Apologia Report AR-Talk
May 13, 1999

Subject:     ar-talk digest: May 13, 1999
Date:        5/14/99 7:00 AM
Received:    5/14/99 11:52 AM
From:        Apologetics Resources (sharing, Q & A, no debate) digest, ar-talk@X
To:          ar-talk digest recipients, ar-talk@apologia.org

Apologetics Resources (sharing, Q & A, no debate)

Digest for Thursday, May 13, 1999.

1. Re: Spock's maxim
2. Religion Items in the News - May 14, 1999 (Vol. 3, Issue 85)

----------------------------------------------------------------------

Subject: Re: Spock's maxim
From: robertbowman <robertbowman@mindspring.com>
Date: Thu, 13 May 1999 11:37:26 -0400
X-Message-Number: 1

No one in particular was cited as having made the statement to which you
referred.  The statement, which Spock and Kirk both affirmed, ran as follows:

"The needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few -- or the one."

--Rob Bowman


----------------------------------------------------------------------

Subject: Religion Items in the News - May 14, 1999 (Vol. 3, Issue 85)
From: ahein@apologeticsindex.org (Anton Hein)
Date: Fri, 14 May 1999 01:02:24 GMT
X-Message-Number: 2

=========================================
Religion Items in the News - May 14, 1999 (Vol. 3, Issue 85)
=========================================

=== Main
1.  Korean TV airs controvesial documentary (Manmin Chungang Sungkyol)
2.  TV evangelists forced to recant claims of God's divine dentistry
3.  Mother Sues Utah-Based Business Treating Teens in Jamaica
4.  Scientology files motions to drop charges
5.  BBC television stops worldwide broadcast of [Scientology ads]
6.  [Scientology] incites unrest in the camp of its opposition
7.  Sweden: new attempt to get NOTs sealed (Scientology)
8.  Scientologists in state civil service anonymous again.
9.  Mormon psychologist's recanting about church flawpuzzles some
10. Church shunned sex -abuse study (LDS)
11. Mormons caught up in wave of pedophile accusations
12. Ex-member of Children of God details childhood abuse
13. Moon's Doctrine Against Bible, Says Joint Christian Council
14. Spiritual Revival: Falun Gong grows in popularity in U.S., China
15. Cultists Threaten Ago-Iwoye (Supreme Eye)
16. Hate thy neighbor (American Knights of the Ku Klux Klan)
17. Judge strikes down Goshen anti-mask ordinance (American Knights)
18. Amway Stood To Gain From Rumor
19. Couple charged with child abuse in death of son
20. Blend of traditional therapy, spirituality going mainstream
21. Recovered memory theory derided as `junk science'
22. OSU conferences provide respite in creation debate
23. Islamic leaders push partnership with Christians
24. American Muslim Council Holds Annual Meeting in Washington
25. Reform Jews finding faith in old traditions
26. Jewish Leaders Want Palo Alto to Create Enclave

=== Noted
27. Catholic children pay tribute to Mary
28. Saints popular among believers
29. 'Cool' Bible launched in US

=== Books
30. On a Higher Level (Keepers of the Ancient Knowledge)

=== The Church Around The Corner
31. Giant banner ad of Schiffer drapes Berlin church tower


=== Main

1.  Korean TV airs controvesial documentary
BBC, May 12, 1999
 A South Korean television station has managed to broadcast a programme
 previously forced off air by members of a Christian sect.  Seoul-based
 Munhwa Broadcasting Corporation (MBC) went ahead with the documentary-
 which examined claims that sect leader Lee Jae-rok could cure illness -
 a day after demonstrators stormed the studios and forced it off air.
 
 Riot police were out in force as the programme went out on Wednesday to
 prevent further trouble.

 Mr Lee heads the 65,000-strong Manmin Chungang Sungkyol sect, a
 Protestant denomination whose name roughly translates as All Holiness
 Church.  His sect believe that he can cure people by touching them, and
 is accusing the programme of distorting facts and defaming its image.

 The organisation was thrown out of the Christian Council of Korea last
 month in a row over "heretical" claims.
 [...more...]


2.  TV evangelists forced to recant claims of God's divine dentistry
National Post (Canada), May 12, 1999
 God works in mysterious ways, but two high-profile evangelical
 Christians in Western Canada have been forced to back down from claims
 that He gave them gold teeth.

 A chastened Willard Thiessen, host of a daily religion program on
 Winnipeg television, admitted yesterday he was wrong in telling his
 tele-flock that God had inexplicably planted a gold tooth in his mouth.
 It turned out the gold tooth had been implanted by his brother Elmer, a
 dentist in British Columbia.
 (...)

 Mr. Thiessen is not alone in his embarrassment.  Dick Dewert, a
 religious broadcaster in Lethbridge, Alta., told a CJIL-TV audience
 during an on-air fundraising marathon in March that God had implanted a
 gold tooth in his mouth after a bout of intensive prayer.  But Dr.
 Jack Sherman, Mr. Dewert's longtime dentist, said he had put it
 in about 10 years earlier.
 (...)

 Praying to God to repair teeth is just another way of asking God to
 reveal himself through healing, said John Arnott, senior pastor for the
 Toronto Airport Christian Fellowship, a charismatic evangelical
 Christian group.

 Mr. Arnott said about 20 of his flock of 2,000 believe God polished
 their fillings or replaced them with gold after praying for such
 healing in March.
 [...more...]


3.  Mother Sues Utah-Based Business Treating Teens in Jamaica
Salt Lake Tribune, May 12, 1999 

A Houston woman has filed a lawsuit against a Utah-based treatment
 business for troubled teen-agers, claiming her two sons were abducted
 against her will and subjected to cultish behavior modification at a
 poorly managed facility in Jamaica.   Donna Burke was divorced from
 her husband when, without her consent, the husband allegedly paid
 Utah's Teen Help to arrange the "kidnapping" of sons David, then 16,
 and Scott Burke, then 14.
 (...)

 Teen Help, the program Burke has sued, is named in at least two other
 other cases filed in U.S. District Court for Utah. Thomas M. Burton, a
 Pleasanton, Calif., attorney who filed the cases, likens the southern
 Utah network of programs that includes Teen Help to a "cult."

 Cross Creek Manor, a Washington County, Utah, home to which Teen Help
 refers troubled teen-age girls, "is one of many closed, secret cult
 centers . . . where adolescents are impounded, tortured, berated,
 brainwashed, and otherwise abused," he alleges in a Utah federal suit
 filed on behalf of daughter Celece and mother Ceta Dochterman of
 California.  In that lawsuit, Celece claims she was forced to urinate,
 defecate and bathe while being watched; she was called a "slut" and
 "family destroyer"; and paraded naked in front of male staff.
 Burke's lawsuit, also handled by Burton, alleges similar outrageous
 treatment.
 (...)

 Along with Teen Help, Burke seeks damages from a network of businesses
 and people the lawsuit claims are business associates, including
 Tranquility Bay, The Caribbean Center for Change, Worldwide Association
 of Specialty Programs, Brightway Hospital, Resource Realizations, R&B
 Billing, Dixie Contract Services, Teen Escort Services, Key Kay, Robert
 B. Lichfield, Karr Farnsworth, Brent M. Facer, Jay Kay, Jean Davis,
 Lorraine Black, Delbert Goates and David Gilcrease.
 (...)

     Some of the defendants were involved with Brightway, a southern Utah
 adolescent hospital Utah officials accused of operating as a front for
 the network of teen homes. Last year, Brightway was forced to close its
 doors under pressure from the Utah Department of Health's bureau of
 licensing.
 [...more...]


4.  Scientology files motions to drop charges
St. Petersburg Times, May 12, 1999
 The Church of Scientology in Clearwater says it is immune from criminal
 prosecution in the death of Lisa McPherson and wants the felony charges
 against it dismissed. 

 In lengthy motions filed this week, Scientology's lawyers argue that
 the charges filed against the church last November "are both
 unnecessary and impermissible."

 Church staffers gave "spiritual assistance" to McPherson, a fellow
 Scientologist, in the days before she died, thus their actions were
 protected under the First Amendment and the state's new Religious
 Freedom Restoration Act, the motions state.
 (...)

 McPherson, 36, died Dec. 5, 1995, after spending 17 days at
 Scientology's Fort Harrison Hotel in Clearwater. Church staffers
 isolated her in a room and forced food and medicines down her throat as
 they treated her for a mental breakdown, according to state
 investigators. The church also is accused of an "inexcusable delay" in
 getting McPherson to a hospital when she became ill.

 Two Scientologists questioned McPherson's care, according to
 investigators. One was a doctor who was said to be shocked by her
 condition when he pronounced her dead at a hospital in New Port Richey.

 Notably, the church's new motions marked the first time since the case
 became public in 1996 that Scientology has been explicitly
 self-critical about what happened to McPherson.

 The motions "condemn" the actions of church staffers, calling them
 "negligent acts" that were "contrary to church scripture." They
 referred to the delay in getting McPherson to a hospital as
 "lamentable, even if it can be explained by the unfortunately stressful
 circumstances created by this entire episode."
 (...)

 Charging a whole church for acts committed by individuals unnecessarily
 burdens all of Scientology and its members, Scientology lawyers argue.

 They also cite the recent case of Baptist leader Henry Lyons. McCabe
 chose to prosecute Lyons, not his organization, the National Baptist
 Convention. The church's motion calls it "troubling" that the same tack
 was not taken with Scientology.
 [...more...]


5.  BBC television stops worldwide broadcast of commercials for
Scientology
epd (Germany), May 6, 1999
Translation: German Scientology News
 After protests from German television viewers, BBC, the British
 broadcasting company suspended the worldwide broadcast of commercials
 for Scientology. Michael Kayser, the German representative from BBC
 World, related this to the epd in Munich. The commercial for the 1950
 book "Dianetics" by Scientology founder Ron Hubbard had been broadcast
 several times a day for about three weeks.

 The television spot had been released by the British Broadcasting
 Advertising Clearance Center. However, since the Scientology
 organization is essentially rated more critically in Germany than it is
 in Great Britain, the broadcaster took the commercial off the air
 prematurely. According to Kayser, BBC World is received by about ten
 million households in Germany.
 (...)

 Scientology has been under surveillance by the state Constitutional
 Security agencies in Germany since 1997. Critics speak of an
 ideologically totalitarian system which closely observes its members
 and operates primarily in a profit-oriented manner. The issue of
 whether the organization is a religious congregation or a business has
 not been uniformly decided upon by the courts. In 1997 Scientology gave
 the number of its members in Germany to the U.N. Human Rights
 Commission as 30,000. Experts have since concluded that it is much
 less.
 [...more...]


6.  Controversial organization incites unrest in the camp of its
opposition
Suedwest Presse (Germany), May 11, 1999
Translation: German Scientology News 

Critics of the controversial Scientology organization are incurably
 riven. This is over the outcome of an agent who operated undercover for
 years. Another who recently left the organization has now exposed the
 provocateur.
 (...)

 Psycho-concerns like Scientology fear nothing more than the exposure of
 its dubious machinations. Those who make these revelations must be
 silenced or discredited. A wedge must be driven into the alliance
 against the [Scientology] organization, states the practical writings
 of Scientology founder, L. Ron Hubbard. Critics, Hubbard continues, are
 all criminal. In order to make that known, Scientology maintains its
 own secret service. In Germany this is called the "Department of
 Special Affairs" (DSA). When nothing incriminating can be found, then
 it is manufactured, say critics.

 If that is not enough, Hubbard recommends the employment of agent
 provocateurs. Fantasies of a science fiction author? Not even close.
 The Scientologists have slipped at least one man in amongst the
 critics, and he has done his job successfully. The man who says this is
 44-year-old Norman S., who himself has worked for DSA. He learned this
 coincidentally from internal memos which state what actions Scientology
 has taken against critics in the past years.
 [...more...]


7.  Sweden: new attempt to get NOTs sealed
From: Catarina Pamnell <catarina@pamnell.com>
Newsgroups: alt.religion.scientology
Date: Wed, 12 May 1999
Message-ID: <3738D3CC.E8AB101E@pamnell.com>

 Summary of article in Metro newspaper May 11, 1999:
 http://www.metro.se/

 Scientology has made a new request to the Supreme Court of
 Sweden to seize the Scientology "secret scriptures" that are
 currently open to public view in the Swedish parliament.

 The scriptures legally became public documents according to the
 "offentlighetsprincip" (a kind of wide freedom of information
 act) when Zenon Panoussis in 1996 handed over copies to the
 parliament.  Scientology sued Panoussis, who lost the case in the
 District Court and was ordered to stop spreading the material.

 The problem for Scientology remained, as the material was still
 publicly available through the parliament. After heavy pressure
 from the US, the Swedish government did seal the material for a
 while. That decision was quickly overturned by the Supreme
 Administrative Court.

 The Scientology movement turned to the bailiff, and demanded the
 confiscation of all copies of the material, but the bailiff
 denied their request. Scientology appealed the decision to the
 District Court, and then to the Court of Appeals, but lost in
 both.

 In a final attempt to keep the material secret, Scientology has
 appealed to the Supreme Court. They state that RTC owns the 
 copyright to the material, and that the District Court has
 actually sentenced Panoussis for spreading it.

 The thesis of L Ron Hubbard's writings is that space aliens live
 inside all humans and impede human development.

 * Follow-up message regarding the availability of the NOTs
  
  Anyone can get a copy. And that's *anyone*, it is not restricted
  to swedish citizens.

 You don't need to state the purpose of your request, or even
 your name, just give an address where they can send it. You do
 however need to pay a copying and postage fee, which could
 amount to nearly $100. For instructions:
 http://www.dtek.chalmers.se/~d1dd/cos/pan27.html

 For checking current details, the phone number to the parliament
 is +46 87 86 40 00
 [...more...]


8.  Scientologists in state civil service anonymous again
Die Presse (Austria), May 10, 1999
Translation: German Scientology News
 "Applicants for the Lower Austria state civil service do not have to
 out themselves as to whether they are members of Scientology." Peter
 Pitzinger, state sect commissioner, mentioned that while Scientology
 was not acknowledged as a church or a religious congregation in
 Austria, neither was it prohibited. He does not think that a
 professional ban on Scientologists would contribute to anything, since
 it would only create martyrs. Instead of that, people should be kept up
 to date on the activities of the organization which makes widespread
 use of anonymous operations. "In all of Austria, there are between
 50,000 and 200,000 members of various sects. In Lower Austria it is
 about 10,000 to 40,000 people," stated Pitzinger. According to what
 Scientology says, it has around 10,000 Austrian adherents.
 [...entire item...]


9.  Mormon psychologist's recanting about church flawpuzzles some
Houston Chronicle, May 10, 1999
www.chron.com (Registration required - free)
 As a psychologist and a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of
 Latter-day Saints, Arleen Cromwell wanted to help her church with a
 problem. Later, however, she contended that there was no problem at
 all.

 In a sworn affidavit she signed in February 1996 - but later recanted -
 the Salt Lake City therapist detailed what she called a pattern in
 which sexually abused children had been shunned or generally mishandled
 by bishops, who in the Mormon faith are local congregational leaders.
 (...)

 Defense lawyers say the church is not liable because it has no control
 over members who abuse children.

 Cromwell would not talk to the Houston Chronicle about why she recanted
 the original affidavit that she had provided for Michael Sullivan of
 Columbia, S.C., the lead plaintiffs' attorney in the Beckley case.
 (...)

 "Had I been more knowledgeable of the efforts of the LDS church at the
 time I signed the 1996 affidavit, I wouldn't have signed it or become
 involved in the lawsuit. I based much of what I said about how the
 church was handling these cases on one conversation with my stake
 president. I should have looked into the situation further with church
 leaders but I didn't."
 (...)

 Von Keetch, a Salt Lake City attorney representing the church in that
 case and similar lawsuits, said Cromwell's recanting of her original
 affidavit is evidence that the experienced therapist is impressed with
 the church's turnaround in training its bishops in a concerted effort
 that began in 1995.

 Sullivan said he suspects that Cromwell was pressured to recant, but by
 whom, he doesn't know.
 [...more...]


10. Church shunned sex -abuse study
Houston Chronicle, May 10, 1999
www.chron.com (Registration required - free)
 She thought the response would be positive - that the Mormon church
 would embrace her study on women survivors of childhood sexual abuse as
 a helpful, groundbreaking piece of research.  But Karen E. Gerdes said
 the report that she and three other women presented received the
 opposite reaction: It was denounced or, worst of all, largely ignored
 by church officials who still dismiss it four years later.

 The study, which Mormon leaders condemned as flawed, found that more
 than two-thirds of the women interviewed said they had bad experiences
 when they turned to Mormon clergymen for comfort and counsel.

 For a church that in recent years has faced numerous lawsuits accusing
 it of harboring, or at least failing to stop, pedophiles in its midst,
 Gerdes said she believed she and her colleagues were providing some
 helpful insights.

 "It was never our intent to make the church look bad, but that's the
 way the church received it," she said of the 1995 study the group
 conducted while at Brigham Young University.
 [...more...]


11. Mormons caught up in wave of pedophile accusations
Houston Chronicle, May 9, 1999
www.chron.com (Registration required - free)
 The church that is known for placing a spiritual premium on family
 values is under increasing attack for an alleged failure to protect its

 children from pedophiles.

 Therein lies the irony of a barrage of lawsuits and general complaints
 alleging that - in an effort to protect its wholesome image - the
 Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, commonly called the Mormon
 Church, has failed to root out child molesters in its midst.

 The fast-growing institution, with 10 million members worldwide, is not
 the only church that has been plagued in recent years by embarrassing
 cases involving sexual abuse of children. But while Mormon officials
 maintain that they have eliminated most of the problems that may have
 once existed, lawsuits and criminal charges linking the church to
 pedophiles have continued to mount.
 [...more...]


12. Ex-member of Children of God details childhood abuse
FACTNet, May 11, 1999 

A 23-year-old woman who was born into the Children of God cult and left

 at the age of twelve, tells her story today in The Mirror. Kristina
 Jones was raped for years by cult members including her stepfather
 beginning when she was nine, at cult communes in England and India. She
 was sexually abused in other ways beginning when she was two, and
 possibly even younger. Children of God believes that sexual "sharing"
 among members is God's will, and that refusing sex is refusing the will
 of God. David Berg, a Children of God leader, details in letters to
 members how he enjoyed being sexually abused by a babysitter when he
 was young, and how he wishes he'd had an opportunity to sleep with his
 mother. He also produced a pamphlet for cult children with pictures and
 instructions on how to give oral sex. F.A.C.T.Net cannot reprint the
 entire story because of copyright regulations. Following is an excerpt:
 "...When your earliest memory of your mother is seeing her walk into
 your bedroom, witness you being given oral sex by one of her friends,
 even though you were only two years old, and yet turn on her heel and
 walk away, it's hard to bury your own feelings just to make her feel
 better about it. When she joined the group in 1973, she thought they
 were just another religious organization. But, by the time she had met
 and married my father, Simon Peter, who was also a member, moved into a
 commune in Kent with about 20 other members, and my elder sister
 Celeste had arrived in 1975, they must have realized that the group
 believed free love, incest, and intercourse with their children were
 considered to be the will of God. I don't think either of them
 questioned Berg's words. After all, he was God's right-hand man. If
 they felt uncomfortable with this aspect of his teachings, they didn't
 dare show it. Probably it was easy to kid themselves that, disgusting
 as some of it sounded, it had to be all right. I can understand that,
 but now that I'm a mother myself I can't even begin to understand how
 they could have exposed their children to it... Little children were
 taught that nudity was good and that sex was the best way of showing
 someone that you loved them. Refusing to sleep with someone who wanted
 you was the biggest sin you could commit, and you were punished for
 it... Adults would come in to read us bedtime stories and have sex with
 us. In a way, you welcomed it. Discipline was very strict, and when you
 were constantly being criticized, beaten and punished you were grateful
 for any kind of attention." When Kristina's mother finally left the
 group, she still was - and is - in bad shape, and not of much help to
 her daughter. Kristina began using drugs and attempted suicide three
 times. She had a son at sixteen, who she parents with love and
 protectiveness. She was awarded pounds 5,000 from the cult in court.
 Kristina is now studying for a law degree and rebuilding her life.
 [...entire item...]


13. Moon's Doctrine Against Bible, Says Joint Christian Council
Africa News Service, Apr. 29, 1999
 The Uganda Joint Christian Council (UJCC) has warned Christians against
 being misled by Dr. Mrs. Hak Ja Han Moon of the Unification Church
 "because its doctrine violates the Bible."
 (...)

 He was reacting to several inquiries from curious Christians about the
 visit of Dr. Moon, who arrives here today and why it has caused such
 controversy.
 (...)

 "While individual members of the member churches of the council may
 have strong links with the Unification Church, as a council we have no
 such links. There are fundamental doctrinal differences between the
 member churches of the council and those of the Unification Church,"
 Kaiso told The New Vision. "It is because of those doctrinal
 differences that the mainstream Biblical Christians are not in
 fellowship with the Unification Church and has come to be regarded as a
 cult worldwide," Kaiso explained. The prelate said Rev. Moon's
 teachings contradict the Bible.

 He advised Christians who regard the Bible as a true word of God, to
 ignore Rev. Moon and his doctrines.
 [...more...]


14. Spiritual Revival: Falun Gong grows in popularity in U.S., China
San Francisco Chronicle, May 10, 1999 

(...) Falun Gong is part of a broader revival of Chinese spiritual
 practice, including qigong (pronounced CHEE-goong), an ancient Chinese
 practice that combines breathing, concentration and meditation to
 promote health and well-being. It works on some of the same principles
 as t'ai chi ch'uan, the slow-moving martial art, and acupuncture, the
 Chinese healing technique.

 ``There's qigong fever in China,'' said Nancy Wong, an assistant
 professor of anthropology at UC Santa Cruz. ``There's an explosion of
 spiritual practices. It could be a fad, or it could have long-term
 political significance.''
 (...)

 Devotion to the teachings of Li is another major component of Falun
 Gong.  Devotee Claire Lee laid her hand upon two paperback books by Li,
 ``China Falun Gong'' and ``Zhuan Falun.''  ``This is like a Bible to
 us,'' she said. ``It's the most advanced form of qigong.''

 There are clear apocalyptic overtones to Li's teachings.
 (...)

 Chen, the Santa Cruz anthropologist, is writing a book about qigong,
 and has been observing Falun Gong for about six years.  ``It's
 apocalyptic in that they are taking about the end of a certain kind of
 history,'' she said. ``Millennial movements in China have always
 threatened the state.''
 [...more...]


15. Cultists Threaten Ago-Iwoye
P.M. News (Lagos), May 11, 1999
 Barely two weeks after the breathtaking school killing at Columbine
 High School in the United States of America, a scenario close to that
 was replayed at the Ogun State University when some students suspected
 to be members of Supreme 'Eye' confraternity (the Airlords) marched
 into one of the venues of the institution's harmattan semester
 examination in a frantic search for members of a rival secret cult-the
 Buccaneers.
 [...more...]


16. Hate thy neighbor
Boston Phoenix, May 13-20, 1999
 (...) Experts on hate-group activity say the message is clear: the
 American Knights of the Ku Klux Klan, a recently formed and aggressive
 branch of the notorious hate group, have arrived in New England. And
 they're recruiting new members.
 (...)

 At a time when membership in hate groups is rising nationally,
 according to the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC), the Indiana-based
 American Knights are growing especially fast. "They came from nothing
 three years ago," says Mark Potok, editor of the quarterly Intelligence
 Report, the SPLC publication that covers the radical right. "This group
 has really exploded onto the American scene and is showing up in some
 quite surprising places."

 The KKK may be the most infamous of American hate groups, but it is no
 longer the organization of choice for bigots seeking company. At its
 peak in the 1920s, the Klan boasted millions of members and mainstream
 status in some communities. But today, of an estimated 100,000 people
 nationwide who belong to some type of organized hate group --
 neo-Nazis, racist skinheads, other Aryan-pride sects -- only an
 estimated 6000 are members of the Klan.
 [...more...]


17. Judge strikes down Goshen anti-mask ordinance
San Francisco Chronicle, May 10, 1999
 A federal judge has ruled a Goshen city ban on masks unconstitutional,
 saying it violates the rights of Ku Klux Klansmen to express themselves
 and associate anonymously.
 (...)

 The American Knights argued that they consider themselves a religion,
 and their national leader, the Rev. Jeffrey Berry, testified that
 members conceal themselves because they are sinners in God's eyes.

 The group also said many members wear the hoods to remain anonymous and
 reduce the risk of retaliation.
 [...more...]


18. Amway Stood To Gain From Rumor
FoxMarketWire, May 12, 1999
  Procter & Gamble Co.'s hell was a potential sales heaven for Amway
 Corp., which stood to gain business from false rumors that its giant
 rival had satanic links, a former Amway salesman testified Tuesday in a
 lawsuit.
 (...)

 His testimony came in the trial of a lawsuit by Procter & Gamble Co.
 charging that it has lost hundreds of millions of dollars in sales
 because Amway has fomented the satanic rumors since as early as the
 1970s
 (...)

 The rumors, prevalent among some religious groups, include the
 allegation that Procter & Gamble's venerable trademark incorporates
 satanic symbols such as the number "666'' and devil's horns.

 Amway Corp., which sells its products directly to consumers through 3
 million distributors worldwide, has denied the charges and filed a
 countersuit accusing Procter & Gamble of conducting a smear campaign.
 [...more...]


19. Couple charged with child abuse in death of son
St. Petersburg Times, May 11, 1999
 Authorities say the parents failed to seek treatment for the 2-year-old
 boy after he was stung by a swarm of yellow jackets last fall.
 (...)

 The Johnsons, whose religious beliefs eschew medical treatment, have
 refused to be interviewed and have never given detectives a reason for
 not getting help for their child, said Hillsborough sheriff's Lt. Greg
 Brown. "All we know is this: They waited seven hours to seek any kind
 of medical treatment," he said.  Investigators, armed with arrest
 warrants, have been unable to locate the Melbourne couple, Brown said.
 (...)

 This was not the couple's first brush with the law over their religious
 beliefs. As part of a small religious group known as Bible Readers
 Fellowship, the Johnsons were acquitted in March 1998 of charges they
 did not report the death of a 1-month-old girl born to a couple from
 their group.

 During questioning for that case in October 1996, Wylie Johnson told
 detectives he relied on his religion for healing. Asked if he would
 ever call 911 to help his child, he replied, "I don't know."
 [...more...]


20. Blend of traditional therapy, spirituality going mainstream
Star-Telegram, May 11, 1999
 (...) For as more of their clients demand treatment for the soul as
 well as the psyche, therapists are expanding their repertoire to
 include talk of everything from God and the power of prayer to past
 lives and karmic debt.
 (...)

 "There is a broad spiritual awakening taking place around us," says
 Henry Grayson, executive director of New York's National Institute for
 the Psychotherapies, a training ground for post-graduate students
 studying to become therapists. Last year, the Institute opened the
 Center for Spirituality and Psychotherapy. Its first conference drew
 more than 500 therapists from the Eastern Seaboard alone.
 (...)

 Some might dismiss the trend as a New Age fad. But the focus on therapy
 for the soul is merely the popularization of an idea that has been
 around since Swiss psychiatrist Carl Jung insisted the spiritual
 component of the human psyche could not be ignored.
 (...)

 When panic attacks began keeping her from showing up at work, Carlucci
 sought the help of Dr. Tasha Mansfield, a South Miami psychologist and
 author of "When God Talks Back -- Madness or Mysticism?" (Centauro
 Publishing, $18.50).
 (...)

 Yet if someone confides that he or she has seen an omen or received
 messages from God, some psychotherapists may think it a sign of mental
 illness. And a psychotherapist who delves into the spiritual world may
 be considered a little crazy himself.

 That's what happened to Dr. Brian Weiss, former chairman of the
 department of psychiatry at Mount Sinai Medical Center in Miami Beach
 and best-selling author of "Many Lives, Many Masters" and "Only Love Is
 Real, a Story of Soulmates Reunited."
 (...)

 Weiss says he now has a client waiting list of 5,000. He has been on
 "The Oprah Winfrey Show" and "20/20." Last year, he trained at least
 800 therapists from across the country to do past-life regressions.
 (...)

 In Los Angeles, Dr. Judith Orloff, author of "Second Sight," is a
 member of the American Psychiatric Association, and an assistant
 clinical professor of psychiatry at the University of California. But
 there is one thing that sets Orloff apart from her peers.

 She's a psychic psychiatrist who prescribes Prozac while using her 
 intuitive abilities to "tune into" her clients and garner information
 she thinks can help seed the healing process.
 [...more...]


21. Recovered memory theory derided as `junk science'
Toronto Star, May 11, 1999
 The theory of recovered memory in sexual assault cases is ``junk
 science'' that has no place in the courtroom, says the lawyer who
 defended John Paul Roby.  ``It belongs on the shelf right up there with
 witchcraft, sorcery and fortune-telling,'' says Steven Skurka.  ``It's
 junk science, and one day we'll look at it the way we look at the Flat
 Earth Society.''

 Prosecutors didn't get convictions on any of the six charges against
 Roby involving three women and three men, who said they only recently
 remembered the alleged assaults after undergoing therapy.
 (...)

 Memory researchers say there is no scientific evidence for the concept,
 arguing other forces are at work, such as suggestive questioning by
 therapists.
 [...more...]


22. OSU conferences provide respite in creation debate
Columbus Dispatch, May 9, 1999
 Despite recent fraternization between science and religion, the news
 from the front is that no truce has been declared.  At two conferences
 last week at Ohio State University, scientists, philosophers,
 theologians, evangelicals and creationists all suggested where the
 lines might be drawn.

 Mainstream academics flocked to "Religion and Science: Tension,
 Accommodation and Engagement,'' while anti-evolutionists met to
 "Rediscover Creation.''
 (...)

 I'd like to report that the proximity of two such conferences, and the
 diversity of opinion, signaled a lull in the shooting between
 scientists and their Bible-based critics.  Unfortunately, that's not
 the case. Peace will reign in the Balkans before this endless fight
 over origins is settled.

 Gentry, the creationist, said scientists are now giving lip service to
 religious tolerance but still feel free to dismiss creationist
 arguments without proving them wrong.
 (...)

 The war is being waged not so much in conference centers as in
 classrooms and bookstores.  Lamoureux, who teaches theology at the
 University of Alberta, said he's appalled to find the majority of his
 students now skeptical about the theory of evolution. Indeed, the
 creationist viewpoint seems to be gaining in popularity, influencing
 instruction not only in biology but also in astronomy and geology.
 [...more...]


23. Islamic leaders push partnership with Christians
Nando Times, May 11, 1999
 Emboldened by NATO military policies to defend Muslims in Kosovo,
 Islamic leaders in the United States speak confidently of a "new
 partnership" with Christianity. And like conservative Christian
 fundamentalists and evangelicals, the followers of Mohammed yearn to
 restore to America a greater sense of modesty and morality.

 "We are witnessing a reversal of sentiment which has been deeply
 embedded in the West for more than 1,000 years," said Jamal Barzingi,
 director of the International Institute of Islamic Thought. "This is a
 new partnership. Not Islam against the West. But Islam and the West
 against the decline of civilization."

 Barzingi made his remarks at the American Muslim Council's eighth
 national convention in Arlington, Va.
 (...)

 The group is seeking acceptance - or at least acknowledgment - from
 U.S. leaders. The council last week dined with 22 members of the Senate
 and House.

 In a personal note, President Clinton commended the council's efforts
 to bring Muslims into the political and social mainstream. "You can
 take pride in knowing that your leadership is helping to uplift
 communities, strengthen our nation, and set an example of faith for
 peoples around the nation," Clinton wrote.
 (...)

 "We will find many, many fair-minded, honest, sincere, God-fearing
 Christians who would like to work together with us to save this
 civilization," Barzingi said.
 (...)
 
 She [Riffat Hassan, a professor of religious studies at the University
 of Louisville] also sounded the convention's theme that Islamic culture
 must reach out to "the people of the book" - Mohammed's term recorded
 in the Koran to describe people who share a faith in the God first
 worshipped more than 3,500 years ago by Abraham, patriarch of ancient
 Israel.

 "Muslims have no special claim on God's grace," Hassan said. "It is
 very, very important to engage in constructive dialogue with Christians
 and Jews."
 [...more...]


24. American Muslim Council Holds Annual Meeting in Washington
USIA, May 11, 1999
 (...) The first part of the convention was devoted primarily to
 political organization and grass-roots lobbying. With American Muslims
 now numbering between four and eight million -- the U.S. census does
 not collect information on religious affiliation -- the AMC and other
 Muslim groups have begun to make serious efforts to organize their
 members for the presidential and legislative elections in November
 2000.
 [...more...]


25. Reform Jews finding faith in old traditions
Cincinnati Post, May 11, 1999
 Reform rabbis from across the country meet in Pittsburgh this month to
 vote on a new direction and definition for their movement, the
 fastest-growing stream of Judaism in America.
 (...)

 But portions of the new platform would be unrecognizeable to Reform
 Jews of past generations.  The platform embraces once-rejected Jewish
 rituals, such as the study of Torah (sacred Jewish law), learning
 Hebrew, keeping kosher, observing the Sabbath.

 For a movement known for radically reforming Jewish laws, Reform
 Judaism is looking awfully traditional these days.
 (...)

 The proposed platform, currently in its sixth draft, contains a curious
 mix of liberal Reform pronouncements about social justice and gender
 equality, and endorsements of more traditional ritual practices.
 [...more...]


26. Jewish Leaders Want Palo Alto to Create Enclave
San Francisco Chronicle, May 12, 1999
 Palo Alto is on the verge of stepping back 2,900 years in history to
 give its Jewish community something new and unheard of in Northern
 California: an eruv.

 In the days of King Solomon, a wall was built around a city to create
 an eruv. The eruv, a district that creates a symbolic extension of the
 home, allows Orthodox Jews to engage in neighborhood life without
 breaking religious bans on doing simple tasks outside the home on the
 Sabbath.

 In modern-day Palo Alto, religious leaders are asking the city to
 recognize the city's perimeter -- about 80 percent of it already
 demarcated by creeks and freeway walls -- as an eruv.
 (...)

 An eruv would create a large private domain that would grant more
 flexibility, Feldman said.  Eruvs exist in about 100 other cities
 around the nation, including Beverly Hills, Washington, D.C., and St.
 Louis.
 [...more...]


=== Noted

27. Catholic children pay tribute to Mary
Toledo Blade, May 8, 1999
 In a centuries-old rite of spring rooted in medieval images, groups of
 Catholic schoolchildren will gather this month to place a crown of
 flowers on the head of a statue of Mary, the mother of Christ.

 Known as the "May crowning," the ritual also is performed by women's
 groups and others to honor Mary as a model of godly womanhood who often
 is referred to as the "queen of heaven."
 (...)

 Today, a renewal of Catholic devotion to Mary brought about in part by
 reports of apparitions around the world has been accompanied by
 heightened interest in the May crowning rite as well.
 (...)

 More recently, Pope John Paul II, who is known for his strong devotion
 to Mary, has further contributed to the revival of the tradition by
 reorganizing the church's rite for the crowning of images in 1982.

 The crowning of Mary is based on "the conclusion that Jesus is king;
 therefore, his mother must be the queen mother," said Sister Jean.
 [...more...]


28. Saints popular among believers
Detroit News, May 11, 1999
 (...)  Near the end of the millennium, saints still maintain their
 popularity with believers. Millions like Gonzalez call on their saints
 every day for help.
 (...)

 There's a saint for almost everything and everyone. There's Joseph
 (protector of the home), Michael (guardian of flight), Gregory
 (singers), Teresa (the soul) and Anne (houseworkers), to name a few.
 There's even a saint for comedians (Vitis) and a saint you call on when
 you have a toothache (Apollonia).

 "We're very practical," says the Rev. Charles McDermott, Vicar 
 Episcopal for Theological and Canonical Affairs for the Diocese of
 Sacramento. "If you have a need, I'm sure there's a saint for you."
 (...)
 
   All of this may appear strange to non-believers, bewildered by all the
 different saints and the roles they play.   Even some Catholics are
 unsure what to make of them. "I don't get it," says one woman, standing
 outside her parish on Easter Sunday. "Do they worship them?"

 The answer to that is no. Saints are honored. They were human beings
 who lived exemplary lives. They are role models, examples meant to
 inspire others to lead richer, spiritual lives. Believers pray to them
 for guidance or for help.
 
     "They're like intermediaries," explains Margaret Hernandez, a case
 worker for Centro Guadalupe, a Catholic social service program. "I pray
 to them because I don't want to bother God all the time."
 [...more...]


29. 'Cool' Bible launched in US
BBC News, May 11, 1999
 An updated, "cool" version of The Bible - retitled The Book - has been
 launched in the United States with the most expensive literary
 promotion in history.
 (...)

 But the mastermind behind The Book, TV evangelist and former
 presidential candidate, Pat Robertson, denied he was promoting The Book
 for profit.  "Our goal is not to sell Bibles. It is to make
 Bible-reading cool and American," he said.
 (...)

 More than 90 million Americans have not read the Bible, suggesting a
 huge, untapped market of potential readers.
 (...)

 American Atheists' spokesman Chris Pokrop said that when a religion
 resorted to trying to make itself "cool" it had "lost the point".
 People should be attracted to their religion because it makes sense,
 it's meaningful and has something applicable to say," he said.
 [...more...]


=== Books

30. On a Higher Level
JournalNow, May 9, 1999
 Joan Parisi Wilcox writes of merging with the moon in an awesome and
 ancient world hidden in the snow-peaked Andes Mountains.  And the
 Clemmons woman says that the lessons she learned from Q'ero Indian
 shamans can be taught and applied in any setting. ''I think the basis
 of their spiritual system is truly universal,'' said Wilcox, who is a
 43-year-old free-lance writer and editor.

 Element Books of Boston has just published Wilcox's first book, Keepers
 of the Ancient Knowledge. In it, she weaves her own experiences with
 the shamans, or ''priests'' of Andean mysticism, through a detailed
 analysis of their complex belief system and threatened lifestyle.
 (...)

 As she began her writing career, she read heavily about religion and
 spirituality. She brought a skepticism to her study, only focusing on
 belief systems that really seemed to produce practical results. After
 learning about Andean mysticism, she felt that it might fit that bill.

 More study about the group led her in 1994 to journey to the land of
 the shamans. She found a country that she said has become the new mecca
 for spiritual seekers. ''Peru today is very much like India was in the
 '60s when the Beatles discovered meditation,'' she said.
 (...)

 Other threats to the Q'ero culture include evangelical Christianity,
 Wilcox said. She knows one shaman who is passing his practices on to
 his nephews instead of his sons, she said, because his sons are
 evangelical Christians who say that his practices are the work of the
 devil.
 [...more...]


=== The Church Around The Corner

31. Giant banner ad of Schiffer drapes Berlin church tower
Nando Times, May 10, 1999
 A larger-than-life banner featuring German supermodel Claudia Schiffer
 was draped over Berlin's landmark Memorial Church Monday in a
 controversial move to fund renovations to the damaged structure.

 French cosmetics company L'Oreal SA sponsored the renovation of the
 church's 174-foot-high bell tower with $130,000 in exchange for the
 right to hang the giant banners featuring the blonde beauty and other
 models on the tower's scaffolding.
 [...more...]


Compiled by Anton Hein
Apologetics Index
http://www.apologeticsindex.org/

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