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RNS
Year in review By
KEVIN ECKSTROM (RNS) — The calendar
may have said 2010, but for Pope Benedict XVI and much of his global
flock, it looked and felt a lot like 2002. For the second time in a
decade, damning charges of child molestation at the hands of Catholic
priests dominated headlines, this time reaching the highest levels of
the Vatican, as critics questioned whether Benedict himself mishandled
abuse cases. The Roman Catholic Church
wasn’t the only institution battling a sense of deja vu, as some
of the most controversial religion stories from the past 20 years returned
to the headlines. A 1994-style fight over health
care reform not only pitted Republicans against Democrats, but also
Catholic bishops against Catholic nuns. Lingering questions about President
Obama’s Christian faith morphed into a belief among one in five
Americans that he’s actually a Muslim. Nearly 10 years after 9/11,
Islamophobia returned with a vengeance as a Florida pastor threatened
to torch a pile of Qur’ans, and Tennessee officials debated whether
Islam is actually a religion. This time, the resurrected
stories were more pointed, the debates more polarizing. Old stories
found new life online, and voices that once would have been dismissed
as extreme were amplified by the Internet, Facebook and Twitter. “New media has had
the effect of keeping certain news stories alive, bringing them back
from the dead and propelling them into the news,” said Diane Winston,
a scholar of religion and media at the University of Southern California. The 2010 abuse scandal, unlike
the 2002 crisis in the U.S., was largely confined to Europe, starting
in Ireland and later erupting in the pope’s native Germany. Four
bishops resigned, and Benedict ended the year by telling cardinals that
worldwide guidelines for handling abuse cases will be forthcoming. “It was really almost
like the crater of a volcano, out of which suddenly a tremendous cloud
of filth came, darkening and soiling everything,” the pope told
a German journalist in a book-length interview. Here at home, the ghosts
of 9/11 loomed large as a fight over a planned Islamic community centre
a few blocks from Ground Zero became a litmus test for tolerance toward
American Muslims. Evangelist Franklin Graham was uninvited from a National
Day of Prayer event at the Pentagon for calling Islam an “evil”
and “wicked” religion, comments he made back in 2001. Even as Michigan’s
Rima Fakih was crowned the first Muslim Miss USA, 53 per cent of Americans
admitted harbouring unfavourable views of Islam. Oklahoma voters passed
a pre-emptive ban on judges using Islamic law in state courts. Omid Safi, a professor of
Islamic studies at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill,
said he is most concerned by the reaction against the organizers of
Park51, the proposed Islamic centre near Ground Zero. “These are the most
interfaith-y group of Muslims imaginable,” he said. “They
are as successful an American story as it gets; it’s the perfect
immigrant narrative. These are people who get sent by the State Department
overseas to say Muslims can live freely in this country, and then they
are caricatured as jihadist radicals.” Distrust of Islam was not
limited to American shores. A year after Switzerland banned minarets
at mosques, Belgium and France banned Muslim women from wearing full-face
veils in public. Like the 1994 Republican
resurgence, the Democrats’ midterm “shellacking” was
fuelled, in large part, by anger over health care reform. The plan split
American Catholics, with bishops opposing it and Catholic hospitals
and nuns supporting it. The hierarchy later dismissed dissenters’
support for the plan as mere “opinion,” however “well-considered.” In the Episcopal Church,
it felt a lot like 2003 again as Rev. Mary Glasspool was elected the
church’s second openly gay bishop. New Hampshire Bishop V. Gene
Robinson, whose 2003 election sparked a global schism, announced that
he will retire in 2013. Glasspool’s election
prompted Anglican leaders in London to sideline their rebellious American
branch on some international panels. The Presbyterian Church (USA) voted
— for the fourth time in a dozen years — to allow openly
gay clergy, and new rules that allow gay clergy prompted dissident Lutherans
to form the North American Lutheran Church. In a flashback to 1976, when
Episcopalians opened the priesthood to women, the last hold-out diocese,
in Quincy, Ill., finally ordained its first female priest. A rash of teen suicides and
gay bullying spurred religious leaders, rock stars and even Obama to
join the “It Gets Better” project, while an October poll
found that two-thirds of Americans see a link between religious teachings
against homosexuality and higher rates of suicide among gay youth. Religious teachings against
homosexuality are not enough to justify a ban on gay marriage, a federal
judge ruled in August in striking down California’s Proposition
8. And religious beliefs are not enough to justify the unconstitutional
law that created the National Day of Prayer, another federal judge ruled
in April. Pioneering televangelist
Robert Schuller, after a bitter and public family feud, handed his Southern
California pulpit over to daughter Sheila Schuller Coleman, who filed
for bankruptcy in October, citing church debts of $43 million. In Oregon, prosecutors travelled
down familiar terrain as two parents from a controversial faith-healing
church were sentenced in the death of their teenage son; their daughter
and son-in-law had been acquitted on similar charges last year. Another
set of parents from the same church face similar manslaughter charges. Religious and humanitarian
groups rallied to deliver relief to earthquake-ravaged Haiti, where
an estimated 220,000 died, more than 300,000 were injured and more than
1 million left homeless. Ten U.S. missionaries were detained, and later
released, on charges of trying to smuggle Haitian orphans out of the
country. Along the Gulf Coast, social
service agencies were stretched thin trying to deliver relief to families
and businesses struggling to cope with the massive BP oil spill. 2010 saw several prominent
culture warriors take a bow from the national stage: — After stepping down
last year as chair of Focus on the Family, James Dobson turned off the
mic at his daily radio program only to start his own show. — Ill health forced
Donald Wildmon to retire as head of the American Family Association. — Ergun Caner was forced
to step down as dean of Liberty Baptist Theological Seminary after exaggerating
his dramatic conversion from militant Islam. At the same time, several
controversial newsmakers from years past re-emerged for a second act
in 2010: — Colorado Springs
pastor Ted Haggard started a new church four years after a stunning
fall from grace in a scandal involving a male escort and drugs. — Obama’s fiery
former pastor, Jeremiah Wright, alleged that the president “threw
me under the bus” during the 2008 campaign. — Roy Moore, who lost
his job as chief justice on the Alabama Supreme Court in 2003 for refusing
to remove a 5,300-pound Ten Commandments monument, lost his second bid
for governor. — Nation of Islam leader
Louis Farrakhan returned to the spotlight to demand an apology from
Jews for “the most vehement anti-black behaviour in the annals
of our history.” — Whitewater prosecutor
Kenneth Starr was named president of Baylor University, the world’s
largest Baptist school. 2010 also saw the passing
of several notable figures: Jews for Jesus founder Moishe Rosen died
at age 78; pioneering feminist theologian Mary Daly died at age 81;
“Davey and Goliath” creator Art Clokey died at age 88. Gospel
artists Doug Oldham died at age 79, Albertina Walker at age 81 and Walter
Hawkins at age 61. Copyright 2010 Religion News Service. All rights reserved. No part of this transmission may be distributed or reproduced without written permission. |
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