Wednesday, January 31, 2018

Top Films/TV Shows That Affirm Faith


Here is the list of nominees for Movieguide®’s 26th Annual Faith & Values Awards Gala, to be held Friday, February 2nd, at the Universal Hilton Hotel in Los Angeles (in alphabetical order):

Best Movies for Families
The Boss Baby (DreamWorks/20th Century Fox)
Cars 3 (Pixar/Walt Disney Studios)
The Case for Christ (PureFlix Films)
Despicable Me 3 (Illumination/Universal Studios)
The Emoji Movie (Columbia Pictures/Sony Pictures Ent.)
Ferdinand (Blue Sky/20th Century Fox)
The LEGO Batman Movie (Warner Bros. Pictures)
The Man Who Invented Christmas (Bleecker Street Media)
Smurfs: The Lost Village (Columbia Pictures/Sony Pictures Ent.)
The Star (Columbia Pictures/Sony Pictures Ent.)

Best 2017 Movies for Mature Audiences
All Saints (Sony Affirm/Sony Pictures Ent.)
Bitter Harvest (Roadhouse Attractions)
Darkest Hour (Focus Features/Comcast)
Dunkirk (2017) (Warner Bros. Pictures/Time Warner)
Justice League (Warner Bros. Pictures/Time Warner)
Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales (Walt Disney Studios)
The Promise (2017) (Open Road Films)
Thor: Ragnarok (Marvel/Walt Disney Studios)
Wonder (Lionsgate Films)
Wonder Woman (Warner Bros. Pictures/Time Warner)

Epiphany Prize for Most Inspiring Movie
All Saints
Bitter Harvest
The Boss Baby
The Case for Christ
Let There Be Light
The Promise (2017)
The Star

Epiphany Prize for Most Inspiring TV Program
Blue Bloods: “Cutting Losses”
The Crown: “Veregangenheit”
Last Man Standing: “Take Me to Church”
Little Big Shots: “Tiny Dancer”
The Long Road Home: “Black Sunday, Part 2”
Victoria: “An Ordinary Woman and The Queen’s Husband”

Faith & Freedom Award for Movies
Bitter Harvest
The Boss Baby
Darkest Hour
Dunkirk (2017)
The LEGO Batman Movie
The Promise
Wonder

Faith & Freedom Award for TV
Blue Bloods: “Cutting Losses”
The Crown: “Veregangenheit”
Five Came Back
The Long Road Home: “Black Sunday, Part 2”
The Middle: “The 200th”
Victoria: “An Ordinary Woman and The Queen’s Husband”

Grace Award Nominees for Movies
Erika Christensen for The Case for Christ
John Corbett for All Saints
Oscar Isaac for The Promise (2017)
Kevin Sorbo for Let There Be Light
Sam Sorbo for Let There Be Light
Terrence Stamp for Bitter Harvest
Dan Stevens for The Man Who Invented Christmas
Mike Vogel for The Case for Christ

Christie Peters Grace Award Nominees for TV
Tim Allen for Last Man Standing: Take Me to Church
Len Cariou for Blue Bloods: Cutting Losses
Jenna Coleman for Victoria: An Ordinary Woman and The Queen’s Husband
Bill Engvall for Last Man Standing: Take Me to Church
Claire Foy for The Crown: Veregangenheit
Steve Harvey for Little Big Shots: Tiny Dancer
Tom Hughes for Victoria: An Ordinary Woman and The Queen’s Husband
Michael Kelly for The Long Road Home: Black Sunday, Part 2
Tom Selleck for Blue Bloods: Cutting Losses
Paul Sparks for The Crown: Veregangenheit

Author of The Culture-Wise Family and How to Succeed in Hollywood (Without Losing Your Soul), Dr. Ted Baehr is chairman of the Christian Film & Television Commission® (CFTVC) and its family guide to movies and entertainment, Movieguide® (movieguide.org).  Now in their 33rd year, CFTVC and Movieguide® are the largest, longest-running international, nonprofit ministry dedicated to “redeeming the values of the entertainment industry by influencing industry executives and by informing and equipping the public about the influence of the entertainment media.”  Movieguide®’s Annual Faith & Values Awards Gala is different than any other awards ceremony in Hollywood.  It honors the best, most family-friendly movies and television programs honoring God and inspiring audiences with messages of Biblical faith, hope, goodness, justice, redemption, forgiveness and true divine love.

How many, if any, of these movies or TV shows have you seen?  Ticket sales and TV ratings say a lot about our culture.  Let’s take back the culture for Christ!

Rev. Dr. Kenneth L. Beale, Jr.
Chaplain (Colonel-Ret), U.S. Army
Pastor, Ft. Snelling Memorial Chapel

Monday, January 29, 2018

HHS Protects Life & Conscience Rights


On January 19, 2018, the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) announced two major actions to protect life and the conscience rights of Americans:

HHS’ Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) is issuing new guidance to state Medicaid directors restoring state flexibility to decide program standards. The letter rescinds 2016 guidance that specifically restricted states’ ability to take certain actions against family-planning providers that offer abortion services. 

HHS’ Office for Civil Rights (OCR) is announcing a new proposed rule to enforce 25 existing statutory conscience protections for Americans involved in HHS-funded programs, which protect people from being coerced into participating in activities that violate their consciences, such as abortion, sterilization, or assisted suicide.

“Today’s actions represent promises kept by President Trump and a rollback of policies that had prevented many Americans from practicing their profession and following their conscience at the same time,” said Acting HHS Secretary Eric D. Hargan.  “Americans of faith should feel at home in our health system, not discriminated against, and states should have the right to take reasonable steps in overseeing their Medicaid programs and being good stewards of public funds.”

“America’s doctors and nurses are dedicated to saving lives and should not be bullied out of the practice of medicine simply because they object to performing abortions against their conscience,” said OCR Director Roger Severino.  “Conscience protection is a civil right guaranteed by laws that too often haven’t been enforced.  Today’s proposed rule will provide our new Conscience and Religious Freedom Division with enforcement tools that will make sure our conscience laws are not empty words on paper, but guarantees of justice to victims of unlawful discrimination.”

The proposed rule provides practical protections for Americans’ conscience rights and is modelled on existing regulations for other civil rights laws.  The laws undergirding the proposed regulation include the Coats-Snowe, Weldon, and Church Amendments, as well as parts of Medicare, Medicaid, the Affordable Care Act, and others (25 statutes in total). The proposed rule applies to entities that receive funds through programs funded or administered in whole or in part through HHS.  The proposed rule requires, for instance, that entities applying for federal grants certify that they are complying with the above-mentioned conscience-protection statutes.

Since President Trump took office, OCR has stepped up enforcement of these conscience statutes, many of which saw little to no enforcement activity under the Obama Administration.

The proposed rule follows the announcement of a new Conscience and Religious Freedom Division in OCR, charged with implementing the proposed regulation as finalized and enforcing statutes that protect individuals and organizations from being compelled to participate in procedures such as abortion, sterilization, and assisted suicide when it would violate their religious beliefs or moral convictions.

The CMS issued a State Medicaid Director Letter restoring state flexibility to establish reasonable standards for their Medicaid programs.  The letter rescinded an April 2016 guidance (State Medicaid Directors Letter #16-005), which limited states’ long-standing authority to regulate providers operating within their states.  The 2016 letter had said that states that attempted to protect the integrity of their program standards by disqualifying abortion providers from their Medicaid programs would come under CMS scrutiny, and would be required to present to CMS evidence of criminal action or unfitness to perform healthcare services.  As stated in the letter to state Medicaid directors, CMS is concerned that the 2016 letter may have gone beyond merely interpreting what the statute and current regulations require.  This decision returns CMS policy to what it was prior to the issuance of the 2016 letter.  States will still be required to comply with all applicable statutory and regulatory requirements, including the requirement that provider qualification standards be reasonable.

Rev. Dr. Kenneth L. Beale, Jr.
Chaplain (Colonel-Ret), U.S. Army
Pastor, Ft. Snelling Memorial Chapel

Friday, January 26, 2018

Love Saves Lives


President Trump, Vice President Pence, and a host of pro-life leaders and activists spoke to thousands who gathered last Friday (January 19) in America’s capital to commemorate the 45th anniversary of the U.S. Supreme Court (SCOTUS) Roe v. Wade decision legalizing abortion-on-demand.

In case you missed it, here is a portion of what each said:

Vice President Pence spoke to the March for Life from the White House via satellite link.  “More than 240-years ago, our founders wrote words that have echoed through the ages.  They declared these truths to be self-evident that we are each of us endowed by our Creator with certain unalienable rights, and that among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness … Forty-five years ago the Supreme Court of the United States turned its back on the unalienable right to life, but in that moment our movement began. A movement that continues to win hearts and minds, a movement defined by generosity, compassion, and love; and a movement that one year ago tomorrow inaugurated the most pro-life president in American history: President Donald Trump … From preventing taxpayer dollars from funding abortion overseas, to empowering states to respect life in Title X, to nominating judges who will uphold our God-given liberties enshrined in the Constitution of the United States – this president has been a tireless defender of life and conscience in America and today, President Trump will do even more to defend the most vulnerable in our society … My friends, life is winning in America because love saves lives. And know that as you march for life, that your compassion, your persistence, your activism and your prayers are saving lives and this pro-life generation should never doubt we are with you.  This president stands with you and He [the Lord God] who said ‘Before I formed you in the womb, I knew you’ is with you as well.”

President Trump followed Vice President Pence and became the first sitting president to address March for Life participants via a live satellite link.  “Today tens of thousands of families, students and patriots and really just great citizens gather here in our nation’s capital ... but you all come for one beautiful cause: to build a society where life is celebrated, protected, and cherished.  The March for Life is a movement born out of love. You love your families.  You love your neighbors.  You love our nation.  And you love every child, born and unborn, because you believe that every life is sacred, that every child is a precious gift from God … We know that life is the greatest miracle of all.  We see it in the eyes of every new mother who cradles that wonderful, innocent and glorious newborn child in her loving arms.  I want to thank every person here today and all across our country who works with such big hearts and tireless devotion to make sure that parents have the care and support they need to choose life.  Because of you, tens of thousands of Americans have been born and reached their full God-given potential.  You’re living witnesses of this year’s March for Life theme: Love Saves Lives … Americans are more and more pro-life, you see that all the time.  In fact, only 12 percent of Americans support abortion on demand at any time.  Under my administration, we will always defend the very first right in the Declaration of Independence – and that is the right to life … Today I’m announcing that we have just issued a new proposal to protect conscience rights and religious freedoms of doctors, nurses, and other medical professionals .... I have also just reversed the previous administration’s policy that restricted states’ efforts to direct Medicaid funding way from abortion facilities that violate the law.”

Thank God for a pro-life administration!

Rev. Dr. Kenneth L. Beale, Jr.
Chaplain (Colonel-Ret), U.S. Army
Pastor, Ft. Snelling Memorial Chapel

Wednesday, January 24, 2018

Many American Corporations Committed to Undermining Your Religious Liberty


Did you miss it?  On January 16th President Trump declared “Religious Freedom Day” in recognition of the 232nd anniversary of Virginia Statute of Religious Freedom.  The Virginia Statute, which was written by Thomas Jefferson, inspired the 1st Amendment to the US Constitution to affirm “the right to choose and exercise faith without government coercion or reprisal.”

President Trump proclaimed, “No American — whether a nun, nurse, baker, or business owner — should be forced to choose between the tenets of faith or adherence to the law.”

However, the radical left, enabled by its corporate allies, would force those nuns, nurses, bakers, and business owners to give up the tenets of their faith in order to advance the liberal agenda.  For evidence of the left’s goals, look no further than Jack Phillips’s case … currently awaiting a decision from the US Supreme Court.  As the owner of Masterpiece Cakeshop in Lakewood, Colorado, Phillips declined to create a custom cake for a same-sex wedding citing his belief in marriage between one man and one woman. For standing for his faith, he has faced persecution by the Colorado Civil Rights Commission and stands to lose his entire livelihood.

Unfortunately, Phillips is not the only business owner to face the left’s wrath for refusing to affirm same-sex marriage.  FNC’s Jeremy Dys points to another recent case that bears marked similarities:
While the U.S. Supreme Court considers whether Jack Phillips and his Masterpiece Cakeshop were treated fairly, Aaron and Melissa Klein wonder what their future holds.  Not only has an Oregon bureaucrat penalized their small, family-owned bakery $135,000 for politely declining – on religious grounds – to create a custom cake that celebrated a same-sex marriage.  The government forced the closure of their bakery.  Since Oregon pronounced the Kleins pariahs, the community followed suit with streams of hate mail, online harassment laced with obscene epithets, and threats to their physical safety.”

When states like Georgia and North Carolina have attempted to enact protections for their citizens, big business has aligned with LGBT activists to develop misinformation campaigns and organize boycotts.  Furthermore, many of these corporations are direct funders of the Human Rights Campaign (HRC), which is the leading advocacy organization for the LGBT agenda.  Not only did HRC effectively coordinate the left’s ultimately successful assault on traditional marriage, but this organization is also attempting to implement a nationwide sexual orientation and gender identity (SOGI) accommodation mandate.  The so-called “Equality Act” proposal would eliminate religious freedom protections for business owners on a national scale because it would grant special protection status for these groups and undermine the 1st Amendment.

Well, boycotts work two-ways.  Take your stand for religious liberty and traditional values.  Stop supporting these leftist-funding corporations with your business.  Click here to see which corporations directly fund HRC’s radical agenda http://2ndvote.com/human-rights-campaign/

Rev. Dr. Kenneth L. Beale, Jr.
Chaplain (Colonel-Ret), U.S. Army
Pastor, Ft. Snelling Memorial Chapel

Monday, January 22, 2018

The Road of Abortion is Built on Deception


Today (January 22) marks the 45th anniversary of the US Supreme Court’s (SCOTUS) landmark Roe v. Wade decision that legalized abortion-on-demand in America … as a woman’s right (never mind the unborn child).  Since then, it has resulted in an all-out assault on the family.

After Roe v. Wade, plaintiff Norma McCorvey, became a Christian and revealed that she had not been gang-raped … as her legal team had claimed – which means this ruling was based on a lie.  So was the companion case of Doe v. Bolton.  Plaintiff Sandra Cano said her attorneys tricked her into signing a statement seeking an abortion … something she says she did not want.  In 2005, she told a congressional hearing, “Doe v. Bolton is based on a lie and deceit.  It needs to be retried or overturned.”

But the deceptions didn’t begin with Roe and Doe.  The SCOTUS’s creation and abuse of a “right to privacy” … not found anywhere in the US Constitution … was hatched in a series of cases in the mid-1960s and early ’70s. 

Here’s how they pulled it off:

In Griswold v.Connecticut (1965), the SCOTUS struck down a Connecticut law forbidding contraception sales even to married couples.  The justices could have done so on the grounds that it was an anachronistic law that few observed or enforced.  Instead, they chose to create a constitutional “right to privacy” … basing it on the sanctity of marriage and grounding it in the heretofore unknown “penumbra” of constitutional rights.  “We deal with a right of privacy older than the Bill of Rights – older than our political parties, older than our school systems,” wrote Justice William O. Douglas in Griswold.  “Marriage is a coming together for better or worse, hopefully enduring, and intimate to the degree of being sacred,” said Douglas.  Ironically, the four-time-married Douglas went on to do as much as any justice to demolish protections for life, marriage and decency.

If the SCOTUS had stopped at Griswold’s celebration of marriage, it might even have shored up the status of the family in the nation’s laws.  The SCOTUS “could have filled the gap left by the Founding Fathers [who made no mention of family in the Constitution] by serving as the starting point for a new family-oriented reading of the Constitution,” wrote the late Michael Schwartz in The Supreme Court of the United States versus the American Family.  “But that is not how constitutional interpretation developed, wrote Schwartz.  Instead, the justices engineered the most consequential bait-and-switch in legal history: They shifted the moral capital of the “sanctity of marriage” to unmarried relationships and then to individuals and finally to “marriages” … without even a bride.

In 1972, another contraception case made it to the high court.  Bill Baird, who went on to run abortion clinics, challenged a Massachusetts law against selling birth control devices to unmarried couples.  In Eisenstadt v. Baird, the SCOTUS dishonestly appropriated Griswold’s recognition of the sacredness of marriage.  In Eisenstadt, the SCOTUS threw the right of privacy as an expression of the sanctity of marriage and priority of the family over the state overboard, and made privacy a purely individual right.

The very next year (1973), in Roe v. Wade and Doe v. Bolton, the SCOTUS once again misused the “right of privacy” established through the sanctity of marriage in order to strike down all state laws against abortion.  The radical nature of Roe and Doe went even beyond establishing a “right” to abortion – It launched a legal revolution against the family.  “The legalization of abortion represents an extreme form of imbalance in the relation of the individual to the family, permitting one family member to kill another,” Schwartz wrote, “and it marks the first instance in our legal history since the Roman Republic that intra-family killing has been tolerated by the public authority.”

Using more legal sleight-of-hand, the SCOTUS obliterated fathers’ rights to have a say in whether their sons or daughters were aborted.  And in another series of cases, the SCOTUS created “children's rights” … including the right of a minor girl to obtain an abortion without the consent of her parents or in some instances without even notifying them.

By 2015, after reducing families to an afterthought, the SCOTUS was ready in Obergefell v. Hodges to create a new constitutional “right” to same-sex ‘marriage’ – the final assault on the family.

With the “right to privacy” and individual autonomy firmly established, people also began to assert the “right” to kill themselves or assist others to do so.  By 2017, several states – California, Colorado, Montana, Oregon, Vermont and Washington (plus Washington, DC) had legalized the brave new world of physician-assisted suicide … which is ripe for abuse.

My friends: We need to re-establish a culture of life in America … by these terrible wrongs that are based on lies and deceit.  A good start would be overturning Roe v. Wade.

Rev. Dr. Kenneth L. Beale, Jr.
Chaplain (Colonel-Ret), U.S. Army
Pastor, Ft. Snelling Memorial Chapel

Friday, January 19, 2018

ATTN: Does Your University Persecute Christians?


The University of Iowa (UI) is caught up in a legal fight with a conservative Christian student group that denied a leadership position to a homosexual student.  The case pits a university policy barring discrimination based on sexual orientation against the religious beliefs of a 10-member group called Business Leaders in Christ (BLC).  

BLC sued after the state’s flagship university in Iowa City revoked its campus registration in November 2017.  The group says its membership is open to everyone, but that its leaders must affirm a statement of faith that rejects homosexuality.  The university says it respects the right of students, faculty and staff to practice the religion of their choice but does not tolerate discrimination of any kind.

BLC, founded in the spring of 2015 by students at UI’s Tippie College of Business, met weekly for Bible study, to conduct service projects and to mentor students on “how to continually keep Christ first in the fast-paced business world.”  The group’s loss of registration as an on-campus student organization means it can no longer reserve campus meeting space, participate in student recruitment fairs, access funds from student activity fees or use university-wide communication services.

A student member of BLC, Marcus Miller, filed a complaint with the university last February 2017 after the group denied his request to serve as its vice president.  Miller’s request was rejected after he disclosed he was gay.

BLC says it denied Miller’s request because he rejected its religious beliefs and would not follow them.  Group leaders must affirm a statement of faith that affirms that they “embrace, not reject, their God-given sex” and support the idea that marriage can be only between a man and a woman.  “Every other sexual relationship beyond this is outside of God’s design and is not in keeping with God’s original plan for humanity,” the statement of faith says.

BLC’s lawsuit, filed in federal court in Davenport, says it “cannot and will not ask leaders who do not share its beliefs to lead members in prayer or to convey those beliefs.”  “Every organization to exist has to be able to select leaders who embrace its mission,” says BLC’s attorney, Eric Baxter with the non-profit law firm Becket Fund for Religious Liberty.  “You would never ask an environmental group to have a climate denier as their leader.  It’s the same thing here,” says Baxter.

Judge Stephanie M. Rose has set a hearing for a request from BLC to reinstate its on-campus privileges in time to participate in spring recruitment fairs (January 24-25) … something the group says is “crucial to its existence.”

UI said it has a right and obligation to ensure an open and non-discriminatory environment on campus.  UI spokeswoman Jeneane Beck said that on-campus groups must guarantee “that equal opportunity and equal access to membership, programming, facilities, and benefits shall be open to all persons.”  But the UI also acknowledged that the court “must carefully weigh the compelling interest of religious freedom on the one hand and the compelling interest of preventing discrimination on the other hand.”

Given that religious liberty is a ‘civil right’ constitutional protected, and sexual orientation is merely a preference (not an innate characteristic), the decision should be easy.  BLC must be reinstated on the UI campus!

Rev. Dr. Kenneth L. Beale, Jr.
Chaplain (Colonel-Ret), U.S. Army
Pastor, Ft. Snelling Memorial Chapel

Wednesday, January 17, 2018

A Federal Judge Nomination Who is A Champion of Traditional Marriage


The Trump Administration has already established a sterling record of solid judicial nominees, and his nomination of Howard C. Nielson, Jr. to the federal bench continues that path.

The Washington, DC attorney, who has yet to be confirmed by the Senate, has come under fire for saying that gay judges shouldn’t hear cases involving issues that affect the LGBT community.

Nielson first came to national attention when he served as one of the attorneys for the plaintiffs in Hollingsworth v. Perry … better known as the “Proposition 8” case.  In 2008, California voters approved a constitutional amendment temporarily banning same-sex “marriage” in the state.  Nielson was on the team that sought to defend the measure in court.  When the chief judge of the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California ruled that Prop. 8 violated the US Constitution, Nielson filed a motion to nullify the ruling … arguing that the judge, Vaughn Walker, should have recused himself because he was in a long-term gay relationship.  [Walker had waited until after issuing his decision to make his sexual orientation public.]  Nielson asserted that Judge Walker “had a duty to disclose not only the facts concerning his relationship, but also his marriage intentions.”  Nielson went further, saying only if Walker “unequivocally disavowed any interest in marrying his partner could the parties and the public be confident that he did not have a direct personal interest in the outcome.”

Nielson’s motion was denied by another district court judge and the Prop. 8 case eventually made its way to the US Supreme Court (SCOTUS) … where the Justices ruled in support of Judge Walker’s decision.  That case paved the way for the Obergefell ruling by SCOTUS 2-years later … legalizing same-sex “marriage” across the country.

Perhaps the greatest measure of Nielson’s qualification for the federal bench comes from the magnitude of the alarm his nomination has raised among progressives. The pro-LGBT Human Rights Campaign (HRC) website announced in bold capital letters – “SHOCKER! ANOTHER ANTI-LGBTQ JUDICIAL NOMINEE FROM TRUMP.”  The HRC AM Tip-sheet continued, “Nielson is just the latest in a long line of extreme and unqualified anti-LGBTQ officials Donald Trump and Mike Pence have appointed and nominated to crucial agencies and court benches – some of whom will serve lifetime appointments.”

The LGBT publication, The Advocate, said that Neilson is just “the latest in a string of problematic judicial nominees.”  And the very left-leaning judicial watchdog group, Alliance for Justice, declared that Nielson’s nomination “raises red flags” because, in part, “in taking a leading role in the effort to prohibit same-sex marriage in California,” and [Nielson] “argued that a federal judge should be disqualified from hearing the case solely because he was gay.”

Early in his career Mr. Nielson served as a law clerk to SCOTUS Justice Anthony M. Kennedy.  He went on to serve in the Department of Justice as Counsel to the Attorney General, supervising high profile litigation.  In 2003 Neilson was appointed Deputy Assistant Attorney General for the Office of Legal Counsel, providing legal opinions and informal advice to the White House, the Attorney General, and Executive Branch Departments and Agencies.

“President Trump has made an outstanding choice to fill the vacancy on Utah’s federal District Court,” said Utah Senator Orrin Hatch.  “Howard Nielson is a first-rate talent with broad experience and a commitment to the rule of law.  He has sterling credentials and a solid reputation in the legal community.  President Trump promised to make judicial nominations a priority for his administration, and today, he continued delivering on that promise,” added the Utah Senator.  “I applaud the White House for selecting such an exceptional nominee and look forward to working with my Senate colleagues to see Howard confirmed,” says Hatch.

Rev. Dr. Kenneth L. Beale, Jr.
Chaplain (Colonel-Ret), U.S. Army
Pastor, Ft. Snelling Memorial Chapel

Monday, January 15, 2018

LA AG Provides Legal Guidance to Students re Religious Rights


Public school students in Louisiana (LA) have new legal guidance about constitutionally-protected religious expression.  Republican LA Attorney General Jeff Landry and U.S Rep. Mike Johnson have together released the Louisiana Student Rights Review to provide information on what is allowed at school under the U.S. Constitution.

“We wanted people to know, and students especially to know, that their First Amendment rights are not surrendered at the schoolhouse door,” Landry tells OneNewsNow.  “And that they do have a right to express their religious views while they are on campus and during their school time.”

The legal guidelines are meant to help public school officials who might find themselves the target of atheist groups, which allege violations of the ‘establishment clause’ and threaten costly lawsuits if their demands go unmet.  Facing a costly court fight, the schools often back down.  “That’s the reason we put the book out,” Landry says.  “It’s put together in an easy-to-read format, and it lays out some great questions and answers that students may have in regards to exercising their religious beliefs during school time or during extracurricular activities, “ says Landry.

Landry, a former U.S. congressman, won election to the attorney general’s office in 2016.  He says America was founded on Judeo-Christian principles, especially the belief that mankind’s rights are God-given, not granted by human beings or by a government.  “That has been enshrined at the beginning from the Declaration of Independence through our Constitution,” he says.  “And so this is a way to ensure that those students, as they go about their daily lives, understand that their religious beliefs are not to be dropped off at the front door of school,” says Landry.

Thank God for elected officials who understand our fundamental rights and set students at liberty to freely express their faith.

Rev. Dr. Kenneth L. Beale, Jr.
Chaplain (Colonel-Ret), U.S. Army
Pastor, Ft. Snelling Memorial Chapel

Friday, January 12, 2018

When Religious Convictions and Government Clash


A religious liberty law firm says a legal ruling – demanding an Amish family to use an electric pump – is about more than just electricity.

The case (Yoder v. Sugar Grove Area Sewer Authority) was heard in a Pennsylvania state appellate court – concluding a 5-year legal battle – where a 2-1 court decision ruled the Old Order Amish couple has to connect to a sewer system using electric equipment.

The Yoder family can appeal to the PA Supreme Court, but that does not guarantee its appeal will move forward.

“Americans should be free to follow their religious beliefs and this should be no less true for those like the Amish with unusual beliefs,” responds Chief Counsel Randall Wenger of the PA-based Independence Law Center.  With some exceptions, he says, the Amish have traditionally worked and lived without electricity as part of their faith; but now the government is requiring the Yoder family to ignore its beliefs.  When the Old Order Amish lose a case like this, says Wenger, some may ignore the legal case because it involves unusual people with odd beliefs.  “Or we can say,” Wenger says, “Wait a second, we all lose because it’s not so much the merits of electricity that should concern us, it’s that a fellow American is being told they don’t have the right to follow their religion.”

In fact, the dissenting judge in the case suggested in writing that the state’s Religious Freedom Protection Act requires the Sewer Authority to show it has a “compelling” reason – in this case a mandatory electric connection – to impose a burden on the Yoder family’s religious beliefs.

If a federal court can force an Amish family to violate its religious beliefs, Wenger warns, that same court can force others to violate their rights, too.  “We don’t live in a free society anymore,” he warns, “if government can force people to violate their most deeply-held convictions.”

Rev. Dr. Kenneth L. Beale, Jr.
Chaplain (Colonel-Ret), U.S. Army
Pastor, Ft. Snelling Memorial Chapel

Wednesday, January 10, 2018

Evolutionary Scientists Retract Former Theory for Truth


Isn’t it refreshing when scientists recognize that they deal in theory, not necessarily in reality!? 

According to Lynde Landgon writing for World News Service on December 31, 2017 a secular scientist – who attempted to explain the origins of life – has made a bold admission that bolsters arguments against Darwinian evolution.  Jack Szostak of Harvard University published a 2016 paper in Nature Chemistry claiming he and his colleagues had figured out a way to get RNA to replicate itself.

Darwinian evolutionists believe RNA (a nucleic acid present in all living cells) were some of the first molecules to form on the Earth and give rise to living things.  But for that to happen, the RNA would have had to somehow reproduce on its own without requisite enzymes that would not have evolved yet.  Szostak claimed to have facilitated RNA self-replication in his lab, but in December 2017, he said one of his colleagues, Tivoli Olsen, realized they had misinterpreted the data when she could not reproduce the original experiment’s results.  “In retrospect, we were totally blinded by our belief [in our findings] … we were not as careful or rigorous as we should have been (and as Tivoli was) in interpreting these experiments,” Szostak told Retraction Watch.

In his 2009 book “Signature in the Cell,” the Discovery Institute’s Stephen Meyer noted the inadequacy of using RNA to explain how life spontaneously appeared on earth.  That inadequacy continues to stymie evolutionists today.  “As I have investigated various models that combined chance and necessity, I have noted an increasing sense of futility and frustration arising amongst scientists who work on the origin of life,” Meyer wrote … referencing some of Szostak’s earlier work on the subject.

Ann Gauger, a developmental biologist and author for the Evolution News & Science Today blog, commended Szostak and Olsen’s integrity for coming forward with the retraction on their own.  “Scientists are human, and they desire certain outcomes that fit with strongly held beliefs,” Gauger wrote.  “It is absolutely necessary that we be our own severest critics, and check and double check our interpretations of data.  This applies to all points of view on the origins spectrum.”

Wouldn’t be wonderful if more scientists came to understand that they are dealing in theory, not in absolute truth!?

Rev. Dr. Kenneth L. Beale, Jr.
Chaplain (Colonel-Ret), U.S. Army
Pastor, Ft. Snelling Memorial Chapel

Monday, January 8, 2018

Planned Transgenderhood


Abortion giant Planned Parenthood (PP) released its annual report over the New Year’s holiday weekend posting record-setting income numbers for its fiscal year that ended June 30, 2017.

PP reported performing over 320,000 abortions this one year, accounting for approximately 1/3 of all the abortions performed in the United States.  However, National Review’s Alexandra DeSanctis points out “one glimmer of positive news” is the number of abortions performed by PP decreased from the previous year … a result of the overall abortion rate continuing to drop across the country.

With fewer women seeking abortion, PP is apparently seeking to expand its business model.  However, this does not mean actually providing more healthcare services for women such as mammograms or prenatal care.  Instead, this year’s report highlights the organization’s new focus on providing transgender hormone therapy.  [17 states now have PP health centers that have hormone therapy.]

In other words, while masquerading as a “healthcare” provider for women, PP is apparently more invested in turning men into woman than expanding what are very critical women’s healthcare services.

The Washington Times reports “the nation’s largest abortion provider struggling to keep its doors open as fewer women undergo abortions and patients seek health care services elsewhere.”  Overall patient visits are down 20% from 2010; and the latest financial numbers indicate a 43% decrease in assets due to the closing of dozens of clinics across the country.

PP’s record-setting income is the result of a 19% increase in private contributions and bequests, including corporate donations, over the previous year.  Undoubtedly, the 2016 election cycle was a boon for PP’s fundraising efforts as the organization remains a major player in left-wing political engineering circles.

The big picture here illustrates the overall exploitative nature of PP’s work.  37% of PP’s income comes from “Government Health Services Reimbursements & Grants.”  A reimbursement of this nature is typically a Medicaid-type payment, something that happens at every qualified healthcare provider for every patient covered under the program. These services are covered at countless clinics that don’t serve as a front for an abortion business.

When patients seek these services elsewhere, abortion, the most expensive service offered, becomes more important to the bottom line, which DeSanctis believes is the underlying motivation for PP’s abortion quotas.

Keep in mind, the abortion industry has been linked to truly exploitative criminal activity such as sex trafficking.  Live Action’s undercover investigations have caught multiple PP employees turning a blind eye to potential victims who were brought to in get what would amount to a forced abortion.

Furthermore, the politicization of gender identity is exploitative in nature as well.  PP’s newest business initiative of providing sex-change therapy hormones essentially supports an agenda that is determined to mandate men be allowed to use women’s restroom facilities on the basis of how they feel, not their biological sex.  The left aims to enable predators in support of the LGBT agenda on this issue, despite the well-documented incidents that show these policies do in fact cause safety concerns.

All in all, PP works more to exploit women, provide abortions, help men become women, and less to provide actual healthcare services to women.  So why would any corporation partner with such an organization?  Clearly, with the reported 19% rise in donations this year, PP is depending on charity to keep its doors open.

Rev. Dr. Kenneth L. Beale, Jr.
Chaplain (Colonel-Ret), U.S. Army
Pastor, Ft. Snelling Memorial Chapel

Friday, January 5, 2018

What Do You Get When Rights Only Go One Way? Intolerance!


Attorneys for an Oregon couple who were punished by a state bureaucrat over a wedding cake are reviewing a federal appeals court decision.

The Associated Press (AP) reported December 28th that the Oregon Court of Appeals upheld a decision by the Oregon Bureau of Labor and Industries that resulted in a $135,000 penalty against Aaron and Melissa Klein, who owned the bakery Sweetcakes by Melissa, located in Gresham.  The Kleins refused to take an order for a same-sex wedding cake and the legal battle that ensued marked one of the country’s first cases that pitted a business owner’s religious views against non-discrimination laws that include homosexuals and lesbians.

The Kleins argued that a liberal labor commissioner, Brad Avakian, violated their religious rights and free speech rights when he imposed the staggering fine for causing emotional distress to the lesbian couple.  Avakian garnered national attention for issuing a gag order to silence the Kleins and even demanding that they pay the fine using personal assets and not their business, The Washington Times has reported. 

Avakian was also known for advocating for homosexual rights, and the Kleins argued that he should have stepped away from their case after he issued a 122-page order that claimed the lesbians suffered 80 symptoms -- resuming smoking habits, weight gain, doubt, and worry -- from the incident that they described as “mental rape.”  Yet the Kleins failed to prove their case against Avakian, the AP story reported; and Avakian proclaimed the court ruling shows Oregon is “open to all.”

The decision against the Kleins comes just weeks after the U.S. Supreme Court heard oral arguments in the case of Colorado baker Jack Phillips.  That decision is expected in June 2018.  Writing about that pending decision at National Review, Kevin Williamson warned about the legal consequences if Christians are forced by “government bayonets” to perform a duty they are morally opposed to.  He wrote: Telling a black man that he may not work in your bank because he is black is in reality a very different thing from telling a gay couple that you’d be happy to sell them cupcakes or cookies or pecan pies but you do not bake cakes for same-sex weddings — however much the principle of the thing may seem superficially similar.  If the public sphere is infinite, then the private sphere does not exist, and neither does private life.

“Obviously this is a blow for the Constitution and the rule of law in this country, and I think it’s a sad day in this country when people can be punished for their religious beliefs,” says Mike Berry, the attorney at First Liberty (FL) who represents the Kleins.

When asked about the Phillips’ case, Berry says it’s too early to know how that outcome will affect the Kleins.  “It would really depend,” he says, “on how broad or narrow of a ruling the Supreme Court issues in that case.”

Firsthand observers of the Phillips’ oral arguments left the courtroom predicting that Justice Anthony Kennedy, known as a swing vote, could side with Jack Phillips.  FL, in fact, is seeking what Justice Kennedy pointed out during the oral arguments.  “Tolerance is really a two-way street in this country,” says Berry, “and if we truly are going to be a nation that values diversity of all points of view and all beliefs, then tolerance really does have to run both ways.”

Rev. Dr. Kenneth L. Beale, Jr.
Chaplain (Colonel-Ret), U.S. Army
Pastor, Ft. Snelling Memorial Chapel