Law and Religion Headlines


Tuesday, 13 March 2018

Why so little Catholic concern over Christian persecution?
(Crisis Magazine: A Voice for the Faithful Catholic Laity)

Holding moral theory accountable
(Msfr. Robert Batule, Crisis Magazine: A Voice for the Faithful Catholic Laity)

Believe, that you might understand: Fides et Ratio at twenty
(Charles J. Chaput, archbishop of Philadelphia, First Things)

London Central mosque given Grade II* listed status
(Harriet Sherwood, The Guardian)

Resident good: how video games can be used in church
(Andy Robertson, The Guardian)

Egypt: Copts’ cross tattoos lead to harassment, insults
(World Watch Monitor)

Nigeria Christians want International Criminal Court to investigate Air Force ‘complicity’ in ‘genocide’
(World Watch Monitor)

Petition for national 'Billy Graham Day' holiday has almost 110,000 signatures
(Nathan Glover, World Religion News)

Scientology Network making TV debut
(Erin Jensen, Religion News Service)

Advice for dealing with critics — from a religion writer with plenty of them
(Jonathan Merritt, RNS Column: On Faith & Culture)

Down and out in Catholic Ireland
(Martin E. Marty, Sightings: Religion in Public Life (University of Chicago Divinity School))

Jerusalem tax spat pits heaven against earth
(Michele Chabin, Religion News Service)

5 years of Francis and his gritty Catholicism
(John Gehring, Religion News Service)

Pressure mounts on Trump after Putin’s recent anti-Semitic remarks
(Kimberly Winston, Religion News Service)

Pope Francis at 5: Paradigm shift on mercy, migrants and marriage
(Nicole Winfield, Religion News Service)

France: Decrease of racist, anti-Semitic and anti-Muslim incidents in 2017
(Human Rights Without Frontiers International)

EVENT, 13 March 2018: It is my given right to live life on my own terms - CSW 62 Side Event Registration
(International Federation for Peace and Sustainable Development)

Cardus launches the Voices from the Crowd initiative
(Convivium)

War games: the patriotic clubs training young Americans – in pictures
(Sarah Blesener, The Guardian)

Monday, 12 March 2018

Religion Watch, March 2018, Volume 33 No. 5
(Baylor Institute for Studies of Religion)

Mar 11: Transexual civil rights protection overrides religious claims, violent Buddhists, and more
(Religious Freedom Review: Weekly updates on religious freedom in America)

Cardinal Zen: Vatican-China proposal weakens the Church
(Catholic News Agency)

A Catholic bishop and his rural Chinese parish worry about a deal between Beijing and the Vatican
(Emily Rauhala, The Washington Post)

Freedom of religion by religion for religion
(Muhammad Faizal Abdul Aziz, Malaysia Kini)

Zambia's crackdown on sex dolls sparks debate over rights, religion
(Obert Simwanza, IOL)

Sen. Mike Lee reintroduces religious freedom bill, LGBTQ groups cry discrimination
(Ashley Killough, CNN)

India’s Hindu right intensifies a religious battle over a demolished mosque
(Annie Gowen, The Washington Post)

Schools to display national motto posters over objections
(Associated Press)

Saudi Crown Prince 'commits to interfaith tolerance' in meeting with Anglican leader
(Peter Kenny, Ecumenical News)

Saudi-backed interfaith center boosted by crown prince’s surprising reforms
(Tom Heneghan, Religion News Service)

Moscow still smarting from Bulgarian scandal
(Interfax-Religiia, Russia Religion News)

Pro-Moscow church disciplines Ukrainian cleric
(RISU, Russia Religion News)

Anti-Semitic vandalism in Holland rises 40% to highest level since 2007
(Jewish Telegraphic Agency)

Michigan Supreme Court refuses to reverse injunction against private school aid
(Howard Friedman, Religion Clause)

11th Circuit: Employer offered reasonable accommodation
(Howard Friedman, Religion Clause)

Pakistan swears in new senators, including Hindu woman
(Munir Ahmed, Associated Press)

Pakistan activists say court ruling threatens minorities
(Associated Press)

Pakistan mother prays for release of 'blasphemer' son
(Kamran Chaudhry, La Croix International)

Pakistan under pressure to rein in blasphemy law
(Kathy Gannon, ABC News)

Infamous blasphemy law may be amended to rein in false claims
(F.M. Shakil, Asia Times)

Pakistani court allows Islamist party to enter elections
(Associated Press)

Reporting on military, religion, a 'taboo' in Pakistan
(ANI)

Massachusetts Supreme Court rules on renovation grants to church
(Howard Friedman, Religion Clause)

Bigoted election campaigns, not terror attacks, drive anti-Muslim activity
(Murtaza Hussain, Maryam Saleh, The Intercept)

Same-sex Jewish wedding takes the spotlight in Brazil
(Marcus M. Gilban, Jewish Telegraphic Agency)

Why some Jews in Russia don’t think Putin’s comment about them was anti-Semitic
(Cnaan Liphshiz, Jewish Telegraphic Agency)

Priest’s murder causes fear for clergy’s safety in Congo
(Ngala Killian Chimtom, Crux: Taking the Catholic Pulse)

Berlin 24/7: World religions gather in Berlin's House of One
(Gero Schliess, Deutsche Welle)

6th Circuit: RFRA does not shield business from EEOC enforcement
(Don Byrd, Baptist Joint Committee for Religious Liberty)

Tunisian women march for equal inheritance rights
(Bouazza Ben Bouazza, Associated Press)

Macedonia marks 75th anniversary of deportation of Jews
(Associated Press)

Gay rights group launches campaign to stop adoption bill
(Associated Press)

Public historic preservation grants in Massachusetts can fund church renovations, SJC rules
(Shira Schoenberg, Mass Live)

Condo board accused of fair housing act violation for ban on religious meetings
(Lidia Dinkova, Law.com)

A 'listening' Jesuit to head Europe’s bishops
(Céline Schoen, La Croix International)

Faith and a future: every child free to learn
(CSWPress, FoRB in Full (a blog by CSW))

Another year, another state contemplating the idea of getting out of the marriage license business
(Bobby Ross Jr., GetReligion)

When Boko Haram strikes again, the religious distinctions get blurry in news coverage
(Julia Duin, GetReligion)

Pope Francis is fashioning a new generation of Catholics
(Marie Malzac, La Croix International)

Human Rights Council holds interactive dialogue with the Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea
(Relief Web)

Down and out in Catholic Ireland
(Martin E. Marty, University of Chicago Divinity School: Sightings)

Religious institutions are key to ending gender inequality
(World Council of Churches)

Missional formation plenary encourages discipleship
(World Council of Churches)

Tveit: Cardinal Lehmann worked tirelessly for unity
(World Council of Churches)

Jews agree that Farrakhan is anti-Semitic. After that, it gets complicated
(Ben Sales, Jewish Telegraphic Agency)

Perceived biases, attacks erode trust in the press
(Lata Nott, The Mercury Columns)

In isolated world of pastors, churches mum on troubling clergy suicides
(Leonardo Blair, The Christian Post)

A right to privacy – proposal 22 strikes a huge blow for democracy in Florida
(Brian Scarnecchia, The Christian Post)

Mississippi lawmakers pass 15-week abortion ban with exceptions for emergency cases
(Michael Gryboski, The Christian Post)

Why blacks are really leaving white evangelical churches
(Van Moody, The Christian Post)

What does battling witchcraft in some of the most remote areas of the world look like?
(Stoyan Zaimov, The Christian Post)

You can ban all the symbols but without God there wouldn't be a classroom
(J. Warner Wallace, The Christian Post)

Rabbis seek to break monopoly on Israeli kosher certification
(Danny Zaken, Al-Monitor: Israel Pulse)

Will France hand over Chinese religious refugees to their persecutors? Appeal to President Macron
(Human Rights Without Frontiers International)

Syrian rebels shell Christian town in northwest Hama with rockets, Russian warplanes respond with incendiary bombs
(Andrew Illingworth, AMN)

Wayne State University reverses decision to de-recognize InterVarsity group for requiring its leaders to be Christian
(Heather Clark, Christian News)

Religious photos of the week
(Kit Doyle, Religion News Service)

Philippines arrests militant who guarded US hostages
(Channel News Asia)

How Trump is remaking evangelicalism
(Emma Green, The Atlantic)

Tony Perkins: Religious freedom restoration under Trump will end if evangelicals don't vote Republican
(Leah MarieAnn Klett, The Christian Post)

'Work actively' to oppose abortion reform, Irish Catholics urged
(Henry McDonald, The Guardian)

My family after the Holocaust: ‘The urge to draw a line under the past is strong’
(Kate Figes, The Guardian)

Police investigate possible hate crime over anti-Islam letters
(Press Association, The Guardian)

Star gazing: why millennials are turning to astrology
(Rebecca Nicholson, The Guardian)

Merton hall faces partial demolition to make way for evangelical church
(Robert Booth, The Guardian)

Oxfordshire vicar who spiritually abused boy banned from ministry
(Harriet Sherwood, The Guardian)

Church of Scientology to launch TV network
(Guardian Staff, The Guardian)

Scientology launches its own TV network today – just like regular television, only more terrifying
(The Guardian)

Five years on, Pope Francis has failed to deliver on his promises
(Catherine Pepinster, The Guardian)

Algeria government denies church closures are discrimination
(World Watch Monitor)

Iran: Christian retreat centre ordered to close by March 10th
(World Watch Monitor)

Millennials give up all possessions to become Jain monks
(Corey Barnett, World Religion News)

Chile cardinal seeks to deflect criticism for pope’s trip
(Nicole Winfield, Religion News Service)

Coronado's historic church directory sign to be removed amid 1st Amendment concerns
(Gustavo Solis, Los Angeles Times)

Most municipal workers quit in Utah polygamous sect town
(Brady McCombs, Religion News Service)

Mennonite investigator will testify in death penalty case
(Colleen Slevin, Religion News Service)

Jailed Mennonite woman will testify in death penalty case after refusing on religious grounds
(Derek Hawkins, The Washington Post)

A point of principle: Why a Mennonite woman has refused to testify in a death-penalty case
(Erasmus, The Economist [Erasmus: Religion and public policy])

Ellsworth Kelly may have been an atheist, but his chapel is undeniably spiritual
(Yonat Shimron, Religion News Service)

Revd Timothy Davis: Tribunal and penalty
(David Pocklington, Law & Religion UK)

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