see: Buggery the only thing that makes church butts sore?
Chairman of the St James Ministers’ Fraternal Rev Glendon Powell, who was among church leaders who showed public support for Professor Bain, yesterday.
MONTEGO BAY, St James — Several church groups from western Jamaica yesterday protested against the University of the West Indies' (UWI) recent sacking of Professor Brendan Bain as head of the Caribbean HIV/AIDS Regional Training Network.
Placard-bearing members of the group of demonstrators, clad in black and with masking tape over their mouths, started gathering at the entrance of the UWI Mona Western Jamaica Campus on Queen's Drive, Montego Bay, from 8:30 am.
Some of the placards read: 'Free Speech Is A Right Not A Privilege'; 'Do Not Change The Buggery Law'; and 'Keep Us Free From Evil Powers'.
They got support from horn-tooting motorists as they drove by.
The UWI sacked Professor Bain following concerns from gay advocacy groups across the Caribbean about his expert testimony given in a Belize court case seeking to challenge laws criminalising buggery.
Several critics, including church leaders, said the professor's dismissal was the university's giving in to pressure from gay rights groups.
Supporters of the academic, one of the region's leading authorities on the HIV epidemic in the Caribbean and one of the pioneers in clinical infectious diseases, last week protested outside the gates of the UWI's Mona Campus in Kingston. Protests, in support of Bain, were also held in Belize last week.
Chairman of the St James Ministers' Fraternal Rev Glendon Powell, who was among the demonstrators yesterday, said the groups wanted justice for Professor Bain.
"This is just standing in solidarity against injustice. The church always stands against any kind of injustice there is. We believe that it doesn't matter who, from the man in the gutter to the man at the top. When injustice is being served, we believe that justice is what the Bible speaks about," said Powell.
"Bain was fired from his job and we don't believe that it is right, and we believe it is a move to silence the Church, and we believe that the Church must always have a voice in doing that which God has mandated us to do," added Powell.
Meanwhile, pastor of the Montego Bay-based Trumpet Call Ministries International, Mary Wildish-Reece said the church wanted to support the freedom of speech.
"We are here today (yesterday) along with many other churches to stand with the east (Kingston protest) with what is happening in our nation to declare that speaking the truth on scientific and medical evidence is not hate speech. We are here to stand for our rights as Christians for freedom of speech, for freedom to preach the gospel, and to declare that we do not want to see the moral fibre of our society eroded and being re-ordered by a minority," Wildish-Reece said.
"We are here to say that enough is enough, and we are calling for a righteous revolution in this nation for the church to stand for what the Bible has said is truth and rights," she added.
On May 26 2014 controversial Reverend Garnett Roper highlighted the Cherry picking of the church on local issues and I agree with him in part,
"JAMAICAN CHURCH leaders are being accused by one of their own of cherry-picking the moral issues on which they speak out.
The charge by the Reverend Garnett Roper comes amid reports that some pastors used yesterday's Sunday services to encourage their members to join a protest planned for today outside the Mona campus of the University of the West Indies (UWI) to show support for Professor Brendan Bain.
"Of all the issues in the society, to pick this one to protest is, once again, the Church being self-serving or cherry-picking moral issues because they are high-profile," Roper said.
"It doesn't do anything to increase or advance the moral standing of the society," he added.
not the right issue
Roper, who is also the president of the Jamaica Theological Seminary, said if the Church is going to "come out of hiding and start making noise in the society", this is not the right issue to use.
"There are far more profound issues that go to the heart of the quality of life of the citizens on which both the State and the powerful are complicit. Picking this issue gives the impression of a cynical Church," he said.
His views were somewhat similar to those of Reverend Gary Harriott, general secretary of the Jamaica Umbrella Group of Churches, who expressed concern that Bain's sacking was not resolved in a more amicable manner.
"I wasn't aware that some church leaders were encouraging their members to be part of any protest in support of Professor Brendan Bain, but I think what we need now is some helpful dialogue towards some kind of healing and reconciliation," Harriott said.
In contrast, pastors Paul and Dorrette Blake, who head Sold Out Ministries, based in western Jamaica, said they were in "total agreement" with the protest."
The charge by the Reverend Garnett Roper comes amid reports that some pastors used yesterday's Sunday services to encourage their members to join a protest planned for today outside the Mona campus of the University of the West Indies (UWI) to show support for Professor Brendan Bain.
"Of all the issues in the society, to pick this one to protest is, once again, the Church being self-serving or cherry-picking moral issues because they are high-profile," Roper said.
"It doesn't do anything to increase or advance the moral standing of the society," he added.
not the right issue
Roper, who is also the president of the Jamaica Theological Seminary, said if the Church is going to "come out of hiding and start making noise in the society", this is not the right issue to use.
"There are far more profound issues that go to the heart of the quality of life of the citizens on which both the State and the powerful are complicit. Picking this issue gives the impression of a cynical Church," he said.
His views were somewhat similar to those of Reverend Gary Harriott, general secretary of the Jamaica Umbrella Group of Churches, who expressed concern that Bain's sacking was not resolved in a more amicable manner.
"I wasn't aware that some church leaders were encouraging their members to be part of any protest in support of Professor Brendan Bain, but I think what we need now is some helpful dialogue towards some kind of healing and reconciliation," Harriott said.
In contrast, pastors Paul and Dorrette Blake, who head Sold Out Ministries, based in western Jamaica, said they were in "total agreement" with the protest."
Read the rest HERE
also see my previous entries:
meanwhile the radio waves have been burning up as fanatics feel empowered by the actions of the Lawyers' Christian Fellowship and the Jamaica Coalition for a Healthy Society, JCHS continued push, The Observer blared:
Western Jamaica churches stand up for Professor Bain
Chairman of the St James Ministers’ Fraternal Rev Glendon Powell, who was among church leaders who showed public support for Professor Bain, yesterday.
MONTEGO BAY, St James — Several church groups from western Jamaica yesterday protested against the University of the West Indies' (UWI) recent sacking of Professor Brendan Bain as head of the Caribbean HIV/AIDS Regional Training Network.
Placard-bearing members of the group of demonstrators, clad in black and with masking tape over their mouths, started gathering at the entrance of the UWI Mona Western Jamaica Campus on Queen's Drive, Montego Bay, from 8:30 am.
Some of the placards read: 'Free Speech Is A Right Not A Privilege'; 'Do Not Change The Buggery Law'; and 'Keep Us Free From Evil Powers'.
They got support from horn-tooting motorists as they drove by.
The UWI sacked Professor Bain following concerns from gay advocacy groups across the Caribbean about his expert testimony given in a Belize court case seeking to challenge laws criminalising buggery.
Several critics, including church leaders, said the professor's dismissal was the university's giving in to pressure from gay rights groups.
Supporters of the academic, one of the region's leading authorities on the HIV epidemic in the Caribbean and one of the pioneers in clinical infectious diseases, last week protested outside the gates of the UWI's Mona Campus in Kingston. Protests, in support of Bain, were also held in Belize last week.
Chairman of the St James Ministers' Fraternal Rev Glendon Powell, who was among the demonstrators yesterday, said the groups wanted justice for Professor Bain.
"This is just standing in solidarity against injustice. The church always stands against any kind of injustice there is. We believe that it doesn't matter who, from the man in the gutter to the man at the top. When injustice is being served, we believe that justice is what the Bible speaks about," said Powell.
"Bain was fired from his job and we don't believe that it is right, and we believe it is a move to silence the Church, and we believe that the Church must always have a voice in doing that which God has mandated us to do," added Powell.
Meanwhile, pastor of the Montego Bay-based Trumpet Call Ministries International, Mary Wildish-Reece said the church wanted to support the freedom of speech.
"We are here today (yesterday) along with many other churches to stand with the east (Kingston protest) with what is happening in our nation to declare that speaking the truth on scientific and medical evidence is not hate speech. We are here to stand for our rights as Christians for freedom of speech, for freedom to preach the gospel, and to declare that we do not want to see the moral fibre of our society eroded and being re-ordered by a minority," Wildish-Reece said.
"We are here to say that enough is enough, and we are calling for a righteous revolution in this nation for the church to stand for what the Bible has said is truth and rights," she added.
ENDS
One pastor however linked to the Dwayne's House homeless idea has called for gays not to give up on the church, see the post HERE, also hear the follow-up radio interview:
More materials:
Ian Boyne: Bain exercised terribly poor strategic judgement .
Lessons to learn from The Professor Bain Matter?
Bain dug his own grave (Gleaner letter)
Here is CVM TV's take.
H
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