Click here to read what appears to be a lengthy excerpt from Marci McDonald’s book, “The Armageddon Factor: The Rise of Christian Nationalism in Canada,” due to be released Monday. One of the many illustrations of the absurdity of Ms. McDonald’s conspiracy theories is her labeling of the Canadian Constitution Foundation as a “Christian advocacy group.” One of CCF’s leading representatives and in-house lawyers is outspoken atheist libertarian, Karen Selick. How much credibility is Random House Canada going to get for publishing this book?
The Toronto Star – May 7, 2010
How Canada’s Christian right was built
From Stephen Harper’s refusal to fund abortion as part of his G8 initiative to the outcry that forced the cancellation of Ontario’s sex ed curriculum, the religious right is making its growing muscle felt on the political landscape. In a new book called
By Marci McDonald
From the moment I began this book, I was confronted by skeptics who insist that a truly influential religious right could never take root in Canada. For some, that denial seemed like an exercise in wishful thinking, a refusal to face the possibility that the idea of the country they cherish — liberal, tolerant, and not given to extremes of action or belief — might not be in sync with the changing reality. Others argued that if a Christian right did exist here it would have burst fully formed on to the political scene, a carbon copy of that in the U.S. — raucous and confrontational, openly pulling the strings of the Conservative party and captained by outspoken television preachers with millions of viewers ready to respond to their bidding. But the American movement has had more than three decades to take shape and flourish; by the time scholars and the mainstream media noticed, it had already infiltrated nearly every level of government from school boards to the Senate, often by stealth.
In this country, where the CRTC has kept the reins on religious broadcasting and Catholics make up a larger proportion of the faith community, the emergent Christian right may look and sound different than its American counterpart, but in the five years since the prospect of same-sex marriage propelled evangelicals into political action, it has spawned a coalition of advocacy groups, think tanks and youth lobbies that have changed the national debate. The “sleeping giant” that Capital Xtra! magazine had warned against in 2005 is now up and about, organizing with a vengeance that will not be easily reversed. As Faytene Kryskow, leader of Christian youth lobby called 4MYCanada, told a parliamentary reception, “We are here, and we are here to stay.”
With funding from a handful of conservative Christian philanthropists and a web of grassroots believers accustomed to tithing in the service of their faith, those organizations have built sophisticated databases and online networks capable of mobilizing their forces behind specific legislation with instant e-mail alerts and updates. Setting up an array of internship programs, they are also training a new generation of activists to be savvier than their secular peers in navigating the corridors of power. Already, their alumni have landed top jobs in the public service, MPs’ offices and the PMO, prompting one official from the National House of Prayer to boast in an unguarded moment, “If the media knew how many Christians there are in the government, they’d go crazy.”
Click here to read what appears to be a lengthy excerpt from Marci McDonald’s book.




May 20, 2010
I concede that there are many within the ‘Church’ that are not His at all. They tie up heavy loads for the people to lift, and do not rise a finger to help. They speak of tithes under the law, seek places of honour in the public square, use their positions to lord over many, live in fine houses, whilst their flock is troubled in making ends meet. Many will come in that day and say, Lord, Lord, did we not cast our demons, heal in Your Name, and He will say, Get away from me, I never knew you! I submit that there are indeed many that fit that description within the many denominations today. But, too there are others that know and follow Him and are changing the face of society and neighbourhoods, one individual at a time.
May 20, 2010
Rob
I meant to say I very much enjoyed this statement of yours. “When I received Jesus Christ, He did not ask me to throw my brain away, but instead to grow in knowledge, not just in scripture of of that in the secular. And, I see His reflection in all that is.” That says it quite well.
I like to say I see God in nature, I don’t go to nature to see God. It is what your last sentence is saying only in a different way.
I feel sorry for the willfully ignorant who choose to worship the created instead of the creator.
May 20, 2010
Dear Ian:
Thank you. I misunderstood. But, truly in investigating discoveries in many fields, I find His design, His imprint and His calling to look to Him.
May 22, 2010
David F. Skoll says:
May 16, 2010
Science and faith are two completely different world views, and the fact that some scientists are also religious merely displays the capacity of the human brain to hold two completely different views without being bothered by the contradiction.
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David got it totaly mixed up. There is faith in God (faith in some kind of order and purpose in universe that we live in) that comes from religion and than there is a specific way of finding out of what that order is. That specific way of finding out what God’s rules of creations are is called science. Since people of faith assume as a constant existence of God and some kind of order that he created they are not fully vested in scientific endavour they are undertaking when they try to discover God’s rules of creations of the Universe. The fact that they are not fully wested in their scientific endavour makes them sceptical scientists.
People who do not believe in God assume scientific endavour as their substitute religion and in order to support their faith they pick certain scientific findings and use them as cornerstones of their new faith (pick and choose scientific dogma like evolution). This new phenomena of science turned into new religion causes all kinds of problems for evolution of science. Recent global warming fiasco is a perfect evidence of nonsense on stilts that atheists create when they try to substitute science(specific process of finding truth) for faith (belief system).
Since David F. Skoll seem to be one of those who believe in evolution my question for him is this. How did a box jellyfish manage to evolve fully functioning eyes without first evolving a brain that could process informations these eyes produce. Is box jellyfish an evidence that eyes evolved before brains or is it an evidence that jellyfish lost their brains somewhere along their evolutionary path?
See:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Box_jellyfish