Wendell Berry . . .

My thanks to some friends that tipped me to this article from the Associated Baptist Press’ reporting on Wendell Berry addressing the conference, “Following the Call of the Church in Times Like These.”   Here is a couple of paragraphs and a link so you can read the entire piece.

Wendell Berry expounds on gay marriage
by Bob Allen | Associated Baptists Press | Jan 14, 2013

“The oddest of the strategies to condemn and isolate homosexuals is to propose that homosexual marriage is opposed to and a threat to heterosexual marriage, as if the marriage market is about to be cornered and monopolized by homosexuals,” Berry said. “If this is not industrial capitalist paranoia, it at least follows the pattern of industrial capitalist competitiveness. We must destroy the competition. If somebody else wants what you’ve got, from money to marriage, you must not hesitate to use the government – small of course – to keep them from getting it.”

“If I were one of a homosexual couple — the same as I am one of a heterosexual couple — I would place my faith and hope in the mercy of Christ, not in the judgment of Christians,” Berry said. “When I consider the hostility of political churches to homosexuality and homosexual marriage, I do so remembering the history of Christian war, torture, terror, slavery and annihilation against Jews, Muslims, black Africans, American Indians and others. And more of the same by Catholics against Protestants, Protestants against Catholics, Catholics against Catholics, Protestants against Protestants, as if by law requiring the love of God to be balanced by hatred of some neighbor for the sin of being unlike some divinely preferred us. If we are a Christian nation — as some say we are, using the adjective with conventional looseness — then this Christian blood thirst continues wherever we find an officially identifiable evil, and to the immense enrichment of our Christian industries of war.”

Click here to read the entire article.

Information Filters in the Information Age

I often tell the youth that I work with, and their parents or adults that work alongside the youth in their congregations, that they need to develop good filters for the information that comes to their email accounts, Facebook feeds, text windows, newspapers, and TV ads.  In an information age it is more important than ever to learn how to know how to spot, to borrow from the board game, “fact or crap.”  How does one know what information sources can be trusted or given more trust than others?  This article from CNN, a media outlet making money of reporting the news, is a good example of how discerning an eye and diligent citizenship must be in this information age.

Did Jefferson Really Say That? Why bogus quotations matter in gun debate.
by Nicole Saidi | Jan 11, 2013

Duane Tigner, a commenter who said he teaches American government to high school students in Sanford, Michigan, described feeling a responsibility to educate young people about the need to develop a discerning eye about the information they come across. Tigner was one of the readers who mentioned that the quotation had been debunked. He suggests starting with a Google search, which often will quickly turn up information about a quotation.

“Many of these quotations are circulated and reposted on social media or appear in chain e-mails,” he said via e-mail. “Every time I see one of these bogus quotes, I call it out as fake.”  click here to read more.