Pope says condoms can be used in the fight against Aids

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William Crawley | 18:10 UK time, Saturday, 20 November 2010

Or at least, that's what we think Pope Benedict has said in a book-length interview with a German journalist to be published next week, excerpts from which have been published in the Vatican newspaper. Reuters is reporting on the story , and the Associated Press report is .

Pope Benedict appears to have changed the Vatican's official stance on the use of condoms to a moral position that many Catholic theologians have been recommending for quite some time. From what we can tell -- and these caveats are important because we need to seek further clarification from the Vatican -- his position is now that condoms can sometimes be morally legitimate as a lesser of two evils in the fight against Aids. In other words, it remains the case that the Catholic Church's officially opposes the use of condoms as contraception, but the Pope now accepts that the use of condoms may sometimes be justified if the intention if to prevent the spread of HIV rather than to prevent procreation.

Take the case of the Catholic married couple where one partner is HIV-positive and the other HIV-negative. In the recent past, have argued that condoms . But the Vatican intervened in Bishop Dowling's case to remind him of the church's official position. Which is another way of saying that the papal nuncio to South Africa has more than once

Pope Benedict now appears to have changed his own stance, which will come as a surprise to many but not all. Whether his new moral analysis would extend to the case of a marriage mixed-status couple will require clarification, but the example the Pope gives is of a gay prostitute who may use a condom (which, in any case, would have no potential to prevent procreation in this case) in order to protect himself from infection.

and interviews suggests that he has been wrestling with this moral debate in his own mind for quite some time. Nevertheless, if these reports prove accurate, we can expect that some critics will call on the Pope to apologize for a policy that, they say, has contributed to the Aids death toll, particularly in sub-saharan Africa.

We'll have more on this story on tomorrow's Sunday Sequence.

Update
We now have an English translation of the interview with Pope Benedict. A key quote:

Pope Benedict: "There may be a basis in the case of some individuals, as perhaps when a male prostitute uses a condom, where this can be a first step in the direction of a moralization, a first assumption of responsibility, on the way toward recovering an awareness that not everything is allowed and that one cannot do whatever one wants. But it is not really the way to deal with the evil of HIV infection. That can really lie only in a humanization of sexuality."

Interviewer: "Are you saying, then, that the Catholic Church is actually not opposed in principle to the use of condoms?"

Pope Benedict: "She of course does not regard it as a real or moral solution, but, in this or that case, there can be nonetheless, in the intention of reducing the risk of infection, a first step in a movement toward a different way, a more human way, of living sexuality."

Open thread

William Crawley | 11:32 UK time, Saturday, 20 November 2010

talktalk.jpgI don't often post an open thread, but some of you tell me it's a good idea because it lets you get stuff off your chest without throwing the direction of other threads. It also permits you to make suggestions about subjects we might give some more substantial space to on Will & Testament. Let's see. Expatiate at will (sorry about the pun). Keep it legal. The house rules still apply.

Does the UN now support the execution of gays?

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William Crawley | 17:53 UK time, Friday, 19 November 2010

The United Nations General Assembly has voted to that calls on member countries to investigate extra-judicial, summary or arbitrary executions that are motivated by prejudice. The UK and Ireland voted to include sexual orientation in the resolution, but they were outnumbered (79-70) by countries including China, Iraq, Iran and Nigeria who voted to remove the protection. Other countries voting to remove references to sexual orientation from this resolution include South Africa and Cuba.


The International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission (IGLHRC) and ARC International in the strongest terms. Money quote:

"This decision in the General Assembly flies in the face of the overwhelming evidence that people are routinely killed around the world because of their actual or perceived sexual orientation, and renders these killings invisible or unimportant. The Special Rapporteur on Extrajudicial, Summary or Arbitrary Executions has highlighted documented cases of extrajudicial killings on the grounds of sexual orientation including individuals facing the death penalty for consensual same-sex conduct; individuals tortured to death by State actors because of their actual or perceived sexual orientation; paramilitary groups killing individuals because of their actual or perceived sexual orientation as part of "social cleansing" campaigns; individuals murdered by police officers with impunity because of their actual or perceived sexual orientation; and States failing to investigate hate crimes and killings of persons because of their actual or perceived sexual orientation."

the General Assembly's decision is "shameful" and may encourage murders of LGBT people.

Picture: about to be executed in Iran in 2005. (Read

PMS directors face disqualification

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William Crawley | 17:11 UK time, Thursday, 18 November 2010

that the Department of Enterprise Trade and Investment (DETI) has decided "that it is in the public interest to seek disqualification orders against six directors" of the The department has written to all the directors involved. Yesterday marked the second anniversary of the company going into Administration.

The six directors who have received letters from DETI have been told that they face disqualification on the grounds that they caused or allowed the Presbyterian Mutual Society to:

1. Carry on the business of banking contrary to the Industrial and Provident Societies Act.

2. Accept deposits as a deposit-taking business in breach of the Banking Act 1987 and I&PS Act 1969.

3. Carry on a regulated activity, namely accepting deposits, without authorisation under Financial Services and Markets Act 2000.

4. Making loans to non-PMS-members in breach of PMS rules.

5. Failing to ensure the directors met sufficiently often to control PMS affairs.

6. Pursuing investment/lending policies not consistent with PMS rules.

7. Having a director who was not a member of the PMS.

8. Allowing non-members to borrow money.

9. Allowing non-Presbyterians to invest.

Read Philip Bradfield's News Letter story in full .

Confessions of an academic cheat

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William Crawley | 11:52 UK time, Thursday, 18 November 2010

This is -- or, if you prefer, a professional cheat. "Ed Dante" (plainly not his real name) writes academic term papers and full dissertations for paying students. But you won't find his name on any of the articles; he works for an online custom-essay company and his clients pass off his work as their own.

Money quote:

"I do a lot of work for seminary students. I like seminary students. They seem so blissfully unaware of the inherent contradiction in paying somebody to help them cheat in courses that are largely about walking in the light of God and providing an ethical model for others to follow. I have been commissioned to write many a passionate condemnation of America's moral decay as exemplified by abortion, gay marriage, or the teaching of evolution. All in all, we may presume that clerical authorities see these as a greater threat than the plagiarism committed by the future frocked."

Read it all .
A live chat with the

In the news this week ...

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William Crawley | 11:45 UK time, Wednesday, 17 November 2010

This is my list of the top religion and ethics news stories of the week (so far). Use the thread to add your links to other stories worth noting. If they are interesting, I'll add them to the main page. We might even talk about them on this week's Sunday Sequence.

Religion stories
Royal wedding: Prince William to marry Kate Middleton.
Church of England in crisis as five bishops defect to .
Lord Blair says religion is regarded as
Toy pig removed from farm set to avoid
British Muslims join the pilgrims at a
Inside the Hajj with
An Imam Who Supports
Pope goes HD with Vatican's
Vatican government is a
US Catholic bishops elect a
Judaism for
Thou shall
Wycliffe raises $250m for Bible translation
John Lennox v.
Row over teaching of religion in
Pope calls for Pakistani Christian
National Interfaith .
Palestinian Man Faces Life Sentence for Declaring Himself '
The evangelicals who think the


Ethics news
Letter from Ireland:
The human
is there new scientific
Man charged over list of
Moral maze: Is civil disobedience justifiable?
The ethics of .
Christian doctor loses
Holyrood committee rejects right-to-die bill.
Obama's religious .
Are the modern media

Thinking allowed
In Our Time: Foxe's Book of Martyrs.
A philosopher
Is there such a thing as "the undeserving poor"?
Antimatter atom trapped for first time, say scientists.
Did the men of 1916 die for a ?
Systemic Fear,
Glenn Beck: America's

Silenced by the Vatican

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William Crawley | 18:32 UK time, Saturday, 13 November 2010

An Irish Catholic priest has . His crime? He argued, in an article in a Catholic religious journal, that homosexuality "is simply a facet of the human condition". priest Fr Owen O'Sullivan published his article, titled "On Including Gays", in the March edition of , but the priest's thoughts have proven too radical for the Vatican's which is headed by american Cardinal William Levada (pictured, right).

As Patsy McGarry reports in today's Irish Times, "the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith at the Vatican contacted the Capuchin secretary general in Rome with an instruction Fr O'Sullivan was no longer to write for publication without first having his articles approved by it." Presumably this means that Fr O'Sullivan is "free" to continue publishing articles as long as he maintains the party line on controversial issues. Patsy's article is headed "", and pedants will question the literal accuracy of that headline. But the CDF's intervention certainly represents a serious limitation on this priest's freedom to publish his own ideas or to question traditional orthodoxies.

Traditionalists will say this is precisely the point of the CDF: to protect and defend the Church's historic teaching. Obedient speech, rather than free speech, they will tell us, is -- or should be -- the calling of a priest. Others will be both surprised and angry that, in the 21st century, a priest has been effectively silenced in a draconian response by the Vatican.

Still other commentators will ask more fundamental questions about the action of the CDF: how can this body respond so swiftly, and so severely, to a priest who writes a theological commentary piece about human sexuality but take so long, if at all, to respond to priests accused of child sexual abuse? The CDF's treatment of Owen O'Sullivan (pictured, left) will inevitable have some asking if free thought a greater crime in the Vatican than child abuse.

But how will lay Catholics in Ireland respond to an intervention by the Vatican which denies a priest the right to publish or broadcast his own ideas without the approval of a superior in Rome? Will Catholics regard this as an outrageous anachronism, an assault on one man's freedom to exercise his God-given intelligence? Will any of Fr O'Sullivan's parishioners -- or brother-priests -- step forward to speak up for a man who has been silenced? Or will the silencing of Owen O'Sullivan be greeted with widespread indifference by the Catholic faithful?


We wait to find out.


Additional resources
Read excerpts from Owen O'Sullivan's article
Read "a previous Furrow article by Owen O'Sullivan, in which he invites a prophetic re-examination of some of the most controversial issues facing the church and the world today.

Freeman Dyson's secular faith

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William Crawley | 11:15 UK time, Saturday, 13 November 2010

When I was a student in the United States, I was privileged to attend a few lectures by . Dyson can be a controversial thinker, but what's not controversial is that he possesses one of the most brilliant minds on the planet. Which, in itself, is something of a conundrum for some experts in climate change: how could a scientist of such brilliance become such an outspoken sceptic about the causes and effects of global warming? Few people know Dyson and his work as well as , whose book oe tells the story of Dyson's troubled relationship with his son.

Brower describes Dyson as "one of those force-of-nature intellects whose brilliance can be fully grasped by only a tiny subset of humanity, that handful of thinkers capable of following his equations. His principal contribution has been to the theory of quantum electrodynamics, but he has done stellar work, too, in pure mathematics, particle physics, statistical mechanics, and matter in the solid state. He writes with a grace and clarity that is rare, even freakish, in a scientist, and his books, including Disturbing the Universe, Weapons and Hope, Infinite in All Directions, and The Sun, the Genome, and the Internet, have made a mark. Dyson has won the Lorentz Medal (the Netherlands) and the Max Planck Medal (Germany) for his work in theoretical physics. In 1996, he was awarded the Lewis Thomas Prize, which honors the scientist as poet. In 2000, he scored the --worth more, in a monetary way, than the Nobel."

Read Brower's article:

The Ancient Island Celts - modern invention or rediscovery?

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William Crawley | 09:58 UK time, Thursday, 11 November 2010

Who were the Celts? Were there any Celts at all in the British Isles? Are Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland Celtic nations?


Those are some of the questions to be explored tonight in Belfast by , an archaeologist from the University of Leicester and author of

It promises to be an fascinating and -- I predict -- controversial exploration. Separating history from myth can be a challenge even for the modern historian: it's an even greater challenge for ancient historians. Read more about .


Tonight's free public lecture is the first in a new ' being run by the Department of Culture, Arts and Leisure.

Simon James will present an illustrated discussion of current scholarship on the question of the Celts, followed by conversation and debate. The lecture is at 6pm tonight at - tea and coffee from 5.30pm.

Additional resources

A ³ÉÈËÂÛ̳ guide to the Celts in Wales.
Richard Rudgley's documentary
The Celts:
The Celts and
A Celts fact file for children.

In the news this week ...

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William Crawley | 19:55 UK time, Tuesday, 9 November 2010

This is my list of the top religion and ethics news stories of the week (so far). Use the thread to add your links to other stories worth noting. If they are interesting, I'll add them to the main page. We might even talk about them on this week's Sunday Sequence.


Religion stories
Remembrance: The Sikh Story.
Five Anglican bishops quit
Clergy abuse victims
Bishop Gene Robinson
New York lawyer convicted in
Giotto's Ognissanti Crucifix brought back to life.
Mark Driscoll to address
Christian woman sentenced to death in
Obama's speech to the Muslim world
'Amazing Grace': a global
Prelates to discuss response to
John Millbank on the theology of .

Ethics news
Bush revives the waterboarding debate.
Veterans argue that Poppy Appeal is a 'drum roll of
Gay sperm donor fights lesbian mother
The Bush memoir: drinking, God, war and the
Row over Amazon sales of paedophile advice guide.
University offers Lady Gaga sociology course.
Twitter 'stoning' jibe from Conservative

Thinking allowed
Mary Midgley:
H. L. Mencken and
Mark Twain: the
Making Muslim .
On the masochism of
Roger Scruton: Effing
A history of the

Is 'separated' education defensible?

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William Crawley | 19:44 UK time, Tuesday, 9 November 2010

You can listen again to last Sunday's Education Special on the ³ÉÈËÂÛ̳ iPlayer. This included an interview with Caitríona Ruane, the education minister, and a panel of some 18 experts from teaching, the churches, the Northern Ireland Assembly and the teaching unions. They debated the recent comments by First Minister Peter Robinson, pictured, who described Northern Ireland's education system as "a benign form of apartheid." What does the research evidence tell us about any link between our segregated education system and social harms such as sectarianism? Can the current system be made to work for the advantage of the whole community? Can Northern Ireland afford its social segregation any longer? Just some of the questions our panel of experts debated in Sunday Sequence: The Education Special.

How has blogging changed?

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William Crawley | 15:45 UK time, Thursday, 4 November 2010

And how is blogging changing us? Technorati has published its .

Background: "Since 2004, our annual study has followed growth and trends in the blogosphere. For 2010, we took a deeper dive into the entire blogosphere, with a focus on female bloggers. This year's topics include: brands embracing social media, traditional media vs. social media, brands working with bloggers, monetization, smartphone and tablet usage, importance of Twitter and Facebook, niche blogging, and changes within the blogosphere over 2010."

Belgium church spokesman resigns in protest

William Crawley | 23:20 UK time, Wednesday, 3 November 2010

The word "unprecedented" is too-often used by journalists, but it does seem remarkably apt in describing what's just happened in Belgium. The spokesman for the leader of Belgium's Catholics has resigned because he can no longer, in good conscience, represent the views of his boss in response to the child abuse crisis currently facing the Catholic Church. In his resignation statement, Jürgen Mettepenningen, pictured, who was a professional theologian before becoming Archbishop André-Joseph Léonard's spokesman in August, said: "I no longer want, can and will act as spokesman for Archbishop Leonard." He later told reporters that the Archbishop's attitude to the abuse crisis was "surrealist" and said: "Archbishop Léonard has sometimes acted like someone who's driving against the traffic and thinks everyone else is wrong."

Read the story

In the news this week ...

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William Crawley | 09:19 UK time, Wednesday, 3 November 2010

This is my list of the top religion and ethics news stories of the week (so far). Use the thread to add your links to other stories worth noting. If they are interesting, I'll add them to the main page. We might even talk about them on this week's Sunday Sequence.

Religion stories
Pastor Eddie Long denies abuse .
Lauren Booth: I'm a Muslim,
Church says politicians are
Lesbian couple challenge
Christians' freedom to express beliefs is at risk,
Megachurch pastor comes out in effort
Did the ³ÉÈËÂÛ̳'s coverage of Halloween 'down-play Christianity'?
Michael Behe begins UK
Divine dispatches:
Church of England cleric compares

Ethical news
Bullfighting under attack in France.
UK 'obliged' to allow some prisoners to vote.
Should we limit right to jury trial to save cash?

"Hugely disappointing" and "fatally flawed"

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William Crawley | 19:47 UK time, Monday, 1 November 2010

That's the response of the leader of Ireland's Presbyterians to the Northern Ireland Executive's .


The , pictured, told a breakfast meeting in Belfast this morning: "The strategy was fatally flawed at the outset because the very people who would be at the centre of delivering a cohesive and integrated society were excluded from its design. And since it looks increasingly unlikely that they can be brought on board for its delivery, then surely this strategy document is all but dead, with little hope of it being resuscitated."

Despite this the Moderator still saw possibilities to build a shared society and was definite that the responsibility to bring forward new ideas rested with those unhappy with the present document.

He said: "All of us who are unhappy with the current document now have both the opportunity - and crucially the responsibility - to bring forward ideas that will help develop a new policy that we can all enthusiastically endorse. No single party, group or individual has the definitive answer, However, none of us, whether we are in politics, or the public service, or in arms' length bodies, or the voluntary sector, or in church circles, or in business, or in trades unions, can back away from the urgent need to help create a much more attractive and uplifting community life than we now have."

And the Moderator had this challenge for the churches and a warning for government: "I am very keen that the churches urgently work to create a short statement of common purpose on the contribution we wish to make together to the building of a cohesive and integrated society - and then apply ourselves diligently to that work for as long as it takes. We have not needed a government paper in the past to stir us to action. We don't need to wait for a new one either, nor do others. However that does not mean that government is absolved from making a huge contribution. They must do that too."

Dr Hamilton also had two very practical suggestions about how everyone could play a part in building good relations through rediscovering the practice of generous hospitality and more careful use of language in public debate: "Given the pressing need to improve relationships right across society, I would urge everyone, corporately and individually to rediscover the practice of generous hospitality towards those whom we either do not know or do not have many dealings with. I can think of no better way to deal with our fears and build cohesion than offer such hospitality. Change is also needed in the way we relate to each other through the public use of language. We live in a community where it is now completely acceptable to rubbish others and their views than to either listen carefully or respond graciously. For as long as any of us regard this as either acceptable or normal, relationships will not be built. Good relations cannot emerge from bitter tongues, because bitter tongues betray bitter hearts and bitter thinking."

The Moderator's comments are contained in a wide ranging paper, "Come together - for a change", a personal contribution to the debate on Cohesion, Society and Integration which has been published today by the Presbyterian Church.

Read the Moderator's paper in full .

Dr Hamilton is not the only leading voice from Northern Ireland to express concern about the Executive's CSI document. Earlier this month, the concluded that the proposals contained in the CSI document fail to meet the test of actually promoting cohesion, sharing and integration.

The Community Relations Council has gathered responses from other public bodies and individuals .

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