Skip to content

Archive site notice

You are viewing an archived copy of Christian Concern's website. Some features are disabled and pages may not display properly.

To view our current site, please visit christianconcern.com

In the News

  • Many of today's hottest arguments about religious freedom involve idiosyncratic micro-communities which impose on themselves (and on their children) norms of life which the rest of society finds bizarre or worse.

    That is one reason why a polygamy trial which recently opened in the Canadian province of British Columbia has attracted attention throughout the country and among law-and-religion pundits across the world.

    The trial focuses on a fundamentalist religious community called "Bountiful". The group is home to Canada's best-known avowed polygamist, Winston Blackmore, as well as his former brother-in-law James Oler. Both have been charged with polygamy under legislation which has existed for more than a century but has proved virtually impossible to apply because of countervailing considerations about religious freedom. "Bountiful", which was founded in 1946, has its roots in offshoots from the American Mormon church whose mainstream leadership eschewed polygamy in 1890. The Mormons now take a very dim view of small holdout communities across North America who still engage in multiple marriage, and have fought legal battles against them.

    Read more.

  • The general synod is the main decision-making body of the Church of Ireland, meeting once a year.

    A private member's motion is set to be debated on Friday, calling for the church to acknowledge the "injury felt by members of the church who enter into loving, committed and legally recognised, same-sex relationships, due to the absence of provision for them to mark that key moment in their lives publicly and prayerfully in church".

    The motion also "respectfully requests the House of Bishops to investigate a means to develop sensitive, local pastoral arrangements for public prayer and thanksgiving with same-sex couples at these key moments in their lives, and to present their ideas to general synod 2018, with a view to making proposals at general synod 2019."

    Read more.

  • An undercover investigation into IVF clinics has alleged that women on low incomes were being offered treatment at no cost if they agreed to give away half their healthy eggs.

    The clinics were then said to charge other infertile couples as much as £7,500 for the donated eggs.

    Jeremy Hunt, the health secretary, has described the findings as serious and worrying.

    Read more.

  • President Donald Trump appointed another strong pro-life advocate to his administration this week.

    Politico reports Teresa Manning, a law professor who has an extensive pro-life background, will help oversee a federal family planning program that currently gives money to Planned Parenthood.

    Manning will be appointed to the role of deputy assistant secretary in the Office of Population Affairs of the Health and Human Services Department. Politico first reported Manning's appointment, and The Hill confirmed it Monday.

    Read more.

  • A top cop whose job it is to investigate the behaviour of other officers is facing a PSNI examination into his public comments about homosexuality.

    The PSNI last night revealed it is going to examine statements made by Detective Inspector Calvin Coulter who is also a Christian preacher.

    DI Coulter is a senior officer in the PSNI's Professional Standards Department.

    Read more.

  • The Palestinian Islamist group Hamas on Monday dropped its longstanding call for Israel's destruction, but said it still rejected the country's right to exist and backs "armed struggle" against it.

    In a policy document presented in Doha by its leader Khaled Meshaal, Hamas also said it would end its association with the Muslim Brotherhood, a move apparently aimed at improving ties with Gulf Arab states and Egypt, which view the Brotherhood as a terrorist group.

    Israel responded to the announcement by accusing Hamas of trying to "fool the world", while the group's main Palestinian political rival, the Fatah faction of President Mahmoud Abbas, also reacted coolly to the policy shift.

    Read more.

  • The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday left intact California's ban on "gay conversion" therapy aimed at turning youths under age 18 away from homosexuality, rejecting a Christian minister's challenge to the law asserting it violates religious rights.

    The justices, turning away a challenge to the 2012 law for the second time in three years, let stand a lower court's ruling that it was constitutional and neither impinged upon free exercise of religion nor impacted the activities of clergy members.

    The law prohibits state-licensed mental health counselors, including psychologists and social workers, from offering therapy to change sexual orientation in minors. The Supreme Court in 2014 refused to review the law after an appeals court rejected claims that the ban infringed on free speech rights under U.S. Constitution's the First Amendment.

    Read more.

  • Social media firms are "shamefully far" from tackling illegal and dangerous content, says a parliamentary report.

    Hate speech, terror recruitment videos and sexual images of children all took too long to be removed, said the Home Affairs Select Committee report.

    The government should consider making the sites help pay to police content, it said.

    Read more.

  • Churches are a 'significant' part of local communities and their loss would be devastating to entire communities, a new survey finds.

    Half of UK adults back the continuing role of churches in society, according to specialist insurers Ecclesiastical.

    In one of the largest ever surveys of peoples' attitudes towards the role and influence of churches in local communities, more than a third of UK adults surveyed said that they would campaign to keep their nearest church from closing.

    Read more.

  • The Channel 4 news presenter tells BBC Radio 5 live it was her "duty" to discuss her termination.

    Watch here.