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Cathleen Falsani

Cathleen Falsani

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Church of the Holy Hand Grenade

Posted: 04/ 5/11 09:03 PM ET

The website of the Dove World Outreach Center describes the tiny church in Gainesville, Fla., as "a New Testament church based on the Bible, the Word of God."

Someone might want to tell them that they missed that whole "Blessed are the peacemakers" part.

While there is great debate about what, exactly, Jesus meant by many things he is quoted as saying in the New Testament, the "peacemakers" passage is not one of them. It is eminently clear that Jesus was talking not just about being peaceful, but also creating peace in the world.

As we're all too painfully aware by now, the church, led by Pastor Terry Jones, put the Quran on trial on March 20 and set it aflame as punishment. That act, in turn, sparked deadly riots in Afghanistan that killed nearly two dozen people, including several United Nations peacekeepers.

To lob a religious grenade into the fragile tinderbox that is the Islamic world is the opposite of what Jesus described.

"We do not feel responsible -- no," Jones said in an interview with ABC News. "We feel more that the Muslims and radical Islam uses that as an excuse. If they didn't use us as an excuse, they would use a different excuse."

Whether the kind of violent response witnessed in Afghanistan over the past week was Jones' intention or not, it is precisely what his actions have wrought.

That is not peaceable. It is wrong. It is sinful. It flies in the face of the message that the Prince of Peace brought to the world, and makes a mockery of the white dove referenced in the very name of Jones' horribly misled church.

When Jesus said that "peacemakers" would be blessed and called the "children of God," he wasn't just talking about people who are peaceful or hope for peace. Jesus was talking specifically about those who "make" peace, those who work for harmony in conflict and unity in divisions.

Jones told ABC that he presided at the "International Judge the Quran Day" event and the subsequent burning to raise "awareness of this dangerous religion and this dangerous element" within Islam.

The irony that his asinine actions portrayed his own Christian faith and values as pretty dangerous themselves seems to be lost on Jones. But it's not lost on many other Christians, Muslims and people of good faith around the globe: the British government deemed Jones such a danger that in January it barred him from entering the U.K. to protect "the public
good."

Theologically speaking, Jones shouted "Fire!" in a crowded theater. He caused a riot. Lives were lost. And their blood is on his hands.

The deadly potential of Jones' Quran burning was something he was well aware of before he lit the match. Jones first threatened to burn the Muslim holy book last fall on the anniversary of the 9/11 terrorist attacks. President Obama, Secretary of Defense Robert Gates and a host of international political and religious leaders publicly urged Jones to abandon his plans. And for a time, he did.

But six months later, ignoring political, religious and military warnings about the clear and present danger of his plans, Jones brazenly carried them out anyway.

Although Jones shares culpability for the deaths in Afghanistan with his fellow religious extremists (in this case Muslim rather than Christian fundamentalists) whose insane rage physically took so many lives, Jones was the catalyst, the chief provoker and inciter.

While Jones claims it was within his civil and constitutional rights to burn the Quran, some legal experts, including U.S. Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer, are seriously questioning whether the First Amendment should protect speech that directly incites violence at home or abroad.

In a 1919 Supreme Court decision, Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes famously said that even the "most stringent protection of free speech would not protect a man in falsely shouting fire in a theater and causing a panic." The question to be answered, Holmes said, "is whether the words used are used in such circumstances and are of such a nature as to create a clear and present danger that they will bring about the substantive evils that Congress has a right to prevent."

Breyer, in an interview last September, is trying to figure out what that means in the 21st century.

"Holmes said it doesn't mean you can shout 'fire' in a crowded theater," Breyer said. "Well, what is it? Why? Because people will be trampled to death. And what is the crowded theater today? What is the being trampled to death?"

Whether Jones' words and actions are or should be protected by the Constitution is a matter for the courts to decide. But in the court of public opinion and in the realm of religious ethics, Jones stands in violation of all that is right and just.

Jones should remove the dove from his church name and replace it with a more accurate symbol of what it stands for. A holy hand grenade, perhaps?

This piece originally appeared via Religion News Service.

 
 
 

Follow Cathleen Falsani on Twitter: www.twitter.com/godgrrl

The website of the Dove World Outreach Center describes the tiny church in Gainesville, Fla., as "a New Testament church based on the Bible, the Word of God." Someone might want to tell them that ...
The website of the Dove World Outreach Center describes the tiny church in Gainesville, Fla., as "a New Testament church based on the Bible, the Word of God." Someone might want to tell them that ...
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Robearbeach
Atty. & Researcher Latin American Studies
11:58 AM on 04/20/2011
But wait, Islam is the "religion of peace." Isn't that what CAIR and the rest of the Muslim world keeps telling us? And aren't we islamophobic bigots if we don't accept this fact? So how could this so-called "pastor" know that simply burning a book would trigger adherents to the "religion of peace" to riot, murder and decapitate people thousands of miles away? After all, he didn't burn a Bible. If you listen to Rosie O'Donnell and others, Christians are the dangerous ones, responsible for all kinds of mayhem. Sure, if he burned a Bible he could expect those awful Christians to riot, murder and decapitate innocent people thousands of miles away. But not the "religion of peace." That was totally unforeseeable because, after all, it is the religion of peace."
06:49 AM on 04/11/2011
Paul Robertson:

"There has been a gross overreacti­on to Jones' petty act of spite. But we seem scared to place the blame where it correctly lies."

Thank you.
chinchilla
They say I need to write something here.
11:49 PM on 04/10/2011
I cannot believe someone had the audacity to equate Dove Outreach and their non-Christian pastor with a Monty Python Reference.

I think apologies need to be made to anyone EVER associated with Monty Python.

(PS. You got the line wrong. It's "Blessed are the cheese makers.")
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Paul Robertson
10:02 PM on 04/10/2011
Free speech isn't just for people that we agree with. Do we really want to set a precedent of gagging our citizens lest they say something that might offend a foreign country?
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NadineColbert
Fox News is unadulterated fiction
04:14 AM on 04/11/2011
Americans don't know the difference betwen free speech and hate speech.
Shame on the supreme court!
Shame on anyone who protects the actions on this psychotic, hatemonger!
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Paul Robertson
06:13 AM on 04/11/2011
"Americans don't know the difference betwen free speech and hate speech."
Clearly you don't, so I suppose you've proven your point. Different countries have different definitions of hate speech but, for the most part, there has to be some sort of threat to the protected group. For example they might incite violence against a group of people. Jones' speech should be rightly condemned, but there was no call to violence in it. There was no threat in it to islamic people at all.
Fundamentally, what Jones did is no worse than flag-burning which, while also vile, has a long history of being regarded as protected speech. The difference between the acts is in the reaction. Can you cite an example where the burning of an American flag has resulted in rioting and the murder of tens of people? There has been a gross overreaction to Jones' petty act of spite. But we seem scared to place the blame where it correctly lies.
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logicanada
Blogger, radio co-host, writer, editor, voice-over
09:31 PM on 04/10/2011
Terry looks a lot like the used car salesman who comes scuttling out of the little booth in a used car lot on a Sunday when the only reason you pulled in was because you missed your turn a block back.
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cayuse
Soaring Eagle, soaring to Spirit from the ego self
10:41 PM on 04/10/2011
I don't know what a car salesman looks like. Congress has a lot of different people and parties and they are all car saleman along with the Administration.

John Kennedy taught people and provided for people and stopped the Military form invading Cuba. And lost his life for these principals. Something a Car Salesman would not do
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ThomasPaineWeNeedYou
Know history or repeat it.
05:18 PM on 04/10/2011
How dare you call it a church!
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cayuse
Soaring Eagle, soaring to Spirit from the ego self
10:41 PM on 04/10/2011
Ohi I could accept it a church. Just not Christian at all
01:41 PM on 04/10/2011
I guess he should have called it performance art.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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kareemachan
watashi ha tororu ga oroka da to omoi masu。
12:34 PM on 04/09/2011
Shouting "Fire!" in a crowded theater is a crime. Why hasn't this man been arrested for his theological version of it? Scumoftheearth he is, and Christian he is not.
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Paul Robertson
10:19 PM on 04/09/2011
Because that's a poor metaphor for what Jones did. When someone yells, "fire!" panic naturally ensues. When someone's god is insulted, violence and murder is not the natural consequence. To react to an insult with violence is wrong and cannot be excused under any circumstances.
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kareemachan
watashi ha tororu ga oroka da to omoi masu。
01:51 PM on 04/10/2011
So you are okay with what he did? REALLY?
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NadineColbert
Fox News is unadulterated fiction
04:16 AM on 04/11/2011
Paul,
Jones was performing hate speech, in any country with ethics, it is against the law, in America it is protected.
America is afraid of judging immorality. It will degrade us all!
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LightShadow62
The answers are not found in the extremes
09:12 PM on 04/08/2011
Calling the nut cases at Dove World Outreach Center "Church of the Holy Hand Grenade" is an insult to Monty Python.

You should apologize.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Forester
Foresters do it in the woods.
09:05 PM on 04/08/2011
Wow, so the State Dept and Homeland Security were right when they cautioned Jones that such a stunt would result in innocent deaths. Imagine that. And now our servicemen and women serving in Afghanistan get to pay more for his righteousness.
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American Air
02:45 PM on 04/08/2011
When you have accepted a jealous god, you have become eviI. Does not matter what you call your faith.
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American Air
02:45 PM on 04/08/2011
The man is being honest. This is the Baptist evangelicals values. He is merely being truthful to his faith.

IF you question him, you have to question the philosophy of the Southern Baptists values...for he is doing nothing but showing to the world what the true values of Southern Baptist evangelicals.
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curiousdwk
Global Citizen. Not Democratic, not Republican, n
12:27 PM on 04/08/2011
This article is based on the false premise that Jones' church is Christian. It isn't. And those in Christian positions should say that he and his church are not Christian. Not that they erred, as in this article, but that they aren't Christian - period.
03:15 AM on 04/10/2011
he belongs to the church of the false scotsmen I see
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cayuse
Soaring Eagle, soaring to Spirit from the ego self
10:51 PM on 04/10/2011
The "red letter" define the WORD, what a Christian is. You are right, but why would you ask a church what GOD through Christ spoke to you and me.
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Talossa
Not all liberals are silly.
12:39 AM on 04/08/2011
Why should a fanatical and harmful group of extremists in a disfunctional, primitive autocracy half a world away be allowed to dictate the behavior of a fanatical but harmless group of kooks in a semifunctional, stagnant oligarchy over here?
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nomadrdw
Zen Druid
12:44 PM on 04/09/2011
these people are NOT a harmless group of kooks. they are every bit as dangerous and radical as the people "over there".
we as a society need to shun and shut these type of people off from the rest of society and let them get by with out the benefits of the modern world. let them revert back to those old days of the old testament and let them deal with the results. good riddance to all the fanatics.
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Talossa
Not all liberals are silly.
11:52 PM on 04/10/2011
Really. Some outfit in Florida with 30 active members and which has never once (despite its rhetoric) committed an act of violence, is "every bit as dangerous and radical" as a global movement of millions of people which has killed hundreds of thousands of people over the last decade alone.

You may need bifocals.
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gregory57
Micro-bio, was one of my favorite classes.
06:59 PM on 04/07/2011
Karzai lost a relative in recent bombing. He knew that spreading the word that Jones had burned a Q'ran would cause violence. Karzai is ALSO to blame, not Only to blame.

As if rightly assigned blame will bring back any of the dead.