Dear Editor,
The ban on people who preach on the JUTC buses has been met with both positive and negative reactions. However, what I find more dangerous than what sometimes passes as gospel is the claim by Rev Al Miller that the ban is an attempt "to destroy 'faith' among our people, to advance negative destructive alien philosophies to overrun our nation" and the embracing of habits and lifestyles that are opposed by biblical Christianity.
A few years ago at the gruesome beheading of two women in St Catherine, a self-styled bishop said it was the act of people involved in devil worship. Where are the facts and proof for such pronouncements? Is not the integrity of the church and preachers suspect when lies are proclaimed as truth?
Dudley McLean
Mandeville, Manchester
dcmduart@yahoo.com
Preaching ban on buses won't destroy faith
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The ban on people who preach on the JUTC buses has been met with both positive and negative reactions. However, what I find more dangerous than what sometimes passes as gospel is the claim by Rev Al Miller that the ban is an attempt "to destroy 'faith' among our people, to advance negative destructive alien philosophies to overrun our nation" and the embracing of habits and lifestyles that are opposed by biblical Christianity.
A few years ago at the gruesome beheading of two women in St Catherine, a self-styled bishop said it was the act of people involved in devil worship. Where are the facts and proof for such pronouncements? Is not the integrity of the church and preachers suspect when lies are proclaimed as truth?
Dudley McLean
Mandeville, Manchester
dcmduart@yahoo.com
Preaching ban on buses won't destroy faith
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