Climate Change: Mankind has ‘slapped nature in the face’ says Pope Francis

Mankind has “slapped nature in the face” Pope Francis has said, as new research reveals that we are heading “towards an unsustainable future”.

Speaking to journalists aboard the papal plane on Thursday, the Pope insisted that global warming is a result of human failure to take care of the planet, and urged politicians to make “courageous” decisions at the forthcoming climate change meeting in Paris.

Francis added that he was “disappointed” by “the lack of courage” shown at the climate talks in Peru, echoing environmental groups that were critical of the deal reached in December. Referring to successive drafts at the Lima talks, Samantha Smith of the WWF conservation group said at the time: “We went from weak to weaker to weakest.”

“I think that man has gone overboard,” the Pope said yesterday. “I remember – you already heard this – what an old peasant once told me: God always forgives, we men sometimes forgive, nature never forgives. If you slap it, it will always slap you back. Then, we exploited nature too much, with deforestations, for example.”

The Pope’s words come at a key time, as a group of international scientists this week published two studies revealing that the factors underpinning human life on Earth are at risk.

A staggering increase in urban populations and energy and fertiliser use, in addition to other factors, mean that the Earth could be reaching a “tipping point”, the studies found.

“It’s fairly safe to say that we haven’t seen conditions in the past similar to ones we see today and there is strong evidence that there [are] tipping points we don’t want to cross,” said lead researcher Prof Will Steffen, of the Australian National University and the Stockholm Resilience Centre.

According to the Guardian, Steffen added: “If the Earth is going to move to a warmer state, 5-6C warmer, with no ice caps, it will do so and that won’t be good for large mammals like us. People say the world is robust and that’s true, there will be life on Earth, but the Earth won’t be robust for us.

“Some people say we can adapt due to technology, but that’s a belief system, it’s not based on fact. There is no convincing evidence that a large mammal, with a core body temperature of 37C, will be able to evolve that quickly. Insects can, but humans can’t and that’s a problem.”

Steffen also said there is no evidence to suggest that these factors are “slowing down”, and blamed the economic system for being “fundamentally flawed” in its pursuit of wealth at the expense of the environment.

“When economic systems went into overdrive, there was a massive increase in resource use and pollution. It used to be confined to local and regional areas but we’re now seeing this occurring on a global scale. These changes are down to human activity, not natural variability,” he explained.

“It’s clear the economic system is driving us towards an unsustainable future … History has shown that civilisations have risen, stuck to their core values and then collapsed because they didn’t change. That’s where we are today.”

The two studies will be presented at the World Economic Forum in Davos, which is due to take place 21-25 January 2015.

The Pope is preparing to publish an encyclical on climate change this summer, and has been vocal in his call for everyone to take personal responsibility for their relationship with nature.

Editor-in-chief of Science magazine, Marcia McNutt, labelled Francis a “powerful new ally” of the war on environmental degradation, and his concern has been attributed to his heart for the poor.

Argentinian Bishop Marchelo Sánchez Sorondo told The Tablet: “The Pope is very aware that the consequences of climate change affect all people, but especially the poor. This is the moral consequence, the moral imperative.”

Source: Christian Today

Atlanta Mayor tagged ‘Antichrist’ over decision to sack fire chief Kelvin Cochran

Mayor of Atlanta Kasim Reed has been accused of being the “Antichrist”, “anti-Christian” and a “Muslim” since he made the decision to sack Atlanta fire chief Kelvin Cochran.

He’s responded to the criticism by saying that he is a “man of deep faith” but Cochran violated the city’s standards of conducts.

Cochran self-published a 162-page book last year entitled Who Told You That You Are Naked?, aimed at helping men overcome feelings of guilt over past sins. It defines ‘uncleanness’ as the “opposite of purity; including sodomy, homosexuality, lesbianism, pederasty, bestiality, and all other forms of sexual perversion”. It discusses homosexuality in half a page, but describes it as “vile, vulgar an inappropriate”.

He was suspended for a month in November and fired on 6 January.

Cochran and his supporters say he has been targeted for his Christian faith and a number of prominent Christian groups have backed his cause, including the Family Research Council and the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association.

This week hundreds gathered in the Georgia State Capital in a ‘Standing for our Faith’ rally and there have been calls for a reconsideration of proposed religious freedom legislation in the state.

But what actually happened both before and after the book was published is somewhat disputed.

Reed said that it was a question of Cochran’s judgement and not his faith that cost him his job. He says Cochran failed to ask permission to refer to himself as Atlanta’s fire chief in the book, which could have led people to think that the city supported his views. Cochran denies the claims and says he did seek permission for the book.

The mayor has also said that Cochran should not have distributed the book to colleagues as it would suggest discrimination against homosexuals among city employees.

In a letter distributed by the Atlanta Journal-Constitution earlier this week Reed said: “While you may have read articles that asserted the issue at hand was Chief Cochran’s religious beliefs, I can assure you that those comments could not be further from the truth.

“The truth is that I am a man of deep faith myself, and we are a city of laws. Chief Cochran’s book, ‘Who Told You You Were Naked,’ was published in violation of the city’s Standards of Conduct, which required prior approval from the Board of Ethics. I believe his actions, decisions, and lack of judgment undermined his ability to effectively manage a large, diverse workforce. Every single City of Atlanta employee deserves the certainty that he or she is a valued member of the team and that fairness and respect guide our employment decisions. His actions and his statements during the investigation and his suspension eroded my confidence in his ability to serve as a member of my senior leadership team.”

Speaking to MSNBC news on Thursday, Reed said: “I hired him, at the end of the day, to put out and prevent fires not to be at the centre of one… and the fact that I’m on your show right now is precisely the reason that we require people to get permission before publishing books.”

But since the decision Reed has received a large number of emails from fervent Christians, many of which have been unpleasant.

“If you read the emails, the comments are way out of bounds. They’ve gone way beyond a normal conversation,” he said in an interview with local news station WXIA.

“Now I ran for office and I got elected to this job. I certainly take my share of criticism and heat, but I’ve got a wife and daughter at home. I have crazy people calling my house, hanging up the phone, calling me the Antichrist, saying I’m some form of Muslim. And while I respect Muslims and other faiths, I’m not [a Muslim] and these people are just taking it a bit too far.”

The campaign against Reed’s decision has received high profile support. Franklin Graham encouraged Christians to attend Tuesday’s rally and said on Twitter that it would “send a [message] to those who would discriminate against believers”.

Fox News presenter Todd Starnes told his 48,800 followers to “Send a message to Atlanta City Hall and their anti-Christian mayor” with a link to the petition set up by the Georgia Baptist Convention.

However, Reed has also received considerable support for his decision, both on social media, and in an editorial in the New York Times published on Tuesday.

The editorial board maintained that Cochran’s comments were inappropriate for someone responsible for a “large and diverse work force”. They added that his religious freedom was guaranteed by the First Amendment but that did not permit him to “foist his religious views on other city employees”.

Source: Christian Today

Pastor thrown overboard because he prayed for good weather

Nigerian Christians migrating to Spain for a better life were allegedly thrown overboard after a pastor was blamed for the worsening weather conditions.

Two Cameroonian migrants have been arrested by Spanish police following accusations that they threw up to ten Nigerians overboard, according to Sky News.

After hitting bad weather, a Nigerian pastor – one of around 50 sub-Saharan African migrants making the journey in an inflatable boat – began to pray that they would not sink. Some of his fellow Nigerian migrants prayed with him. Some survivors say the Cameroonian men accused the pastor of causing the stormy weather and then pushed him and the others praying overboard.

When the survivors arrived in Spain, they appeared afraid of the two Cameroonians. This aroused the suspicions of officials.

A statement from the Spanish police, shared on The West Australian, says that “the detainees blamed the bad weather on the Nigerians who were praying and used the boards that covered the bottom of the boat to assault and throw overboard the pastor and the other Nigerian passengers.”

The 50 migrants departed from northern Morocco on 3 December in an inflatable boat without a motor. They were hoping to make the nine-mile journey across the Strait of Gibraltar to Spain.

The boat was found adrift off the coast of Almeria, southern Spain, two days later by Spanish coast guard officials. There were 29 survivors, including a three-year-old child. The rest of the passengers who did not survive “perished due to the rough conditions of these types of voyages,” say police.

Thousands of African migrants risk the dangerous journey from Morocco to Spain every year, many of them never make it to Europe. Last year, 3,500 migrants stranded on boats off Spain’s coast were rescued by the country’s maritime rescue services.

Source: Christian Today

Should LRA commander be forgiven and given amnesty?

A senior commander in the Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA), which has terrorised Northern Uganda and surrounding countries for 20 years, gave himself up to American special forces. Dominic Ongwen has been accused of horrific actions and is to be sent to the International Criminal Court (ICC) in The Hague to face trial on charges of war crimes and crimes against humanity.

A murderer who has enslaved children and been an accomplice to one of the most feared warlords of modern times, whose crimes include abductions, massacres, willful killing, rape, sexual enslavement, mutilation, maiming and child recruitment – surely Ongwen, if anyone, richly deserves his trial.

However, reports the IRIN news service, not everyone agrees. Retired Bishop Baker Ochola, a member of the Acholi Religious Peace Initiative (ALPI) – which has long campaigned for a negotiated rather than military or judicial resolution to the LRA crisis – said: “It’s wrong and a bad thing to take him to ICC. The government of Uganda has no moral authority to support it.

“Even if he committed serious crimes against humanity, we as religious leaders stand for forgiveness. Even those who crucified Jesus on the cross, he prayed and forgave them because they didn’t know what they were doing.”

His argument is partly practical, as Ongwen’s conviction could have implications for those still held by LRA leader Joseph Kony.

“The government should not jeopardise the lives of children and women still in LRA captivity,” he says. “We appeal to the government to forgive and set him free. He should be given amnesty as any rebel who surrenders, renounces and abandons rebellion.”

However, he also makes an ethical point.

“Kony who started the war should be the one tried. Not children who were abducted and forced to commit crimes against their will.”

This is the heart of the problem of Dominic Ongwen, and many like him. Ongwen was captured by the LRA when he was only 10 and on his way to school, reportedly “too little to walk long distances”. Caught at such an impressionable age, he grew up in the likeness of his captors, as many did; the LRA’s practice of indoctrinating recruits by forcing them to mutilate and kill relatives or other children by bludgeoning them or biting them ensured that there would be no return to their previous lives. As the Invisible Children charity says, “Joseph Kony and his commanders brainwash abductees until, over time, these lies become indoctrinated as truth in the fighters’ minds, thereby making the possibility of escape an unfathomable concept.” Ongwen himself rose rapidly through the ranks, becoming a major at 18 and a brigadier in his late 20s. His relationship with Kony fractured, perhaps leading to his decision to turn himself in.

His story, however, indicates the difficulty of deciding the limits of responsibility when children are so thoroughly brainwashed that their sense of right and wrong appears to be entirely warped. Furthermore, the responsibility of individuals for even the most heinous of crimes has in this case to be seen in a particular context: the sense of grievance felt by the Acholi people of Northern Uganda, from which the LRA first originated, and its continuing sense that the child soldiers are still Acholi, no matter what they have done. The LRA did terrible things, but so, say the Acholi, has the Ugandan army; lopsided justice is no justice at all.

So, for instance, Okumu Reagan, the chair of the Acholi Parliamentary Group, told IRIN: “I think [the] international community needs to look at circumstances and scenarios surrounding Ongwen. That abducted children like Ongwen, who were forced and conscripted into the culture of killing, raping, mutilating, maiming, sexual enslavement and other crimes because of the failure by government to protect them, [now] face trial is an insult for humanity.

“Ongwen was abducted, indoctrinated and shaped into a killing machine against his will like other children still in LRA captivity.”

Winnie Laker, a war victim in Kitgum, northern Uganda, says: “It’s double standards by government. Why didn’t it prosecute Kenneth Banya, Onen Kamundulu and Sam Kolo [senior LRA commanders who received amnesties following their capture or surrender] who too committed atrocities in the region? Ongwen should be forgiven and pardoned.” Referring to the reconciliation process central to the culture of the Acholi community, she said: “We want him to undergo Mato Oput.”

Others, however, are less forgiving. One LRA victim, James Odongo, is opposed to an amnesty.

“That guy [Ongwen] committed serious atrocities. He should be immediately transferred to The Hague to face justice. Our justice system in Uganda lacks integrity and already there are some voices calling for Ongwen to be pardoned and given amnesty.

“With the political [election] campaigns around the corner, you never know, [President Yoweri] Museveni may want to use it for political votes.”

While Titus Obali, who spent just under a year in Ongwen’s captivity before escaping, said: “Ongwen and his boys used killing, beating, maiming and raping as a weapon to inculcate and indoctrinate people into the LRA rebellion. He forced many children to kill people.

“I personally witnessed him kill people. He used an axe to hack one of the persons [rebels] who escaped from South Sudan with a gun. He chopped him by the neck. He called us to see. He told us if any of us tried to escape, the same would apply. We feared for our lives. They killed so many people.

“Since he has surrendered, let justice takes its course. If ICC wants me to give my testimony, I am ready to testify against him for the atrocities and crimes I witnessed him commit.”

Child soldiers who have managed to escape or been liberated from the LRA face a desperately difficult time as they try to re-integrate with their society. Many are traumatised; many face fear and rejection because of what they have done. Josephine Inopayngba, 27, a counsellor in Dungu for former child soldiers and LRA abductees, told IRIN that the fear instilled by LRA methods remains. One escapee from the LRA made pregnant by rape “told me she wanted to kill her child at birth. I told her the child is innocent. She said kids kill their parents and she was afraid the child would grow up and kill her.”

Charities such as Invisible Children have effective programmes aimed at encouraging former LRA members to come home and supporting them when they do – though the scale of the problem, because of the sheer numbers involved, is vast, and the region is still poverty-stricken because of corruption, neglect and misgovernment.

The Acholi Religious Leaders Peace Initiative, set up to help negotiate an end to the conflict and mitigate the military response of the Ugandan government – issued its annual end of year peace message in December. It spoke of the need to promote a culture of forgiveness and reconciliation, noting that army action against the LRA in 2008 had only driven it out of Uganda, causing “untold suffering” in the Central African Republic, South Sudan and the Democratic Republic of Congo.

It said that the spirit of unforgiveness had caused “the stigmatisation of those affected with HIV/AIDS, those born in the LRA’s captivity and the girl-child-mothers who came back with children born in LRA captivity. Domestic violence still persists against women; inter-state hatred still exists as a result of the LRA war … Land disputes and other community conflicts have become part of the definition of the contemporary life in Acholi Sub Region.”

If Dominic Ongwen is send to the ICC for trial, it will be years before there is a result. In the meantime, Joseph Kony is at large and the troubles of the Acholi region are unresolved.

It is very tempting to think that a criminal has been caught, and to leave it there. However, the questions of personal, corporate and national responsibility go much deeper than that – and while the ICC might shed some light on these, it cannot provide answers.

Source: Christian Today

David Cameron: ‘I profoundly disagree’ with the Archbishops criticism on inequality

David Cameron has responded to the Archbishops of York and Canterbury’s criticism of income inequality in Britain by saying he “profoundly disagree[s]” with their assessment.

Speaking in Washington, Cameron defended the Church’s “perfect right to speak out” on political issues, but added: “under this Government inequality has fallen so I don’t think the picture they paint is accurate”.

“I look forward to debating and discussing it with them. They have a right to speak out as long as they don’t mind when I speak pretty vigorously in defence of the excellent economic and social record of this government,” he said.

“The fact is you can’t do any of these things in terms of tackling poverty, growing opportunity, rebalancing the economy unless you have a strong economy and we have restored or are restoring the strength of the British economy.”

The Prime Minister’s comments follow the publication of excerpts from a collection of essays on the problem of inequality in the UK. The book, entitled, ‘On Rock or Sand? Firm Foundations for Britain’s Future’ will be published next week. Both John Sentamu and Justin Welby have written a chapter.

According to the Telegraph, the Archbishops accuse the Coalition government of selling a “lie” that economic growth is the solution to all of Britain’s social problems.

“We believe that if we can fix the economy, the fixing of human beings will automatically follow,” Welby writes.

“That is a lie. It is a lie because it is a narrative that casts money, rather than humanity, as the protagonist of God’s story.”

The church leaders also insist that Britain is controlled by a “rampant consumerism and individualism” and call for the redistribution of wealth.

Sentamu specifically condemns the existence of the working poor. “The poor in this ‘age of austerity’ experiencer what I call a ‘new poverty’, where many of the ‘new poor’ are in work,” he writes.

“Once upon a time, you couldn’t really be living in poverty if you had regular wages. You could find yourself on a low income, but not living in poverty. That is no longer so.”

In a YouTube video introducing the book, Sentamu adds: “We need to rediscover the true meaning of the word economy – it means a household, a community whose members share responsibility for each other.

“The giant that must be slayed is income inequality – where some few have far too much and the many have too little.”

Source: Christian Today

Police arrest 12 suspects believed to have link with paris killings as John Kerry arrives

Police arrested a dozen people suspected of helping the Islamist militant gunmen in last week’s Paris killings, the city prosecutor’s office said on Friday as U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry arrived for talks.

The arrests came after Belgian police killed two men who fired on them during one of about a dozen raids on Thursday against an Islamist group and German police said they had arrested two people following a raid on 11 properties linked to radical Salafists.

Centered on southern Paris suburbs including the Montrouge area where a young policewoman was killed in the attacks, the arrests were for suspected “logistical support” for the shootings, an official said.

Seventeen victims and the three attackers died in three days of violence in Paris last week that began with an assault on the offices of satirical weekly Charlie Hebdo.

Paris’s Gare de l’Est train station was evacuated at 8:00 a.m. local time after an alert but reopened about an hour later, the SNCF state railway said, without giving further details.

Kerry met French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius early on Friday before greeting President Francois Hollande with a hug in the courtyard of the Elysee presidential palace.

Kerry had said on Thursday that his visit to France was to give a “big hug” to Paris. Senior U.S. officials were absent from a commemoration march held in Paris on Sunday attended by dozens of world leaders. President Barack Obama’s administration conceded that was an omission.

“I think you know that you have the full and heartfelt condolences of the American people and I know you know that we share the pain and the horror of everything that you went through,” Kerry told Hollande on Friday.

Hollande called the shootings France’s 9/11 in reference to the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks in New York.

“Together we need to find the right responses and this is the purpose of our meeting here today, beyond the friendship,” he said.

Investigators are still poring over the complex chain of events that led to three French nationals – two brothers with Algerian roots and a third of African extraction – perpetrating the worst attacks on French soil for decades.

Belgian investigators said they are trying to establish if a man detained in the city of Charleroi on suspicion of arms trafficking had any links with Amedy Coulibaly, the gunman who killed four Jews at a kosher supermarket in Paris last week.

His lawyer Michel Bouchat told French media the man was not an associate of Coulibaly and had merely sold him a car. The man in question already contacted police on Tuesday to say he had had contacts with Hayat Boumedienne, the partner of Coulibaly now believed to be in Syria.

Source: Reuters

Oscars So White

Within minutes of the announcement of Academy Award nominations on Thursday, up popped a Twitter hashtag to frame a fresh debate about the lack of diversity in Hollywood: #OscarsSoWhite. Before long, it became the social network’s top US trending topic.

The slate for the 87th Academy Awards was a reminder of the glacial pace of change in Hollywood’s film industry, even after what looked like progress for black actors and filmmakers last year stemming from the best picture winner, “12 Years a Slave”.

All 20 actors nominated in the four acting categories this year are white and no women are nominated for either best director or screenwriter. Award watchers called it “the whitest Oscars” in years.

The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences has some 6,000 members, who are selected for the quality of their work and recommendations by existing members. Academy branches, such as for actors and directors, nominate for their categories, and everyone can nominate best picture contenders.

“The Academy is about 90 per cent white and 70 per cent male and we’re seeing the sad result of that in voting,” said Tom O’Neil, founder of awards tracker Gold Derby, referring to figures from a 2012 Los Angeles Times study on Academy voters.

Race and gender are not considered, although behind-the-scenes, members say there are debates at branch level about how to make membership more diverse.

David Oyelowo, the star of “Selma,” and the film’s director Ava DuVernay, both failed to garner nominations despite having been nominated for Golden Globes for their parts in the movie about African-American civil rights activist Martin Luther King Jr. DuVernay made history as the first black woman to be nominated for a Golden Globe best director award.

Some historians had said the film misrepresented President Lyndon Johnson’s stand on voting rights, but critics were quick to point out that “Selma” was only the latest historical picture to draw scrutiny over its accuracy.

The film scored a best picture Oscar nomination, and Academy president Cheryl Boone Isaacs – who herself made history as the first black female president of the organisation – drew attention to that.

“I am extremely happy to note that ‘Selma’ is up for best picture, which means the talent that it took to bring ‘Selma’ to the screen was recognized, and I think that’s important,” she said.

But Selma’s exclusion in all the other key Oscar races and in the director, producer, actor and writer guild awards, is likely to hurt its chances at winning best picture on Oscars night, said O’Neil, the awards tracker.

“Critics proclaimed it’s the best movie of the year and the Oscars shunned it in most categories, so that means something’s wrong,” he said.

Last year “12 Years a Slave” made history as the first film by a black director, Steve McQueen, to win best picture. African-American John Ridley won best adapted screenplay and Lupita Nyong’o won best supporting actress.

But if race is a big part of the debate, so is gender.

All of this year’s best picture nominees – “American Sniper,” “Birdman,” “Boyhood,” “The Grand Budapest Hotel,” “The Imitation Game,” “Selma,” “The Theory of Everything” and “Whiplash” – were male-driven stories with male-dominated casts.

Source: Christian Today

Bishop Eugene Taylor Sutton says Episcopal Church is in ‘deep pain’ over Heather Cook hit-and-run

The Episcopal Bishop of Maryland has said the diocese is in “deep pain” over the hit-and-run in which one of its most senior bishops killed a cyclist.

Bishop Suffragan Heather Cook, the first female bishop in the Episcopal Diocese of Maryland, hit and killed cyclist Tom Palermo, 41, when she drove her SUV into a bicycle lane in Baltimore on 27 December last year. She left the scene of the incident, but later approximately 30 minutes returned.

The Episcopal Bishop of Maryland Eugene Taylor Sutton, Cook’s senior in the diocese, wrote in a pastoral letter on Tuesday: “The Diocese of Maryland is in deep pain. Words barely express the depth of our shock and despair over the events and revelations of the past two weeks.

“There are still too many questions for which there are no easy answers, and we are filled with anger, bitterness, pain and tears. Our thoughts and prayers remain with the Palermo family in their bereavement and for ourselves as a diocese in mourning.”

Cook is now in jail, having been charged with manslaughter, leaving the scene of an accident resulting in death, driving under the influence of alcohol and texting while driving. The 58-year-old bishop has admitted to having and alcohol problem. She has also said she was “in shock” when she left the scene.

She has been placed on administrative leave by the diocese, and Bishop Eugene said that the church was conducting an investigation “to consider the consequences for her actions as well as review the process that resulted in her election.”

One particularly contentious issue is that diocesan officials knew that Cook had been convicted of driving under the influence of alcohol in 2010, but this information had not been formally disclosed to the people who elected her last year.

In his letter Bishop Eugene counsels his diocesan colleagues on how to respond to the tragedy, sharing his own experience.

He wrote: “I hadn’t realized how much I had internalized the weight of responsibility for the tragedy, the sense of shame, and the desperate need to make it all better. Later, praying before the Icon of Christ the Pantocrater, I gazed into those piercing eyes of our Lord, asking: What is Christ wanting to say to me? And what did I want to say to him? After what seemed like an eternity, I was finally able to gaze into his eyes and say: ‘Lord, it’s not your fault.'”

One minister in the diocese has described the situation as an “epic failure” on the part of the Episcopal Church.

Following a diocesan meeting Rev Anjel Scarborough wrote in an open letter to her congregation at Grace Episcopal Church in Brunswick last week.

She said that although the committee that appointed Cook appear to have followed the Church’s national guidelines, “our guidelines are woefully inadequate and naïve in addressing the complex problems of substance abuse and addiction.”

Scarborough lists a summary of the many failures she perceives in this tragic event.

“In the end, this was an epic failure. It was the failure of a process to stop a candidate for bishop from being put forward when clearly her alcoholism was not in remission. It was a failure of Heather’s to choose not to treat her alcoholism and conceal her past. This resulted in the death of a husband and father – something which Heather will have to live with for the rest of her life and for which she may be incarcerated. This was our failure of Heather too.

“As the Church, we set her up to fail by confusing forgiveness with accountability. We did not hold her accountable to a program of sobriety and we failed to ask the tough love questions which needed to be asked. In so doing, we offered cheap grace – and that is enabling.”

Palermo leaves behind a wife and two children aged 6 and 4. Scarborough said that the churches in the diocese had agreed to designate the funds from the offering on 1 February to go to the education fund which has been set up for Palermo’s children. The fund has already collected in excess of $80,000 according to youcaring.com.

Cook’s case is scheduled for a preliminary hearing in February, but it could be a number of months before the trial.

Source: Christian Today

 

US military deploy troops to help train syrian rebels

The U.S. military is planning to deploy more than 400 troops to help train Syrian rebels to fight the Islamic State, along with hundreds of U.S. support personnel, a Pentagon spokesman told Reuters on Thursday.

The U.S. military has not yet identified where it will draw its forces from for the training mission, expected to begin in the spring at sites outside Syria, Colonel Steve Warren said. Turkey, Qatar and Saudi Arabia have offered to host the training.

Warren did not offer additional details on the troop figures, first reported by Defense One website.

The training program is a part of President Barack Obama’s multi-year plan to field local forces in Syria to halt and eventually roll back Islamic State fighters, while pounding them with U.S.-led airstrikes.

The Pentagon has estimated that it can train more than 5,000 recruits in the first year and that up to 15,000 will be needed to retake areas of eastern Syria controlled by Islamic State.

Critics in Congress have said the Pentagon program won’t aid Syrian opposition forces fast enough, however, and question whether it is too small to influence the course of Syria’s multi-pronged civil war between President Bashar al-Assad and his opponents.

Across the border in Iraq, Obama has authorized more than 3,000 U.S. troops to advise and train Iraqi and Kurdish forces.

The disclosure of the planned troop deployments for the Syria training mission came just days after senior U.S. officials met Syrian opposition and civil society leaders in Istanbul to discuss the program.

U.S. Major General Michael Nagata, Combined Joint Interagency Task Force – Syria Director, and U.S. Special Envoy for Syria Daniel Rubinstein led the meeting on the U.S. side.

“These introductory meetings were an important step as we prepare to launch the train-and-equip program later this spring with our international partners,” said Pentagon spokeswoman Commander Elissa Smith.

Source: Reuters

Pope Francisn to canonize a missionary during his visit to US this autumn

Pope Francis said on Thursday that during his trip to the United States in September he would canonize Junipero Serra, a missionary who brought Christianity to the west of the United States in the 1700s.

“In September, God willing, I will canonize Junipero Serra in the United States, who was the evangelizer of the west of the United States,” he told reporters aboard the plane taking him from Sri Lanka to Manila on the second leg of his Asian tour.

Francis is due to visit Philadelphia for a world gathering of Catholic families. While Philadelphia is the only official stop on the tour so far, he is widely expected to visit New York to address the United Nations and Washington to meet President Barack Obama.

Holding the canonization ceremony in the United States opens up the possibility he might visit the western part of the country where Serra worked as a missionary.

Serra, who was born on the Spanish island of Majorca in 1713, went to the Americas in the middle of the 18th century and led one of the first Franciscan missions in California.

He arrived in San Diego in 1769 and spent most of the rest of his life there before dying at a mission in Carmel near Monterey in 1784.

“It’s wonderful to think that this new saint once walked the road that is now the Hollywood Freeway and called it El Camino Real, ‘The King’s Highway’,” Los Angeles Archbishop Jose Gomez said in a statement.

The archbishop said there are “no official plans” for the pope to visit California but people are anticipating hearing more about his plans for this latest canonization.

The Pope said since Serra has for centuries been considered a holy man, he had waived Church rules that require a second miracle to be attributed to the candidate for sainthood after his beatification.

He said Serra was “a great evangelizer”.

Source: Christian Today