The Weekly is a highlight of the work the Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission is doing to strengthen you and our churches for God’s glory. Explainer: The debate over the removal of historic monumentsWhat just happened? Recent protests centered around racial injustice and the killing of African Americans, like George Floyd and many others, have led to a renewed debate over the meaning and significance of historical monuments. Over the past three weeks, over 100 monuments across the United States have been torn down or scheduled for removal. Which monuments are involved? The removal efforts fall into two broad categories. The first category includes the use of legal and legislative means of removing statuary, and has focused primarily on Civil War-era figures (such as Confederate generals and the Emancipation Statue in Washington, D.C.) and Christopher Columbus (19 memorials to the Italian explorer have been removed so far). This Week at the ERLC
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![]() News From Capitol HillThis week, the White House issued an executive order aimed at improving America’s child welfare system by seeking to strengthen foster care and adoption programs. The order outlines three objectives: improving partnerships, resources, and oversight. The impetus behind this order is the belief that every child deserves a family, and states and communities have both a legal obligation, and the privilege, to care for our nation’s most vulnerable children. Assistant Secretary Lynn Johnson said of the executive order:
Executive orders work in our system of government as administrative policy directives. This order seeks to bolster the current foster system through community action and education by increasing the resources available to children, families, and caregivers, while also increasing transparency within and surrounding the current system in order to facilitate a stronger legal structure for children and their families, both biological and adoptive. For more on this new policy directive of the Trump Administration and why it matters, see our new explainer. In other news in Washington, Supreme Court advocates like the ERLC began the week anticipating decisions in a variety of significant cases on religious liberty, abortion, and more. Yet, continuing their theme of surprises, the justices only issued 2 decisions—one on Monday and one on Thursday. This leaves 13 cases outstanding with only Monday and Tuesday of next week left on their calendar to release decisions. The ERLC will be watching. To learn more about the five cases the ERLC engaged this term, four of which should be ruled on next week, check out this article. Featured PodcastsOn this episode of The Russell Moore Podcast, we continue our journey through Genesis by looking at the story of Cain and Abel in Genesis 4:1-17. In this dark passage of Scripture, there are hints of grace and mercy. We are reminded that the God who punishes Cain in just judgment is also the God who offers a temporary suspension of doom to Cain in exile. This is a shadow of the future judgement and grace offered to all of us in the person of Christ and the gospel. Listen here. Stuart Hall and his wife Kellee were, like many of us in early March, wondering what the future held as the coronavirus spread across the globe and our country shutdown. Stuart would soon contract COVID-19 and battle the novel disease for weeks in the ICU. They join Jeff Pickering on the Capitol Conversations podcast. The Hall’s story is one of relentless faith and a growing courage as they walked through an unimaginably dark valley. They came out on the other side thanks to a heroic team of doctors and nurses and the love and prayers of their church community. Listen here. From The Public SquareCan the Church Save Marriage?
With 'hundreds' of Christians killed in Nigeria in June, USCIRF urges Nigerian government to intervene
Tennessee lawmakers pass fetal heartbeat abortion bill backed by governor
African American leaders call for Southern Baptists to stand together in unity
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