Archive for October, 2008

Can you spot the fuzzy math in this Columbus Dispatch story?

Thursday, October 16th, 2008

According to the Dispatch, pollsters surveyed 50 women to see who they think won the Oct. 15 presidential debate and it was “a major win for Democrat Barack Obama. Seventy-one percent of these undecided voters thought Obama did better in addressing the issues important to them, while only 9 percent felt that way about Republican John McCain. The group slightly favored Obama coming into the debate, but afterward he won support by about a 2-to-1 ratio.”
Q. What is the mathematical red flag in the above paragraph?
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Church Sign Wars

Thursday, October 16th, 2008

Presbyterians (Cumberland variety) and Catholics (of the Roman sort) debate the big issues of the day.
Click here for Church Sign Wars.
h/t: FaithBasedBlog.
(And yes, it’s parody, and no church signs were harmed during filming…)

Breaking news — McCain delegate plans to vote for McCain

Wednesday, October 15th, 2008

A Little Rock bishop named Robert Smith is making headlines for telling his congregation that he plans to vote for John McCain for President. Undoubtedly, that revelation will come as a shock to Smith’s congregants — especially the ones that didn’t see him on television at the Republican National Convention last month when Smith voted, as a delegate, to send McCain to the White House. But Smith’s announcement, because it came from the pulpit, could raise violate IRS regulations. Smith hopes it does: He’s sent a recording of his admission to federal tax officials, all but daring them to challenge him.
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There’s a glaring error in a 1A story from the Washington Post

Wednesday, October 15th, 2008

Can you spot the mistake? It’s in this story about parishes and dioceses that have split from the Episcopal Church since the ordination of a practicing homosexual as bishop of New Hampshire in 2003:

“They say the Episcopal leadership defines Scripture on modern rather than eternal standards, and they take exception to the ordination of female clergy, the full acceptance of gays and lesbians and what they see as reduced importance in the role of Jesus for a believer’s redemption.”
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John McCain’s campaign and Trent Lott’s house

Wednesday, October 15th, 2008

ANALYSIS
I’ve been thinking a lot today about John McCain’s struggling presidential campaign and Sen. Trent Lott’s beach house in Pascagoula, Miss. Or, more accurately, former Senator Trent Lott’s formerbeach house in sunny Pascagoula. (more…)

Thank God we don’t live in Nebraska. Exhibits A&B

Wednesday, October 15th, 2008

Some guy in Nebraska with way too much time on his hands filed a suit against God. That’s weird. But it gets even weirder. The guy, Ernie Chambers, is a longtime state senator. He’s a Democrat. From Omaha. Chambers’ suit was filed in Sep. 2007. That tidbit is “Thank God we don’t live in Nebraska Exhibit A.” Here’s “Thank God we don’t live in Nebraska Exhibit B:”
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Billy Graham movie sinks like lead at box office

Tuesday, October 14th, 2008

My condolences to the investors: “Billy: The Early Years” raked in $192,042 at the box office over the weekend. Showing on 282 screens, it attracted, an awful $681 per screen. An average of less than $230 per night. At $7 per ticket, that works out to fewer than 35 viewers per day per screen.

Fireproof, the evangelical film, and Religulous, the agnostic anthem raked in far more money, according to BoxOfficeMojo.com.

Billy: The Early Years is “just a love story to Billy,” explains director Robby Benson. Based on the trailer, it looks like lead actor Armie Hammer did a decent job of acting. But it’s not easy to convince people to pay $7 per ticket (plus $11 for popcorn and a soda) to watch a biopic about a TV evangelist.

If any of you have seen Fireproof or Religulous or Billy: The Early Years, I’d love to get your reaction to these three films.
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Mafia haven becomes Pentecostal church

Monday, October 13th, 2008

Click here to read all about it.

h/t: Caleb Powers

As it was in the beginning…White churchgoers favor McCain

Monday, October 13th, 2008

You’ve probably seen dozens of articles explaining how the Democrats are going to fight tooth-and-nail to win over white churchgoers in 2008. So far, Gallup says it’s a battle Democrats are losing. According to the most recent survey, 65 percent of whites who go to church every week plan to vote for John McCain. Only 28 percent of this group plans to back Barack Obama.

These numbers have not budged much since June, despite hard work by Democratic activists. In the end, however, it may not matter. Churchgoers are a minority in the U.S. White churchgoers are a subset of a subset. If Obama wins 28 percent of the white churchgoing vote, Gallup suggests that will be enough to win the White House in November.

By the way, I’m trying to track down polling data from 2004 to compare it to 2008 data. The 2004 exit poll from CNN offers polling numbers based on race and based on church attendance, but not based on both race and church attendance simultaneously.

Mormon convert, 104, spreads Latter-day message

Thursday, October 9th, 2008

Dorothy Wagner has been baptized twice in her life: The first time by sprinkling in a Presbyterian Church, the second time by immersion in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latterday Saints.

The first ritual took place before women’s suffrage. The second — more than a century later — occurred in the Internet age.

Of the 279, 218 Mormon converts in 2007, Wagner was the oldest in Arkansas — perhaps the oldest anywhere, church officials say.

“It’s the fastest growing church in the world. Did you know that ?” Wagner said. “Must be doing something right.”

The Horseshoe Bend woman was nearly 103 when she received “baptism for the remission of sins” and reached what the church has called the “gateway to the celestial kingdom.” On Saturday afternoon, Wagner shared her testimony with about 100 fellow Latter-day Saints who had gathered for a church relief society meeting in North Little Rock.

The day’s theme: “A New You.” “I’m still a youngster in the church. I can’t wait to tell you my secrets,” Wagner told the crowd, smiling as she said it.

Someone asked Wagner what she’d want to tell the world about the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

“I’d say ‘ Join it. Join me, ’” Wagner said. “All these lovely people: I can’t praise them enough.” For most of Wagner’s life, the Mormon church had been a distant entity — a tabernacle choir, a Temple Square, a place of worship in a distant city.

But about five years ago, Mormons built a house of worship in Ash Flat, about 15 miles from Wagner’s home.

One Sunday, dissatisfied with her church, Wagner drove to the Mormon church instead and walked through the doors.

“They’d never seen me before, and I’d never seen them,” she said in an interview. The people inside were “all smiles and wondering what on earth I was doing there.” Soon, the widow found herself surrounded by new friends, people who don’t smoke or drink alcohol or coffee, people who typically put on their Sunday finest when they go to worship God.

“They always dress and look so fresh and nice,” she said. “The men are cordial. They always come up and shake hands with me.” Church members offered to bring Wagner to church, but she declined their invitation, preferring to drive her 20-year-old white Cadillac to services.

During the week, Wagner studied Mormon teachings and watched BYU Television, a cable and satellite station affiliated with the church’s flagship university.

Church members embraced “Sister Wagner,” taking her food and visiting her home several times a week.

Eventually, Wagner decided to become a Latter-day Saint herself.

“They act like they like me,” Wagner said.

“More than like. We love you,” interjected Teresa Bailey, a Visiting Teacher who checks on Wagner.

When she visits, Bailey offers companionship more than doctrine.

“I have a good listening ear. That’s what she wants. That’s what she needs,” Bailey said. “She’s just a delightful person, and I learn from her.” In 1904, the year of Wagner’s birth, there were only 324, 289 Mormons on the seven continents of the world. Today, there are 13. 2 million.

“It’s the fastest growing church in the world. Did you know that ?” Wagner said. “Must be doing something right.”

“Basic Instinct” writer pens ‘Thank you’ to God

Friday, October 3rd, 2008

Hollywood loved Joe Eszterhas when his best friends were Jose Cuervo and a carton of Salems, when profanity poured from his mouth and successful screenplays flowed from his typewriter.

But the new Eszterhas makes his old colleagues uncomfortable.
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Pope to lead Bible-reading marathon

Friday, October 3rd, 2008

Pope Benedict XVI is one of 2,000 people who will help read the Bible cover-to-cover, live on Italian television… Click here for more.

Arkansas senator gets Borat-ed

Thursday, October 2nd, 2008

Bill Maher’s new movie, Religulous, includes a painful-to-watch interview with a U.S. Senator from Arkansas.
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