28 February 2008 – Family Integrity #355 — First they make Christian belief illegal
Dear Friends,
It’s happening in the UK now. As was done in Roman times, you are not jailed for being a Christian. First they make Christian belief and practise illegal, then they jail you for breaking the law.
Parenting your child by correcting him is now illegal in NZ. Some of us will go to jail, not for parenting well, but for breaking the law. Lawbreakers, we all agree, need to be punished. That’s the state’s job. But it is not the state’s job to make laws re-defining God’s laws about parenting and morality.
Regards,
Craig Smith
National Director
Family Integrity
PO Box 9064
Palmerston North
New Zealand
Ph: (06) 357-4399
Fax: (06) 357-4389
Family.Integrity@xtra.co.nz
http://www.FamilyIntegrity.org.nz
Our Home….Our Castle
From:
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/dailymail/home.html?in_page_id=1766
Christian couple told: ‘You can’t foster if you think it’s wrong to be gay’
Last updated at 11:24am on 27th February 2008
Eunice Johns: ‘I can give love and security’
They are devoted foster parents with an unblemished record of caring for almost 20 vulnerable children.
But Eunice and Owen Johns have been forced to abandon their good work because they refuse to tell children as young as ten that homosexuality is an acceptable lifestyle.
To do so, they say, would go against their Christian beliefs.
The devastated couple withdrew an application to their council to continue as foster carers after being told they must condone homosexuality to adhere to gay rights laws.
The Equality Act (Sexual Orientation), which came into force last April, makes it illegal for any business or organisation providing a public service to discriminate against anyone because of their sexuality.
The council says its fostering panel felt it would not be following the regulations if it placed a child with a couple who could not comply with the Act.
The couple’s case comes at a time when there is a chronic shortage of foster parents, who work on a voluntary basis. Around 8,000 more are needed nationally.
The couple, who have four grownup children of their own, first became foster parents in 1996 and provided weekend respite care for 18 children over the next four years at their home in Derby. They gave up fostering when a catering business they ran became too time-consuming.
They then re-applied to provide weekend respite foster care to children aged under ten when they felt they were able to devote themselves fully to the task again.
Yesterday Mrs Johns, 59, a Sunday school teacher, said: “We started going through the assessment and were told that there was new legislation.
“They were asking: “What would you do if a 10 year-old child came home and said they had been picked on because they were homosexual?”
“They said, “Do you know you would have to tell them that it’s ok to be homosexual?”
“But I said I couldn’t do that because my Christian beliefs won’t let me. Morally I couldn’t do that, spiritually I couldn’t do that.
“I said I was there to explain that I would not compromise my faith.
“I said I would have to tell the child that as I am a Christian I don’t believe in homosexuality but I can give as much love and security as I possibly can.”
Mr Johns, 63, a metal polisher, said: “I would love any child, black or white, gay or straight.
‘But I cannot understand why sexuality is an issue when we are talking about boys and girls under the age of ten.”
Their case has been taken up by the Christian Legal Centre, which is to seek a judicial review if the council does not reverse its decision.
Religious campaigners say Mr and Mrs Johns are the victims of an equality drive which puts gay rights above religious beliefs.
Stephen Green, director of Christian Voice said: “The fostering service is in danger of losing an experienced Christian couple all for the sake of worshipping at the altar of diversity.”
Sara Bolton, Derby City Council cabinet member for children and young people, said: “This is an unfortunate case. But these laws are in place for the good of the children in our care.
“We need to treat everybody fairly because we’re looking after vulnerable children and therefore we need to keep strictly to the legislation and the policy.”
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