Ernie :
With all due respect, Steve Jobs is  --at least nominally-- a  Missouri 
Synod Lutheran.
The official position of his own Church is even more conservative  than the
Manhattan Declaration. Yet Apple is taking an anti-Family Values  stand ? ? 
?
No Christians at Apple have pointed out the obvious to Jobs ? And  the 
obvious
goes deeper than this one issue. Does Christian faith mean much at  all
to Mr Jobs ?  Sorry to sound so critical, but what else can  anyone think ?
When the issue is the values of Christians vs the demands of  homosexuals,
automatically cave-in to the homosexuals ?  California Leftism  trumps
Christian faith ?  Sure seems like it. Let us hope this can be  resolved
in a much better way than has so far been the case. No-one  wants
to see this situation continue.
 
Billy
 
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Christian Post
 
 
 
 
 

 

 
Petition Asking Apple to Reinstate Christian App Gains Steam
Fri, Dec. 03, 2010 Posted: 06:33 PM EDT   
____________________________________
  
 
NEW YORK – A petition launched Thursday to protest Apple's decision to 
remove  an iPhone app opposing gay marriage is quickly gaining steam. 
The Manhattan Declaration app, which allowed Apple users to add their name 
to  the ecumenical document in support of the sanctity of life, traditional 
marriage  and religious liberty, was pulled from the App Store over the 
Thanksgiving  holiday after a group of activists charged the app as anti-gay. 
Some 7,700 Change.org members petitioned the company to ask them to pull 
the  app, contending the statement contained "hateful and divisive language." 
Supporters of the Christian declaration are now fighting back with a 
petition  of their own. As of Friday afternoon, over 37,000 people have signed 
the 
 petition launched by the organizers of the Manhattan Declaration asking 
Apple to  reinstate the app. 
"We'll keep it up there as long as we need to keep it up there," 
evangelical  leader Chuck Colson, one of the declaration's drafters, told The 
Christian Post  on Friday. 
The petition addressed to Apple founder Steve Jobs and the company itself  
asserts that the positions espoused in the declaration are based on biblical 
 Christianity. The letter rejects claims that the declaration promoted 
"hate" or  "homophobia." 
"Disagreement is not hate," the petition states. "We urge you and Apple,  
therefore, to promote communication and civil dialogue on these important 
social  issues by reinstating the Manhattan Declaration App." 
Despite the app being targeted by gay rights activists, Colson said he  
wouldn't support efforts to counterattack gay-themed apps. 
"We favor as open discussion of issues as civilly as possible," said 
Colson.  "I wouldn't want to suppress the gays just because they want to 
suppress 
us.  That would be inconsistent with our beliefs." 
Colson was one of the members of the document's drafting committee, which  
included Dr. Timothy George of Samford University and Dr. Robert George of  
Princeton University. They drafted the Manhattan Declaration in response to  
growing efforts to marginalize the Christian voice in the public square. 
The declaration struck a chord among the Christian community when it was  
unveiled last fall, garnering the support of prominent evangelical, Orthodox 
and  Catholic leaders. Nearly 480,000 people have signed the document to 
date. 
Colson, who spoke in New York City on Friday as a guest of The King's  
College's Distinguished Visitor Series, said the document initially generated  
very little controversy. 
When the app based on the declaration was released in October, it received 
a  4+ rating by Apple, which cleared it of any objectionable material. 
He said the group had contacted Jobs and Apple following the app's removal  
challenging them to find statements that were defamatory or offensive in 
the  declaration. Apple has yet to issue a response to the group. 
The evangelical leader expressed concern that Apple's decision may  
potentially affect other Christian apps available in the iTunes store. 
"There is nothing in the Manhattan Declaration that is not rooted in  
Scripture. So if that becomes the offense then all the other apps would be  
subject to the same charge," said Colson.
Katherine T. Phan
Christian Post Reporter   
____________________________________
  
 
Copyright © 2010 Christianpost.com. All  rights reserved. 











 







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