Conversions spark violence.New Delhi New Delhi (dĕl`ē), city (1991 pop. 294,149), capital of India and of Delhi state, N central India, on the right bank of the Yamuna River. (ENI)--Churches in Sri Lanka Sri Lanka (srē läng`kə) [Sinhalese,=resplendent land], formerly Ceylon, ancient Taprobane, officially Democratic Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka, island republic (2005 est. pop. have urged the government to give protection to Christians following recent attacks on churches and increasing demands for a ban on religious conversions in the Buddhist-maiority nation. "We are appealing to the government and those responsible for law and order to [protect] innocent people to worship and ensure their fundamental right to practise their religion," said Anglican Bishop An Anglican Bishop is a bishop in the Anglican church, either in the British Isles or beyond. Anglican Bishops
ipomoeabatatas. Illangasinghe, chairperson of the National Christian Council of Sri Lanka. The Christian council, which groups Protestant and Anglican churches, issued a statement expressing "deep concern" over violence against church targets. "Over the past two months in particular, several churches have been attacked and on some occasions church workers beaten up," said the council statement. The call for "unethical conversions" to be banned was made at a convention of 1,500 Buddhist monks in Sri Lanka's capital, Colombo, on Sept. 23. The demand followed a ruling by the country's Supreme Court in July that Christian groups cannot register as social charities since their proselytizing work contravenes the Sri Lankan constitution. "The ongoing debate [on conversion] and the atmosphere has been vitiated vi·ti·ate tr.v. vi·ti·at·ed, vi·ti·at·ing, vi·ti·ates 1. To reduce the value or impair the quality of. 2. To corrupt morally; debase. 3. To make ineffective; invalidate. as a result of the court ruling," said Bishop Frank Marcus Fernando, president of the Roman Catholic bishops' national commission on catechetics Cat`e`chet´ics n. 1. The science or practice of instructing by questions and answers. catechetics . He insisted that relations between the churches and the Buddhist leadership were good, and laid some of the responsibility for the present tension on Christian groups. "Our own fundamentalist [evangelical] groups are also to be blamed for the present situation," he said. His concern was echoed by Bishop Illangasinghe, who said the "aggressive evangelizaton" of "tiny" church groups was disturbing the harmony that existed between Christians and the Buddhist majority. However, if a law to ban conversion was enacted as demanded by some Buddhists, Bishop Illangasinghe said, "all the churches will have to suffer for the adventurism ad·ven·tur·ism n. Involvement in risky enterprises without regard to proper procedures and possible consequences, especially the reckless intervention by a nation in the affairs of another nation or region: of a few [church] groups." The National Christian Council appealed to church groups "to be more sensitive about the manner in which we interact with persons of other faiths." |
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