In recent weeks, the Southern Baptist Convention has garnered extensive attention for its decision to remove Saddleback Church from fellowship over the California-based megachurch’s decision to allow a woman to serve in the office of pastor.
In June, messengers at the SBC’s Annual Meeting in New Orleans, Louisiana, voted overwhelmingly to uphold the disfellowshipping of Saddleback and a smaller church, Fern Creek Baptist Church of Louisville, Kentucky, (88% and 92%, respectively) for having women serve as pastors.
Al Mohler, president of Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, warned during the annual meeting that Saddleback was threatening the unity of the SBC and that the issue of women pastors was not nonessential.
“It’s not just a matter of church polity; it’s not just a matter of hermeneutics,” Mohler stated during the appeals session. “It’s a matter of biblical commitment, a commitment to the Scripture that unequivocally we believe limits the office of pastor to men.”
How Many People Leave Their Childhood Religion?
Nearly 85% of folks who were raised Catholic were still a member of that faith group when they were interviewed. For Protestants it was even higher – over 90%. Christians just didn’t move around a whole lot back in those days. However, among those who raised without religion, the vast majority picked a faith tradition as they moved into adult-hood. That was the case for 2/3 of those raised nones in the 1970s.
However, those trends lines have not stayed flat over the last five decades. Retention is down for all Christians, but at different rates. For Catholics, it dropped below 80% somewhere in the early 1990s and it fell below 70% in the early 2010s. For Protestants, it’s still fairly high but is clearly down from the 90% reported in the 1970s. Today, about 80% of folks raised Protestant are still Protestant as adults.
The nones are different story entirely, though. It used to be that 2/3 of those raised nones identified with a religion as adults. Now, about 2/3 of those raised with no faith group are still nones into adulthood. In other words, most people raised none are still a none now. .
Evangelicals have very good retention rates, even in the last decade nearly three quarters were still part of the same faith tradition as adults. The overall retention decline for evangelicals is just five percentage points. For mainline it’s much worse. They started right around the same level as evangelicals (76%), but now it’s just 58%. That means that if you found five people who were raised in the mainline, two of them would no longer be mainline today.
President ends recognition of Chaldean patriarch, putting Christian assets at risk
After experiencing violence and persecution in the recent past, new clouds are gathering over the future of Christians in Iraq, and now threaten the highest Christian authority in the land, the Chaldean Patriarch, Card Louis Raphael Sako.
Recently, Iraqi President Abdul Latif Rashid issued a decree ending the “institutional recognition” of the office the cardinal holds. This was done by repealing Decree 147, signed by Mr Rashid’s predecessor, the late Jalal Talabani, on 10 July 2013, which recognised the patriarch’s appointment by the Holy See as head of the Chaldean Church “in Iraq and the world” and thus, “responsible for the assets of the Church”.
The latter aspect is what matters. “Someone wants to take control over the assets and properties held by Christians and the Church,” a source told AsiaNews.
Following the decision, President Rashid tried to clarify his decision. His Office issued a statement saying: “Withdrawing the republican decree does not prejudice the religious or legal status of Cardinal Louis Sako, as he is appointed by the Apostolic See as Patriarch of the Chaldean Church in Iraq and the world.”
The press release goes on to say that, “the abolition of the Presidential Decree is intended to correct the situation. A constitutional or legal basis was not provided for the issuance of Presidential Decree No. 147 of 2013.” At the same time, it says that Card “Sako is highly valued by the Presidency of the Republic” as “Patriarch of the Chaldean Church throughout the world.”
First Indian elected to lead Maria Bambina sisters
Sister Venita Fernandes has become the first Indian to head the Sisters of Charity of the Saints Bartolomea Capitanio and Vincenza Gerosa, an international Catholic religious congregation based in Italy.
Sister Fernandes, a native of Balli-Fatorpa in the western Indian state of Goa, was elected at the congregation’s 28th general chapter that was held May 8 to June 24 in Rome.
Radio Salesian bags national award with industry and social Leaders
First community radio of Darjeeling bagged National Award for Entertainment and Development Excellence along with awards for Industry giants.
On receiving the award, Director of Salesian Radio 90.8 FM, Father C. M. Paul, said, “This award has come to us solely due to the sincere efforts of Radio Salesian RJs, both past and present. Cheers to TEAM Radio Salesian!”
Malaysian prelate with Indian roots named cardinal
Although no Indian is among the 21 new cardinals named by Pope Francis on July 9, the country has a link with one of two Asians.
Bishop Sebastian Francis Mechery of Penang is the new cardinal from Malaysia. The other Asian is Jesuit Bishop Stephen Chow Sau-yan of Hong Kong.
Bishop Mechery was born on November 11, 1951, in Johor Bahru, which was then part of the Federation of Malaya. His grandparents had emigrated to Malaya in the 1890s from Ollur in Thrissur district, Kerala.
New bishop appointed for Meghalaya’s Jowai diocese
Pope Francis on July 8 appointed Father Ferdinand Dkhar, as the bishop of Jowai in the northeastern Indian state of Meghalaya.
The 59-year-old bishop elect is currently the administrator of the diocese of Jowai.
Bishop elect Dkhar was born February 26, 1962, in Longkaluh, a parish under the diocese.
Mob assaults principal for “Christian prayer” in Pune school calendar
A mob has attacked the principal of a private high school in the western Indian city of Pune.
The incident took place on July 4 when a group of parents, accompanied by the members Bajrang Dal, assaulted the principal of the D Y Patil High School for allegedly singing a school prayer with the phrase “Dear Lord.”
The school, established in 2002, is situated in Pune’s Talegaon Dabhade area.
The attack was captured by some school staff and it went viral forcing the police to intervene. The video shows the principal Alexander Coates Reid, a Christian, being chased by some 30 people who shouted “Har Har Mahadev.”
The newindianexpress.com reported that the mob attacked Reid and the police booked him for forcing the students to take part Christian prayers.
It also reported that several parents had complained about their children being forced to recite Christian prayer. They also said that the students were not given holidays for Hindu festivals.
However, the wire.in portal quoted an official from the Talegaon police station to say that Reid was a “strict teacher” and a few parents were waiting to confront him. “They decided to make an issue out of a non-issue, involve local vigilante groups and attack the principal,” said Police Inspector Ranjit Sawant.
Next door saint of marginalized, disadvantaged
We meet many people in our day-to-day lives, known and unknown. But many do not realize the goodness of the people we come across.
They may be saints who are making changes in the lives and others. In the fast-moving world, people have no time to sit and talk with others; they have shut their ears to listen to the cry of the poor, and there is no time for people to see what is happening next door.
We live in a period where we eat, live, sleep, and die on or with social media. We get up with WhatsApp and go to sleep on social media without having any time for others. Though the world is less generous, less kind, less charitable, and less courageous, there are people who dedicate themselves to serving others and remain superheroes of charity and kindness.
This is the story of Father Benjamin Chinnappan, who brightened the lives of poor, marginalized children, abandoned widows, and drop-out girls. This pioneer of charity is from a remote village called Kakkanur in the Villupuram district of Tamil Nadu, India.
Father Ben, as he is fondly known by everyone, was ordained for the Archdiocese of Pondicherry-Cuddalore in 1988 and has been a citizen of the United States since 2004.
He was inducted into the Archdiocese of Pondicherry, India, in November 2020, and became a member of Voluntas Dei Secular Institute, USA.
St Patrick Academy studentsFather Ben obtained a Licentiate Degree in Biblical Theology from the University of St. Paul, Ottawa, and after a year of training in Clinical Pastoral Education, he was certified by the USCCB (United States Catholic Bishops’ Conference) as a chaplain to work in hospitals.
Commission for new martyrs revives Odisha Christians’ hope
Christians in the eastern Indian state of Odisha seem elated that Pope Francis has created a commission for new martyrs. They hope the new commission would address their demand that the Church recognize as martyrs their people killed during the 2008 anti-Christian violence in Odisha’s Kandhamal district.
“The Vatican move is a welcome step in the right direction,” says Ajay Kumar Sin-gh, a human rights activist and part of a seven-member committee that prepared a document on the Kandhamal victims.
Archbishop John Barwa of Cuttack-Bhubaneswar, the head of the Catholic Church in Odisha, points out that the Kandhamal Christians were killed solely because of their “unwavering faith” in their faith.
“They were not criminals, nor were they anti-socials or a burden on society. They were well-liked community members,” asserted the Divine Word prelate in his foreword of the book “Kandhamal Massacred in Anti-Christian violence in 2007-2008” sent to the Vatican for the recognition of 36 Catholic martyrs of Kandhamal.