(Bonn/ Cape Town, March 2012)
“Religion and Civil Society” is the theme of the latest issue of the International Journal for Religious Freedom, put online free of charge on 1 March. While “civil society” is an old concept in political philosophy, it became newly relevant following the collapse of communism in Central and Eastern Europe. It emphasizes the freedom of autonomous social groups and institutions below the state and not controlled by it.
This issue of the IJRF includes philosophical essays by Professors Silvio Ferrari and Rik Torfs, who raise fundamental questions about religion and freedom. Torfs discusses the crisis of religious freedom, including the progressive debasement of the idea when less rigorous approaches lead to the loss of other freedoms. Ferrari explores the tension between religious truth and religious freedom and the implications for a robust civil society.
Other authors focus on specific regional concerns. Bony Guiblehon uses the recent change of government in the Ivory Coast to understand the larger relationship between religion and politics, and he challenges the standard media view of former president Laurent Gbagbo’s connection with Evangelicals. Mxolisi Michael Sokupa explores the experience of the Seventh Day Adventist Church in South Africa and elsewhere. Roy Stults provides an overview of the theology of persecution developed by Paul Lee based on his experience with the Korean Church.
We also examine some social issues and challenges they pose to religious freedom, particularly in the West. Nicholas Kerton-Johnson looks at the marginalization of Christians in the United Kingdom. Mike Donnelly provides a seminal look at the implications for religious freedom and parental rights of restrictions on homeschooling. He contrasts the long and successful campaign to exercise this freedom in the United States with recent experience of restrictions in Germany, Sweden, and elsewhere.
Drawing upon Kerton-Johnson, Donnelly, and others, Stephen Baskerville singles out the newly vocal sexual agenda as a source of hostility to religious belief and its free exercise, emphasizing the expanding scope of government social and family policy. In the opinion piece IIRF Senior Research Writer Fernando Perez conveys some words of caution about an overoptimistic view of the “Arab Spring.” The ascendancy of Islamists to power raises questions about their commitment to freedom for Christians and other minorities who fear the prospect of heightened persecution. Daniel Röthlisberger reports on research on self-help by the persecuted and help for them in the light of New Testament teaching.
As of January 2012, IJRF has been included by the South African Department of Higher Education and Training into the “Approved list of South African journals”.
The editors of IJRF are Prof. Dr. Christof Sauer (Cape Town) and Prof. Dr. Dr. Thomas Schirrmacher, with Prof. Stephen Baskerville, PhD (Washington, DC) as managing editor.
Downloads:
· International Journal for Religious Freedom Vol 4 Issue 2
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Table of Contents
Editorial
In my Opinion
The key to securing religious freedom in post-Arab Spring nations
Fernando Perez
A response to the high counts of Christian martyrs per year
Thomas Schirrmacher
Research in Progress
Contents and limits of assistance and self-help for persecuted Christians
Daniel Röthlisberger
Articles
The internal crisis of religious freedom
Rik Torfs
Religion and the development of civil society
Silvio Ferrari
Laurent Gbagbo and the evangelical church in Côte d’Ivoire:
Ambiguous political affinities
Bony Guiblehon
Religious freedom in education
Michael P Donnelly
Governing the faithful: A discussion of religious freedom
and liberal democracies with particular focus on the United Kingdom
Nicholas Kerton-Johnson
The sexual agenda and religious freedom
Stephen Baskerville
Sabbath observance, law and religious freedom
Mxolisi Michael Sokupa
God’s mission through suffering and martyrdom: A Korean perspective
Roy Stults and Paul (Young Kee) Lee
Documentation
International standards for constitutional religious freedom protections
Study Consultation on Freedom of Religion and Rights
of Religious Minorities
International Conference on Freedom of Faith: the Problem
of Discrimination and Persecution against Christians
Noteworthy
Book Reviews
Books received / ordered
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IJFR Subscription Information
I. Subscription to get IJRF via email
To receive new issues of IJRF electronically on release, send an email to:subscribe-ijrf-fulltext-subscribe(at)bucer.eu
To receive an email notice about a new issue of IJRF available online, send an email to: subscribe-ijrf-notice-subscribe(at)bucer.eu
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II. For printed copies, back issues or subscriptions please contact:
International Journal for Religious Freedom
II. For printed copies, back issues or subscriptions please contact:
International Journal for Religious Freedom
IJRF
P.O. Box 535
Edgemead 7407
Rep South Africa
Tel +27-21 558 77 44
Fax +27-21 559 7745
subscriptions(at)iirf.eu
P.O. Box 535
Edgemead 7407
Rep South Africa
Tel +27-21 558 77 44
Fax +27-21 559 7745
subscriptions(at)iirf.eu
Subscriptions
Annual subscription fee for 2 issues (2012):
South African Rand 240 (~ 25 EUR / US$ 35)
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Branch Code: 02 41 09
Account Number: 071 117 431
SWIFT Code: SBZAZAJJ
Branch: Sea Point
Branch Code: 02 41 09
Account Number: 071 117 431
SWIFT Code: SBZAZAJJ
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