Tuesday, August 4, 2009

Christian rapper gets jail time for Myspace rant


Christian rapper gets jail time for Myspace rant

Posted: 03 Aug 2009 12:26 PM PDT


Florida-based Christian rap artist, Illyte, is headed to the big house.

Christian rapper Illyte gets two years in prison for threatening cops

Christian rapper Illyte gets two years in prison for threatening cops

The rapper, whose real name is Antavio Johnson, pleaded no contest to two counts of corruption by threat of public servant on July 24, for which he will receive two years in prison.

Johnson’s charges stem from a song, “Kill Me a Cop,” that was posted on his Myspace page earlier this year.

The song has since been removed from his page.

With lyrics such as “Call me crazy but I think I fell in love with the sound of hearing the dispatcher saying, ‘Officer Down,” as well as a mention of two officers, including a deputy who was murdered in 2006, a sheriff with the Polk County gang squad decided to investigate.

His search led him to Johnson, who was already in jail for violating his probation on a 2007 cocaine possession charge.

According to Illyte’s brother, Gerald Johnson, Illyte wrote the song when he was still a teenager as a way to protest the ill-treatment he felt that he had received at the hands of police officers.

According to Hip Hop Database, Johnson, who also goes by “T.O” released his first Christian mixtape, “The Life & Rhymes Of Antavio Johnson Volume 1″ in 2006.


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Pride: The unseen problem behind Henry Louis Gates’ arrest

Originally posted at: http://theundergroundsite.com/index.php/2009/08/pride-the-unseen-problem-behind-henry-louis-gates-arrest/



Pride: The unseen problem behind Henry Louis Gates’ arrest

Posted: 01 Aug 2009 12:12 AM PDT


A few weeks ago, Harvard professor Henry Louis Gates returned home from a trip to China. He  was in China filming for a documentary tracing the ancestry of cellist Yo-Yo Ma.

When he got to his house, he tried to open his front door, but it was jammed. He tried to force his way in.

A neighbor called the police on Gates.

When the police arrived, after some choice words, including some “yo mama’s,” Gates was arrested for disorderly conduct.

05_Flatbed_2 - JULY

Though charges were eventually dropped, in light of all that has happened, especially the 24-7 media coverage of the incident, I’m sure Gates probably wished he had stayed in China a few more days.

If he had extended his trip, maybe he would’ve avoided the arrest and all the hoopla that has followed.

He wouldn’t have people scrutinizing his comments to the police or wondering if he reacted prematurely.

Life would’ve still been simple for “Skip.” He’d be busy with speaking engagements and being scholarly–researching genealogies and stuff.

Instead “new” revelations concerning his case are coming out every day.

Personally, I’m glad that this happened to Gates.

Not because he was arrested or felt harassed in his own home, but because the post-racial fantasyland in which many Americans were living is on the outs, and reality is making a come back.

It doesn’t matter if Gates was actually a victim of racism or not. The fact that he can tick the “racism” box is telling.

It tells me that racism is alive and well in the United States.

Anybody who says it’s not hasn’t been reading or watching the news lately.

Examples of racism are everywhere: Little black children getting kicked out of swimming pools; TV pundits alienating entire people groups; black and white only proms, and the list goes on.

After Barack Obama was elected last year, it was easy to think that people of color had finally broken through the racial glass ceiling.

And maybe we have, but even if a glass ceiling is broken, it takes time for everyone to reap the benefits for which a pioneer makes strides.

If blatant racism is still taking place in 2009, America is still not “there” yet.

How do we get there?

First we have to realize that there is a problem. Though racism exists, the problem isn’t racism. There’s something deeper going on.  If we peeled back the surface of racism, we’d see something deeper— the sin of pride.

Saint Augustine described pride as “the love of one’s own excellence.”

As such, pride makes us think we are better than each other. That’s why the person with blond hair and blue eyes or the person with a dark complexion is able to assume he’s better than everyone else.

C.S. Lewis said of pride in Mere Christianity, “It is Pride which has been the chief cause of misery in every nation and every family since the world began.”

“Other vices may sometimes bring people together: you may find good fellowship and jokes and friendliness among drunken people or unchaste people. But Pride always means enmity–it is enmity. And not only enmity between man and man, but enmity to God.”

Pride transcends race and is the root of other forms of discrimination as well.

Pride is the reason the person with a doctorate is esteemed more than the person who only has a GED.

Pride is also part of the reason taxpayers are paying to ship the homeless out of their city centers, so that City A is a “clean” place where people can be proud to live.

I know it sounds “pie in the sky,” but once we get rid of our pride, then we will be blessed.

Jesus said in Matthew 5, that those who are poor in spirit, or humble, will be blessed.

2 Chronicles 7:14 says something similar:  “If my people, who are called by my name, will humble themselves and pray and seek my face and turn from their wicked ways, then will I hear from heaven and will forgive their sin and will heal their land.”

As the opposite of pride is humility, if we turn from our pride, we will actually be able live in an environment in which we can truly accept each other –We’ll live in a post racial world, and care not about how much melanin a person has.

Then, and only then will racism disappear from the front pages of our newspapers. People who look Middle Eastern won’t be subjected to racial profiling.

Glen Beck won’t feel like he has to call Obama a racist, and Brian Kilmeade won’t have to apologize for making statements concerning the racial purity of Americans.

In the church, black people won’t feel like they have to go to black churches, or white people to their own enclaves.

People would just be people, and love each other – just the way Christ demands.

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Black & White & Gray All Over: Part 2

Originally posted at: http://theundergroundsite.com/index.php/2009/07/black-white-gray-all-over-part-2/



Black & White & Gray All Over: Part 2

Posted: 29 Jul 2009 12:30 PM PDT


Of Bird Watching & Spiritual Eyesight

“Wow, lookie there! That’s a Yellowthroat sparrow!” Those were the words of a twelve year-old boy, perched on a neighborhood fence, peering through the eyepieces of a pair of camouflaged Simmons binoculars, furiously scribbling notes.

“And look over there! That’s a…well, it sort of resembles a….Ugh, I can’t see anything through these stupid binoculars!” These were the words of a frustrated, and often squinting, twelve year-old boy who decided not to take his father’s advice and clean the lenses of said binoculars. Bird-watching doesn’t work too well when your visual enhancement tool isn’t so visually enhanced anymore. In fact, it can be easy to mistake one bird for another, as that young boy would learn on more than one occasion.

But what about statements and questions like this: “Can you believe the pastor let’s them play that kind of music in the church!”? or “Shouldn’t we be taking communion at a table together, instead of at the altars or in the pews? Isn’t that what Jesus and the disciples did?…I think I remember a verse somewhere that says…well, I can’t remember, but it’s in there somewhere!” I’d be willing to bet most of us have heard statements such as these countless times from countless fellow Christians and churchgoers.

Whether its confusion over bird watching or internal church issues, the conversations can often and easily turn into embittered, finger-pointing dialogues between participants—and the reason remains the same in both areas: poor eyesight and a need for clear visual enhancement. For believers, that enhancement comes in the form of the Scriptural truths found in the Word of God, our spiritual binoculars. And in the case of today’s Christians and church members, there is a desperate need for a regular renewal and cleansing of our spiritual eyesight, before attempting to make a discernment, ruling, or even form an opinion on a gray area. Unfortunately, the majority of contemporary Christians know what they believe, yet many remain unable to support these beliefs, stances, and opinions with solid Scripture.

In 1 Corinthians 10, Paul is writing to the Corinthian church, discussing the controversies over certain Christian liberties and freedoms. Note his words in verse 23: “All things are lawful, but not all things are profitable. All things are lawful, but not all things edify.” (New American Standard-updated edition). If you know you’re New Testament well, you know this isn’t the first time Paul has used this phrase: “All things are lawful for me, but not all things are profitable. All things are lawful for me, but I will not be mastered by anything.” (1 Corinthians 6:12, NASU, emphasis added).

According to renowned Christian author, pastor, and speaker John MacArthur, three of the most important questions to ask yourself when confronted with a controversial decision or gray area within your spiritual walk are: 1. “Will it benefit me spiritually?”, 2. “Will it bring bondage?”, and 3. “Will it further the cause of evangelism?” (Grace To You Radio Ministries-2003: “What To Do in the Gray Areas”). Besides matters such as entertainment choices and clothing (some of which can easily imprison us), these same questions can and do apply to ambiguous issues within the church. For instance: “Will implementing contemporary worship music benefit and build up church members spiritually?” (Edification). Or “Will adding such music aid us in our desire to reach the local un-churched, unsaved youth and college students in our area?” (Evangelism). MacArthur notes that when Christian individuals (as well as churches) begin to run controversial issues through the aforementioned grid of principles, what was once unclear will soon become clear. What was once seen as useless can become eternally useful. And what was once dividing can become uniting.

After being careful to discuss and warn about the dangers in such divisions and decisions becoming a stumbling block for fellow believers (1 Corinthians 8:8-9), Paul, in chapter 10, concludes by masterfully communicating that everything is done for the ultimate glory of God: “Whether then you eat or drink or whatever you do, do all to the glory of God…not seeking my [or our] own profit, but the profit of many, so that they may be saved.” (1 Cor. 10:31, 32b-c, NASU, emphasis added). Granted, this may (and likely will) mean sacrifice on our part. We may not always have the kind of church music we want. We may not be able to go see the kinds of movies or purchase the kinds of CDs we think we should be able to. But once again, for Paul, it’s all about respecting our fellow believers, giving God his due eternal glory, and furthering the Gospel. And isn’t that the ultimate purpose of the church anyway? Isn’t that the ultimate purpose of the Christian life?

-Josh Givens, Underground Staff Writer & Childhood Bird Watcher

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Pop Culture Moments by Mo: Steve McNair and the other woman

Originally posted at: http://theundergroundsite.com/index.php/2009/07/pop-culture-moments-by-mo-steve-mcnair-and-the-other-woman/

Pop Culture Moments by Mo: Steve McNair and the other woman

Posted: 20 Jul 2009 10:06 AM PDT

mcnair

Wikipedia-On July 4, 2009, the bodies of Steve McNair and Sahel Kazemi were found in McNair’s home in Nashville; both bodies had gunshot wounds. On July 8, 2009, the Nashville-Davidson County assistant medical examiner announced that traces of gun powder residue were found on the hands of Kazemi and confirmed that their deaths were the result of a murder-suicide, with McNair being the murder victim.

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From Porn to Purity Rings: There’s an App for That

Originally posted at: http://theundergroundsite.com/index.php/2009/07/from-porn-to-purity-rings-theres-an-app-for-that/


From Porn to Purity Rings: There’s an App for That

Posted: 20 Jul 2009 11:02 AM PDT

Another take on Apple and its headline making apps

After the removal of the pornographic application known as “Hottest Girls” (designed by app developer Allen Leung) for the increasingly popular Apple iPhone, it seems the multinational consumer electronics giant is seeking to clear its name of any connection to sexually explicit material.

In a bold, albeit somewhat of a shallow and pedantic move, Apple has implemented Christian iPhone app developer Island Wall Entertainment’s Purity Ring Application, “in an attempt to engage with today’s youth using new mediums,” according to Christian Today.

And why not?

After considering the ferocious uproar of countless Christian and non-Christian iPhone users alike over the sleezy photos found in Leung’s program, this would essentially serve to clear Apple’s name. Or will it?

For readers who are completely unfamiliar with the purity ring concept, allow me to fill you in. Back in the mid-nineties, the idea of sexual abstinence was being highly promoted by certain Christian-affiliated sexual abstinence groups.

The purity rings, also sometimes referred to as chastity rings, promise rings, or abstinence rings, were developed in an effort to encourage the “true love waits” mindset among teens and twenty-somethings still in the their prime dating years.

Interestingly enough, the Bush administration of the 90’s had a lot to do with the cultural explosion of the purity ring phenomenon, considering they threw millions of dollars worth of government money into funding advertisement campaigns for the rings.

The goal was to educate teenagers about the dangers of STI/STDs and promote safe sex (a rather ironic message, considering the purity rings promote no sex at all until marriage).

And now it seems that the former scantily-clad-and-nude-model-approving Apple Inc. is attempting to throw the Christian iPhone users demographic a bone.

Any iPhone or even iPod Touch owner now has the option of taking a “purity pledge” via their specific device, one which will result in a three-dimensional purity ring display “spinning on the screen….in an infinite loop.” Talk about desperation!

Am I the only one out there who thinks Apple could really care less about the moral and spiritual issues behind pornography? Or the only one who thinks this money-hungry electronics giant is just endeavoring to keep their “religious” iPhone users for fear of losing subscriptions and loads of cash? Pathetic.

Why not promote the real message and ideals behind sexual abstinence and purity all together; the message that Island Wall Entertainment is no doubt seeking to encourage?

After all, Company Director Henry E. Bennett remarked, “This is an exciting opportunity to reach a whole new generation of people, on a platform that has never been used to spread this important message.”

“I have made a covenant with my eyes; how then could I gaze at a virgin?”

Job 31:1 (New American Standard¬-updated edition)

“I made a solemn pact with myself never to undress a girl with my eyes.”

Job 31:1 (The Message Translation)

Of the aforementioned passages, seventeenth century English clergyman Matthew Henry says, “The lusts of the flesh, and the love of the world, are the two fatal rocks on which multitudes split; against these Job protests he was always careful to stand upon his guard…From the beginning it was so, that a man should have but one wife and cleave to her only; and Job kept closely to that institution and abhorred the thought of transgressing it; for, though his greatness might tempt him to it, his goodness kept him from it.” (Matthew Henry’s Commentary on the Old Testament).

And remember: the first sin in the world began in the eye (Genesis 3:6).

It seems to me Apple is just looking out for their own public image. May God bless the efforts and message of Island Wall’s software, despite the senseless antics of a money-hungry corporation.

-Josh Givens, The Underground staff writer


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Black & White and Gray All Over: Part 1

Originally posted at: http://theundergroundsite.com/index.php/2009/07/black-white-and-gray-all-over-part-1/


Black & White and Gray All Over: Part 1

Posted: 21 Jul 2009 05:31 PM PDT


The Original Gray Area: Of Men, Meat, and Idols

If you think this whole phenomenon of internal church bickering and disputing over controversial issues is a relatively recent occurrence, think again.

Back in the Apostle Paul’s day (A.D. 57), churches and Christians were quarreling over something even more intensely dividing: meat.

I know what you’re thinking: “Oh, you mean like arguing over what barbecue sauce is better: KC Masterpiece or Sweet Baby Ray’s?”

ribs

No, it was more like debating whether or not a Christian could eat meat that had been sacrificed to idols, earthly representations of gods other than the one, true Jehovah God.

For some, this practice was completely acceptable, particularly when you consider that the meat markets of the day tended to sell “idol meat” at a far cheaper price than meat that had come straight from the slaughter house (let’s admit it, everyone wants a bargain).

For others, meddling with anything that had been sacrificed to a false god was an unfathomable sin (not to mention potentially unhealthy and dangerous).

But look at what Paul had to say about the issue: 

“Now concerning things sacrificed to idols, we know that we all have knowledge. Knowledge makes arrogant, but love edifies…Therefore, concerning the eating of things sacrificed to idols, we know that there is no such thing as an idol in this world, and that there is no God but one.

For even if there are so-called gods whether in heaven or on earth, as indeed there are many gods and many lords, yet for us there is but one God, the Father, from whom are all things and we exist for Him; and one Lord, Jesus Christ, by whom are all things, and we exist through Him.

However, not all men have this knowledge; but some, being accustomed to the idol until now, eat food as if it were sacrificed to an idol; and their conscience, being weak, is defiled.

But food will not commend us to God; we are neither the worse if we do not eat, nor the better if we do eat. But take care that this liberty of yours does not somehow become a stumbling block to the weak…Therefore, if food causes my brother to stumble, I will never eat meat again, so that I will not cause my brother to stumble.” (1 Corinthians 8:1-9, 13: NASU, emphases added)

Paul knew exactly what this issue was at its core: a gray area. So for starters, he exposes idols for what they truly are: fabrications of man (noting that some people may not have knowledge of this).

And then he goes on to outline why this particular topic is gray, not black & white: the mere activity of eating anything has nothing to do with being more virtuous or, on the same token, more criminal or sinful as a Christian (vs. 8).

Although we are certainly charged to respect our physical bodies because they are temples of the Holy Spirit and meant for His glory (1 Corinthians 6:19-20), it matters little what we eat for physical nourishment or where it comes from (only a danger in the sin of gluttony).

Finally, Paul takes careful measures to caution the Corinthian church on over-exercising their liberties and freedoms in Christ, lest they cause a fellow believer to stumble (vs. 9).

In fact, he takes it a step further and goes so far as to say, “…if food causes my brother to stumble, I will never eat meat again…” (vs. 13). When it comes to gray matters, Paul gets it.

For him, it isn’t about the endless debates on why an issue may or may not be right or wrong. It’s all about bringing glory to God and respecting and honoring his fellow brothers and sisters in Christ.

What if Christians and churches today were to apply this same mindset to modern gray areas? What if, instead of allowing debates and quarrels to rip entire congregations to shreds or create factions within church bodies, we exercised love above all (verse 1)? Issues within the church are not only black and white, some are gray.

But perhaps, in bearing with our newspaper riddle metaphor, the color red is of more importance than we realize. Perhaps it is the red, redeeming blood of Jesus Christ, spilt upon the hill of Calvary for the sins of the world, which we need view controversial issues through.

Perhaps the church globally, with all of its differences, disagreements, and discord, should truly be black, white, gray and, under the Savior’s blood, red all over.

 

–Josh Givens, The Underground staff writer

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