The following article raises a question that I have raised  previously,
never with a good answer from anyone, namely:
 
Why don't Christians even care about the slaughter of other  Christians?
 
I think I now know the answer: It is because Christianity  has been 
emasculated,
it pretty much happened during the Clinton years, but actually became an  
even
worse problem under George W Bush and has deteriorated even more
since the election of Barack Hussein in 2008.
 
Christianity wasn't always like this. In the  past:
(1) Christians had self confidence
(2) Christians included many, many people who understood a range of
what might be called social science fields and could draw upon  expertise
in these areas and offer solutions to problems based on at least
some semblance of knowledge about what to do that might be effective
(3) Christians had moral clarity about all social issues of  consequence.
 
What has happened is that Christianity has become reductionist  religion,
it is generally reduced to some one thing, as if Christ was sort of a  
masculine
version of Mother Theresa, or was a pacifist Quaker, or the like. But was  
he
any such thing?  Few except extreme sectarians of history  (Mennonites,
the Amish, true-believer Franciscans, Trappists, etc) had any such  view.
Generally Jesus was the Christ of the whole New Testament and someone
who drew heavily on the OT.
 
You can see this in Christian art and symbolism where there are cross  
designs
that have been used again and again as part of religious tradition to  show
the Church militant, Christian faith as love, the Church as missionary  
endeavor,
and on and on, though a range of factors that all were regarded as  
essential
to Christian faith.
 
Christian faith has become privatized, it is mostly regarded as a personal  
matter.
There is Jesus and things of spirit, and he has nothing at all to do with  
life
in the workplace or governance or the system of justice or much of
anything else. All of which is aided and abetted by general ignorance
of Christian history and precedents set by great Christians of the  past.
Thus today there is no equivalent of Martin Luther, nor of Americans
like Jonathan Edwards of Roger Williams or Charles Grandison Finney,
or Walter Rauschenbusch or the Neibuhr brothers, all of whom were,
we might say, polymaths in addition to being men of faith. 
 
Instead we get one half-baked "prime time preacher" after another, a few  
with 
pretensions to breadth of knowledge, like Pat Robertson, which is kind  of
a joke in his case even if he does try, but otherwise there are so  many
Joel Osteens, poorly educated, with little critical (in the  scholarly 
sense)
intelligence, and no comprehension that faith could mean anything  beyond
their favorite salvation narrative.
 
Is this Christianity at all?  The more I think about it the more it  seems
obvious that it is no such thing, it has little relationship to the  faith 
taught by Jesus 
and, while it may well be a force for good in the world, it basically is a  
child's faith
and not adult faith at all. No wonder Christians don't care about the  
holocaust
of other Christians, they are children for whom the world consists  of
home and family and that is it. 
 
As usual, a disclaimer is necessary. You can find exceptions, there  always
are exceptions, but I have the sinking feeling that this analysis is
far more right than wrong. And if this is true then there are many  
implications
and some very important lessons to learn, such as the fact, as I see  it,
that what is called Christianity today needs to be completely replaced by  
an
altogether new kind of Christian faith that, while it allows children
to be children, demands that grown ups should be educated adults
who see it as essential to take responsibility for the world they live  in
as something intrinsic to their faith.
 
 
Billy
 
---------------------------------------------------
 
 
 
August 14, 2014
 
Jewish Journal
 
 
Why doesn’t the world seem to care when Christians die?
by _Rob  Eshman_ (http://www.jewishjournal.com/about/author/2835) 
 
When Jews are killed, we make sure the world knows. When Palestinians are  
killed, the Web explodes. So why is it that when Christians are murdered and 
 persecuted en masse, no one seems to care — not even other Christians? 
We see this mystery playing out in Iraq with the hundreds of thousands of  
members of Christian minorities whose deaths have not yet provoked an  
outcry.  
It was only last week, when the torture and killing had reached such 
extreme  levels that the world began to take notice, that President Barack 
Obama 
ordered  United States humanitarian and military intervention to rescue some 
40,000  members of the Yazidis, a non-Muslim minority cornered by radical 
Muslims on a  mountain outside of Mosul. 
 
“It’s a full-scale genocide,” _Nuri Kino_ 
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuri_Kino) , a Swedish-Assyrian  journalist, told 
me recently. “They are 
bombing near Mosul as we speak.   It’s so frustrating to hear the U.S. media 
say 
this is so sudden and surprising.  Systematic ethnic cleansing has been 
going on from day one, and it’s going to  get worse.” 
For 10 years, Kino has been writing about the growing strength of  
fundamentalist Sunni groups in Iraq and Syria, and of their persecution of 
those  
countries’ non-Muslim groups.  
What Kino has been writing and speaking about for years is now on CNN. But  
when I reached him by phone last week in Sweden, just before his next 
secret  trip into the Middle East, Kino was far too emotionally wrought to feel 
 
vindicated.
 
A fundamentalist Sunni Muslim group calling itself the Islamic State in 
Iraq  and Syria (ISIS) has taken over swaths of Iraq, Syria and Lebanon. It is  
murdering, pillaging and exiling thousands of people from other ethnic and  
religious groups. ISIS gives Christians who live in the many villages in  
northern Iraq a choice: Convert to Islam, leave or be killed. 
“Being a Turkmen, a Shabak, a Yazidi or a Christian in [Islamic State]  
territory can cost you your livelihood, your liberty or even your life,” Human  
Rights Watch’s Middle East executive director Sarah Leah Whitson said in a 
press  release on Saturday from Iraqi Kurdistan. 
As of last week, America has finally taken notice — and action. Kino and  
others fighting for the cause worry that tomorrow the airdrops and the 
spotlight  will disappear, but the problem won’t.  
The Yazidis are an ancient minority whose religion recognizes Jesus as a  
prophet, but also combines elements of Zoroastrianism, Islam and other local  
traditions. They are just the latest target in ISIS’ genocidal campaign 
focused  largely on Christian minorities.
 
Assyrians are Christians who speak a linguistic relative of Aramaic. Of the 
2  million Assyrians worldwide, about 400,000 live in the United States.  
Only 250,000 remain in their homeland.   
There, ISIS’ documented abuses include executing Assyrian women who  refuse 
to wear a hijab; raping a mother and daughter for not paying a  religious 
tax; destroying the purported tomb of the Prophet Jonah, whom  Assyrians 
revere; kidnapping; forced sexual slavery; and depriving refugees of  clean 
water and food.
 
Since taking power from the Iraq army, ISIS has gone on a spree of killing  
and forcibly exiling all of the Assyrian, Chaldean and other Christian  
communities in its path. As far back as 2007, ISIS bombed a Yazidi village and  
killed 500 people. 
In July, in Mosul, ISIS thugs painted the Arabic letter ن (noon) on the 
doors  of Christian homes after their original inhabitants fled, were forced 
out or  murdered. ن is the first letter of the Arabic Nasrani, the word for  
Christians. 
The Assyrian diaspora community in Europe and America has been trying,  
without success, to draw the world’s attention to this campaign of intimidation 
 and terror. A group called A Demand for Action organized a series of 
protests  across the United States earlier this month, including one in front 
of 
the  Federal Building in Westwood that drew about 200 marchers, mostly local 
 Assyrians and Chaldeans.
 
“It is a modern-day Holocaust,” Suzan Younan, the organization’s 
spokeswoman,  told me. “I compare Jewish homes that the Nazis painted a Star of 
David 
on with  Christian homes that ISIS painted an ‘N’ on. There is a another 
genocide  happening as we speak.” 
What especially frustrates Kino is that this has been going on with almost 
no  outcry from American politicians or religious leaders. 
“We hear, ‘Gaza, Gaza, Gaza.’ ‘Ukraine, Ukraine, Ukraine.’  But where  
are the Christian leaders of the United States?” Kino demanded, his voice  
breaking. “These people are the roots of Christianity. They speak Jesus’ 
mother  tongue. Shame on Sarah Palin, all those so-called good Christians. 
Shame 
on both  Democrats and Republicans.”
 
Kino heaped scorn on American politicians who didn’t see this genocide  
coming. 
The region is full of ethnic minorities with competing claims and agendas.  
The Assyrians are the largest of the Christian minorities, buffeted on one 
side  by Kurds, who want the oil-rich Nineveh plains — the Assyrian 
ancestral  homelands — as part of a future Kurdistan, and on the other by ISIS, 
which wants  them gone, or dead. 
Saddam Hussein granted Iraq’s forced-together minorities their religious  
rights, even as he denied them political rights. The Ba’athist Assad family  
ruled neighboring Syria the same way. 
At the risk of raising the back hairs of died-in-the-wool partisans, much 
of  the blame for the current debacle belongs to the George W. Bush 
administration’s  invasion of Iraq. 
“When the U.S. invaded Iraq,” Kino said, “it was amazing how unaware they  
were of the different sects of Islam and other religions. But this genocide 
was  easy to predict. It’s what happens when you take power from the Sunnis 
and give  it to the Shiites, then you guys leave the country and the 
Shiites discriminate,  then of course the radicals will react.” 
Fundamentalist Sunni groups have been marauding through the area for  
decades. Ideologically, they are the spawn of the extreme ideology that  bred 
the 
Muslim Brotherhood — Hamas and al-Qaida.   
“ISIS is just al-Qaida. There’s no difference,” said Kino, who wrote a 
novel,  _The Line in  the  Sand_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/The-Line-In-Sand-ebook/dp/B00CIWWTNY) ,  and an 
as-yet-unproduced screenplay about the  Assyrians’ 
plight. 
But this is the difference between ISIS and many radical Islamist groups:  
ISIS has plenty of guns and money. Where ISIS has overpowered the Iraqi 
army, it  has captured the latest American weaponry. It controls oil fields and 
their  revenues, and some $400 million it extracted from Mosul banks when it 
captured  the city. 
Savina Dawood, who represents _A Demand for Action_ 
(https://www.facebook.com/DemandforAction)  in Iraq,  works among the refugees 
in the Kurdish city 
of Erbil, helping them find places  to stay, medical care and supplies. When 
I reached her by phone there, she said  the U.S. humanitarian relief to the 
Yazidis hasn’t noticeably relieved the  Assyrian situation. 
“This has had no impact,” she said. “People are still displaced, and they  
haven’t gone back to their homes.” 
Dawood, 24, an Assyrian native of Erbil, has collected stories of extreme  
hardship. In the town of Singal, Iraq, she was told that ISIS took hundreds 
of  women captive to serve as sex partners for the ISIS fighters. In Erbil, 
she  met women whose husbands had been taken by ISIS weeks ago and have yet 
to be  seen. 
 
Meanwhile, Assyrian refugees crowd into churches, public parks and 
community  buildings around Erbil and other larger towns — protected, for now, 
by 
the  Kurdish Peshmerga forces.  
Dawood said she has no idea when, or if, they will ever be able to return 
to  their homes. 
I asked her if the Assyrians have received any help from the international  
community.
 
“The attention we’re getting internationally is only from our own people  
outside Iraq, not others,” she said, speaking of the Assyrian Christian  
diaspora. “ISIS is trying to force us out of our ancestral country because  we 
are indigenous people, and we are Christians. But we are also  human. So if 
people don’t care about Christians or indigenous people, fine,  but can they 
help us as humans?” 
Helping the non-Muslim minorities in Syria and Iraq and stopping ISIS will  
take long-term resolve. Kino and others say the best way to begin is to  
immediately establish a safe haven in northern Iraq’s Nineveh plains. United  
Nations forces, or other international security forces, can be deployed to  
protect them from attack.  
 
The Assyrians want their safe haven to evolve eventually into an autonomous 
 nation of their own, where they can protect themselves. A hundred years 
ago, at  least 250,000 Assyrians were slaughtered in the genocide perpetrated 
by the  Young Turks regime that decimated the Armenian population as well. 
Now, a  hundred years later, they face a second round of extermination. 
Carving their  own bit of land out of an oil-soaked swath of Kurdistan and Iraq 
with no army  and no international support may be a distant dream. 
In the meantime, what they most want, and need, is protection and 
assistance  from an indifferent world. 
“The international community must help us,” Dawood said.  “Their silence  
means they are fine with it.”

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