zenpundit.com » christianity

Archive for the ‘christianity’ Category

Laura Seay on Invisible Children and the LRA

Friday, March 3rd, 2017

[ by Charles Cameron — for your convenience, Laura Seay’s tweet-streak updating us on the LRA, reformatted as prose — though by no means prosaic ]
.

Foreign Policy @ForeignPolicy

Five years after its “Kony 2012” video broke the internet, Invisible Children is waging covert war against the LRA. http://atfp.co/2ljVz6A

Laura Seay @texasinafrica

This isn’t the full extent of the crazy, naive things IC, Bridgeway, & Laren Poole have undertaken in the last few years. There’s more. And the “more” is capital-I Insane.

I’ve been researching the anti-LRA efforts as part of my book project on how advocacy movements affect US policy in Africa. The US has spent over $1 billion on the anti-LRA mission since 2011. The LRA is now tiny, ~150-250. Whether Kony is still alive is unknown. Innocent people still suffer as a result of the LRA’s much-decreased activity. No doubt about that. But is this the best way to spend $1 billion? Especially given how many other armed groups in the region do far more harm to civilians?Could the skills of the 100 US Army Special Operations Forces posted to the CAR mission to “advise” the UPDF be put to better use elsewhere?

These are not easy questions & there aren’t easy answers to them. And there’s the issue that 5 1/2 years in, we still haven’t caught Kony or eradicated the LRA. At what point do we cut our losses & give up? The folks who are still working on these efforts have been passionately & deeply engaged on the LRA crisis for 10-15 years. They got what they wanted: global attention, abundant funding, a military mission (in which they are deeply involved). And it hasn’t worked. But some dangerous precedents have been set, particularly re the role of private charitable foundations funding a foreign military.

No matter how good their intentions, foundations aren’t accountable to anyone. Nor can foundations control how the UPDF will use training & equipment they provided in the future or in other situations. It’s a risky game. And it won’t be the foundations who suffer the consequences if things go wrong down the line. AFRICOM also can’t control what the UPDF will do with the skills they’ve developed while working alongside US Army Africa. Ideally, the UPDF leaves the mission with more professional soldiers with strong capacity & ethics. But again, we can’t control that. It’s messy with no clear “right” answer.

I think the anti-LRA movement will be remembered as a cautionary case about the role of advocacy movements in shifting US policy. Advocacy movements shouldn’t get all that they want. Their wishes need to be tempered by expert & local opinion. And US charitable foundations should not be allowed to fund foreign military activity. Period.

Boy general, boy bishop

Saturday, January 28th, 2017

[ by Charles Cameron — children raised to high office, not a bad idea ]
.

The Make-A-Wish Foundation, with the help of Camp Pendleton, recently treated a young boy suffering from retinoblastoma – “a rare cancer of the eye” — to a day of Marine exercises. Brig. Gen. Vincent A. Coglianese temporarily assigned him the rank of general.

Which reminds me..

Hereford Cathedral’s account of the ceremony of the making of a boy bishop gives us a clue to the theology behind that medieval ceremony, recently revived:

This annual ceremony is a successor to a service that developed sometime in the thirteenth century. The climax of the ceremony takes place during the singing of the canticle Magnificat. As the choir sings the words He hath put down the mighty from their seat, the Boy Bishop displaces the Bishop of Hereford from his episcopal chair. This dramatic moment is charged with spiritual meaning.

An equally dramatic moment is recorded in the Gospels, when our Lord was asked by his disciples, who is the greatest in the kingdom of God? Much to their surprise Jesus gave them a memorable lesson, which still haunts the human imagination. Jesus took a little child ‘and set him in the midst of them’ (Matthew XVIII, 2). Deep in Christianity there has always been the teaching that children are nothing less than the measure of our humanity, and that no one will enter the kingdom of God ahead of them. This child-centred teaching about membership of God’s kingdom always comes as an affront to adult pride and invites grown-ups to think new thoughts and adopt new perspectives. Very appropriately, in one of the few surviving sermons preached by a Boy Bishop during the middle ages, the choice of text was ‘Except you will be converted, and made like unto little children, you shall not enter into the Kingdom of Heaven.’

Happy Christmas: Of Shia & Christian in Beirut and Aleppo

Sunday, December 25th, 2016

[ by Charles Cameron — season’s greetings ]
.

https://www.facebook.com/rami.khal.7/videos/10157979313090319/
.
I trust you can see and hear this video, or at least click through to Le Liban c’est ça aussi : une chorale musulmane qui chante Noël dans une église and watch it. It presents, as the post in French tells us, a Lebanese Shiite choir singing Christmas carols in a church, and with it I offer you my Christmas greetings on behalf of one and all at Zenpundit, greetings secular, sacred, Maccabean, Nazarene, Muslim, or at the mall.

**

I’m, as you may know, in recovery from heart surgery and on kidney dialysis, and this year I received a very kind care package of renal-failure appropriate food from an anonymous source, so I’m reminded that while the mall, grocery store and food-laden table may not represent the “essence of Christmas” as my mother would have wished — the child born God to brighten our dark world — they can nonetheless represent generosity as well as commerce, a break in the relentless pursuit of dominance, human life as gift and giving.

On this day, therefore, of commercial, charitable and Christian celebration, we wish you all, according to your varied natures and our own perspectives, happiness this Christmas in the teeth of winter and the world.

**

That Muslim voices are raised above in a Christian church in praise of the Christian nativity offers a glimpse of hope for mutual respect in the strife-and faith-torn Middle East — but such matters as the overlapping and interconnections of faiths are never simple, and by way or remembering something of the nuance, here’s a quick sentence from COL Pat Lang‘s post at Sic Semper Tyrannis yesterday, Christmas in Aleppo – Attention Joe Scarborough:

One of our German correspondents on SST informed us the other day that there are now some Christian members of Hizbullah, the Lebanese Shia militia. This would make sense because after the 2006 war against Israel Hizbullah assigned priority of its own reconstruction money to Christians in south Lebanon.

**

To quote Charles Dickens:

It was the best of times, it was the worst of times, it was the age of wisdom, it was the age of foolishness, it was the epoch of belief, it was the epoch of incredulity..

Best wishes & blessings to all..

Trump’s candidacy ‘spells end of American religious right’ — my latest just up at Lapido

Wednesday, October 26th, 2016

[ by Charles Cameron — plus a link to Dr Moore’s Erasmus Lecture yesterday ]
.

My latest for LapidoMedia concerns Trump and the religious right, and centers on some remarks by Dr Russell Moore. It begins:

DONALD Trump’s presidential bid is dividing not just of the American people but American religious opinion.

Evangelicals and Catholics alike are deeply split on his candidacy.

What’s at stake is both individual conscience and the future of American religious politics.

Russell Moore, head of the Southern Baptist Convention’s public policy office, says ‘the Donald Trump phenomenon … is an embrace of the very kind of moral and cultural decadence that conservatives have been saying for a long time is the problem.’

Read the rest on the Lapido site

**

Dr Moore gave the 2016 Erasmus Lecture yesterday, after my article went to press: Can the Religious Right be Saved? for First Things [link is to video, I don’t have a transcript]. I am by no means an Evangelical, but I find him very impressive.

Two more tweets of interest from Elijah Magnier

Wednesday, October 26th, 2016

[ by Charles Cameron — angels as force multipliers for ISIS, and the cross restored ]
.

I used a tweet from Magnier in Prophetic dreams, Dabiq now, Mosul back then, and another in my comment on The map borders on the territory? Turkey, Palestine. Here are two more..

The first updates us on the Qur’anic concept of angels, rank on rank, supporting the Muslims at the Battle of Badr (Qur’an 8.9):

**

And before I show you the second, let me remind you of this, from November of last year:

mosul-church

Now the situation is blessedly reversed:


Switch to our mobile site