
Faith Leaders, elected officials break bread, call for peace amid global conflict at Newport Beach Prayer Breakfast
More than 100 people shared eggs, sausage, fruit and pastries at the Newport Mesa Irvine Interfaith Council's Prayer Breakfast, held at The Church of Latter-Day Saints' campus on Bonita Canyon Drive. Organizers billed 'Fostering Peace Amid Global Conflict,' as the topic of that morning's talks.
The event opened with a performance by the All-American Boys Chorus, featuring a capella renditions of 'California Dreamin',' 'On The Road Again' and 'God Bless America.' That was followed by opening remarks from the council's executive director, Akbar Hussaini.
He said the world was in the midst of 'strange times' and made reference to 'extreme ideology both at home and abroad,' the victims of lynchings who 'get their homes bulldozed for complaining about it,' and 'genocide' that has been described as 'essential pesticide.' He clarified in a follow-up interview with the Daily Pilot he was alluding to the persecution of Christians and Muslims in India, the Israeli invasion of Gaza and other conflicts.
'None of this is right,' Husssaini said. 'None of this should be treated as normal. What should be normalized is a gathering like this, of people of different faiths working together for the common good.'
Hussaini and Rabbi Marcia Tilchin from the Jewish Collaborative of Orange County acknowledged there were people among the audience who hold starkly differing perspectives on world events, especially those targeting ethnic or religious communities. They said it was important for them to come together in forums like the interfaith council to have authentic, respectful, yet difficult discussions.
'I've been part of those and this has been, particularly since Oct. 7 with what's happened in the Middle East, it has been hard,' Tilchin said. '... What I asked of my colleagues is to say that the challenges and the depth and the history of what's happening in the Middle East and the geopolitics involved, it's never as simple as it seems on the surface or what gets shared on social media. What I ask of them is that we work together to beautify Orange County, to be good to everybody.'
She was among the many Orange County faith leaders who led the gathering in prayer that morning. During her remarks, she called on people to 'uproot bigotry intolerance, misogyny, racism discrimination and violence,' and 'welcome the stranger and the immigrant and to honor the gifts of those who seek refuge and possibility here, as they have since our nation was born.'
Father George Okusi of St. John the Diviner Episcopal in Costa Mesa sought guidance and blessings for the people of California, especially those impacted by wildfires. The president of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints' Newport Beach stake, Daniel Livingston, proclaimed the importance of families, adding that 'marriage between man and woman is essential to thy eternal plan loyal to each other and loyal to their marital vows.'
'Interfaith is not about us diluting our identity and trying to melt into a homogeneous glob,' Hussain said. 'It's more about keeping our identities, putting that on display and coming together as a mosaic.'
The morning's keynote speaker was Gaddi Vasquez, former director of the U.S. Peace Corps and Ambassador to Rome. He's an Orange County native raised by immigrant farmworkers, and recalled how his family of four got by in a one-room trailer 'borrowing' electricity from utility poles. The statesman added that he previously worked for Southern California Edison.
'Whatever we lacked in material goods, we sustained ourselves with faith, love and support,' Vasquez said.
'I'm a proud American, but I'm also a survivor whose enduring faith has sustained me through periods of time when the odds seemed insurmountable.'
He described the destruction he witnessed in the aftermath of conflict in Afghanistan and other parts of the world. He has also seen the good that can happen when people of faith and others respond to the needs of the most vulnerable.
'I witnessed the impactful work of non-government organizations, faith-based organizations, individual efforts, and the application of humanitarian and financial aid that is giving the least among us a fighting chance.'
Newport Beach Mayor Joe Stapleton called Vasquez's words inspiring, and described the prayer breakfast as a testament to the 'power of prayer.' He and fellow council member Robyn Grant said the city was honored to facilitate a moment of unity and a forum between people of diverse viewpoints and backgrounds.
'We all have important places to be and important things to do,' Grant said. 'Every single person in this room has family and friends and faith and community and service and work. But to take a little bit of time and reflect on what we can all share with each other is really powerful.'
Costa Mayor John Stevens, Irvine Mayor Larry Agran were also among the elected and appointed officials in attendance Thursday.
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Politico
16 hours ago
- Politico
Are Christian nationalists targeting women's right to vote?
Happy Friday. Thanks for keeping up with us! As always, reach out with thoughts, questions, offerings: ecordover@ and klong@ This week we examine the theocratic, patriarchal movement making waves in Washington. Last week, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth reposted a CNN interview of his pastor, Christian nationalist Doug Wilson, writing 'All of Christ for All of Life.' In the video, church members discussed why they believe women shouldn't be allowed to vote — a tenet of Wilson's main church, Christ Church in Moscow, Idaho. In the CNN segment, Wilson, who founded a network of churches in the late 1990s called the Communion of Reformed Evangelical Churches, or CREC, said 'women are the kind of people that people come out of.' He has written several books on marriage, masculinity and childrearing, along with blog posts with titles like 'The Lost Virtues of Sexism.' He has referred to various women as 'small-breasted biddies,' 'lumberjack dykes' and 'cunts' and extolled the 'benefits' of slavery. The pastor's views are coming under scrutiny as he gains influence within the Republican Party. Last year, he declared that his church was seeking to make inroads with 'numerous evangelicals who will be present both in and around the Trump administration.' Since then, he's appeared at congressional events, cheering when Hegseth — one of his congregants in Tennessee — was confirmed. Office of Management and Budget Director Russ Vought also has ties to the church. Christian nationalism is the belief that the U.S. was founded as a Christian nation and should remain so in the future — and that our laws should reflect Christian values. A 2024 survey by the Pew Research Center found that half of U.S. adults think the Bible should have some influence on federal laws, even though the First Amendment prohibits the government from 'establishing a religion.' The public support for Christian nationalism from high-ranking members of the White House cabinet is alarming for civil rights advocates, political scientists and Christians alike who say it could impact policy, further gender inequality and promote fear among women. 'To have the Secretary of Defense repost this message is especially worrisome ... because it resonates so strongly with this notion of threat. What role does Pete Hegseth see the military playing in carrying out, in enforcing, in reinforcing this Christian nationalist understanding of women's submission?' Traci West, professor emerita of Christian Ethics and African American Studies at Drew University Theological School, tells Women Rule. A 2024 study from the Public Religion Research Institute found that a 'key aspect often linked to Christian nationalism is adherence to patriarchal ideals.' 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He says that data shows that 'conservatives, even when they're quite pronatatalists,' i.e. promote having more babies, 'are actually the least likely to support things like paid leave and childcare, even tax credits — which, he says could make it 'more difficult for women to go back to work.' Jared Longshore, a minister of Wilson's church, tells Women Rule he personally supports President Donald Trump and is 'very grateful for what he's doing. … I'm certainly grateful for what he did with Supreme Court justices. … I know Pete has done things' related to women in combat roles. 'Scripture calls the husband the head and then the woman the body,' Longshore says. 'When you hear that the husband has a hierarchy in the home, we should think in the same way that we think about the relationship between our heads and our bodies.' 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The Hill
17 hours ago
- The Hill
Trump's assault on universities is a war on thinking
President Trump's assault on liberal ideals in the world's greatest institutions of learning reveals a vacuous anti-intellectual conservatism. His strategy speaks to his MAGA supporters culturally and politically in pushing back against what he calls the 'radical' or 'woke' left. In doing so, he threatens the academic freedoms underpinning the strengths of liberal arts, science and intellectual achievement in America. It is important for me to state upfront that I have built a career defending markets and innovation, and providing evidence against discriminatory preferences rooted in beliefs that benefit one cultural group over the greater good of many. The birth of the modern world lies in a simple idea: Virtue is acquired and not bestowed as fortune to people of rank. This was not easy for conservative people of rank to digest, and fierce battles were fought along the way against institutions supporting colonialism, aristocracy, patriarchy, sexism and homophobia. Acquisition of virtue underscores Machiavelli's advice to a prince in the 15th century questioning class privilege. The notion of virtue was once only available to conservative white men who were propertied and often aristocratic. Being of leisure, they were at liberty to think with a free mind. This was the foundation of the liberal arts in the 17th century. Concerted struggle brought new groups to universities — men from middle and working classes in the 19th century, women in the early 20th century and minorities in the late 20th. However, it was their virtue that elevated the ranks of American academics and their students, leading to great scientific discoveries and human achievement. At the mundane level, their struggles were difficult. Women and minorities in academia faced —and continue to face — sexism, homophobia and racism. Court records on these issues laid out page to page would extend from Maine to California and beyond. For any one case someone might find of a minority being favored, one can find a hundred others who faced discrimination. Many of them were immigrants. Over one-third of the Nobel laureates in economics, chemistry, medicine and physics are immigrants to the U.S. There are nearly 400,000 immigrant professors in the country. American tech leadership, whether in Silicon Valley or in its engineering schools, rests on the hard work (dare I say, Protestant ethic) of immigrants. Given the rampant discrimination that immigrants, women and minorities have faced in higher education, Trump's claim that white Christians are being discriminated against is laughable, manipulative and political. In equating liberal arts with 'radical communism' and other such nonsense, Trump pulls off a masterful deceit. But his lies will never make American great again. Most knowledge is built on principles of science and refinements based on successive waves of evidence. But science is neither easy nor linear in its progress. Galileo, Newton and Darwin debunked extant religious beliefs about the centricity of the Earth and human beings. But the path was convoluted. For example, Darwin's ideas also encouraged beliefs about women and racial minorities being inferior. These ideas eventually lost out, but we kept the best of Darwin. Science is and will always be biased, but its ideas win through evidence and debate, not sanctions or prohibitions on free speech. Trump would have cut off Darwin's science funding, deported Newton and put Galileo on trial for heresy. Paranoid politicians like Trump cannot recognize that science is not about who votes in elections. The Western world has survived such political assaults in the past. Most of us now believe that the Earth is relatively round and that homo sapiens are descended from apes. Since Socrates, ideas have won through the strength of their innovation and debate, to make us see things we had not seen before, or to make the world a better place. Trump, who claims to be supporting abstract ideals such as merit, brings a poisoned chalice to the nation's thinkers. He sanctions us with punitive measures, cuts off our funding, drowns us in lawsuits and floods the academy with his meddlesome government coercions. Debating ideas using evidence or upholding free speech are not Trump's strengths. Bullying and suing people for money are. Trump's actions are those that the world of knowledge has fought from the time of Socrates to that of McCarthyism. One of my German colleagues often tells me that the mistake we make is in assuming that Nazis were dumb. It breaks a professor's heart to see intellectually gifted people such as Ted Cruz (Princeton, Harvard Law School) JD Vance (Ohio State, Yale Law School) or Josh Hawley (Stanford, Yale Law School) lay aside their intellectual capital for the illiberal purposes of undermining our knowledge producers. Liberal arts, science and ideas in general will always threaten those in power. The Trump administration's legal mumbo-jumbo — about Title VI and antisemitism investigations that it employs to shut down knowledge production — has been rightly called out as a war on liberalism, but it is more fundamentally a war on intellectual pursuit. Regulating our universities into safe spaces for MAGA-type conservatism will not make American academia great again. Punishing the gifted to make the vindictive better off is not the same as robbing the rich to pay the poor, as it leaves everyone worse off. This Western liberalism-loving libertarian professor provides the following grades to Trump: A+ for serving hemlock, F- for virtue.

USA Today
a day ago
- USA Today
Trump must tell Putin the truth about war in Ukraine. I pray he finally does.
My prayer is that the truth sets Ukraine free. I pray that President Trump negotiates from truth − and that truth leads to freedom, in Ukraine and beyond. President Donald Trump often takes multiple positions on an issue. Supporters sometimes see this as part of his negotiation style. Detractors view it as a matter of character. But this week, his words have consequences far beyond political positioning. In Ukraine, false statements can undermine a nation's defense and cost lives. Russia's invasion of Ukraine poses a particular challenge for evangelicals. Many of us are deeply connected to Ukraine's people and churches. Yet some of Trump's statements have repeated inaccurate Russian narratives, which risks obscuring the truth and undermining support for Ukraine. To be fair, President Trump has sometimes spoken accurately about the war. Perhaps he sees this as a negotiation tactic, but I hope that in private he is clear with Russian President Vladimir Putin when they meet Aug. 15 in Anchorage, Alaska. Even so, public falsehoods about the conflict increase the likelihood of an unjust resolution, emboldening Russia to repeat its aggression elsewhere. Trump falsely says Ukraine started war against Russia For example, in February, Trump repeated Russian talking points, suggesting that Ukraine provoked the war. That framing shifts blame from the aggressor (Russia) to the victim (Ukraine). Again, at times he has acknowledged Russian aggression, but the inconsistency is deeply troubling. Like many American evangelicals, I'm not neutral in Russia's war on Ukraine. Our seminary, the Talbot School of Theology at Biola University, has an extension center in partnership with Kyiv Theological Seminary. Our students live with this war every day. Sadly, when I visited them 2024, Christians there urged me to ask American evangelicals to stop believing Russian propaganda about the war. Talbot is not alone with such relationships. Ukraine has been called the 'Bible belt of Europe,' with a vibrant evangelical movement and strong partnerships with American churches. Most major denominations have ministry partners there. Many congregations know firsthand that Ukraine − not Russia − is the victim, regardless of political talking points. Opinion: The key to success at Trump-Putin Alaska summit on Ukraine? Low expectations. These relationships create a unique responsibility for evangelicals. We must pray for leaders, and we must stand for truth, whether or not it is politically convenient. The truth matters not only for the war's cause, but also for Ukraine's record on religious liberty. Ukraine is far from perfect. Yet the difference between life in free Ukraine and life under Russian occupation is stark, especially for Christians. In Russian-controlled areas, religious freedom has been harshly suppressed, as documented in 'A Faith Under Siege.' The Kyiv Independent recently documented a crackdown on Christians who refuse to align with the occupiers. The 'sects' Russia claims to suppress are often evangelicals. Critics of Kyiv often say Ukraine 'persecutes Christians,' citing restrictions on the Ukrainian Orthodox Church. But this situation requires context: Elements of the UOC have long been linked to Moscow's influence, raising concerns about its role as a conduit for Kremlin-backed activity. And most Orthodox believers in Ukraine now belong to the Orthodox Church of Ukraine, recognized in 2019. To be clear, I do not support restricting religious speech or practice, yet understanding the situation beyond talking points is essential. Ukraine is not perfect on religious liberty, but Russia's record on religious tolerance is unmistakable. Another persistent falsehood is that Ukraine somehow started the war. But the facts are simple: Russia launched a full-scale invasion in February 2022 − after seizing Crimea in 2014 and fueling war in the Donbas. This timeline is indisputable. Yet in April, Trump remarked, 'You don't start a war against someone 20 times your size and then hope that people give you some missiles.' Russia also claims it is 'liberating' Russian-speaking Ukrainians from a 'fascist' regime in Kyiv. This is a familiar tactic in Russian history − using a false narrative of liberation as a pretext for invasion. It is a lie Russian rulers have told for centuries. Any vision for peace must prioritize truth: Russia invaded Ukraine. Russia started this war. And any honest path toward peace must begin there. Some Americans believe supporting Ukraine is not worth the risk. We all long for the war to end. The fact is that you can end a war at any time − if you are willing to give the aggressor what it wants. But that's not peace. It is surrender. American Christians must pray for Ukraine − and for peace On Friday, negotiations start in Alaska, but they should not begin with the aggressor's talking points. Russia began this war. Russia remains the enemy of peace. Facts matter and American evangelicals should say so, regardless of political cost. Opinion: Gen Z is returning to Christianity. Data proves it. Our brothers and sisters in Christ across Ukraine are counting on us to do just that. Let us pray for Ukraine, for justice, for protection and for peace. And let us pray for President Trump − that he would speak the truth about the war and work toward a just resolution. We don't have to agree with every Ukrainian decision nor, for that matter, endorse every U.S. policy. But we must care about truth. As Jesus said, 'The truth will set you free.' And on this point, the truth is clear: Russia is the aggressor. Ukraine is the victim. My prayer is that the truth sets Ukraine free. I pray that President Trump negotiates from truth − and that truth leads to freedom, in Ukraine and beyond. Ed Stetzer is the dean at the Talbot School of Theology at Biola University and a distinguished visiting scholar at Wycliffe Hall at Oxford University.