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Moroni to Remain in Chains!

Apparently Mormon leaders did not take my pleas to heart. Apparently, I am not a voice of the people to be reckoned with. Alas! 

It was announced Thursday that Just Add Coffee will be dropping their T-Shirt design with the angel Moroni on it. Apparently, if the Mormon church says that an angel may not partake of a cup of Joe, the angel must listen.  Sorry, Moroni. I hope there is a nice Starbucks in heaven for you. Lord knows they’re everywhere else.  

My original story here 

And Thursday’s story: 

Coffee shop owners drop Mormon angel from T-shirt designTAYLORSVILLE, Utah (AP) — In keeping with a local economy that features “Polygamy Porter” beer, a suburban Salt Lake City coffee shop thought it was being funny with a recent T-shirt design: The angel Moroni blowing a trumpet, tipped ever so slightly as coffee pours into it.

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints did not see the humor. Not only is Moroni revered — Mormons believe he appeared to church founder Joseph Smith — but church members are discouraged from drinking coffee.

Van Lidell and Ed Beazer, owners of Just Add Coffee, say they use humor to set their 4 1/2-year-old business apart from the competition. A Starbucks opened next door last year.

“We didn’t do it to be mean,” Beazer said. “We didn’t do it because we’re anti-Mormon. We did it because we thought it was funny.”

Nevertheless, after Mormon church officials asked the coffee shop to stop using Moroni’s image, the owners agreed.

Just Add Coffee’s new design is still irreverent. It shows a hand (with dark suit sleeve and white shirt cuff) pouring coffee from a pot into a horn and says: “The Lord giveth, and a church taketh away.”

Christianity in Brazil

This was posted on Reuters about the growing evangelical churches in Brazil. I would disagree with the assesment that pentecostals are “protestant”. I think this position would be shared by most evaneglical Christians, but also by most pentecostals themselves.  

Either way, this is an interesting story about the growth and transformation of the Christian church in South America. When the Spirit of God moves, it really does move where it wills. After so many years of the Gospel being borne among the Roman Catholic Church, it now seems to have moved out beyond - at least for a time.

Pope Benedict’s attempts to preserve the Roman Catholic church within Brazil are, I think, a little bit of bad faith. So long as the Church is strong, it ought not to matter that the Roman Catholic church is weakening. Personally, I do not lament that the United Methodist Church in America is fewer in numbers each year, only that the over-all attendence and participation in churches  is dropping in the US. Pope Benedict, who has always secretly espoused the doctrine of extra ecclesia nulla salva est (”outside of the church, no salvation”), does not see this. He shall be in my prayers, as will all these people in the story who have found joy, meaning, hope, and new life in the Lord.

 

Rising Protestant tide sweeps Catholic Brazil  

CARAPICUIBA, Brazil (Reuters) - For years, Ronaldo da Silva’s daily routine consisted of drinking himself into a stupor until he passed out on a sidewalk.

Now he spends his days praying and singing with hundreds of fellow Christians at the Universal Church of the Kingdom of God in Carapicuiba, a sprawling shantytown on the outskirts of Sao Paulo where Pentecostal congregations are found on just about every block.

“I’d probably be dead or in jail if it weren’t for this church,” said da Silva, a 38-year-old former Catholic who claims God cured him of epilepsy and helped him straighten out his life when he converted to Pentecostalism a decade ago.

Conversions like da Silva’s are increasingly common all over Brazil, where a boom in evangelical Protestantism is steadily chipping away at the supremacy of the Roman Catholic Church.

The trend, which is playing out all across Latin America, poses a major challenge for Pope Benedict, who arrives in Brazil on May 9 for a five-day visit largely aimed at blunting the decline of Catholicism in this continent-sized nation.

Although Brazil still has more Catholics than any other country in the world, with about 125 million, the percentage of believers that practice the Vatican’s brand of Christianity has been dropping rapidly in the last three decades.

When the late Pope John Paul II visited Brazil in 1980, 89 percent of Brazilians identified themselves as Catholic. By 2000, when the last census was taken, the share of Catholics in the population had fallen to 74 percent.

The number of evangelical Protestants nearly tripled in the same period to 26 million, or about 15 percent of the population. That growth, which is expected to continue, is dramatically altering the religious landscape of a country where the national identity has been intertwined with Catholicism since the Portuguese landed 500 years ago.

“The face of Christianity in Brazil, and all over the developing world, is increasingly Pentecostal,” said Luis Lugo, director of the Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life, a research group in Washington.

REACHING THE MASSES

Pentecostals are not Brazil’s only “evangelicos,” as Protestants are called here. Mainstream churches such as Presbyterian and Lutheran are also present, but Pentecostalism is by far the fastest growing kind of Protestantism.

More than other Christians, Pentecostals believe that God, acting through the Holy Spirit, plays an active role in everyday life. They belong to denominations such as the Assemblies of God and the Universal Church, which was started in a Rio de Janeiro funeral home in 1977 and now has more than 2 million members.

Pentecostalism is especially strong in poor urban areas, where the precariousness of daily life — blackouts, violent crime, high unemployment — can make people seek divine intervention. Many converts are also attracted to the pop-style music and dynamic liturgies, which resonate with contemporary tastes more than the traditional Catholic Mass.

At the Universal Church in Carapicuiba, the weekly Saturday night service at times looks more like a dance hall than a religious temple, with worshippers flailing their arms in the air and singing in unison. Some, like the former alcoholic da Silva, frequently break into tears as they look to the sky and thank God for their good fortune.

“The language of evangelicals is simple, direct, with minimal theology, making it easily understood by the masses,” said Silvia Fernandes, a sociologist at the Center of Religious Statistics and Social Research in Rio de Janeiro.

Evangelical Protestants are also a political force in Brazil. About 10 percent of members of Congress are evangelicals, acting as an influential legislative caucus. Three of the last four state governors in Rio were Protestants, and President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva aggressively courted the evangelical vote in his re-election campaign last year.

The Catholic Church, which is also losing followers to secularism, has responded to the Pentecostal boom by borrowing some evangelical thunder. In a movement that has come to be known as the Charismatic Renewal, some Catholic churches in Brazil have adopted animated worship styles and Pentecostal practices like speaking in tongues and divine healing.

The best-known proponent of renewalist Catholicism is Padre Marcelo Rossi, a former aerobics instructor turned pop-star preacher from Sao Paulo who sells millions of CD’s and even starred in a movie in which he played the Archangel Gabriel.

So far, however, the shift to renewalism has done little to reverse the evangelical tide — a trend that Catholic leaders acknowledge is worrisome.

“I’m not going to say that it pleases us when believers leave the church,” Odilo Scherer, Sao Paulo’s new archbishop, said in a recent interview with the newspaper O Estado de Sao Paulo. “Maybe our methods are inadequate.”

The Rev. Dr. Yeager Hudson

   This is the obituary posting for a good and decent man. Yeager was my teacher, mentor, and friend in college. He is probably one of the main reasons I am a minister, Methodist, and even a Christian.

  He is not a name than anyone reading this blog is likely to know, but he was important to me. Perhaps this is only a sign that while so many of us will never make the cover of Newsweek, we are all important to the lives we touch and the fingerprints we leave on the souls of those we encounter.

   Rest in peace, good a faithful servant (Matthew 25). You are and will be greatly missed until we meet again . . .

     GEORGETOWN — The Rev. Dr. Yeager Hudson died April 22, 2007, at Midcoast Hospital in Brunswick, after a long battle with cancer.

     He was born on Aug. 14, 1931, in Meridian, Miss., the son of Ernest and Effie Elizabeth (Yeager) Hudson. He attended Millsaps College in Jackson, Mich., graduating with honors in 1954. While attending Millsaps College he also met and married his wife of 53 years, Louise Hight Hudson.

     Upon completing his undergraduate studies, he and his wife moved to Boston, Mass., where he earned a Masters in Sacred Theology as well as a PH. D. in Philosophy from Boston University. While completing work on his Doctorate, he accepted a temporary teaching position in 1959 at Colby College in Waterville. This temporary position resulted in not only a life-long love affair with the State of Maine, but a teaching career at Colby College that spanned 40 years.

     During his studies at Boston University, Dr. Hudson developed an affinity for South Asian Philosophy. Under the instruction of Amiya Chakravarty, the 20 personal secretary of Indian Peot/Philosopher Rabindranath Tagore, Dr. Hudson also came to share a deep affection for the works of Mr. Tagore and others such as Ralph Waldo Emerson. These influences would continue to shape Dr. Hudson’s thinking and teaching over his entire career, ultimately leading to several sabbatical leaves spent living in both India and Sri Lanka.

     In addition to his teaching position, Dr. Hudson was also an ordained Minister of the United Methodist Church. During the years spent at Millsaps College, Dr. Hudson was Deacon for several rural congregations in the Vicksburg, Mich. area. While not formally the pastor of a congregation since having lived in Mississippi, Dr. Hudson was closely involved with the Methodist church on both a local and New England-wide level. He led services, performed weddings and conducted funerals for various congregations around the state while their pastors were on vacation, otherwise disposed or by individuals requests.

     Dr. Hudson is survived by his wife, Louise Hudson of Georgetown; two sons, Paul Hudson of Georgetown and Gary Hudson of Cincinnati, Ohio; five grandchildren, Isabelle, Walter, Sophie, Wyatt, Celie and several nieces and nephews.

     A visiting hour will be held from 6 to 7 p.m., on Friday at Mayo, Curtis & Hill Funeral Home, 819 High St., Bath. A funeral service will be held at 2 p.m. on Saturday at the United Methodist Church, 1184 Washington St., Bath. A gathering of family and friends will follow in the Parish Fellowship Hall. Burial will be at Mountainside Cemetery in Georgetown.

    Donations in lieu of flowers can be made to Colby College in his name, the Bath United Methodist Church Building Fund or the Georgetown Historical Society.