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The Vatican is helping promote a new Saudi-backed interfaith center in a bid to advance religious freedom around the world. The King Abdullah Bin Abdulaziz International Center opened Monday in Vienna with the foreign ministers from the facility’s founding nations — Saudi Arabia, Spain, and Austria — in attendance, along with United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon.
According to the New York-based Gatestone Institute, a non-profit international policy council, the center’s primary focus enter will be “to promote a work program called "The Image of the Other," which will examine stereotypes and misconceptions about Islam in education, the media and the Internet.
Explaining the Vatican's role in the new initiative, Jesuit Father Federico Lombardi, the Vatican spokesman, said the center's purpose of furthering interreligious and intercultural dialogue was a "basic and an urgent need for the humanity of today and tomorrow."
The Vatican will use its role in the center to call for the "effective respect of the fundamental rights of Christians who live in countries with a Muslim majority, in order to promote authentic and integral religious liberty," the spokesman said in a statement Nov. 23.
He said the Vatican was participating in the center "in order better to put to use her experience and trusted expertise in the field of interreligious dialogue." He also noted that the center's co-founding states, Austria and Spain, "have centuries-old Christian traditions."
So it's PRIMARY FOCUS will be to make people more open to Islam. And that means it really isn't about religious freedom. If the Vatican thinks this is going to get Saudi Arabia to legalize Catholicism in it's country .. well ...... IMHO the Vatican is being bamboozled, or they are in cahoots with some other agenda. Considering it's the Vatican, either of those is very possible.
Another major source of concern was how independent this center would be. That's why the center was established by the three equal national partners as an international organization under Austrian law. Its directorship is constitutionally managed by a nine-member board -- three Christians (representing the Vatican, the Ecumenical Orthodox Patriarchate, and the archbishop of Canterbury), three prominent Muslim scholars (two Sunni and one Shiite), one Jew, one Hindu and one Buddhist.
. . .
(Rabbi David Rosen, the international director of interreligious affairs for the American Jewish Committee, is the Jewish member of the board of directors for the King Abdullah Center for Interreligious and Intercultural Dialogue.)
Why we have to take the Saudis' interfaith offer seriously
Our Messiah selected 12 ordinary mortals to write down their experiences and teachings from him, so that latter generations may cross reference their texts for verification of teachings and comprehend better the selection of disciples.
He chosed all of different characters - a skeptic (Thomas), a young bravado (Peter), a matured straightforward empathetic man ( John), to a betrayer (Judas), in the spirit of openess and transparency, to discuss and share those teachings to the world.
Each and EVERYONE of them, to feed the lambs, not just one disciple.
He did not appoint anyone leader. He left it free for mortals to choose, and through his teachings of paying to Caesar and to the Kingdom of Heaven, it was very clear he made the distinction between religion and state governance, to be separated, one that teaches spirituality, and the other - governance of mortals in the temporial, with moral and ethical guidelines using free will to choose, to progress and evolve.
Peter was young, immatured and filled with bravado, ever ready with the sword. This, our Messiah knew from the start. Millions had misinterpretated that he favored Peter. It was not with favor that Peter was singled out, but rather, his lack of maturity that our Messiah had to devote extra attention to so that Peter's fate will not come to pass.
He was provened right, as Peter denied him not once, but thrice in public, on his own free will.
Our Messiah also knew Judas would betray him from the start, but his inclusion was to warn mankind of wolves existing amongst assemblies of man, and to always be careful. Judas time was short. He hung himself, and thus ended his legacy and views of the time spent with the disciples, as his words can never be accepted for the dark heart that he carried even while in the presence of our Messiah.
Peter was young, immatured and filled with bravado, ever ready with the sword. This, our Messiah knew from the start. Millions had misinterpretated that he favored Peter. It was not with favor that Peter was singled out, but rather, his lack of maturity that our Messiah had to devote extra attention to so that Peter's fate will not come to pass.
www.wayoflife.org...
The Commission for Global Governance (CGG), which was established in 1992 with the full support of the U.N. Secretary-General Boutros Boutros Ghali, calls for “global governance, cultural diversity, a one-world economy, the new world order, and a global rule of law” (“A Beginning of Global Governance,” Contender Ministries, May 20, 2002).
On April 4, 1997, the CGG issued the Milano Charter, which called for a worldwide struggle against intolerance “against culture, civilization, religion, and ethnicity.” It called intolerance “the new enemy.” The CGG urged the nations to “empower the U.N. to confront” this and other “enemies.” One response to this plea was the formation of the World Court in 2002 to prosecute “human rights abuses.” It defines these as “injury to a population’s mental health.”
Thus, when the United Nations has its way and has the power to enforce its will, the “intolerance” of a Bible- believing Christian toward those beliefs and actions that are contrary to the Scripture will be considered a very evil thing.
Saudi 'Propaganda Center' Opens in Vienna
Critics say this work will parallel long-standing efforts by the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC), a bloc of 57 Muslim countries, to pressure Western countries into making it an international crime to criticize Islam or Mohammed, all in the name of "religious tolerance."
The Austrian Initiative of Liberal Muslims (ILMÖ) said "this dubious Wahhabist center in Vienna" will "only serve Saudi Arabia's political and religious interests abroad, under the guise of dialogue" and that its sole aim was to make Riyadh "respectable."
U.S., E.U. Spearhead Islamic Bid To Criminalize Free Speech
The European Union has offered to host the next meeting of the so-called Istanbul Process, an aggressive effort by Muslim countries to make it an international crime to criticize Islam.
The announcement comes less than one month after the United States hosted its own Istanbul Process conference in Washington, DC.
The Istanbul Process – its explicit aim is to enshrine in international law a global ban on all critical scrutiny of Islam and/or Islamic Sharia law – is being spearheaded by the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC), a bloc of 57 Muslim countries.