Showing posts with label Malaysia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Malaysia. Show all posts

Thursday, February 25, 2010

Global Conversation on Muslim-Christian Dialogue

Christianity Today and the Lausanne movement have been conducting Global Conversation on certain important global issues recently. In March 2010, the Conversation is on

How should Christians who have a passion for evangelization relate to Islam? For North Americans, the question took on new urgency in the wake of September 11. But Christians in Muslim-majority societies have dealt with the question far longer.

Chawkat Moucarry, World Vision International's director of interfaith relations describes his commitment and mission in A Lifelong Journey with Islam.

I have never understood why some people look at dialogue and mission in either-or terms. In my experience, these words belong so much to each other that they should never be divorced. Evangelical Christians (whose theology I share) have shown an unwarranted suspicion of dialogue, simply because some have used it as a substitute for mission. Not only are the two words compatible, but they must shape each other.

more here.

David Shenks has this to contribute "My life motto as I engage in dialogue with Muslims is the same that Moucarry has highlighted (1 Pet. 3:15): Be clear in my confession of faith—Jesus is Lord. Give account of this reality to all who ask. Bear witness with gentleness and respect." more here in Experiencing Dialogue.

While dialogue seems to be the way to go, there are concerns. Evelyne A. Reisacher who had served for over 20 years as the associate director of a church-based organization in France called l'AMI, dedicated to facilitate Christian-Muslim encounters and assist Muslim Background Believers. She is assistant professor of Islamic studies and Intercultural Relations at Fuller Theological Seminary has this to say in Dialogue Shaping Mission Shaping Dialogue.
In conclusion: Has my perception of dialogue changed? Yes and no. The questions I raised prior to my first experience of dialogue in 2003 are still relevant and must be revisited each time I engage in dialogue. My commitment to Jesus Christ and the gospel has not changed. But dialogue is a constant reminder of the human face of mission: It helps us encounter Muslims as equal interlocutors worthy of being listened to and with whom we should respectfully share our beliefs.
How then does this dialogue translate to realpolitik?

Dr Ng Kam Weng, director of Kairos Research Centre in Kuala Lumpur shares about the situation in Malaysia "to explain the ambivalence of Christian minority groups toward Christian-Muslim dialogue" as a response in Building a Common Society.

Dialogue beneath the Gothic arches of Western universities should be welcomed, but surely genuine dialogue would gain more credence if it took place at the ground level, especially in countries where Islamic authorities do not feel the need to modulate their power so as to present an acceptable face, as they would when dealing with their Western counterparts. If indeed dialogue takes place, the Islamic authorities typically set the terms of engagement, reducing it to social rituals to confirm the dominance of Islam rather than to promote mutual understanding and respect. Naturally, local Christians lose enthusiasm for "dialogue."

It is not often so cut and dry about inter-faith dialogue in Muslim-majority countries as has been pointed out by Dr Ng. Read more here.

Nigeria is another country where is there had been violence between Muslims and Christians. Sunday Agang who is dean of the School of Theology and Ethics, JETS Theological Seminary in Jos, Nigeria comments on The Audacity of Dialogue.


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Saturday, January 9, 2010

More about Church Torching in Malaysia

Response from Rev. Ong Sek Leang, Senior Pastor of Metro Tabernacle Church. The administrative office of Metro Tabernacle in Desa Melawati was completely gutted.




HT: Sivin Kit's Garden

KUALA LUMPUR (Reuters) -
Sat Jan 9, 2010 11:57pm EST

Arsonists in Malaysia struck at a convent school and a fifth church on Sunday amid rising tensions between majority Muslims and Christians over the use of the word "Allah" to describe the Christian God.

Police in the sleepy city of Taiping, around 300 km (185 miles) from the capital Kuala Lumpur, said a petrol bomb had been thrown at the guard house of a Catholic convent school but had failed to go off.

They also said they had found several broken bottles including paint thinners outside one of the country's oldest Anglican churches, All Saints, Taiping, and said one of the building's walls had been blackened.

read more and watch the video.

Washington Post
By EILEEN NG
The Associated Press
Sunday, January 10, 2010; 12:37 AM

On Sunday, men, women and children from the Metro Tabernacle parish assembled in the cavernous, 1,800-seat meeting hall of the Malaysian Chinese Association party for the service. They lifted their hands and sang "We put all our faith in you," and "You are the God of love and peace" during the Sunday service.

"My wife was worried, but we want to be here to support the church," said Michael Chew, 40, who came to the service with two children, aged 1 and 6.

The service was in English, as are most Christian services in mainland Malaysia though some are in Chinese and Tamil languages. Such services do not use the word "Allah." Only the Malay-language prayers for indigenous tribespeople in the remote states of Sabah and Sarawak use "Allah," as they have for decades.


The Allah ban is unusual in the Muslim world. The Arabic word is commonly used by Christians to describe God in such countries as Egypt, Syria and Indonesia, the world's largest Muslim nation.


read more and watch the slide show


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Mr. Zam who’s the president of the Parent Teacher Association of an Islamic School next to the Metro Tabernacle Church was very kind to share some of his thoughts in relation to church arson on Friday, January 8, 2010.



HT: Sivin Kit's Garden

Thursday, January 7, 2010

Why? Why the Need to Resort to Violence?


Malaysia churches firebombed - Aljazeera.net

Two Christian churches in Malaysia have been firebombed amid tensions over the use of the word "Allah" by non-Muslims in the country. ...

Two Christian churches in Malaysia have been firebombed amid tensions over the use of the word "Allah" by non-Muslims in the country.

Attackers threw a petrol bomb at church in the capital, Kuala Lumpur, and tried to set another ablaze in a nearby suburb in the early hours of Friday, witnesses and officials said.

A Malaysian court had last week overturned a government ban on non-Muslims using the word "Allah" in their literature, allowing Roman Catholic newspaper, the Herald, to use the term to refer to God in the Malay language.

The judge has since suspended the implementation of the ruling, after the government appealed the ruling and the Catholic church agreed to the suspension.

The fire in Friday's first incident gutted the administrative office on the first floor of the three-storey Metro Tabernacle Assembly of God church, shortly after midnight.

"There are witness reports two persons on a motorbike came near the entrance and hurled in something looking like a petrol bomb," Kevin Ang, a church spokesman, said.

Separately, Lawrence Andrew, the editor of the Herald, said a Molotov cocktail was thrown into the compound of the Roman Catholic Assumption church in Petaling Jaya, just outside the capital, around 4am on Friday.


other links from Sivin Kit's Garden who call for Mourning for Malaysia

Malaysian church fire-bombed ahead of Muslim protests

KL church torched

Malaysia church torched amid Allah row

Church damaged in midnight fire

Malaysian church set on fire: officials

Is this the right approach? When the due process of the law do not give you what you want, you resort to violence to get what you want? Then these "respect" you give to the "due process of the law" is just so much empty words. And the issue is about? The content and context of a word.

It is a sad day for Malaysia.

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Sunday, January 3, 2010

Barry Wain's Malaysian Maverick


Barry Wain (2009) Malaysian Maverick: Mahathir Mohamad in Turbulent Times, New York, NY: Palgrave Macmillan

Barry Wain is Writer-in-Residence at the Institute of Southeast Asian Studies in Singapore. He was a former editor of The Asian Wall Street Journal. An Australian, Wain has spent 37 years as a journalist in Asia.

The book blurb at the back cover,

The grandson of an Indian immigrant and the first Malay commoner to become prime minister of Malaysia, Mahathir Mohamad turned the Muslim-majority Southeast Asia country into one of the developing world's most successful economies. During his 22 years in power he adopted pragmatic economic policies alongside repressive political measures, and showed that Islam was compatible with representative government and modernization...But in mixing business and politics, Mahathir encouraged cronyism and failed to prevent the spread of corruption. Authoritative and impatient, he jailed opponents, sacked rivals and undermined institutions as he pursued his obsession with development...


This is an interesting book that is written by a journalist. His aim was to present and review ex Malaysian prime minister's term of office from the grassroot level.

Wednesday, December 16, 2009

Problem of Bible Knowledge in Malaysian Schools

PRESS STATEMENT

MALAYAN CHRISTIAN SCHOOLS’ COUNCIL


SHOCKED BY SPM 10+2 EXCLUSIVITY


The Malayan Christian Schools’ Council is shocked at the Government’s decision not to include Bible Knowledge in the 2 additional SPM subjects as announced recently.


This is despite repeated representations and memoranda to the authorities concerned since June this year.


In The Star Online news report dated Tuesday December 8, 2009 it was announced that the two additional SPM subjects are limited to Bahasa Arab, Bahasa Cina, Bahasa Tamil, Chinese Literature and Tamil Literature.


This decision appears to have been hastily taken without due consultation. It has unjustly excluded other subjects which are highly valued by ethnic and religious minorities in Malaysia.


Among these subjects are Bahasa Iban, Bahasa Punjab and Bible Knowledge. This marginalisation is a source of great consternation among the affected communities which constitute a significant percentage of Malaysians.


We urge the Cabinet, in particular the Minister of Education, to leave the choice of the two additional SPM subjects to the candidate. Surely, such an inclusive approach is more in line with the PM’s vision of 1Malaysia “People First, Performance Now”.

(signed)

YAP KOK KEONG

Chairman

MALAYAN CHRISTIAN SCHOOLS’ COUNCIL

Dated this 17th December 2009

(The Malayan Christian Schools’ Council represents the Mission Authorities of the Catholic, Methodist, Anglican, Brethren, Presbyterian and Basel Churches)

Wednesday, December 9, 2009

The Exorcist as a Christmas Special?

While I am reluctant to criticise our public television, I wonder whose bright idea it is to screen such a movie and by what leap of logic to bill it as a Christmas Special?

CHRISTIAN FEDERATION OF MALAYSIA

(PERSEKUTUAN KRISTIAN MALAYSIA)



Address: 10, Jalan 11/9, Section 11, 46200 Petaling Jaya, Selangor Darul Ehsan, Malaysia

Telephone: (03) 7957 1278, (03) 7957 146, Fax: (03) 7957 1457

Email: cfmsia@yahoo.co.uk



9 December 2009




CFM STATEMENT ON THE EXORCIST III movie shown on NTV7

on 5 Dec 2009 SATURDAY at 11PM

THE EXORCIST III MOVIE DOES NOT REFLECT CHRISTMAS MESSAGE


The Christian Federation of Malaysia (CFM) strongly objects to the recent showing of the movie The Exorcist III by NTV7 on 5 December 2009 at 11pm which was promoted by the network as a “Christmas Special”.


The CFM, which represents the Christian community in Malaysia, views with disdain the decision of the network to broadcast a satanic and horror movie for public viewing and to say that it is in connection with the season of Christmas. Such a programming decision is utterly incomprehensible and wholly inappropriate.


If indeed it is the genuine desire of the network to broadcast movies as part of a “Christmas Special”, we feel that the network should be screening movies that exemplify the Christmas spirit of love and sharing rather than a satanic and horror movie. We wonder what message the network is trying to portray to the public about the true meaning of Christmas.


The world is full of violence and horror on a regular basis. Let us at least set aside the season of Christmas, when Christians around the world celebrate the birth of Jesus Christ, as a time to promote love, joy and peace.


signed

Bishop Ng Moon Hing

Chairman and the Executive Committee of the

Christian Federation of Malaysia

Tuesday, November 17, 2009

Church Crisis: It's all about Money

This report was published in the Star newspaper in Malaysia

Crisis rocks Calvary Church

By CHARLES FERNANDEZ and STUART MICHAEL

THE Calvary church in Damansara Heights, Kuala Lumpur, is rocked with controversy over alleged mismanagement of funds.

A group of church members, who call themselves the Truth, Transparency and Good Governance Group (TTG), is demanding for accountability and transparency over the use of church funds from the Calvary Church’s Board of Deacons (BOD) led by senior pastor (SP) Rev. Tan Sri Prince Guneratnam...

Futuristic: An artist impression of space ship-like Calvary Convention Centre (CCC) , a project by Malaysian architect Datuk Dr Ken Yeang.



The CCC, the TTG claims, has been dogged by controversy right from the beginning. The project was supposed to cost RM50mil, excluding land cost, but this has now ballooned to RM150mil.

Although the project started with much hope for a new beginning for the Calvary Church, work on the project subsequently took a bad turn.

The project, which was scheduled to have been completed by October this year, is now left temporarily abandoned due to the stoppage of work by the main contractor since April this year. Two Sundays ago, the pastors announced that the church had issued a Notice of Default to the main contractor,

“The church commenced the project, knowing right from the start that there were not enough funds to complete it. Despite selling some properties and obtaining a bank loan, the church still has to continue raising a lot of funds to finish this extravagant project.”


read more

Wednesday, October 28, 2009

CNN on Bible Seizure in Malaysia

Bibles seized as Malaysia minorities fear fundamentalism

By Saeed Ahmed, CNN
October 29, 2009 -- Updated 1254 GMT (2054 HKT)
Non-Muslims in Malaysia fear that Islamism is seeping into the moderate nation's fabric.
Non-Muslims in Malaysia fear that Islamism is seeping into the moderate nation's fabric.

(CNN) -- Authorities in Malaysia have seized more than 20,000 Bibles in recent months because they refer to God as "Allah," Christian leaders said Thursday.

The seizures have fed fears among minority groups, which see signs of encroaching Islamic fundamentalism in the predominantly Muslim but multi-racial country.

"There is a growing sense of Islamic assertion, yes," said the Rev. Hermen Shastri, general-secretary of the Council of Churches of Malaysia. "There is some concern."

The Bibles were written in the country's official language, Malay -- in which the word for God is "Allah," as it is in Arabic.

However, Malaysia's government says the word is exclusive to Islam.

Its use in Christian publications is likely to confuse Muslims and draw them to Christianity, the government says. So it has banned use of the word in Christian literature.


read more

Sunday, October 25, 2009

The Literary Bar in Malaysia

There are a lack of serious writers in Malaysia and National Laureate shares his thoughts in the Star newspaper. Interestingly he thinks that there is no racial bias in awarding the National Laureate when he is the 10th and all ten are Malays.


Sunday October 25, 2009

Raising the literary bar

By ANDREW SIA


Our new National Laureate talks about the need for more serious works and an alternative media.


The malaise of Malay literature starts from schools, Anwar says. “In the school system, we don’t encourage too much serious discussions. It’s about following the format or scheme to answer questions. So when they grow up, there is the lack of a critical mind. ”

After writing for over 40 years, Anwar Ridhwan still believes in quality over quantity.

read more

Saturday, October 24, 2009

15,000 bibles detained by Malaysian Government

In the Religious Liberty Watch blog, nkm notes that 15,000 Bibles are detained by the Malaysian authorities and gives his opinion.


15000 Bibles Detained by Malaysian Government this Past Year

By nkw

It is bad enough that Malaysian government officials continue to seize and detain the Al Kitab (Malay Bible) at their whims and fancies. It is worse as the government is supposed to have a gentlemen’s agreement dating from the mid 1980s with the leaders of the Malaysian Church that allows the Al Kitab to be used within church premises.



read more

Sorry Your Book is Banned!

Elizabeth Tai highlights in the Star newspaper about book banning in Malaysia and what a sad state of affair it is.

It’s arbitrary, my dear

By ELIZABETH TAI


Given broad, vague guidelines that keep changing, publishers and authors are hard- pressed to decipher what books get banned.

ON March 9, 2001, a day after the start of the Kampung Medan clashes in Kuala Lumpur, Suaram chairperson K. Arumugam was chased by 20 motorcyclists when he drove into the area.

The experience affected him so much that he decided to write a book about it.

Right to Read, held in Kuala Lumpur two weeks ago, aimed to get people to ask why books are banned, and what happens when access to information is restricted.

After spending two years on research and RM10,000 on printing, 5,000 copies of March 8 (written in Tamil) rolled off the press in April 2006.

Nine months later – on Jan 19, 2007 – Elizabeth Wong (now Selangor exco member) informed Arumugam that his book, which had sold about 3,000 copies by then, had been banned.

read more

.

Tuesday, July 28, 2009

What's in a Name?

From Christianity Today.com

Top Story
What's in a Name?
Christians in Southeast Asia debate their right to refer to God as Allah.

Saturday, July 18, 2009

Angry in Malaysia

My dear brother in Christ, Dr Tan Soo Inn wrote an interesting commentary on the situation in Malaysia. I am reposting it here with his permission.


GRACE@WORK MAIL 29/09
July 17th, 2009 Edition.
This ecommentary is sent out free but your donations help this ministry in
its commitment to bring truth to life. Details below.
(Grace@Work Mail is a ministry of Graceworks: www.graceworks.com.sg)


Commentary: Angry in Malaysia
By Soo-Inn Tan


"My dear brothers, take note of this: Everyone should be quick to listen, slow
to speak and slow to become angry, for man's anger does not bring about
the righteous life that God desires. Therefore, get rid of all moral filth and
the evil that is so prevalent and humbly accept the word planted in you,
which can save you." (James 1:19-21 TNIV)



If you are a follower of Jesus in Malaysia, you are probably angry. Consider
the following.

1. Two Muslim journalists infiltrate a Catholic church incognito. They had
heard that a number of Muslims had been converted to Christianity through
this church. They found no evidence of such conversions. During mass they
come forward to take the communion wafer. They did not swallow and held
the wafer in their mouths till they had left the church building. They then
spitted out the wafer and took pictures. They then published an article about
their "adventure" together with pictures of the spitted out communion wafer.
To date there is no reprimand from any official government body. Police
reports have been made.

I come from a free church tradition. I believe the communion bread remains
bread though I believe the Spirit of Christ is at the Lord's Supper. This is
besides the point. Malaysia is a multi racial, multi religious country where the
constitution protects the dignity of all religions. The silence from the
government is deafening. Imagine if some Christian journalists had thrown
the Koran on the floor, took pictures, and published the story. Of course we
should forgive our enemies. But there are other issues involved, including
holding the government responsible to its call to protect the dignity of all
religions.

2. In recent times the Malaysian Anti Corruption Commission (MACC) has
been aggressively investigating public servants from opposition parties. (Of
course whether a party is considered an opposition party depends on your
perspective. In truth the "opposition" parties form the duly elected
governments in a number of states.) Christians should be at the forefront of
any fight against corruption. But when politicians from the governing party
are rarely investigated while so many politicians from "opposition" parties
are investigated, something is seriously wrong.

The glaring double standard gives lie to the fact that the Anti Corruption
Commission is a non partisan body committed to eradicate corruption
wherever it is found. It seems that the Commission is but a political tool of
the ruling party.

3. And now we learn that a political aide, who was interrogated by the
Commission, has fallen to his death from the 14th floor of the Anti
Corruption Headquarters. He had been taken to the MACC office at 6pm on
Wednesday (July 15th) to assist in the Commission's investigation into the
alleged abuse of constituency development funds by several state
assemblymen. Did he jump? Was he pushed? We do not know.

What we know is this. He was interrogated till 3.45am in the morning. In the
words of Goh Keat Peng:

[Why was a witness being held for questioning for ten hours and only
released at 3.45am? What kind of case is it and what is the urgency of the
case in question that the witness had to be deprived of sleep and forcibly
kept awake till 3.45am? Was the nation deemed to be in grave danger had
the witness in question been sent home at a respectable time and asked to
report again for questioning the next morning?

The nation could endure long years of waiting over so many other much
longer pending cases involving so much more public money and have much
greater weight in public interest but this particular case could not wait for
the next morning when the witness in question would have been fresher and
better rested?
(http://www.themicahmandate.org/2009/07/i-cannot-remain-neutral-about-i
ssues-of-morality/)]

Like I said if you are a follower of Jesus in Malaysia you should be angry. I
am. Which is why I remember James 1:19-21. I know righteous anger can
quickly become unrighteous. I know that when I get angry my discernment
is compromised. I am more vulnerable to manipulation. I become rash and
speak and act prematurely. When I am angry, I need to bear in mind at least
two things:

1. Unrighteous anger will not accomplish God's purposes. If our concern is to
be agents of God's work, unrighteous anger is out.

2. When we are consumed by anger we only see the evil "out there." We
stop working at the evil inside us. We forget the ongoing call to "get rid of all
moral filth and the evil that is so prevalent" in our own lives.

However fear of unrighteous anger should not paralyse us from doing what
is right. Followers of Jesus are called to speak up against injustice.

["Speak up for those who cannot speak for themselves,
for the rights of all who are destitute.
Speak up and judge fairly;
defend the rights of the poor and needy."
(Proverbs 31:8-9 TNIV)]

And as John the Baptist discovered, "speaking truth to power" may demand
the highest price (Matthew 14:1-12). There is a time to speak up. There is a
time to act. There is a time for righteous anger. But we must guard our
hearts and ensure that all we say and do flow out of the twin loves for God
and neighbour (Mark 12:28-31).

Whatever righteous anger may look like, it must come from a heart that has
such a deep passion for God that we are deeply pained that His ways are
violated. It must come from a heart with such a deep compassion for human
beings (of whatever race or religious background) that we are roused when
human life is violated. And it must come from a heart that is always
suspicious of its own righteousness.

Tuesday, January 20, 2009

The Number of Paediatricians in Malaysia


According to Professor Lee Way Seah, President of the College of Paediatrics, Academy of Medicine of Malaysia, as of October 31, 2008, there are 217 paediatricians in Malaysia.
Of these 217, only 35 are in the public sector. The rest are in private practice.

The population of Malaysia is 25,274,132 (July 2008 est.) according to https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/print/my.html

This makes the paediatrician: population ratio as 1:116,470.65
That is a scary ratio!
.

The Number of Paediatricians in Malaysia


According to Professor Lee Way Seah, President of the College of Paediatrics, Academy of Medicine of Malaysia, as of October 31, 2008, there are 217 paediatricians in Malaysia.
Of these 217, only 35 are in the public sector. The rest are in private practice.

The population of Malaysia is 25,274,132 (July 2008 est.) according to https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/print/my.html

This makes the paediatrician: population ratio as 1:116,470.65
That is a scary ratio!
.

Sunday, December 21, 2008

Books on the Overseas Chinese

Picked up these books from Borders, Singapore last Friday.


(2007) published by Centre for Malaysian Chinese Studies, Kuala Lumpur

(2008) published by World Scientific, Singapore

Looking forward to reading them.
.

Books on the Overseas Chinese

Picked up these books from Borders, Singapore last Friday.


(2007) published by Centre for Malaysian Chinese Studies, Kuala Lumpur

(2008) published by World Scientific, Singapore

Looking forward to reading them.
.

Tuesday, September 30, 2008

Selamat Hari Raya


to all my Muslim readers


Selamat Hari Raya Aidil Fitri


Maaf Zahir Batin

.

Selamat Hari Raya


to all my Muslim readers


Selamat Hari Raya Aidil Fitri


Maaf Zahir Batin

.