Friday, 8 August 2014

Black and white flag similar to ones used by jihadis is hoisted outside east London housing estate Daily Mail

'Provocative': A black and white flag sometimes used by jihadists has been raised over a London estate, which has caused offence

Anti-extremism campaigners condemn 'provocative' act in Tower Hamlets

Flag contains script used by all Muslims but design often used by jihadists

Emblem has caused offence and the local council intervened to remove it

Local campaigners had already pulled it down but Palestinian flag remains


A controversial black and white flag similar to one championed by Muslim extremists has been hoisted over an east London estate.

The emblem was hung alongside the Palestinian flag in Poplar, Tower Hamlets - often referred to as an 'Islamic Republic' in the capital. 

Anti-extremist campaigners said today the raising of the black flag was a 'provocative' act and undermined legitimate anger about the crisis in Gaza. 

One man who objected to it says he was confronted by a gang of youths who asked him: 'Are you a Jew?'.

When he said: 'Would it make a difference?' they responded: 'Yes it f****** would', according to the Guardian.

The black and white flag has the Shahadatayn - the declaration of faith that all Muslims say - written on it, which translates as 'There is no god but God, Muhammad is the messenger of God'.

But in recent years versions has been hijacked by extremist supporters of the Taliban, Hamas, al-Shabaab, Al Qaeda and ISIS.

It is not clear who raised the flag on the Will Crooks Estate - named after the local MP and noted Victorian-era anti-poverty campaigner - but it has caused offence.

Read more here:

Alex Salmond on the ropes: Bookies say he’s 4/1 to stand down as First Minister, Daily Express, updated

Alex Salmond, Salmond to stand down, Salmond on the ropes, Alex Salmond tv debate, SNP

EMBATTLED Alex Salmond was ­fighting on two fronts last night to quell growing SNP rage over his disastrous TV debate and save his currency plans.

Questions were raised about the First Minister’s future after senior lieutenants started briefing against him following his defeat to Alistair Darling in the live showdown.

Last night, bookmakers William Hill offered odds of 4/1 that Mr Salmond would stand down before the next Holyrood elections in 2016.

The plotting came amid renewed splits in the Yes camp with nationalist figureheads Jim Sillars and Dennis Canavan demanding a Scottish currency.

However, their guns may well have been spiked as Mr Salmond sparked a fresh battle for an independent Scotland to retain sterling, declaring: “It’s our pound and we’re keeping it.”

The SNP leader give his clearest hint yet this could mean using the pound without a formal currency union with the rest of the UK – an option known as dollarisation or the Panama option. He also repeated his threat that a breakaway country would refuse to accept its share of the UK’s national debt unless a deal was made.

But there was more embarrassment for Mr Salmond when it emerged that his own blueprint for secession contained a serious error in dealing with the currency for a go-it-alone Scotland.


Comment:

It is interesting that Mr Salmond keeps insisting that a break away Scotland will keep the Pound ,  this is known as dollarization or the Panama option,  (Panama uses the US Dollar as it’s currency) this would be known as de-facto or unofficial currency substitution,  The main UK parties have already said that there will be no sterling zone or currency union between England, Wales and Northern Ireland and a break away Scotland, despite this Mr Salmond insists that Scotland will keep the Pound and if he isn’t allowed to use the Pound,  an independent Scotland will not pay it’s fair share of the UK national debt,  a majority of international financial organisations including  France’s  Societe Generale  have stated  that any official or  unofficial currency union would affect Scotland greatly and if Scotland’s defaults on it’s international debts, Scotland would face  economic  hardship, Alex’s Salmond’s plans are economically incoherentand Scotland with  the rest of the UK  forming a Sterling Zone isn’t an option. It’s interesting that using the Pound in an un-official currency union is known as the Panama option,  any student of Scottish History or British History will know  the results of what  happened the last time Scotland took a Panama option see The Darien Colony.


Thursday, 7 August 2014

Brazil’s ‘Billionaire Bishop’ Builds $300M Solomon’s Temple Replica

Brazil’s ‘Billionaire Bishop’ Builds $300M Solomon’s Temple Replica



Universal Church Solomon's Temple replica



A 10,000-seat rendition of Solomon's Temple was inaugurated last week in São Paulo, Brazil, owned by the Universal Church of the Kingdom of God.
The large 11-story complex has a helicopter landing pad, allowing Universal Church founder and Brazil's "billionaire bishop," Edir Macedo, to drop in for sermons. It also features an oasis of olive trees similar to the garden of Gethsemane near Jerusalem and more than 30 towering columns.
"The Universal Church spared no expense," Rogério Araújo told The New York Times. "We sought to build a colossus, something that would make people stop and gaze, and that's what we deliver/

10 Reasons God Needs You to Show Courage in the Pulpit - Ministry Today



The Lord is for me; I will not fear. What can man do to me?" (Psalm 118:6. See also Heb. 13:5-6)

I read that scripture-–especially the Hebrews 13:5-6 incarnation-–and smile.  Asking "what can man do to me?" is kind of like asking for it, isn't it? Daring them to "bring it on."

The answer of course is that man can do a great deal to you. But the bottom line—and the point of the scripture—is that ultimately, with God being "for me," it does not matter.

Nothing matters so much as our being one with the heavenly Father.

Can we talk about courage? This is as rare as plutonium these days, particularly among the very people who should demonstrate it most readily, followers of the Lord Jesus Christ.

Only two people in the church need courage: the one in the pulpit and the one in the pew.

The messenger of God in the pulpit needs courage for a thousand reasons. Here are 10:

1. To preach the whole counsel of God no matter who may disapprove—and to sweeten that preaching when his flesh is involved and wants to "lower the boom" on certain people. Graciousness takes courage also.


Further Reading:





Tom Holland on our island story: what England and Scotland share politically and morally, New Statesman



Magna Carta and the Declaration of Arbroath, Boswell and Johnson, Walter Scott and Disraeli, Robert Owen and Keir Hardie – Scotland and England have long mirrored each other in many ways, says Tom Holland.

The Tarbat Peninsula, a spit of land sticking out from the northernmost Scottish Highlands, seems an unlikely spot for a revolution. At its tip stands a lighthouse, built by Robert Louis Stevenson’s uncle back in 1830 after a deadly storm in the adjacent Moray Firth; a few miles south lies the tiny fishing village of Portmahomack. Most visitors there today are tourists, attracted by its picturesque harbour and sandy beach; but back in the mid-6th century it was the scene of a momentous experiment.

A band of ascetics, wandering enthusiasts for an exotic new religion named Christianity, arrived at the court of a local king. Simultaneously intrigued and suspicious, he granted them some unwanted land on which to found a community. “The Haven of Saint Colmóc” – “Port Mo Chalmaig” – was the first ever monastery on the coast of Easter Ross. For 250 years, until it was destroyed by a terrible fire at the beginning of the 9th century, Portmahomack was one of the most celebrated places in Britain.

That it is impossible to be certain who either the king or “Saint Colmóc” was reminds us just how dark the Dark Ages can be. Various shocking details were reported of the people among whom Portmahomack was founded. It was said that they had come from Scythia; that they fought naked; that they were ruled by women who kept whole troupes of husbands. Most notoriously of all, they were reported to tattoo themselves: a barbarous habit that had led them to being nicknamed “Picti”, or “painted people”. A people more hostile to the norms of southern lands it would have been hard to imagine. Even the Romans had given up trying to tame them. Yet where the legions had failed, a hardy band of monks had succeeded. An outpost of Mediterranean culture had been successfully planted in the farthest north.

The coming of Christianity to Pictland was part of a much broader process that ultimately united the whole of Great Britain in a common religious culture. Pagan rulers, when they submitted to baptism, were rarely signing up to the poverty and pacifism preached by monks. What appealed instead was the awesome potency of the Christian God. Membership of the Church attracted those with broad horizons and a taste for self-enrichment.

Yet conversion to Christianity was never a one-way street. At Portmahomack, the missionaries were influenced by native customs, as well as vice versa. The tradition of holy men possessed of a privileged relationship to the supernatural was not unknown to the Picts. Even the tonsure worn by the monks derived from the Druids. The very stonework of the monastery was incised with patterns already ancient when the Romans had first arrived in Britain. The decision to become Christian did not, for the peoples of Pictland, imply surrender to an alien power. Rather, it reflected a creative engagement with the world beyond their various kingdoms.


Further Reading:






Eric Pickles's appointment as Faith Minister is bad news for secularists, The New Statesman, The appointment of Eric Pickles to Faith Minister causes a right pickle for atheists

The Communities Secretary is a fierce opponent of

The Communities Secretary is a fierce defender of religious privilege. 

Earlier today, as Westminster reacted to Boris Johnson's announcement that he will stand for parliament in 2015, David Cameron carried out the mini-reshuffle necessitated by Baroness Warsi's resignation. Baroness Anelay, previously Lords Chief Whip, has replaced the Tory peer as Minister of State at the Foreign Office (attending cabinet), and Lord Taylor has taken Anelay's old post. Lord Bates has replaced Taylor as Under Secretary of State at the Home Office.

But the most eye-catching change is the transfer of Warsi's faith brief (which she hung onto after her demotion in 2012) to Eric Pickles. The Communities Secretary has regularly used his platform to attack secularists, declaring earlier this year that Britain is a "Christian nation" and that "militant atheists" should "get over it". That outburst was prompted by a legal bid by the National Secular Society to prevent local councils including prayers as part of their official agenda. He said:

I’ve stopped an attempt by militant atheists to ban councils having prayers at the start of meetings if they wish. Heaven forbid. We’re a Christian nation. We have an established church. Get over it. And don’t impose your politically correct intolerance on others.


New faith minister worries secularists

New faith minister worries secularists



new-faith-minister-worries-secularists



Communities Secretary Eric Pickles has been handed the responsibilities of Faith Minister in a move criticised by a secularist campaigner.

David Cameron announced the change following the departure of Baroness Warsi earlier this week.
In April this year, Pickles sparked debate by saying that militant atheists should “get over” Britain being a “Christian nation.”

Controversial

He has previously taken a strong stance on matters involving religious liberty.
While addressing the Conservative Spring Forum, the Government minister called on atheists to stop imposing their “politically correct intolerance on others”.
And in a speech last year, he warned that traditional religious freedoms were being threatened by secularists.

Today's post

Jesus Christ, The Same Yesterday, Today and Forever

I had the privilege to be raised in a Christian Home and had the input of my parents and grandparents into my life, they were ...