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Archive for October, 2009

31
Oct

Stealing the First Fruits

I’m sure everyone has heard or read about ‘Bishop Tamaki’ this week. NZ’s own self proclaimed King and Bishop cult leader has risen to the spotlight, and for good reason. While I will not hark on about his seriously misguided and laughable (not to mention unbiblical) oath he had 700 men of his church swear to, as that would merely be a waste of words, I would like to touch upon something else that is just as sinister, his blatant abuse of funds ‘freely’ given to him from his congregation during the ‘First Fruits’ offering at his services.

This is a ‘church’ based in south Auckland. It would naturally attract many people within the area from a lower socioeconomic background. As it stated in the NZ Herald, members sometimes come with a background of abuse or other problems. In general, we are not talking about rich people here.

Then comes the story from the NZ Herald this morning, detailing Brian Tamaki’s massive $350,000 – $500,000 NZD and up salary taken directly from church goers. These people are giving to him over and above the required 10% of their salary tithing to the church. This is repulsive abuse of his church goers. While many in his congregation work blue collar jobs, possibly struggle to pay bills each month, he owns expensive property, drives flash cars, has a wardrobe of seemingly endless suits, and lives a lavish lifestyle not seen by any within his church.

This ‘First Fruits’ offering given to Tamaki was initially brought to Destiny Church by Michael Pitts, from Cornerstone Church in Ohio. Take a look at their website – seem similar to Destiny Church? This man is also obsessed with his own image and is the prominent figurehead of that Church as well.

What is worse, is this offering is justified with scripture!?! When people lose sight of Christ and pursue their own ends it is tragic to watch. This is exactly what has happened with Bishop Tamaki.

I fully believe people should give generously of what is given to them by God. After all, we are merely caretakers of what is ultimately God’s, our money, possessions, any earthly good really. But, when this offering is warped into a profit seeking business, it has lost its original intention, to glorify God, and is merely supporting a sinful enterprise.

I hope and pray the people at Destiny Church are able to clearly see how they are being led astray by a leader who has turned his back on the Gospel, manipulating his flock to achieve his own ends.

30
Oct

When in Rome…

Hello all! I am in Rome this week and because of the relative unreliabilty of the internet, will have to keep this mercifully short. I kind of like Rome as everywhere you turn there seems to be more historic ruins, or grand churches. Even the most unremarkable corner church is gorgeously decorated and old inside. I love the place as it just reeks of ancient history and there are so many things around that just attest to the majesty of the Roman Empire at it’s peak. Ok so the ancient Romans were far from perfect, but they could sure build some nifty buildings.

I wonder what growing up in Rome would be like being surrounded by all this history. I guess you would probably tend to take it for granted. Apparently quite a high propotion of Italians consider themselves to be Catholics, although this number is far higher than Italians who actual profess to still go to Mass. Which is a shame really as the Churches here are wonderful places to worship or just sit (although sitting in silence is a little harder due to the constant stream of tourists).

We even managed to unexpectedly see the Pope this past Sunday. In a line for what we thought was entry to St. Peter’s, we were instead herded into a small penned in area at the side of a makeshift stage. There was Mass in St. Peter’s and after this, quite a few priests and bishops filed out (apparently there was some sort of synod regarding Africa but I’m a bit sketchy on the details). Anyway, the Pope filed out and gave a short little address in Italian I think. The truncated English version probably didn’t do it justice. Perhaps someone will fill me in on the details.

We’ve also seen the chains that chained St. Peter, some pieces of the holy crib, and numerous relics of saints. We stopped by at the Holy Stairs but found the place locked up. Similarly at Santa Croce in Gerusalemme (where I believed from memory housed the nails used in the Crucifixion and also a piece of the good thief’s cross) we found the doors closed between 12pm – 3.30pm most likely for the afternoon siesta period. Even the local begger outside the Church must have been siesta-ing as his/her post and sign were left neatly placed on a seat. Whilst the skeptic in me thinks that it is quite unlikely that those were the actual pieces of the crib, or those were the actual stairs Jesus climbed up to see Pilate, or that those were the actual nails used, I guess that is what having some measure of faith is about. Does it really matter if these weren’t the actual items used as long as they focus you on prayer / meditation?

Anyway, we leave Rome behind tomorrow and make our way to Venice. And although our efforts to see Bernini’s sculpture of The Ecstacy of St. Therese (made more mainstream by Dan Brown) were thwarted by the infamous Italian siesta, it has been a most agreeable few days spent at the home of the Catholic Church (although I guess you could technically argue that is Vatican City).

29
Oct

one knows they are busy when…

…they are getting married in 3 weeks and they feel like it’s going to be one of the more stress-free activities. This is basically an excuse for me having to post an article below without much commentary. Mea Culpa! I promise I will be better next week!

“Law & Order” Abortion Episode Outrages Pro-Abortion Groups
By James Tillman
WASHINGTON, DC, October 26, 2009 (LifeSiteNews.com) — Last Friday’s episode of Law & Order on NBC, entitled “Dignity,” has infuriated pro-abortionists while pleasantly surprising pro-lifers with an unexpectedly even-handed treatment of the issue of abortion.
Ripping its plot from recent headlines, “Dignity” begins with the murder of late-term abortionist Dr. Walter Benning (Matthew Boston) during a church service. Although the episode has a disclaimer stating that the story is fictional, its initial outline closely matches the case of the late-term abortionist Dr. George Tiller, who was shot and killed in a church in Wichita, Kansas, on May 31st.
After the murderer, Wayne Grogan is captured and confesses to the crime, while his defense attorney, Roger Jenkins (Richard Thomas), argues that the killing was justified because Grogan was acting in defense of someone else – namely, an unborn infant whom Benning was going to abort.
In the end Grogan is found guilty of the murder; but over the course of the episode a host of the arguments and issues surrounding abortion are covered in a manner unusually sympathetic to the pro-life cause.
As Dave Andrusko writes on the NRLC’s website: “What makes the Law & Order episode so riveting is that virtually every pro-life argument you knew you would never hear on a network program is a part of ‘Dignity.’”
“More important, it occurred to me as I listened in utter astonishment that each of these observations could have been presented in a way that was artificial, forced, or (as so often is the case with network portraits of pro-lifers) something that you would expect from an idiot. None of that was the case. These were real flesh-and-blood people, not caricatures.”
Early in the episode, for instance, Detectives Lupo and Bernard argue with each other over abortion. Lupo says that forcing an 11-year old rape victim to give birth is unthinkable, to which Bernard responds: “You got it backwards, man! The horrible thing is the rape! Not the bringing of a life into the world.”
He continues by pointing out that he himself was born to an unwed mother, and that Lupo very nearly had another partner.
Similarly, when Executive Assistant District Attorney, Michael Cutter argues with District Attorney Jack McCoy about whether they should give Grogan a plea bargain, Cutter compares abortion to slavery and Grogan to John Brown. He continues by arguing that Roe v. Wade conformed but to the science of its day, and that it deserves another look.
When witnesses begin to take the stand, however, the contrast between the pro-abortion and pro-life position only grows.
One abortionist, called as witness for the prosecution, says that the life of the disabled child Benning was going to abort would be without dignity. He continues to say that even if politicians make abortion illegal and “bow to the hypocrites and fools” of the pro-life movement, he would continue to perform abortions despite the law.
Perhaps the most surprising issue the episode raised is the connection of abortion with infanticide. Over the course of the case, the defense, desiring to show that Benning was a murderer, calls a witness to testify how a breathing, born-alive infant was killed by Dr. Benning.
“The boy was crying a little cry, moving his arms and legs,” she says. “Dr. Benning cut the umbilical cord; then he took the surgical scissors and inserted it into the base of the baby’s skull.”
Several similarly gruesome, real-life cases of infanticide involving abortionists have occurred in recent years. In one case that drives close to home, an abortionist working for George Tiller, Shelley Sella, was accused of stabbing a born-alive infant in the ribcage until the baby died. In addition, former nurse turned pro-life activist Jill Stanek has also related that while working at a hospital in Illinois, numerous babies born alive after failed abortions were simply left to die in the “soiled utility room.”
Pro-abortion groups have responded to the Law & Order episode with outrage that the show would feature an abortionist modeled on Dr. Tiller in a less than beatific light.
Charlotte Taft writes that “NBC cannot hide behind the words” by stating that the story is fictitious. For the media to make a negative story so blatantly ripped off the death of “St. George,” as she dubs Tiller, is to murder him again. “There is no balance here,” she says.
Kate Harding complained on Salon.com that the episode features only two groups: “Anti-choicers, who believe fetuses’ rights trump women’s, and the pseudo-pro-choicers, who are conveniently persuaded to agree with them by the end of the episode.”
“Dignity” may be watched on iTunes.
URL: http://www.lifesitenews.com/ldn/2009/oct/09102603.html

26
Oct

Break before you break

This is my fourth year of taking advantage of blogging on Labour Day, but even with the sleep I’m running on (or lack thereof) I’ll try not to recycle previous posts. :)

This Labour Day comes in quite a different context for me this year. Unlike previous years, Labour Day 2009 is at the end of four weeks of leave that I have taken from work. Some of this leave was “parental support leave”, but the majority was annual leave I have been saving up in preparation for the birth as well as spending time finishing renovations on our house and moving back in.

So there’s the context – Labour Day this year is the end of my longest long weekend in recollection. ;) While you would have to have a pretty active imagination to have called this a holiday, it was a break from work to focus on other things. Leading up this break, I was a red alert on my own HR report which normally shows those of my staff who have too much leave owing to them. Our company believes that if you have too much leave owing to you, not only is it a risk to the organisation in terms of leave liability, but it’s a sign for managers that work/life balance may be out of kilter. HR are very keen in staff taking regular breaks to relax and recharge, lest you burn out.

And I have to agree. I haven’t had a decent break in quite a while, in order to have this time off at this stage of the year. But as I face the rather unappealing prospect of returning to ironing shirts and shaving every morning, I look back over these past four weeks and can definitely see the sense in taking the break, and in taking regular breaks. I’m even trying to rediscover the Sabbath and trying not to work on Sundays.

What about you out there? How do you like to holiday? Traditional Christmas/summer long break, or winter ski holiday? Regular long weekends, or school holidays? Or, are you as I appeared on my report – a bit of a worry for the HR people at your work because you haven’t been on a break for a long long time and you may just be wound up so tight with stress and pressure that if you are placed under any more stress you will probably just snap! ;)

25
Oct

The good fight is a battle

Pope Benedict XVI canonized five new saints this month, including Hawaii’s Blessed Damien de Veuster, who has been widely venerated worldwide on the ‘secular’ stage, as well as in Catholic circles.

Born in 1840 (the same year the Treaty of Waitangi was signed here!), in 1873, he went to the leper colony on Molokai after volunteering for the assignment. I’m not sure if I’m would be up for volunteering at a leper colony on a lonely island. It was true self sacrifice. Yet, day by day, even by saying no to a second piece of chocolate cake (which might also have benefits for one’s waistline as we approach the holiday season!) , we can all learn temperance, make ourselves a little stronger, and slowly get better at controlling ourselves and sacrificing ourselves in bigger ways.

Damien cared for lepers of all ages, but particularly the children segregated in the colony. Sadly, he announced he too had caught lepracy in 1885, but despite that he still continued to build hospitals, clinics, and churches, and some six hundred coffins, while battling with the disease himself.

He was declared venerable in 1977, and Pope John Paul II declared him beatified on June 4, 1995. Then on February 21 this year the Vatican announced that Father Damien would be canonized. The ceremony took place in Rome on October 11, 2009, in the presence of King Albert II of the Belgians and Queen Paola as well as the Belgian Prime Minister and several cabinet ministers, completing the process of canonization. It all sounds very posh! – although a far cry from the stage on which Damien himself lived his life, I’m sure he enjoyed the spectacle from heaven.

Pope Benedict XVI has said that the figure of Father Damian “teaches us to choose the good fight not those that lead to division, but those that gather us together in unity.” Funny how we all have that innate sense of right and wrong – like Batman or Harry Potter or little boys playing cowboys and Indians with a ‘good guy’ and a ‘bad guy’.

Why the focus on saints by the last two Popes? These people formally recognised by the Church are an inspiration to us and remind us of the universal call to holiness. I find it especially heartening that even people who were eventually saints were often discouraged in prayer when they frustratingly continued in bad habits – but their experiences warn us not give up because of that and forfeit God’s grace.

24
Oct

Talk about a conversion at gunpoint…

The power of the Gospel is incredible. It can transform even the most seemingly hardened of hearts in an instant. It can make the impossible possible, the ordinary miraculous, transform the coward into a hero. The most powerful weapon for Christians is the Word of God. And oh how powerful it is…..

This week, an armed robber in the USA went into a check cashing store demanding money. Once behind the counter, the distraught clerk yells out, “You don’t have to do this. Do you know God?!?” The robber is stopped in his tracks, tells the clerk that times were tough and he has to support his little girl, but then miraculously starts to pray with her, asking her for a hug and apologizing to her for what he was doing. He then got onto his knees and continued to pray for 10 minutes! He even removed the bullet from his gun and handed it to the clerk promising not to hurt her.

How undeniably brave this woman was! Talk about God transforming the weak…. With a gun pointed at her head she thinks, “Does this person know Jesus?”!?! Honestly? I have trouble talking and praying with my non-Christian friends, let alone armed robbers demanding cash! Her seemingly gut reaction in time of fear quite possibly saved a soul. He turned himself in the next day saying he is trying to right himself with God.

This reminded me of Luke 12:12, “For the holy Spirit will teach you at that moment what you should say.” God is always with us, especially in the most terrifying of situations. We should never underestimate the power of His Truth.

You don’t believe me? Watch it all on tape:
Robbery Suspect Prays With Victim

23
Oct

Travel diary

Hello all from Florence. We’ve had a great time wandering around the city so far and checking out all the sights. It’s amazing just how old the churches are here and really gives you a great sense of all the history that’s wrapped up in the Catholic Church. I shudder to think what tourists think of our ecclesial architecture when they visit New Zealand. Every chuch here seems to be fantastically decorated with religious icons, paintings, and symbolism. I guess our excuse is that the faith didn’t make it down to us until late so the best we can do is use the architectual / design styles of the time…

We’ve been through German, the Czech Republic, and are currently in Italy. English speakers are in short supply but it seems most Europeans can manage a smattering of English (some very fluently) which is more than I can say for my grasp of other langauges. It makes it interesting when attending Mass. So you go to a Sunday service and you don’t recognise anything the priest is saying. But you do recognise the form of the Mass. So you sit and stand when neeeded, perform the occasional kneel, break out the sign of peace, then walk up to receive communion. So is your Mass ‘experience’ cheapned in a way because you don’t understand anything and your mind is drifting around during the service? But surely the most important part of the Mass is the reception of the Body of Christ. Does then make it ok to just go and receive communion while holidaying in foreign countries then leaving?

If you’re detecting a slight guilty conscience, I haven’t actually done any of the above. (Actually, we missed Mass in Prague on Sunday as we slept in and didn’t locate another Catholic Church…). Well at least we looked for a Church…