{News reports suggesting Pope Francis said dogs can go to heaven grabbed headlines Friday. But in an example of getting lost in translation, the pontiff never actually commented about whether pets get a pass to the afterlife — an idea that gained traction among animal lovers and roused theologians. }
The confusion began when Pope Francis last month spoke broadly about the world during a speech later posted to the Vatican’s website. One particular part of his talk — “Holy Scripture teaches us that the fulfillment of this wonderful design also affects everything around us” — was highlighted and analyzed by Italy’s Corriere della Sera. The newspaper interpreted it to mean the pope believes animals go to heaven, and drew an analogy with another pope who spoke on the subject.
“It is said that Paul VI consoled a tearful child whose dog had died, and told him: ‘One day, we will see our animals again in the eternity of Christ,’” the newspaper said.
That’s where the message apparently got mixed up. Many news organizations, including The New York Times and NBC News, attributed the Pope Paul VI quote to Pope Francis. Adding to the confusion, neither the Vatican nor the pope clarified the remarks.
Sex Mountain in Indonesia attracts thousands of Muslim pilgrims, who believe having sex out of wedlock at this holy site will bring them wealth and good fortune. Dateline follows them as they take part in this unusual ritual.
Married men, cheating housewives, government officials and prostitutes revelling in a mass ritual of adultery and sex. This is what happens on Gunung Kemukus in Indonesia, otherwise known as Sex Mountain.
“I come here to seek good fortune,” regular visitor Mardiyah told me as I follow her journey on tonight’sDateline at 9.30pm on SBS ONE.
She is one of thousands of pilgrims who journey to a mysterious hilltop in Java to perform this ancient ritual. Most of those who take part in the ritual consider themselves devout Muslims
Mardiyah prays at Sex Mountain, in the hope that the ritual will help provide money to pay her debts.
There are several versions of the mythic tale that date back to the 16th century. Legend has it a young Indonesian Prince Pangeran Samodro had an affair with his stepmother.
They ran away and hid on Gunung Kemukus. One day, while mid-coitus, they were caught, killed and buried atop the mountain. It’s now an Islamic shrine where this sex ritual takes place.
The story goes: pilgrims must copulate on the mountain every 35 days for seven consecutive times and blessings and wealth should come their way.
But for the magic to work and the money to flow, it’s believed their sex partner for the ritual should not be their spouse.
Gepeng travelled hundreds of kilometres to reach Gunung Kemukus, or Sex Mountain.
I meet Gepeng, who like many others has travelled hundreds of kilometres from across the archipelago to get to sex mountain.“You go there to look for a different partner, not the one you have at home. Historically that’s how it works,” he said.
Another man travelling with him explained: “I don’t tell my wife. There’s no way my wife will find out.”
Pilgrims first pray and make offerings at the grave. They then must wash themselves at sacred springs nearby and once that’s been completed, they have sex.
This ritual isn’t seen anywhere else in Indonesia or the rest of the Muslim world. It’s a very Javanese blend of religious ideals with Islamic, Hindu and Buddhist influences.
A visit to Sex Mountain includes rituals combining Islamic, Hindu and Buddhist influences.
Professor Keontjoro Soeparno, a social psychologist from Gadjah Mada University in Yogyakarta, has been studying the ritual for more than 30 years.
“It’s a strange thing. A paradox: there’s a mosque, shrine – but outside – there’s a place for having illicit sex,” he said. “The fact is – it’s hypocritical.”
It’s impossible to ignore that the ritual is riddled with contradictions. Islam views adultery as a sin, so the ‘out of wedlock’ sex clearly goes against the mainstream law of the religion.
Karaoke bars and ‘sex shacks’ line the hillside. Some are privately owned, others built and funded by the local government. But they’re loathe to publicly admit there is any sex going on at Gunung Kemukus.
‘Sex shacks’ offer rooms by the hour for those who’ve found a new partner to have sex with.
“Pilgrims should come here with pure hearts and clean bodies,” a gatekeeper employed to look after the mountain shrine said.
“We’ve never said the sex is a condition of the pilgrimage. It’s what they want to do.”
The territory has become prime real estate for commercial sex workers. Professor Keontjoro estimates about half of the women who show up now are prostitutes.
“The government facilitated the rise of prostitution. The Islamic religion forbids all this, but the government would rather not know about that. Because they’re more interested in profit – they leave their religion behind,” he said.
Some say if you pay for sex the ritual doesn’t work. The reality is the local government makes a sizeable profit from sex mountain. They charge the stalls to set up shop and the pilgrims pay a toll to enter the site.
With up to 8,000 pilgrims arriving on the busiest nights and an entry fee of around 5000 rupiah, or 50 cents, a time, it’s big business in Indonesia.
So it’s not surprising officials and religious leaders turn a blind eye.
Up to 8,000 people visit Sex Mountain on its busiest nights, with seven visits required to complete the ritual.
The question remains though – how do we know this ancient tradition actually works. Does sex with a stranger really boost your bank account?Mardiyah genuinely believes it does, attributing sex mountain and its spiritual powers to her recent success.
“Praise be to God, after coming here, even though I have a few debts, my business is making a bit of a profit. Even though it’s small, I still give thanks that I’ve received blessings from here,” she said to me.
I don’t know how willing I am to believe in the legacy of Prince Samodro and his stepmother lover, but I can understand the attachment to the myth.
{
During a recent visit to the former capital of the Ottoman Empire, the pope labored mightily to bring Islam into dialogue with Christianity. But does he really accept that God is God?}
At the famous Blue Mosque during a papal visit to Istanbul, Pope Francis stood beside the grand mufti of Istanbul and prayed for two minutes, bowing his head, closing his eyes. At the end of his prayer, the grand mufti whispered aloud: “May God accept it.”
One can’t help wondering: Did the grand mufti doubt that God would accept a prayer from the head of the Roman Catholic Church? Indeed, does Francis, or any Christian, genuinely accept that God is God, whether his name be Allah or God?
As in previous visits to Islamic countries, the busiest pontiff in recent memory had labored mightily in Turkey to bring Islam into dialogue with Christianity: not an easy thing, although both are Abrahamic religions, in theory accepting the notion that God revealed himself to Abraham and his descendants.
A long-running argument exists over whether Christians and Muslims worship the same God. In my view, they certainly do. The creator—he or she—brought the world into being. The gender business interferes in odd ways, as the Arabic word for God is apparently quite neutral, whereas God is often seen as masculine in the Judaic tradition, the ultimate patriarch, as in Psalm 89: “Thou art my father, my God.” The situation is complicated by Christianity, where Jesus becomes the son of God, though his equal as well, having a place beside the Holy Spirit as part of a Trinity—with equal weight on each foot of the tripod. (To many outside Christianity, this looks a bit like polytheism!)
Judaism, Christianity, and Islam are firmly monotheistic religions, in fact. This puts them at odds with the countless polytheistic religions, where many gods compete for prominence. The ancient Greeks and Romans were comfortable with any number of deities and were quite open to allowing conquered nations to continue to worship in whatever ways they saw fit, as long as they didn’t mind having an emperor who required taxes and tributes. Jews in ancient Palestine were, under Roman occupation, moderately free to follow their Temple-oriented religion without interference until, a few decades after the death of Jesus, anti-imperial zealots openly rebelled against the empire, drawing the wrath of a vast and well-equipped army on their heads, precipitating the terrible destruction of the Second Temple in Jerusalem in 70 CE.
The God of the Jews was known by various names, including YHWH—the vowels are deliberately missing, although we derive the name Jehovah from this combination of consonants as written in Latin letters. Other names of God were Elohim, and Adonai, although these latter are often seen as reflections of God’s attributes, not separate names. One is, of course, inevitably up against the problem of translation when speaking of names. God is God, but he has various names in different languages, and each strand of monotheistic religion has multiple ways of describing the godhead.It has never been more important for Jews, Christians, and Muslims to understand that they worship the same God and “inhabit a common moral universe.” Pope Francis would seem to agree.
The God of Islam—who has as many as 99 names, all subsumed in Allah—often seems very like the Jewish creator: a remote God, merciful but all-powerful. Allah seems unlikely to enter into a “personal” relationship with Muslims, who readily submit to the divine will. Allah can’t truly be called a male figure in Islam, so “his” doesn’t really work as a descriptor. The God of Israel did indeed enter into dialogue with human creatures, meeting Adam and Eve in Eden, speaking to Moses in the burning bush, demanding sacrifices, issuing commandments. The various writings that eventually made up the Hebrew scriptures—the five books of Moses, the books of the prophets, and the so-called writings—characterized the human relationship with God in complex ways; but it was clearly a relationship.
The Christian God is more available to his followers: the head of a family, as depicted in the roles of father and son, making him appear more human than either the Jewish or Islamic creator. One can approach a father, and Jesus could speak to God as Abba or father, encouraging his followers to do the same, as in the Lord’s Prayer. Jesus offered a way of communicating with God that felt intimate.
There has been, as one might guess, a lot of disagreement about whether Christians and Muslims worship the same God, but Miroslav Volf, a well-known professor at Yale Divinity School, has done a good deal of work on this subject, concluding that both religions “believe in one God, one God who is a sovereign Lord and to whom they are to be obedient. For both faiths, God embodies what’s ultimately important and valuable.” He suggests that it has never been more important for Jews, Christians, and Muslims to understand that they do, indeed, worship the same God and, in fact, “inhabit a common moral universe.”
Pope Francis would seem to agree. He is, in many ways, working to repair damage done by Benedict, the previous pontiff, in his infamous lecture at the University of Regensburg in Germany, where some of his remarks were taken, possibly out of context, to be anti-Islam. As if in reaction, the current pontiff has gone out of his way to forge alliances with Islam, praying that religious tolerance will ultimately prevail in the Middle East.
That is a lot to pray for, but Pope Francis is praying for all of us.
This article was published on {{thedailybeast.com}} by {{Jay Parini}}
{Christians at the United Christian Church of Rwanda were urged to contribute money for the purchase of their pastors’ vehicles, IGIHE reports.}
Bishop Rwandamura Charles told Christians on 18 Oct. 2014 that they have to take money out of their pockets and buy Pastors ‘cars because pastors are the ones who carry out the burden of their problems.
He said a pastor is someone who is wealthy, eats lunch in Serena Hotel and lives in a good house so someone who is not able to get all of that “is not a pastor.”
He called upon Christians to make sure that their pastors are wealthy people adding that church leaders should get their privilege as high profile people and Christians will be explained why and how their offerings will help in making good life for their shepherds.
Bishop Rwandamura said “A Bishop without money is not a bishop; Apostle without money is not an Apostle. Apostle has money; he takes food in Serena Hotel. They are Kings, they are special people. We get tasks from God, no where you can apply for this work; this is a duty as well as a pledge.”
Rwandamura further explained that Christians must understand well the reason behind that call because Bishops, Apostles and pastors transport their problems and their bad sprits to God for the purification.
He says “We carry your burdens, your illness, your problems and your devils. We fight them day and night. Pastors are in front of you with your problems, your sterility, your AIDS and even you poverty.”
{{Christians speak out}}
Christians raise mixed feelings about the issue where some of them called it a dictatorship.
They said that asking them to buy all of the staff for their pastors is exaggerating.
Nyirimanzi{{*}} says “I think this is like leading with dictatorship. Sometime they terrorize us by saying that those who don’t give money to buy their cars will be cursed, unfortunate, etc.”
He added that “When you hear how they preach you become panicky and give money very quickly to avoid a curse and bad luck. They also say that those who offer will get blessed throughout their works”
Another Christian who spoke to us said “Even if none of the pastors come and force you to give money but they use a fear-provoking language that pushes us to dreadfully give our money.”
{Nyirimanzi*: The name withheld }
More on this article contact angedelavictoire@igihe.com or emma@igihe.rw
{The Divine Network International Ministries opens a new branch in Kampala, Uganda where it anointed Prophet Bisimwa Emile Prince as its Kampala representative and one of the shepherds in DNIM.}
After divine revelation, DNIM was founded by a Rwandan National Habineza Jean Claude currently living in the U.S.
The church has succeeded in opening different branches around the World.
It has branches in USA, Asia, Africa, and Dubai, Haiti, South Sudan and Canada as well as the newly opened branch in Uganda.
At the official launching of Kampala branch, the East African President of Divine Network International Ministries “DNIM”, Africa, Apostle Ntakoritagira Marcel said that DNIM has the objective of guiding followers in spiritual way as well as supporting their personal development through discussions, training, projects and helping each other.
He said all people, without discriminating, are allowed to come to DNIM for spiritual and Divine guidance.
He added that the church is planning to extend God’s Kingdom all over the world.
In Rwanda the God’s Ministry is represented by Niyonsenga Alphonse who is also the Senior Advisor.
DNI was launched on 14th July 2014. Its Founder is a Rwandan National Jean Claude Habineza who is living in the United States Of America.
{For the tens of thousands who hang on his every uplifting word and seek solace from the supernatural powers many contend he channels, they don’t like when he leaves them.}
“People in Rwanda say, ‘You abandoned us. You left us,’” the Rev. Ubald Rugirangoga said earlier this week.
The beloved “Father Ubald” has good reason for taking periodic sabbaticals outside his Central Africa homeland. Tens of thousands more people in other parts of the world have beseeched the presence of the longtime priest with a unique mysticism.
Rugirangoga is in the early stages of his latest transcontinental tour. He started in Germany last month before coming to the United States in early September.
After visits to Jackson Hole, Wyo., and Denver, Rugirangoga arrived in Green Bay this week. A capacity congregation is expected for the healing Mass he will give at 11 a.m. Friday in the chapel at The Shrine of Our Lady of Good Help in Champion.
“We usually pack the house. This is one of our biggest healing Masses,” said Karen Tipps, the coordinator at the shrine. “Whenever Father Ubald is here, we have standing-room-only usually in the church. They’re anxious to get here. And, they come from Chicago and Minnesota and everywhere when we have a healing Mass.”
Tipps advises those with an interest in making the journey to the popular shrine northeast of Green Bay to arrive early to secure a parking spot and a seat in the sanctuary.
Rugirangoga, who will be celebrating with facility rector the Rev. Peter Stryker, has come to the shrine a handful of times the last few years. It is one of Rugirangoga’s favorite destinations when he makes his rounds through the U.S. and North America – this purpose-filled trip continues with upcoming stops in Nashville, Tenn., and Dallas, then on to Canada before he returns to Rwanda in early November.
“I am with friends,” Rugirangoga, 58, said. “I am at the shrine. I pray.”
Sending up prayers in the name of forgiveness, reconciliation, hope and healing is what Rugirangoga does without reluctance or fatigue practically 24/7.
The Vatican has stripped the former papal envoy to the Dominican Republic of his diplomatic immunity, opening the way for him to be extradited to face sex abuse allegations in the country.
The Polish priest Jozef Wesolowski was found guilty of sexually abusing young Dominican boys by the Vatican in June.
Correspondents say the Caribbean state was unhappy at his immediate recalling by the Church when the claims surfaced.
He is the most senior Vatican official to be investigated for sex abuse.
Pope Francis has pledged a crackdown on clerics and employees of the Church who exploit minors, comparing their actions to a “satanic mass”.
Wesolowski had served as ambassador to the Dominican Republic for five years.
‘A serious and delicate case’
In a statement late on Monday, Vatican spokesman Federico Lombardi denied that the Vatican had tried to cover up the case by immediately recalling Wesolowski.
He said the 66-year-old former archbishop no longer had immunity and “might also be subjected to judicial procedures from the courts that could have specific jurisdiction over him”.
Pope Francis wants to see justice done and the Vatican had moved without delay in its investigation, he insisted.
“Far from any intention of a cover-up, this action demonstrates the full and direct undertaking of the Holy See’s responsibility, even in such a serious and delicate case,” he added.
The case is seen as highly sensitive because Wesolowski was an ambassador for the Church and had been ordained both a priest and a bishop by Pope John Paul II.
{{After seven years of hard work and conscientious saving, Issouf Balde was about to realise his life-long dream of fulfilling one of the five pillars of Islam by travelling to the holy land of Mecca for the Islamic pilgrimage, but the Ebola virus dashed his hopes.}}
“My travel agent returned my money for the trip, saying that the embassy of Saudi Arabia has refused to grant visas to all pilgrims from Guinea for fear we could transfer the virus there,” the 62-year-old locksmith told reporters.
“Until a solution for the disease emerges, Muslims from Guinea will not be able to see Mecca. I’m completely shattered. It would have been my first time in [my] life and perhaps my last because, at my age, I don’t know when [I will] raise money for another trip,” he said breaking down in tears.
Guinea is becoming an undesirable destination to the world while its inhabitants are seen as automatic carriers of the Ebola virus and are vigorously pushed back from entering other territories.
Senegal was the first country to seal its borders with Guinea when the haemorrhagic fever first broke out in March. Many NGOs in the West African sub region had slammed Senegalese authorities for the “inhumane” decision.
But today, independent health experts in Sierra Leone and Liberia are chiding their respective governments for not emulating Senegal, which, according to them, could have choked off the spread of the virus to both countries where it has killed 638 and infected a further 1,329 people, according to the World Health Organisation (WHO).
{{Guineans shunned}}
“People from other countries, especially Sierra Leone and Liberia, feel we Guineans are prostitutes of the Ebola virus, and that we are responsible for their growing woes,” Brahima Bah, a 42-year-old lawyer in Conakry, said.
“Nobody is happy to contract the virus and we Guineans are (at the time of publishing) not proud of the fact that it started here in West Africa, so why the blame and stigmatisation from everywhere? I was invited to a forum in South Africa but later told my place was cancelled because of the health situation in my country. We’re just victims of the Ebola circumstances.”
Guinea has borne the brunt of Ebola in the West African region as it struggles to contain the virus. A recent update released by Dr Sakoba Keita, director of prevention and fight against Ebola, a special department within the country’s health ministry, showed the death toll (at the time of publishing) had reached 373 from 506 cases of infection registered nationwide.
The southern city of Guéckédou is (at the time of publishing) the worst hit with 285 cases and 247 deaths, followed by the capital Conakry with 95 infections and 42 killed, while Macenta, close to Guéckédou, comes third on the tragedy chart with 29 deaths from 39 cases. The virus has spread to 11 of the 33 prefectures in the country of 12 million people.
Pope Francis has lifted a ban on the beatification of murdered Salvadoran Archbishop Oscar Romero.
For years, the Roman Catholic Church blocked the process because of concerns that he had Marxist ideas.
An outspoken critic of the military regime during El Salvador’s bloody civil war, Archbishop Romero was shot dead while celebrating Mass in 1980.
Beatification, or declaring a person “blessed”, is the necessary prelude to full sainthood.
The bishop was one of the main proponents of Liberation Theology – an interpretation of Christian faith through the perspective of the poor.
‘Death squads’
On Monday, the Pope said he was hoping for a swift beatification process.
“For me Romero is a man of God,” the pontiff told journalists on the plane bringing him back from a trip to South Korea.
“There are no doctrinal problems and it is very important that [the beatification] is done quickly.”
Archbishop Romero denounced the right-wing death squads that operated in the Central American nation at the time and the oppression against the poor, calling for an end to all political violence.
Left-wing rebels fought an insurgency against the US-backed right-wing government.
Some 75,000 people were killed in the civil war, which began in 1980 and ended in 1992 with a UN-brokered peace agreement.
Archbishop Romero was killed on 24 March 1980, aged 62, after ending his sermon in the capital, San Salvador.
No-one has ever been convicted in connection with his murder.
In 2010, then President Mauricio Funes – El Salvador’s first left-wing leader since the end of the civil war – made an official apology.
“I am seeking pardon in the name of the state,” Mr Funes said as he unveiled a mural honouring Oscar Romero at El Salvador’s international airport.
{{The Pope has called for reconciliation on the Korean peninsula, on the final day of his visit to South Korea.}}
Koreans, Pope Francis said, should reject a “mindset of suspicion and confrontation” and find new paths to build peace.
He spoke at a Mass in Seoul’s main cathedral attended by President Park Geun-hye and North Korean defectors.
The service coincided with the start of major US-South Korea military exercises.
The annual drills, called Ulchi Freedom Guardian, last for 12 days and involve some 80,000 US and South Korean service personnel.
The exercises always enrage North Korea, which has in recent weeks conducted a series of short-range missile tests – including one as the Pope arrived.
It has threatened a “merciless” retaliatory strike in response to the drills.