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Note to Texas Baptists: “Interreligious” really does mean more than “Christian Interdenominational”

Texas Baptists (at least the folks at Hyde Baptist in Austin, Texas) don’t seem to be aware of the distinction. Austin Area Interreligious Ministries, the city’s largest interfaith organization, announced…

Texas Baptists (at least the folks at Hyde Baptist in Austin, Texas) don’t seem to be aware of the distinction.

Austin Area Interreligious Ministries, the city’s largest interfaith organization, announced Thursday that its annual Thanksgiving celebration Sunday had to be moved because Hyde Park Baptist Church objected to non-Christians worshipping on its property.

The group learned Wednesday that the rental space at the church-owned Quarries property in North Austin was no longer available because Hyde Park leaders had discovered that non-Christians, Muslims in particular, would be practicing their faith there. The event, now in its 23rd year, invites Jews, Muslims, Christians, Hindus, Bahais and others to worship together.

Organizers had booked the gymnasium at the Quarries in July and made the interfaith aspect clear to Quarries staff at that time, said Simone Talma Flowers, Interreligious Ministries’ interim director.

Several Muslim groups were acting as this year’s hosts for the event. Kent Jennings, associate pastor of administration at Hyde Park, released a statement Thursday that said church leaders received a postcard about the service Monday and only then realized that it “was not a Christian oriented event.”

The postcard also “promised space for Muslim Maghrib prayer and revealed that the event was co-hosted by the Central Texas Muslimaat, the Forum of Muslims for Unity, and the Institute of Interfaith Dialog,” according to Hyde Park’s statement.

“Although individuals from all faiths are welcome to worship with us at Hyde Park Baptist Church, the church cannot provide space for the practice of these non-Christian religions on church property,” the statement said. “Hyde Park Baptist Church hopes that the AAIM and the community of faith will understand and be tolerant of our church’s beliefs that have resulted in this decision.”

Yeah.  Be tolerant of our intolerance.  Sure.

On the bright side, it provided an opportunity for some other folks to step up.

With hundreds of people expected to attend and only a few days to find another site, Muslim organizer Shams Siddiqi said they couldn’t find another facility. That’s when leaders at Congregation Beth Israel, Austin’s largest synagogue, offered to host the celebration.

“Symbolically, that’s a very good thing,” Siddiqi said of the joint Jewish-Muslim endeavor.

Indeed.

(via Les)

Wow! Almost in time for Veterans Day!

Maybe it’s meant to be a Thanksgiving gesture instead. The U.S. Military is demanding that thousands of wounded service personnel give back signing bonuses because they are unable to serve…

Maybe it’s meant to be a Thanksgiving gesture instead.

The U.S. Military is demanding that thousands of wounded service personnel give back signing bonuses because they are unable to serve out their commitments.

To get people to sign up, the military gives enlistment bonuses up to $30,000 in some cases. Now men and women who have lost arms, legs, eyesight, hearing and can no longer serve are being ordered to pay some of that money back.

One of them is Jordan Fox, a young soldier from the South Hills.  […] Fox was seriously injured when a roadside bomb blew up his vehicle. He was knocked unconscious. His back was injured and lost all vision in his right eye.

A few months later Fox was sent home. His injuries prohibited him from fulfilling three months of his commitment. A few days ago, he received a letter from the military demanding nearly $3,000 of his signing bonus back.

Because, of course, those sneaky wounded vets may have intentionally gotten themselves crippled in order to screw the military out of some of their fraudulently acquired signing bonuses

Remember:  We Support Our Troops!  Unless, you know, they can’t fight any more.

(via Les)

 

TV Time

Katherine and Ginger watch their forty-seventh episode of “Animaniacs.”…

Katherine and Ginger watch their forty-seventh episode of “Animaniacs.”

Floor done!

Next up – baseboards, threshold, closet reconfigure, then furniture moves….

Next up – baseboards, threshold, closet reconfigure, then furniture moves.

Because I have twenty minutes free …

As the dearth of any text here recently indicates, things have been busy-busy-busy … and the times when I haven’t been, I’ve been vegging to compensate.  🙂 So I have…

As the dearth of any text here recently indicates, things have been busy-busy-busy … and the times when I haven’t been, I’ve been vegging to compensate.  🙂

So I have a half-dozen unfinished posts that probably aren’t worth finishing right now.  Instead:  the Readers Digest Condensed Version:

  1. Travel I:  The trip to Fort Worth was nice.  Did you know that Thurber, Texas (where my mom’s dad was born) is just 40 miles west of Fort Worth?  Neither did I.  I’ll have to check that out on some future trip.  Aside from that, the trip was successful, and I had a wonderful post-get-together-socializing dinner at Del Frisco’s (mmmm … osso bucco).
  2. Travel II:  We drove down at met the Ks down in the Springs for the weekend, staying at the Cheyenne Canon Inn, the B&B we’ve stayed at before down there — Jim & Ginger’s, as well as Katherine’s first time there.  We did the hiking over to the Starr Kempf kinetics, a drive up to Helen Hunt Falls and hike thereof, wandering through old Manatou (was sorry to see Filthy Wilma’s go, but enjoyed the “replacement” Green Horse Gallery — pottery was obtained), ate some fine dinners, and toured Garden of the Gods on the way home.
  3. Home improvement project of the visit is the Craft Room (formerly Kitten’s Bedroom).  The idea here is to have a hard-floor room that all the science projects, art projects, craft supplies, etc. can go.  So, to date, we’ve torn out all the carpet (at least previously changed once before, based on the old staples in the floor from a previous pad), and laid out most of the new wooden laminate floor, which is astonishingly easy to install, except for a few places where the room isn’t a perfect square.
  4. Kitty update:  Indy did okay while we were away — Margie seriously scored by getting an assistant from the vet come by to give him meds the two days we were gone.  Went in for a follow-up checkup today.  Indy’s eye has improved, but not as much as the vet would like, so we’re on new meds for another week. We can be coneless most of the time, but not when not being kinda-sorta supervised (so that he doesn’t rub on it).  Follow-up appointment a week from Saturday.  Mist, meanwhile, had his “wellness” check-up — the vet thinks he’s a bit hyperthyroid, so we got a senior test panel (oh, the indignity of not being able to pee in a cup on command).
  5. Weather:  It’s snowing!  Yow!  Which may be sufficient (with sub-freezing temps all day) to put a kibosh on visiting with some friends up north.
  6. School:  Kitten got her report card for the first trimester.  She got mostly “3” grades in all her academics (it’s a 1-4 score, and “3” means “Meets Learner Objectives” — but it’s not clear if that’s to full grade level, to the stuff already taught, or what — pinged the teacher but haven’t got an answer yet).  for her skills and behaviors she got all “CD” (top score, “Consistently Demonstrates”) for everything, with the note, “Katherine is a conscientious, hard-working student who is making steady progress in all areas.”  Nice.
  7. Karate:  Speaking of which, as the pictures showed, both of us got our orange belts (7 kyu).  Woot!  So now we get to practice our next kata, Heian Sandan, together.  Yay!

And that will, hopefully, do for the nonce.  Time for a spot of breakfast, more floor application, and prepping for Thanksgiving!   Thanks for your patience …

Kitten a L’Orange

Yay! (This was her looking formal and poised, thus missing the huge grin she had when she ran over to put on her newly-awarded belt.) UPDATE: This should have…

Yay! (This was her looking formal and poised, thus missing the huge grin she had when she ran over to put on her newly-awarded belt.)

UPDATE: This should have posted last night, mutter mutter …

Orange you glad I didn’t say Banana?

Two orange belts in the family. Huzzah!…

Two orange belts in the family. Huzzah!

Wood floor!

Making great progress…

Making great progress

Look! Wood floors!

Project of the week is putting down some hard flooring in the “craft room” (former Kitten bedroom). Today we tore up carpet….

Project of the week is putting down some hard flooring in the “craft room” (former Kitten bedroom). Today we tore up carpet.

Political commentary

I’m good for about one “This Modern World” strip a month, but BD’s reference to this one will do just fine for the quota….

I’m good for about one “This Modern World” strip a month, but BD’s reference to this one will do just fine for the quota.

Gardening

Visiting Garden of the Gods on the way back north….

Visiting Garden of the Gods on the way back north.

Deer, dear

Outside the back door of the B&B….

Outside the back door of the B&B.

Smile, dahlings

Dinner at Blue Vervain, Manitou Springs….

Dinner at Blue Vervain, Manitou Springs.

Helen Hunt Falls

Above Colorado Springs….

Above Colorado Springs.

Kitten wishes

A sign that Katherine made for Indy. Note she’s figured out how to make the letters go “behind” the drawing when she runs out of room?…

A sign that Katherine made for Indy. Note she’s figured out how to make the letters go “behind” the drawing when she runs out of room?

Travel Time

And … Yay, an empty crossword puzzle in the flight mag….

And … Yay, an empty crossword puzzle in the flight mag.

Lovely view

Quoth the sticker, STAND CLEAR OF HAZARD AREAS WHILE ENGINE IS RUNNING. Especially while in mid-air, I suppose….

Quoth the sticker, STAND CLEAR OF HAZARD AREAS WHILE ENGINE IS RUNNING. Especially while in mid-air, I suppose.

Awwwww …

So indy got into a tussle with some cat the past few days, and got a corneal puncture … And, now, eye drops and pain meds and (eek) a…

So indy got into a tussle with some cat the past few days, and got a corneal puncture … And, now, eye drops and pain meds and (eek) a lampshade collar to keep him from rubbing. Very unhappy cat over the latter, especially as he’s a walk-along-the-wall kind of kitty.

UPDATE: And, aside from our not being happy about Indy’s state, either, we’re doubly unhappy as this probably puts a kibosh on our going down to the Springs this weekend, as he needs twice-daily meds for the next several days.

Damned if you do …

Ran across this G.K. Chesterton passage today: For fear of the newspapers politicians are dull, and at last they are too dull even for the newspapers. The speeches in our…

Ran across this G.K. Chesterton passage today:

For fear of the newspapers politicians are dull, and at last they are too dull even for the newspapers. The speeches in our time are more careful and elaborate, because they are meant to be read, and not to be heard. And exactly because they are more careful and elaborate, they are not so likely to be worthy of a careful and elaborate report. They are not interesting enough. So the moral cowardice of modern politicians has, after all, some punishment attached to it by the silent anger of heaven. Precisely because our political speeches are meant to be reported, they are not worth reporting. Precisely because they are carefully designed to be read, nobody reads them. 
— “On the Cryptic and the Elliptic,” All Things Considered (1908)

And what a difference a century makes, when today we instead complain about politicians striving too hard for the flashy and emotional, for the brief sound-bite of the 7 p.m. News, uttering slogans rather than “careful and elaborate” thoughts — meant to be heard, not read.

This is a test. It is only a test.

So I took my test to see if I can graduate from yellow belt to orange belt.  Things went moderately well — I only felt mildly embarrassed at a…

So I took my test to see if I can graduate from yellow belt to orange belt.  Things went moderately well — I only felt mildly embarrassed at a couple of goofs, and Sensei told me I’d done a good job.

Margie and Katherine came to watch, and Margie took pictures.

I assure you, I looked just like this guy doing my kata, Heian Nidan — except I had a dashing beard.

I’ll find out how I did next Tuesday.  Katherine tests on Thursday.  Good luck, Kitten!