K-House eNews For The Week Of May 18, 2010
**TABLE OF CONTENTS**
This Week's 66/40 Radio Broadcast
Articles and Commentary
- Fighting al-Qaida - And Somewhat Winning - (Read)
- Draft Of New NATO Mission Statement Released - (Read)
- Pope Benedict XVI: Is Joseph Ratzinger All Talk? - (Read)
Important News Headlines
Memory Verse of the Week
**THIS WEEK'S 66/40 RADIO BROADCAST**
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Ruth and Esther
The Romance of Redemption
Both of these books, filled with all the intrigue, romance, and action of any modern-day screen play, have been heralded for their literary value for centuries. But this is not their most rewarding feature. God's use of these two faithful women brings a new understanding of God's faithfulness and the importance of our faithful participation.
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**ARTICLES AND COMMENTARY**
FIGHTING AL-QAIDA - AND SOMEWHAT WINNING -
(Print)
Thankfully, Al Qaida has failed to accomplish a major terrorist attack in America since 2001. However, the jidahist organization has continued its destructive activity around the world and has fought to undermine the stability of young post-Saddam Iraq through acts of terror. Despite the tenacity of Al Qaida's disciples, however, victories are being won.
South Africa:
On Monday, Iraqi security chief Major General Qassim Atta announced that al-Qaida planned to commit a terrorist attack at the World Cup, pushing South African security personnel into high alert. The United States has the Super Bowl. The rest of the world watches the FIFA World Cup - the premier competition of the other football. From June 11 to July 11, 2010, soccer enthusiasts will follow as the world's best teams battle it out in ten different venues from Cape Town to Durban across South Africa.
South African authorities have been working to straight-jacket the nation's violent crime problem ahead of the World Cup. Security precautions have been implemented to protect the sports event from terrorist attacks, but Monday's announcement from Iraq shifted South Africa's security focus. Reportedly an al-Qaida operative in the custody of the Iraqi security forces, Abdullah Azzam Salih Misfar, admitted that a major terrorist attack was planned for the World Cup, and the impetus went all the way up to al Qaida's second highest leader, Ayman al-Zawahiri.
Tuesday, however, Misfar contradicted the Iraqis' announcement, saying that he had merely passed on a suggestion to the al-Qaida leadership, but no World Cup terrorist plot had actually come to fruition. He hadn't ever talked to al-Zawahiri, he said, but had just passed on his idea through other al-Qaida officials. He never heard back about it.
"I wrote the idea and sent it to Abu Hamza," Misfar said. "It was relayed through other men, but I didn't get a reply."
Hamza, also known as Abu Ayub al-Masri, was killed last month.
al-Qaida in Iraq
According to Misfar, al-Qaida in Iraq is not doing very well. A number of senior operatives have been killed or arrested since the capture last month of Munaf al-Rawi, whom Misfar called the Baghdad chief. Al-Rawi was an al-Qaida gopher through whom many messages were exchanged, and his capture has proved disasterous for al-Qaida. The jihadists are already weakened and short on funds; Misfar has linked al-Qaida with robberies of gold stores in Baghdad.
Al-Qaida has continued to keep a firm face, however. The alleged head of Islamic State of Iraq (an extremist Sunni organization considered an umbrella organization for al-Qaida), Abu Omar al-Baghdadi, and the leader of al-Qaida in Iraq, Abu Ayyub al-Masri, were both killed in a raid in Baghdad last month. In an effort to prove it's still kicking, al-Qaida has succeeded in a number of bombings since the March elections and has announced replacements for its slain leaders. ISI's new "war minister" al-Nasser Lideen Allah Abu Suleiman declared war against Iraq's military and police and said the ISI would give the Shiites, "a long gloomy night and dark days colored in blood."
Al-Qaida's forces in Iraq are weakened and struggling to hang on. Their forces are small and their leaders continually get knocked down by the Iraqi and American security forces. They are not invincible. At the same time, this beaten bunch has remained determined and has refused to give up. New recruits also keep pouring in across the Syrian border, despite efforts to keep the border's many ravines guarded and blocked.
As they fight these bloody men, the security forces of Iraq can learn a valuable lesson; they need to be even more resolute than the terrorists. Al-Qaida is merely made up of human beings - human beings who often talk bigger than they can act.
Related Links:
World Cup Bomb 'Plot' Was Just An idea, Says al-Qaida Accused - The Guardian
Curbing the Al Qaeda Threat in Africa - ABC News
Al Qaeda's Iraq Network Replaces Slain Leaders - Reuters
Al-Qaeda Number Two Plotting World Cup Terrorist Attack - Telegraph.co.uk
DRAFT OF NEW NATO MISSION STATEMENT RELEASED -
(Print)
The North Atlantic Treaty Organization released a draft of its new mission statement on Monday. The years of the Cold War are over, but nothing likes to die, international organizations included. And like anything living, NATO wants to be fed and continues to grow and stretch itself.
According to this draft, NATO has rewired itself and during the next decade the organization will push for peace in Afghanistan, seek closer ties with Russia, stand in the way of Iranian aggression, and focus on providing for the common defense of its member states. Not only is NATO not dead, it's continued to give itself free reign over the world. The potential excuses for NATO military actions appear limitless, along with the geographic arena in which it might contemplate action. At the same time, there is division in Europe about how to handle the problems faced by those nations.
Afghanistan:
The war in Afghanistan is the largest mission ever attempted by NATO, and the new mission blueprint makes it clear that success in Afghanistan is important for the security of the region. The draft states that, "The Alliance is committed to the creation of an Afghanistan that is stable and that does not serve as a platform for international terrorist activity; it should continue working with its partners to achieve this strategically important objective."
Yet, while the US has pushed for a consistent NATO role, European nations are seeking to cut back their military spending. Europe will not endure the death toll forever either. Nearly 1,800 NATO soldiers have been killed fighting in Afghanistan.
NATO Secretary-General Anders Fogh Rasmussen argued the importance of being willing to leave home for self protection, as in Afghanistan, saying, "[W]e may have to go beyond our borders to defend our borders."
However, even Rasmussen seemed to have resigned Afghanistan to a potential loss, saying, "But Afghanistan is not a make or break situation for NATO," said Rasmussen. "NATO is about much more than Afghanistan ... despite the fact that there is so much focus on Afghanistan right now." (That's not the John Paul Jones winning attitude.)
Russia:
The Soviet Union collapsed nearly twenty years ago, and NATO has struggled to carve out a new meaning for its existence in the post Iron Curtain era. According to the draft statement, NATO will work toward greater partnership with its former enemy Russia. NATO countries and Russia have a mutual interest in fighting drugs and terrorism and in bringing peace to Afghanistan.
Of course, it isn't a surprise that Russia has seen the expansion of NATO as a threat. In May of 2009, Russia issued a national security strategy of its own, which included concern about NATO's power. "The instability of the existing global and regional architecture, especially in the Euro-Atlantic region… is an increasing threat to the international security," the document said.
Missile defense is also a big concern for Russia. While the Obama Administration set aside US plans to build a missile defense shield in the Czech Republic and Poland, a system may be set up in Romania and Bulgaria by 2015. NATO's new blueprints call for cooperation with Russia over missile defense, saying, "Missile defense is most effective when it is a joint enterprise and cooperation … between the alliance and its partners – especially Russia – is highly desirable."
Russian Deputy Prime Minister Sergei Ivanov in an news conference on Tuesday said that Russia will be able to make decisions by the end of the year about how much it will cooperate with NATO on any proposed missile defense system.
Self-Defense:
Former US Secretary of State Madeleine Albright chaired the committee that drafted NATO's New Strategic Concept, and she maintained that defense is still NATO's top priority, saying, "to safeguard security at home the alliance must continue to treat collective defense as its core purpose."
Albright urged member countries to step it up and start putting more money into defense. Only six of NATO's 28 member nations have met their two percent of GDP defense spending goals. Cash-strapped Greece and Turkey have both managed to invest their share (and therefore, the reasoning goes, anybody else can do it too). Altogether, America's European allies spend about $280 billion annually on defense, compared to the $710 billion budget of the US.
Nukes:
The draft statement does not call for the removal of all nukes from Europe, but in fact states that, "as long as nuclear weapons exist," NATO needs to have them. Apparently, NATO doesn't need a great many, though, and should keep them "at the minimum level required by the prevailing security environment." The statement therefore supports continued arms reductions agreements with Russia. Germany, Belgium, and other NATO countries want the United States to remove a good 200 nonstrategic arms from military bases in Belgium, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands and Turkey leftover from the Cold War.
The final draft of the strategic concept will be finshed by the NATO Secretary General this summer and NATO leaders are expected to approve it at the summit in Lisbon, Portugal in November.
Related Links:
NATO Mission Statement Supports Retaining Tactical Nukes - AP
NATO Emphasizes Defense Spending Despite Crisis - Reuters
Russia On Standby As NATO Goes Global - TV-Novosti
NATO Unveils Draft Of New Mission Statement - AP
Draft Of New Strategic Concept for NATO - NATO
The Redefinition of NATO (1999) - Koinonia House
POPE BENEDICT XVI: IS JOSEPH RATZINGER ALL TALK? -
(Print)
"The cardinals have elected me, a simple, humble worker in the Lord's vineyard. I am comforted by the fact that the Lord knows how to work and act even with insufficient instruments. And above all, I entrust myself to your prayers." - Joseph Ratzinger upon his installation as Pope Benedict XVI.
Last week Pope Benedict travelled to the Fatima shrine to worship, drawing 500,000 followers with him to the spot where the Virgin Mary allegedly gave visions and prophecies to three Portuguese children. This week Portugal ignored Pope Benedict XVI's pleas and legalized same-sex marriage, becoming the sixth European nation to do so. The Pope had criticized both gay marriage and abortion as "insidious and dangerous threats to the common good". Whether people adore or ignore the Pope, he holds a powerful position in the world. Who is the man under the Triregnum, this man who influences so many millions of people?
No Nazi:
Joseph Ratzinger was born in 1927 in the Bavarian village of Marktl am Inn, Germany, the youngest of three children. His father, Joseph Ratzinger, Sr., was a Anti-Nazi Catholic policeman. The family moved four times during Joseph's early upbringing because of conflict with the Nazi regime, eventually settling in the Catholic town of Traunstein. There, young Joseph would have undoubtedly witnessed the effects of Nazi cruelty toward Jews, the disenfranchised and conscientious objectors. We find no concrete examples of the Ratzinger family's active participation in resistance against the Nazis. Joseph Ratzinger's failure to take a more personal and active role in defying the Nazi authority or assisting victims, which were certainly abounding, is a popular point for debate among Pope Benedict XVI's supporters and critics alike.
In 1941, Ratzinger was required by law, with all 14-year-old German boys, to join the Hitler Youth. He did so with apparent reluctance and avoided the meetings, though proof of attendance would reduce his seminary tuition. In the same year, Nazis took one of Ratzinger's 14-year-old cousins, a boy with Down's Syndrome, from his family home during the Nazi Aktion T4 eugenics movement.
Joseph was conscripted into the Flak - the German anti-aircraft corps - while still in seminary, but illness prevented him from participating in much of the military training and duties. He later deserted the corps in 1945, right before the end of the war, and was held briefly in an Allied POW camp. Joseph and his brother George underwent "repatriation" in 1945 after WWII, and were first admitted to St. Michael Seminary in Traunstein, and then the Ducal Georgianum of the Ludwig-Maximilian University. Upon graduation, both were ordained.
The Controversial Pope:
Since his installment as the Vatican's highest official, Pope Benedict XVI's viewpoints have drawn heavy criticism from a number of groups, including world-wide gay, Jewish, and Muslim communities, abortion advocates, and victims of papal sex scandals. He has been called prior to his selection, perhaps unjustly, "the panzer cardinal," and "the pope's hitman," and by The LA Times, a "hard-line doctrinal watchdog." His personal manner, however, is frequently expressed in a mild, gentle, logical way, humble and devoid of either the icy pomp of long-past papal figures or the charisma and geniality of his friend John Paul II. He is known for embracing Jews, calling them, "my brothers and sisters of the Jewish people, to whom we are joined by a great shared spiritual heritage, one rooted in God´s irrevocable promises." On the other hand, he's made a large number of negative statements toward Islam and Buddhism, homosexuality and abortion.
Conservative Christians tend to embrace this "reactionary" Father precisely for his staunch call to Universal Truth and his return to fundamental Catholicism that eschews secular relativism.
"We are moving toward a dictatorship of relativism which does not recognize anything as for certain and which has as its highest goal one's own ego," Benedict warns regarding our current culture, and admonishes, "being an adult means having a faith which does not follow the waves of today's fashions or the latest novelties."
The current Pope has shown by his public statements on Islam and non-traditional gender roles that he is capable of speaking his convictions, no matter how unpopular they may be. But has he shown by his past actions - or possibly his inaction - the same willingness to protect the defenseless?
The media frequently advertises Pope Benedict as scientific, bookish, monkish, theologically conservative, even reactionary and repressive. Less conservative critics of Benedict point out that exposure to the Nazi regime and subsequent resistance, and even to the liberating culture of Germany in the 1960's should have instilled the importance of reasoned questioning of corrupt authority in a young Joseph Ratzinger. Perhaps it has. The Pope has drawn fiery condemnation from The NY Times for his conservative political positions. Yet Benedict's frequent criticism of corporate greed, his opposition to the Iraq War, his push for nuclear disarmament, and "his mild and sentimental socialism has somehow escaped notice" by "liberal commentators," writes The Weekly Standard's Joseph Bottum in a May 2005 article.
The Scandals:
The Catholic Church is now deeply embroiled in allegations of sexual crimes committed by bishops in the US, Britain, Germany, Austria, France, the Netherlands, and even Italy herself. The Church faces a massive fallout that includes rapidly declining membership, dissatisfied believers, loss of faith, and an increasingly negative perception among Muslims, Jews, atheists, and Buddhists. The Catholic Church also must compensate for a decrease in charitable donations from members, which has already forced the Church to sell a number of its churches and schools.
Pope Benedict XVI seems, according to his own words, to be a devoted servant of social justice. Yet over the past decade, lawsuits filed against the Holy See contend that the Vatican was aware of the sexual misconduct of priests such as the late Wisconsin Rev. Lawrence Murphy, who may have abused as many as 200 deaf boys from 1950-1974. Victims and families contend that the Church was aware, yet did not remove these predators from their posts, but in some cases, "rehabilitated" and moved the offenders to a new jurisdiction where new victims were allegedly targeted.
While he only recently became Pope, Ratzinger apparently bears some responsibility for the Catholic Church's negligence. Over a period of several decades, thousands of allegations of sexual misconduct were recorded by bishops and sent to then-Cardinal Ratzinger at the Congregation of the Doctrine of the Faith, an office within the Vatican responsible for priest conduct, trials, and defrockings. When the initial allegations against Wisconsin priest Lawrence C. Murphy, who worked at a renowned school for deaf children from 1950 to 1974 came to light, Cardinal Ratzinger failed to bring him to trial because he was old and ill, and too much time had passed according to the Catholic Church's statute of limitations. Considering that Murphy had molested about 200 boys, Ratzinger's lack of action reflects the Catholic Church leadership's serious neglect of the damage done to these child victims.
The Pope has admitted the failure. Benedict XVI has been the first Catholic official in the wake of the recent sexual abuse allegations to publicly acknowledge the Church's own guilt, rather than dismissing media coverage of the scandal as a smear campaign, as other Catholic officials and spokespeople have repeatedly done. Though he did not specifically mention sexual misconduct, Pope Benedict XVI recently spoke to reporters during his trip to Portugal, declaring sexual abuse against children "truly terrifying," and insisting, "The church thus has a profound need to relearn penitence, accept purification, learn forgiveness, but also the necessity of justice."
An estimated 150,000 loyal supporters gathered in the rain and gloom of St. Peter's Square this May in a show of solidarity for their pontiff, who indirectly spoke regarding the allegations. Benedict spoke out, not against the media, but against human weakness of sin, "the spiritual evil that unfortunately sometimes infects even members of the church."
All eyes are on the Pope now, waiting to see whether victims of the decades-long abuse will receive justice, or how the church officials who committed crimes, either by action or inaction, will be treated by the Roman Catholic Church. The Pope's reaction to the current scandal is vital for its moral credibility.
While Protestants reject a large number of the teachings of the Roman Catholic Church as unbiblical, the rest of the world doesn't know the difference. While many Protestants consider the Vatican a diabolical institution, much of the world looks to the Pope as the leader of Christianity on earth. Whether we like it or not, the scandals in the Roman Catholic Church affect the willingness of people to hear the Gospel. That the Pope has acknowledged the sin and failure rather than placing blame on other people is good, but the Roman Catholic Church, and specifically Pope Benedict XVI, truly need to continue to deal with this problem - with actions and not just words.
Related Links:
Portugal Allows Same-Sex Marriage - ABC News (AU)
Pope Benedict Says Giant Mass at Fatima Shrine - BBC News
The Priest Sex Abuse Scandal is Closing In On The Pope - USA Today
Vatican Declined to Defrock U.S. Priest Who Abused Boys - The New York Times
Pope Benedict XVI - Jewish Virtual Library
Biography of Pope Benedict XVI - The Vatican
The Last European Pope? - The Weekly Standard
A Time for Contrition - The New York Times
**IMPORTANT NEWS HEADLINES**
Ancient Pyramid Tomb Found In Mexico - May 18, 2010
Archaeologists say they have discovered an ancient tomb inside a pyramid in Chiapas in southern Mexico. They say it could be 2,700 years old, making it the oldest burial site in a pyramid in Mesoamerica. The team of archaeologists from Brigham Young University in the US, the Mexican National Institute of History and Anthropology, and the National Autonomous University of Mexico said the discovery suggests that the use of pyramids as burial sites goes back much further than previously thought and could pre-date Mayan culture.
BBC News
Iran Agrees To Ship Some Uranium To Turkey - May 17, 2010
The United States will move ahead with its press for sanctions against Iran, despite Teheran's announcement that it will ship some of its low-enriched uranium abroad, American officials said on Monday.
White House spokesman Robert Gibbs said the US would continue to work with its international partners through the UN Security Council "to make it clear to the Iranian government that it must demonstrate through deeds – and not simply words – its willingness to live up to international obligations, or face consequences, including sanctions."
The Jerusalem Post
Volcanic Ash Grounds 1000s of Planes - Again - May 17, 2010
Volcanic ash from Iceland grounded 1,000 flights and delayed hundreds of thousands of passengers in parts of northern Europe on Monday. However, the forecasters said the situation would improve during the week. Eurocontrol, the European air traffic agency, said about 1,000 flights out of a total of 28,000 in Europe had been cancelled on Monday, but it offered passengers hope that the disruption will soon pass. The same Icelandic volcano’s ash last month prompted a number of European countries to close their airspace for nearly a week and travel British Airways Chief Executive Willie Walsh called the closure was a "gross over-reaction". "It can be managed and we don't need these blanket closures," he told reporters in London.
Reuters
Portugal Legalizes Same Sex Marriage - May 17, 2010
Portugal's President Anibal Cavaco Silva says he will sign a law legalising same-sex marriage passed by parliament earlier this year.
The law had been fiercely opposed by conservatives in the Catholic country.
The ratification will make Portugal the sixth country in Europe to allow same-sex marriage after Belgium, Spain, Norway, the Netherlands and Sweden.
BBC News
Fighting A Lawless Al-Qaida In Africa - May 15, 2010
In the bare and unremarkable desert town of Thiès, a platoon of commandos from Mali and Senegal are scaling a building's edifice, one handful of rope at a time. This is practice.
According to the script, a carload of European sightseers on their way, perhaps, to a waterbuck-filled nature reserve, will be kidnapped by desert bandits, ransomed to Al Qaeda in the Maghreb, and whisked to Senegal's northeastern frontier. And that's where a bit of rope-climbing expertise could save the day, as Senegal's finest shimmy down from hovering helicopters to stage a rescue.
ABC News
**MEMORY VERSE OF THE WEEK**
Let all bitterness, and wrath, and anger, and clamour, and evil speaking, be put away from you, with all malice: And be ye kind one to another, tenderhearted, forgiving one another, even as God for Christ's sake hath forgiven you.
Ephesians 4:31-32 KJV
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