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A briefing was held …

A briefing was held …
A briefing was held recently dealing with the Cornwall Declaration on Environmental Stewardship. This is a short declaration on the matter of caring for the environment in light of the love of God and the liberty He gives us, while considering sound science, sound economics and the needs of the poor. From Amy Ridenour’s National Center blog:

Before a packed audience today on Capitol Hill, the Interfaith Stewardship Alliance (ISA), along with the Acton Institute for the Study of Religion and Liberty and the Institute on Religion and Democracy held a lunch briefing at which top theologians and policy experts articulated a vision of Biblical stewardship based upon the Cornwall Declaration.

The title of the briefing was: “Pulpits, Pews and Environmental Policy: How the Cornwall Declaration is helping define the mandate of Biblical stewardship.”

If this sounds like an ECI redux, there are some differences.

Speaking about the Evangelical Climate Initiative (ECI), a statement signed by some members of the evangelical community that promotes the theory of catastrophic man-made global warming, Beisner said “[We] disagree with their assessment of the scientific evidence of the extent of human contribution to global warming, their prediction of the impact of climate change on human communities and the rest of the ecosystem, and their prescription of major reduction of carbon dioxide emissions as a solution to the alleged problem. The ECI does not specify how much emission reduction is needed to achieve its goals [to counteract global warming]. [This is] to ignore one of the most important aspects of the climatology debate: How much benefit would be gained at what cost to the global economy. And the global economy is not just an economist abstraction. It is real people who depend on that economy for jobs, income and the food, clothing, shelter, transportation and all other goods that they need.”

Sometimes, considering cold economic facts is just as much good stewardship as reducing car emissions or turning off the lights.

I will say this in criticism of the briefing. They’re a bit too critical of the ECI.

Paul Driessen, senior policy advisor for the Congress of Racial Equality, admonished celebrities, media and wayward religious leaders who are “twisting common definitions of ethics, morality, social responsibility and compassion for the poor to justify global warming agendas.”

I respect, and in some cases know, some of the signers of the ECI, and I really don’t think they’re deliberately trying to twist words or have some overarching global warming agenda. Some may, but those I know don’t, best I can tell. Now, I think the ECI may play into the hands of those with such an agenda, giving them a supposed common cause with evangelicals, but I don’t think that was the intent.

While that part was a little much, Driessen goes on to give some criticism I tend to agree with.

Driessen also noted, “It is often the very policies they promote that actually represent the greatest threats to the world’s poor. Over two billion of the world’s people still do not have electricity for lights and refrigeration in their homes, for hospitals and clinics, for schools, shops, offices and factories, for wastewater treatment and other modern technologies that we often take for granted,” he said. “And yet these poor countries are told they mustn’t build coal or gas-fired electrical power plants, because First World countries are concerned about global warming.”

Sometimes, turning on the lights is just as much good stewardship as reducing car emissions.

The over 1000 signers of this declaration include a number of people I respect, just as I respect a number of ECI signers. The Cornwall Declaration, however, includes more than just evangelicals. There are Jewish and Catholic as well as Protestant signers. Sometimes, gathering a group like this together leads to a least-common-denominator, watered down mission, but so far it doesn’t appear that way.

This Cornwall Declaration is definitely worth a look.

See also: Cybercast News Service report.

UPDATE: Jordan Ballor of the Acton Institute has an excellect comparison of the two tacts taken by the ECI and the Cornwall Declaration. His article is “Preserved Garden or Productive City? Two Competing Views of Stewardship”.

(Cross-posted at Stones Cry Out, Blogger News Network and Redstate. Comments welcome.)

The Carnival of Home…

The Carnival of Home…
The Carnival of Homeschooling is up.

Mark Steyn’s latest …

Mark Steyn’s latest …
Mark Steyn’s latest is a must-read. It’s about how Iran got where it is today and what it may mean if it does go nuclear. It’s rather long but full of historical lessons on what worked, and what didn’t (most notably appeasement), in the past and how to apply it to the present situation. If Western powers are kowtowed when Muslim extremists burn buildings, imagine how timid they’ll be when those folks have a nuke available to them (marked “from Iran with love”). And, as his history lessons show, this antagonism on the part of Iran didn’t suddenly begin when Bush sat down in the Oval Office; they’ve got a long tradition of it. Steyn is under no delusion that dealing with Iran now will be easy by any stretch of the imagination, but dealing with it later will be nigh well impossible.

This short take doesn’t do it the least bit of justice, so I recommend sitting back and taking in the whole thing.

In its never-ending …

In its never-ending …
In its never-ending quest to become the supreme oxymoron, the United Nations has in the past had its Human Rights Commission chaired by the countries with the worst violations of human rights. The next step in that quest is this.

Under threat of United Nations Security Council sanctions for its own nuclear program, Iran has been elected to a vice-chair position on the U.N. Disarmament Commission, whose mission includes preventing the spread of nuclear weapons.

The commission’s deliberations began last Monday and are scheduled to continue until April 28. On the first day of the commission meeting, Iran along with Uruguay and Chile was elected as one of three vice-chairs.

It happened on the same day that Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad promised his people “good news” about the country’s nuclear program.

The following day, Iran announced that it had managed to enrich uranium, a key ingredient in the production of a nuclear bomb.

So Iran gets to help make the rules regarding nuclear arms. Amazingly, Iran was voted into this position, unlike the HRC where countries take turns being the head honcho round-robin style. At least the UN had a little fig leaf to work with there, but this time the emperor really is naked.

Some people think we just need to clothe the emperor properly, i.e. fix the problems with the UN. The real problem, however, is the emperor himself who continues to defend his wardrobe malfunctions. It’s time to start over.

(Cross-posted at Stones Cry Out, Blogger News Network and Redstate. Comments welcome.)

My sister and her hu…

My sister and her hu…
My sister and her husband hosted a Seder Supper last Thursday. I’ve attended a number of these in the past. It is amazing how so many of the portions of the Seder point to Jesus. But there was a little preliminary item that a friend of theirs presented before the Seder that I want to write about this time. This friend gave us his “Reader’s Digest” version of how he came up with the date of the Last Supper, Jesus’ last Seder, which was interesting, but more interesting to me was the information that was presented as an aside on the way to his finding.

In the book of Matthew we find a lineage of Jesus, going back through his father Joseph. In verse 6 we see that Joseph was a descendant of King David (and hence his requirement to go to Bethlehem during the census called when Mary was pregnant with Jesus). Through this we see that Jesus was indeed heir to the throne of David, one of the requirements of the Messiah. However, there a hitch in this lineage. In verse 11 we find that the lineage goes through Jeconiah aka Jehoiachin, and therein lies a problem.

Back in the book of Jeremiah (chapter 22, verse 24-40) God passes judgement on Jehoiachin, prompting an exile to Babylon. But that’s not all. In verse 30, God specifically tells Jehoiachin that his lineage on the throne is done.

This is what the LORD says:
“Record this man as if childless,
a man who will not prosper in his lifetime,
for none of his offspring will prosper,
none will sit on the throne of David
or rule anymore in Judah.”

Thus none of his descendants will take that throne anymore, as though he were childless. But if Jesus is his descendant, doesn’t that therefore void His claim to that throne.

Normally, yes. However, God’s amazing plan for Jesus gave Him that right anyway. In the book of Luke, we find Jesus’ lineage through Mary.

[Quick aside: Each of the 4 Gospel writers emphasized a different aspect of Jesus. In Matthew, He is King. In Mark, He is Servant. In Luke, He is Man. In John, He is God. A King and a Man have official lineages, but a servant nor God do not. Interesting. Additionally, the lineages, as we’ll see in a bit, fit with the portrayal of Jesus in those books.]

This lineage also passes through King David (verse 31), but through a different son. In Matthew, it goes through David’s son Solomon, who was David’s actual successor to the throne, though it was not a legal succession. Since Solomon’s mother was Bathsheba (I Chronicles 3:5), she convinced David to name Solomon as the heir instead of the legal heir, the older son Nathan. And who do we find in Jesus’ lineage on Mary’s side? Nathan.

Thus, Jesus has both the royal and legal right to claim the throne of David, and also breaking the curse on the royal line since He can claim legal right. It’s just one more of those amazing “coincidences” that God works out to show those who are watching that He’s in control. Prophesy is fulfilled, not just in and of itself, but in a way that that is both elegant and meaningful. I’m sure some readers have heard this before, but it was new to me (or perhaps I just remembered it this time–the handout helped) and I wanted to pass it along.

Happy belated Easter.

(Cross-posted at Stones Cry Out. Comments welcome.)

Self-government with…

Self-government with…
Self-government without self-control is self-defeating. This Paul-Harvey-ism keeps being proved true, and nowhere more so than in the Palestinian territories.

In a revelation that surprised many here associated with the deal, it emerged this week the charitable foundation of Microsoft founder Bill Gates largely was responsible for transferring to the Palestinians the high-tech Jewish greenhouses of the Gaza Strip prior to Israel’s evacuation of the area.

The greenhouses, passed in a private charity deal last summer, reportedly have been stripped and looted by Palestinian gangs and Palestinian security officers hired to protect the structures.

“I wish I would have known it was Bill Gates who paid for the greenhouses. I would have sent him a thank you letter,” Ahmed Al-Masri, current manager of the Gaza greenhouses, told WorldNetDaily.

“Thanks for the spare parts, Bill. Sorry we threw stones.”

But Gates may not have got his money’s worth.

Ya’ think?

According to reports, the greenhouses were looted by gunmen following Israel’s withdrawal. Computer equipment and, in some cases, entire greenhouses were stolen. The theft has put out of action about 70 acres of the roughly 1,000 acres left by the Jewish communities, according to Al-Masri.

“The looters took their time to dismantle the greenhouses and to uproot entire greenhouses and carry them away,” Amid al-Masri previously told reporters.

Another round of looting struck the greenhouses in February when Fatah gunmen hired to protect the greenhouses abandoned their posts because they had not been paid. Witnesses reported some of the security guards themselves participated in the looting.

These were not just nifty places to grow plants. The produce was bug-free and would have been immensely beneficial to the Palestinians. But now they’re unable to reproduce this success on their own, so who do they turn to?

As WND reported, Palestinian farmers have had trouble reproducing the bug-free produce previously generated by the Jewish owners. The Palestinian owners reportedly asked the U.S. governmental development group USAID to hire former Jewish Gaza greenhouse owners as consultants for their declining vegetable businesses.

Yup, they come to us and to, ironically, Israel. They cut off their nose to spite their face, and now they want to borrow noses.

In what appears to be a face-saving maneuver, the manager alleges he’s recovered it all.

Al-Masri yesterday said the Gaza greenhouses are fully functioning and are producing at full capacity. He also said most of the stolen greenhouse equipment has been recovered by the Palestinian Authority police. His claims could not be independently verified before press time.

We’ll see about that, especially those dismantled and dispersed for parts. The wider the dispersal, the less likely that is true.

Looks like we have a…

Looks like we have a…
Looks like we have a bit of a protest backfire going on.

Recent images of seas of illegal aliens marching in cities across the U.S. are having a far greater negative than positive impact on the foreigners’ cause, according to a new poll.

A Zogby survey of nearly 8,000 people shows coast-to-coast protests against immigration proposals in Congress – particularly to make it a federal felony to be an illegal worker in the U.S. – have not persuaded a majority of likely American voters.

Asked whether the protests have made likely voters more or less sympathetic toward undocumented workers, 61 percent said they’re less likely to be sympathetic to the plight of illegals as a result of the protests, while only 32 percent of respondents said they’re now more sympathetic. Younger respondents to the poll were more likely to be sympathetic than were older participants. And while 56 percent of Democrats said the protests made them feel more sympathy for unlawful workers, just 6 percent of Republicans felt that way.

Guess the word “illegal” means something other than “unlawful” to Democrats. Breaking the rules, hoping the feds will give you a shortcut to citizenship, and doing an end-run around those in the process of doing this legally, is no big deal for the Left. Any wonder why they can’t get folks to believe that they stand for the rule of law?

The story pointed to by the link has a photograph of protestors holding up a sign saying “This is our continent, not yours!” Sorry, but that’s not going to make any friends.

The lefty blogs have…

The lefty blogs have…
The lefty blogs have been all over a report that one report back in 2003 gave the opinion that the trailers found in Iraq were not bio labs, as Bush claimed. Unfortunately, these folks are falling for the talking points the media is hoping they’ll take away from their reports. The Media Research Center is all over this, noting that the Washington Post report did make a small note of the fact that 2 other reports did suggest that they could be bio labs. But the way the story was written, it was easy to miss and was very late in the article, after “the jump” from the front page the the continuation page deeper in the paper (a jump that papers know many people don’t make, certainly not TV reporters).

Once again, the claims that Bush lied are, in fact, lies themselves. The Left is so ready to believe what they want to believe, don’t confuse them with the facts, or when they do know the facts, don’t expect them to give it a fair airing.

Further details abou…

Further details abou…
Further details about Saddam’s quest for nukes comes from Christopher Hitchens. It’s been widely known (and dismissed out of hand by Democrats) that Iraq approached Niger about…something. Joe Wilson insists it wasn’t about enriched uranium. But as Mr. Hitchens points out, when you send your top IAEA rep to talk to Niger, it’s extremely unlikely he’s talking about banana exports.

In February 1999, Zahawie [the aforementioned IAEA rep] left his Vatican office for a few days and paid an official visit to Niger, a country known for absolutely nothing except its vast deposits of uranium ore. It was from Niger that Iraq had originally acquired uranium in 1981, as confirmed in the Duelfer Report. In order to take the Joseph Wilson view of this Baathist ambassadorial initiative, you have to be able to believe that Saddam Hussein’s long-term main man on nuclear issues was in Niger to talk about something other than the obvious. Italian intelligence (which first noticed the Zahawie trip from Rome) found it difficult to take this view and alerted French intelligence (which has better contacts in West Africa and a stronger interest in nuclear questions). In due time, the French tipped off the British, who in their cousinly way conveyed the suggestive information to Washington. As everyone now knows, the disclosure appeared in watered-down and secondhand form in the president’s State of the Union address in January 2003.

The appearance of forged papers in connection to this has cause the aforementioned dismissals by Democrats. Hitchens does not deny the existence of the forgery, although he points out how pitiful the forgery was; easily discovered under slight scrutiny.

But this doesn’t alter the plain set of established facts in my first three paragraphs above. The European intelligence services, and the Bush administration, only ever asserted that the Iraqi regime had apparently tried to open (or rather, reopen) a yellowcake trade “in Africa.” It has never been claimed that an agreement was actually reached.

And that’s precisely what Bush said in those 16 words in the State of the Union address. Hitchens goes on to examine what motive(s) there might be to produce such a crude forgery, but I want to hit on another point regarding it.

A NATO investigation has identified two named employees of the Niger Embassy in Rome who, having sold a genuine document about Zahawie to Italian and French intelligence agents, then added a forged paper in the hope of turning a further profit. The real stuff went by one route to Washington, and the fakery, via an Italian journalist and the U.S. Embassy in Rome, by another. The upshot was—follow me closely here—that a phony paper alleging a deal was used to shoot down a genuine document suggesting a connection.

Someone tried to overplay their hand, but that doesn’t mean that the meeting didn’t happen, and in fact there is still good intelligence, and paperwork backing it up, saying that it did.

Still, the Left will continue allege that the case for war was built in a bunch of lies and ignore evidence to the contrary (evidence that has been around for at least 3 years). Read, as Hitchens says a few times, the first 3 paragraphs of his article over and I hope you’ll wonder, given the evidence, why you ever believe Joseph Wilson (if you ever did, that is).

Hat Tip: Mark Kilmer at Redstate.

(Cross-posted at Stones Cry Out. Comments welcome.)

Some folks thought t…

Some folks thought t…
Some folks thought that the “War on Christmas” was mostly a self-fulfilling prophesy by the Christian Right. Think again. At least with Easter, the war’s been formally declared.

A media company that produced a best-selling documentary asserting that Jesus Christ never existed today launches its “War on Easter,” encouraging volunteer atheists to plant copies of the film “The God Who Wasn’t There” in churches across the United States.

Dubbing the effort “Operation Easter Sanity,” Brian Flemming, a self-described “former Christian fundamentalist” and president of Beyond Belief Media, hopes to covertly place 666 copies of the documentary in churches by Easter Sunday, April 16. The number 666 is the biblical mark of “The Beast,” which also is the name of another film by Flemming set for a 06-06-06 release.

“People go to churches to hide from the truth,” Flemming said in a statement. “At no time is this more apparent than Easter, when Christians get together to convince each other that a man died, stayed dead three days, rose from the dead and then flew into the air above the clouds.

“Our nonviolent campaign sends the message that nowhere in the country is safe from the truth. Wherever Christian leaders are indoctrinating children with 2,000-year-old fairy tales, the truth may just find its way there.”

Continued the former Christian: “Our ‘War on Easter’ is of course completely without violence of any kind. Christians believe that beating a man to a pulp and nailing him to a cross somehow solves all the world’s problems. Beyond Belief Media does not.”

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