Orange County News  |  Calendar  |  Community Briefs  |  Ongoing Meetings  |  Event Guidelines  |  Event Submission Form
  Orange County News   California News   SUBSCRIBE
Banded by love
Women shed wedding rings to purchase African water wells
OPINION
Legislation 2008: The good, the bad, the ugly
by Karen Holgate
SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Every year California’s state Legislature introduces thousands of bills. In any two-year session, more than 5,000 pieces of legislation make their way through the legislative process. Each year hundreds of good bills get introduced, yet each year people who follow legislation ask, “Why are we always fighting bad bills, and where are the good bills?” Unfortunately, with the political climate in California, very few of the “good” bills get passed; most of them “die” in committee. The flip side is that a disproportionate number of bills deal with “sexual orientation.” What follows is just a brief look at this year’s legislative offerings.

The good
Two examples of good legislation are AB 2085 and AB 2086, both by Assemblyman Bob Huff, R- Diamond Bar. The pair of bills would have modified some of the more controversial elements of SB 777, authored last year by Sen. Sheila Kuehl, D-Santa Monica. That bill passed both houses and was signed into law by Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger. That bill amended two dozen sections of California’s Education Code, which now prohibits any instruction, school activities, or instructional materials that promote a discriminatory bias towards certain categories of people, including homosexuals, bisexuals, transgendered persons and cross-dressers.

AB 2085 simply deleted the reference to “sexual orientation” that was included in SB 777. AB 2086 took a different approach; it required the school to notify parents if discussions about gender identity or sexual orientation were planned and would have given parents the opportunity to notify the school if they wished to opt their child out of the specified instruction. As noted above, however, good bills often fail, and these two have already been consigned to the “graveyard.” They were defeated on a straight party-line vote in the Assembly Education Committee.

Another bill, AB 2888, authored by Doug La Malfa, R-Redding, required any person seeking a job working with children in an unaccompanied capacity to undergo a criminal background check. Opposed by the American Civil Liberties Union, this bill also failed to pass its first committee hearing.

On the Senate side, SB 1274, a bill by Mark Wyland, R-San Juan Capistrano, would require that the Pledge of Allegiance be recited every day in public schools and that—by the end of third grade—both the Pledge and the national anthem be memorized by students. What many people don’t realize is that saying the pledge is not de rigueur in classrooms any longer. In some cases, children don’t even know what the pledge is. Efforts similar to SB 1274 have failed in the past.

The bad
From Mark Leno, D-San Francisco, who continues to author legislation to make homosexual marriage legal, comes a bill (AB 2567) to memorialize homosexual icon Harvey Milk by designating May 22 as Harvey Milk Day. Harvey Milk, you may remember, was the first homosexual to openly declare his sexual preference and be elected to office in a major city—San Francisco. Although the reasons had nothing to do with his sexual orientation, Milk—along with then-Mayor George Moscone—was shot to death by a political rival in 1978. However, it isn’t enough that the day be declared as special for the general population; no, AB 2567 encourages schools to conduct “suitable commemorative exercises” to acknowledge the “special significance” of the day. This bill is another blatant attempt to indoctrinate children with the idea that homosexuality is commonly accepted, and that it should be celebrated. This is the agenda behind the creation of Harvey Milk Day, encouraging all public schools to give it attention.

Senate Bill 60 is the ongoing attempt by Senator Gilbert Cedillo, D-Los Angeles, to legalize drivers’ licenses for illegal aliens. Cedillo has brought this bill forward every year since 1999.

SB 1729, by Carole Migden, D-San Francisco, requires nurses and doctors who work in nursing facilities to take mandatory “sensitivity training” that focuses on being “sensitive to gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender issues.” Apparently Senator Carole Migden believes that it isn’t enough for health care providers to treat the health needs of each of their patients with compassion; she now wants to extend special status to homosexuals who are ill over and above the needs of other patients.

The ugly
California is one of the nation’s leaders in extending “domestic partnerships” to co-habitating same-sex couples and persons over age 62. SB 1066, another by Migden, will eliminate the age barrier and allow any two persons living together and not biologically related to file for domestic-partner status. This bill totally undermines the value and sanctity of marriage. Remember that domestic partners now reap all of the state tax benefits historically reserved for married couples. SB 1066, if passed—and there is no reason to believe that it wouldn’t—encourages unmarried persons to live together and to file as domestic partners if, for no other reason, than for the tax breaks. SB 1066 passed its first committee hearing.

As discouraging as it sometimes seems, the good news is that there is a growing movement by parents and churches to reclaim a position of power to change the culture of this state. Their numbers are growing as more and more Christians become aware of what is happening in our state.

Holgate is the legislative director for the California Family Council.
Get more
local news!
News content on the Christian Examiner site is only a portion of what is published in our regional print editions.

Click to subscribe
OC Calendar
Community Briefs
Ongoing Meetings



by Lori Arnold
YORBA LINDA, Calif. — Ali Eastburn was sitting with two dozen or so women at an Orange County Bible retreat when the facilitator asked the group how they could be influential in the world.

As a pastor’s wife, Eastburn’s thoughts immediately went back several weeks to when her husband, Ken, told her that two-thirds of the world’s population did not have access to clean drinking water.

“I was looking around the room and saw these large diamond rings, including my own, and I noticed some of the designer bags and designer shoes,” Eastburn recalled of the August 2006 event.

The pastor’s wife spoke up. If they sold their possessions, they might be able to feed an entire African village.

“It kind of fell silent,” Eastburn recalled.

While her comment stalled out there like a biblical millstone, Eastburn noticed that her heart felt remarkably lighter just at the thought of such a thing.

When she got home, she telephoned Ken, who was out of state at an event with the church’s elders. As he listened on the other end, Eastburn told her husband, pastor of The Well Church in Orange County, that she wanted to sell her wedding ring and use the money to purchase a water well in Africa.

“He was so proud of me because I was so materialistic growing up,” she said.

She then suggested launching a new ministry, telling her husband that if she was willing to give up her wedding ring, other women might be, too.

Appreciative of her excitement, Ken encouraged his wife to follow her heart, but suggested the idea probably wouldn’t resonate with other women. He polled the elders he was traveling with and they all agreed:  Their wives weren’t going to go for it and no one else would either.

But within months Ali and four of the six elders’ wives had shed their glistening covenant rocks as part of Eastburn’s new ministry, With This Ring. It’s part of a concept she calls radical giving, something she first became exposed to while watching the Stephen Spielberg epic “Schindler’s List.”

The film is based on the life of Nazi sympathizer Oscar Schindler, who took advantage of the Jewish slave labor to build his manufacturing empire. Over time, though, his heart changed and Schindler is credited with saving more than 1,000 Jews by buying them out of captivity under the guise that he needed more labor at his factory. At the end of the film, a group of Jewish men celebrate the war’s end by presenting Schindler with a ring they made from gold they extracted from their own teeth.
FULL STORY



Southern California HIV/AIDS ministry seeks local chapter leaders
Christian Examiner staff report
IRVINE, Calif. He Intends Victory, an international ministry to those affected by HIV and AIDS, is launching a new branch-based project in an effort to expand assistance nationwide.

Dan Davis, director of the ministry, said the project will expand a network consisting of chapters and ministry associates. The idea is to provide resources closer to a patient’s hometown. The ministry also provides support to families.

Ministry officials will review applications to select committed Christians who, as chapter leaders, can facilitate local support groups and provide community resources on HIV/AIDS services in their geographical territory. Clients will be referred to the chapter leaders from the ministry’s headquarters in Irvine. Each of the chapter leaders will report to the ministry’s board and to Davis.

In addition to the chapter leaders, He Intends Victory also uses ministry associates to assist with phone consultations for people facing the struggles of living with HIV/AIDS.

The ministry has 28 chapters and ministry associates in its national network.

The Orange County chapter of He Intends Victory has been continuously running an open support group for people infected/affected by HIV/AIDS since 1989.
FULL ARTICLE



Christian Examiner Newspapers • P.O. Box 2606, El Cajon, CA 92021  (619) 668-5100    •    ©Keener Communications Group