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United States News Title: Policeman Prays with Flood Victims – Red Cross tells Him to Stop Apparently, that whole First Amendment, Freedom of Religion thing is kind of passé for some people at the Red Cross down in Lafayette, Louisiana. I mean, how else could you explain their decision to condemn a police officer for having the audacity to pray with flood victims in need of help? Last week police officer Clay Higgins stopped by the local Red Cross shelter after work to see how he could be of service to the hurting people of his community. Higgins was still in uniform and carrying a Bible as he spoke and prayed with local residents. After a few minutes on scene he was approached by a Red Cross volunteer who told him that the Red Cross had taken issue with what he was doing and wanted him to leave. He said the Red Cross had an issue with me being there. So I asked him what the problem was. He looked down at my Bible and he gestured and said, They have a problem with that. Higgins then asked to see a supervisor, and that supervisor told him that he needed to leave their facility. I was told that the Red Cross does not allow spiritual counseling in their shelters. The supervisor told me the Red Cross is not a religious-based organization and they dont allow religious interaction with the residents. While Officer Higgins was being chastised by the Red Cross supervisor someone approached and asked him to pray with them. Mr. Higgins was happy to oblige but was forced to do so outside. I was not proselytizing. I was just there to thank volunteers and offer prayers and encouragement
Christian compassion was not welcomed there in the manner I had provided, Higgins told Fox News Todd Starnes. The Red Cross tried to diffuse the controversy by telling the Baton Rouge Advocate that the policy is simply meant to respect people of all faiths and that Officer Higgins would have been allowed to continue doing what he was doing had he simply asked to do so. However, that has not been the experience of other Christians dealing with the Red Cross in Louisiana. In his report on this story, Starnes also relates what a local Pastor told him about how the Red Cross deals with Christians: A pastor in the town of Albany told me that four families left a Red Cross shelter after they were told they could not pray or read their Bibles at their cots. They got upset and literally packed up their stuff and came right here, said the pastor, who asked not to be identified. A Red Cross worker told them they could not pray or read their Bible in public. The pastor said he drove to the shelter in question and he was immediately met with individuals who related similar stories. I hadnt even made it in the door, the pastor said. They said the Red Cross workers told them they could not pray or read Bibles. I told them to go to their cot and pray and read. I told them theyre on church property and they could read a Bible on church property. For their part, the Red Cross denies the Pastors story, going so far as to say that it is simply not true. The Red Cross says that anyone staying in one of their shelters is free to pray and gather among themselves as they see fit
but then they add this very big caveat, However, we recognize and are sensitive to the fact that hundreds of people from different backgrounds are often sharing a large space with limited privacy. The Red Cross also says that they provide spiritual care through their Spiritual Care program, where trained Red Cross workers can provide comfort to people across many differing faiths. Im not sure how Red Cross thinks that a person of the Christian faith will feel being comforted (in their own religion) by someone who may not actually believe the method of comfort being used. Its downright condescending to think that the faith-based comfort is only about the words being said and not about the connection that might be made through belief. Anyway, when Starnes asked if non-Red Cross trained outsiders could provide spiritual care, the Red Cross refrained from responding. However, Officer Higgins was happy to answer
If I wanted to pray with the folks in the shelter, the Red Cross told me I would have to be approved in advance, I would have to fill out the documents and they would set me up at a table. I would not be allowed to leave the table. If people wanted to come to me, they could. But I could not go to them. We should be (and are) thankful for the good work that the Red Cross does helping people when things are at their worst. They should be praised for reaching out to the poor, the hurting, and those who have lost everything. However, Id be remiss not to encourage them to shift their policies and allow people of faith to practice as they see fit in their facilities so long as they arent encumbering or endangering those around them. These are the hardest times that many of these people will face and their need for spiritual comfort may never be greater
its a bad time for the people who are supposed to be helping them to have a fit of politically correct fascism. Poster Comment: The Red Cross has become a massive PR engine which takes advantage of millions of well-meaning volunteers, and capitalizes on disasters. Its an unpleasant conclusion, but it may just be the truth. It's far too depressing if its true. The CEO of the Red Cross receives a salary of $500,000 and a bonus of $65.000! Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest
#1. To: HomerBohn (#0)
It's not just the red cross, www.mainetv.net/clinton_1.mp4
Elected and unelected Bureaucrats, leeches, and cockroaches are all part of the same family in the animal kingdom.
Well then why does the "Red Cross" use the a red "Cross" as its symbol and in its name? People really have to blind, deaf and dumb sometimes! This started when Red Cross was trying to help in the Muddled East and Moslems where upset about the "Red Cross" being a Christian organization.
What business is it of the Red Cross to make such a demand? And what makes them think they have the authority to do so? The Red Cross should STFU !! Si vis pacem, para bellum Those who beat their swords into plowshares will plow for those who don't Rebellion to tyrants is obedience to God. if you look around, we have gone so far down the the rat hole, the almighty is going to have to apologize to Sodom and Gomorrah, if we don't have a judgement come down on us. President Obama is the greatest hoax ever perpetrated on the American people. --Clint Eastwood "I am concerned for the security of our great nation; not so much because of any threat from without, but because of the insidious forces working from within." -- General Douglas MacArthur
Yep, and all deserve the same treatment! Si vis pacem, para bellum Those who beat their swords into plowshares will plow for those who don't Rebellion to tyrants is obedience to God. if you look around, we have gone so far down the the rat hole, the almighty is going to have to apologize to Sodom and Gomorrah, if we don't have a judgement come down on us. President Obama is the greatest hoax ever perpetrated on the American people. --Clint Eastwood "I am concerned for the security of our great nation; not so much because of any threat from without, but because of the insidious forces working from within." -- General Douglas MacArthur
At least the color still fits.
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