One of the nine justices from the US Supreme Court has tendered his resignation and will leave the Court in a month’s time. This appointment is significant because the justice will remain in post until resignation or death (which could be 30-50 years -- the youngest candidate is a 46 year old woman) and because the Supreme Court justices often vote in accordance with their own political beliefs. President Trump is likely to select a conservative (with a small ‘c’ – someone who interprets the Constitution literally rather than re-imagining it in the light of modern views) which will create a conservative majority in the court on social issues for the first time in decades. Speculation has already begun about possible repeal of Roe vs. Wade, the 1973 decision that made abortion legal in the USA.
One decision the Supreme Court has made recently concerned a “baker and gay marriage cake” case. A Christian baker in Colorado, whose beliefs were sufficiently strong that he refused to bake Halloween cakes, was asked to bake a cake supporting gay marriage and refused. The Colorado Civil Rights Commission (CCRC) decided he was using his claims of religious freedom to justify discrimination. However, a Christian activist then asked several bakeries in the state to bake a cake saying that homosexuality was a sin; all refused and were backed by the CCRC. The Supreme Court found that the Christian baker was in the right by a 7-2 majority on the grounds that the CCRC had been “unusually hostile” to him, with the inconsistent decision regarding the other bakeries featuring heavily in the justification. However, this reasoning means that the case does not necessarily apply to other US states where similar sanctions have been applied against Christian bakers, florists and other businesses.
The ultra-liberal Canadian government, in contrast, has increased its legal pressures against Christians. Its latest move has been to uphold a decision by two Canadian provinces that a Christian law school cannot have its graduates validated as lawyers because Trinity Western University requires students not to engage in acts “that violate the sacredness of marriage between a man and a woman”. It has also ruled that a polyamorous (i.e. polygamy without multiple marriages) threesome can all be named as legal parents of a child. Legal resistance continues to centre around the state of Alberta where parents want to block a law that not only allows schools to set up LGBT ‘clubs’ but allows them to keep a child’s membership secret from parents.
Hungary has achieved a significant drop in abortions and divorces and a surge in marriages by introducing pro-family policies. The policies include maternity support; paid childcare leave; family tax benefits and housing allowance; tax allowances that encourage young couples to marry; no-charge holiday camps for children; subsidized textbooks; and decreased utility costs. Compared with 2010, there has been a 42% increase in marriages; a 20% drop in divorces; and a 30% fall in abortions.
Andrew White, the “Vicar of Baghdad”, has been cleared of criminal charges for allegedly paying Islamic State terrorists to redeem Yazidi sex slaves. It seems that some human rights activists did make such payments, and that White also managed to free six or seven women through his network of Arab contacts, but that White’s actions did not involve payment. “You would think that releasing sex slaves from ISIS was a good thing,” said White, “but [the police] were convinced that I could only have done it by paying for them”.
In the Far East, a major move of God has been reported from Mongolia. “Even people on the streets will talk to you about how to get saved” said 86 year old missionary Marilyn Hickey.
There is also a story from Myanmar (formerly Burma) of two thousand Kachin Christians escaping from the Burmese Army, which has been attacking the mainly Christian ethnic minority for decades allegedly in a campaign against separatist groups. The civilians had been trapped in the jungles in the north; they fled on foot, with several being injured by landmines on the way. When they came to a wide river, local elephant owners volunteered the services of their animals to transport the refugees across.
In the Philippines, a third Catholic priest has been killed in a drive-by shooting. The current president, Rodrigo Duterte, is carrying out a “war in drugs” using the same methods he employed as mayor of a large city -- by encouraging extrajudicial killings. There have been 16,000 unsolved homicides in the past 18 months, mainly among the urban poor. The policy remains popular among ordinary Filipinos but the Catholic Church in the country has been a vocal critic of the policy, calling it a “reign of terror” in poor communities.
The recent conflicts between Israel and Palestinians in the Gaza Strip were brought to an unexpected end by the weather. Palestinian attacks had already caused fires near the border, including in a Jewish school. It was feared that the end of Ramadan would be marked by the launch of large numbers of “kite bombs” designed to cause further conflagrations, Instead, unseasonal downpours of rain flooded streets to the point of half-submerging cars.
Back in the USA, the Department of Justice has carried out a 3 month investigation against suspected online child sex offenders. The investigation identified 195 offenders who either produced child pornography or committed child sexual abuse and 383 children who suffered. 2,300 people were arrested in mid-June and are likely to be charged.
Also in the USA, the debate over gun control has a new case to consider: an armed robber in Washington State was shot dead by a pastor. The man entered Walmart in the town of Tumwater, which sells ammunition, and opened the case by shooting it. He then attempted to steal a car, shooting the driver twice. Two men who were legally armed followed the man outside; after telling him to put the gun down, the pastor (who is also a paramedic but declined to give his name) shot the robber dead.
In technology news, a 9 year old girl in the UK has been checked into rehab because of her addiction to the video game Fortnite. The unnamed girl had been limited to playing the game for one hour on school nights and two hours at weekends but would get up every night and play secretly. Eventually her father found her sitting on a urine-soaked cushion because she wouldn’t even leave the game to go to the toilet. An addiction counsellor said, “Over the last two months I’ve been contacted by dozens of parents with children as young as eight showing signs of addiction to Fortnite. I’ve been working in this field for three decades and never seen anything like it, how widespread and potentially damaging this is.”
And finally, the organisers of the next Olympic Games in Tokyo have announced that the event will be 100% powered by renewable energy. They have budgeted for installing solar panels and buying renewable energy from power companies. In addition, they will use fuel cell vehicles and will lease or rent services as much as possible to ensure that 99% of all buildings, supplies and materials are re-used after the Games. The motto on their website is, “Be better, together – For the planet and the people”.