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Related: About this forumLoving Uganda to Death: The Global Reach of Far-Right Christian Hatred
http://www.religiondispatches.org/archive/sexandgender/6926/loving_uganda_to_death__the_global_reach_of_far_right_christian_hatred/By PETER MONTGOMERY
From the film: Rachelle and Jesse Digges, Missionaries, at the International House of Prayer (IHOP) in Kansas City Photo Credit: Derek Wiesehahn
Peter Montgomery
Peter Montgomery, an associate editor for Religion Dispatches, is a Senior Fellow at People For the American Way Foundation where he was on staff for 15 years. Before that he was associate director of grassroots lobbying for Common Cause and wrote for Common Cause Magazine, an award-winning journal featuring investigative reporting about the federal government.
While conservative evangelical and Catholic leaders complain loudly about the persecution they suffer in the United States, the culture wars they are igniting and supporting around the world subject LGBT people and their allies to very real persecution.
The role that American religious right leaders have played in fomenting anti-gay bigotry in Uganda has been well-documented, but never before with the emotional punch delivered by God Loves Uganda, a new documentary by Academy Award-winning director Roger Ross Williams that premiered at this years Sundance Film Festival.
I love Uganda, says Kapya Koama in the films opening words. But, something frightening is happening that has the potential to destroy Uganda.
Filmmaker Williams was given remarkable access to leaders and missionaries affiliated with the International House of Prayer (IHOP) movement based in Kansas City, and he makes the most of it. Dominionist Lou Engle describes Africa as a firepot of spiritual renewal and revival, and be believes Uganda has a special prophetic destiny. Engle has tried to distance himself somewhat from the infamous kill the gays bill that is pending in Ugandas legislature, but here he is on film, at his TheCall rally in Uganda, standing with speakers calling for passage of the bill.
more at link
okasha
(11,573 posts)is directly attributable to the C-Street Family and its Republican members/allies in Congress. There ought to be a legal way to break their hold. I'm pretty sure what they're doing usurps the function of the Federal grovernment in dealing directly with foreign governmnents and is therefore unconstitutional. ACLU and/or Lambda Legal should step in on this.
cbayer
(146,218 posts)pinto
(106,886 posts)I hope Williams' piece garners a wider audience.
cbayer
(146,218 posts)Fortinbras Armstrong
(4,473 posts)cbayer
(146,218 posts)kwassa
(23,340 posts)It is a long and involved story, but the Anglican Communion is a voluntary association of national churches, based on geographical location. Everyone minding their own business, and doing their own thing.
Until 2003, when the Diocese of New Hampshire elevated the Rev. Gene Robinson to the post of bishop. Robinson is gay.
The central African members of the Communion, headed by Peter Akinola, Archbishop of Nigeria, went nuts, tried to get the Archbishop of Canterbury to come down on the Americans, started a whole movement that included ordaining dissident conservative Americans as bishops or as churches under the wing of African churches. Because of the inaction of the Archbishop of Canterbury, the whole situation festered forever, and Nigerien and Ugandan and Rwandan Anglican churches have all set up associations. They were crossing boundaries of national churches, which is illegal but unenforced within the communion, with conservative American churches who essentially tried to leave and take Episcopal-owned property and governing structures with them. Many of these moves have been taken to court, and the conservatives have lost almost all the court cases.
But it goes on and on and on.
cbayer
(146,218 posts)hrmjustin
(71,265 posts)kwassa
(23,340 posts)at least here in the US. No one has power over the Episcopal church except us.
If they kicked us out of the Communion, which will not happen, it would not make the slightest bit of real difference. There are other liberal national Anglican churches, too. I think the central African churches are the most conservative, and much of the communion is somewhere in the middle. The US, Canada, New Zealand and Australia are liberal.