Dr John Coulter ✍ As a preacher’s kid married to a preacher’s kid, church life is a major part of my spiritual DNA, so I have always assumed I’ve seen and heard it all in Christianity.


No one was more shocked than myself when then Moderator of the Presbyterian Church in Ireland (PCI), one of Northern Ireland’s largest Protestant denominations, Rev Trevor Gribben, announced he was stepping down over safe-guarding systems.

As the son of a Presbyterian minister and a religious commentator journalistically, I always felt I had my ear close to the ground in PCI. But as the saying goes, I didn’t see that one coming.

After all, only a few weeks earlier before that shock PCI press conference, I’d had tea and traditional Presbyterian tray bakes as I chatted with Rev Gribben at a Service of Recognition for Accredited Preachers in First Antrim Presbyterian Church.

As well as the shock of that resignation press conference, there was also the surprise of comments from internationally renowned safe-guarding expert Ian Elliott speaking to BBC Spotlight when it was said the Presbyterian crisis ‘could be like the Catholic Church’.

Such is the concern over the revelations, that a special meeting of the General Assembly has been called for later this week to be attended by clerics and elders, but which is open to the public and media and will also be live-streamed.

Having been a religious affairs correspondent in my time in journalism and covered the General Assembly as a reporter, normally it tends to be as routine as a past district council committee meeting.

But Thursday’s meeting is scheduled to be one of the most important in the history of PCI. It will be a defining moment and could set the direction of the denomination for decades to come.

Whilst what appears to have triggered the crisis concerns one convicted sex offender in one congregation, there is the real danger Thursday’s meeting could be the beginning of lifting the lid off further allegations of lapses in safe-guarding, abuse, bullying or harassment.

Put bluntly, a drop could become a trickle, which could result in a flood. The real dangers for PCI are the long-term consequences of this meeting and the fact that the police have launched a criminal investigation.

Could a situation emerge that if future allegations come out of the woodwork, rank and file Presbyterians may become so embarrassed or ashamed of what has allegedly taken place, they move to other denominations or places of worship.

PCI is already facing a challenge of a fall in numbers in the pews to such an extent it has also launched a so-called ‘reconfiguration’ of its congregations across the island of Ireland - a move which could see churches merge, amalgamate, having more closer co-operation, or even shut.

A glance at PCI’s journal, The Presbyterian Herald, shows an almost staggering amount of vacant churches across Ireland. Like many Christian denominations, gone are the days when there was almost a waiting list for folk wanting to train for the ministry.

Equally worrying for PCI could be the outcome financially if, like the Catholic Church, cases of alleged abuse resulted in compensation payouts. Over the years, the Catholic Church has had to pay huge compensation sums to victims of clerical sex abuse.

While any visit to the Vatican in Rome will convince anyone of the Catholic Church’s assets and its ability to pay such compensation claims, the key question must be asked - does PCI have the same cash funds if compensation was required?

Put bluntly, could PCI be bankrupted by potential compensation claims arising from alleged safe-guarding issues?

And just as the Catholic Church has faced allegations of historical sex abuse, in terms of this current PCI safe-guarding crisis, how far back in time will allegations go?

I have often written about my own experiences as a Presbyterian minister’s son growing up in the north east Ulster Bible Belt in the Seventies and being made an example of simply for being the preacher’s kid.

The worst incident happened in my early teens. I had become a born again Christian at the age of 12. I was keen to grow in my Christian faith. Then I got a Sunday school teacher who was very theologically liberal. He was one of the most bad tempered Presbyterian elders I have ever encountered.

His classes were downright boring on Sundays. There was no discussion on the catechism passages, bible verses or memory hymns we had to repeat parrot fashion. So to lighten the boredom, us lads would have some craic among ourselves.

This elder was a strict disciplinarian so us laughing did not amuse him and he decided to stop this trivial behaviour. He did so by punching me in the face reducing me to tears in front of my peers. It certainly stopped the craic! Why was I being singled out?

But those early Seventies was an era when corporal punishment was legal in schools in Northern Ireland - and that also applied to Sunday schools.

You could imagine the legal furore which would erupt in 2025 if a Presbyterian elder punched a young teenager in Sunday school in front of witnesses!

The elder in question is dead. If he was alive, he’d probably defend his action, that discipline had to be maintained in his Sunday school class and making an example out of the minister’s son was the best method.

There is also to be a time of worship prior to Thursday’s special meeting of the General Assembly. No doubt in any prayers of intercession, there will be a time to remember the persecuted church across the globe. Perhaps in their prayers, too, delegates could remember folk who have been persecuted BY the church.
 
As these events unfolded in recent weeks, I have often pondered what my late father, Rev Dr Robert Coulter MBE, would have made of the situation.

Dad died in September 2018 and hardly a day goes by that I don’t think about him. I miss him dearly. But in one way, I am glad he is not around to see the crisis which has consumed the denomination to which he devoted so much of his life.

The photo accompanying this column is taken from the Sixties when dad, pictured left, was assistant minister in Westbourne Presbyterian Church in east Belfast and the senior minister was the Rev David Alderdice, pictured right. Both ministers are sadly gone.

Rev Alderdice is the father of Lord John Alderdice, a former Alliance Party leader. Lord Alderdice helped compile the dossier alleging a culture of bullying and abuse of power within PCI.

Both our dads later moved to the Ballymena Presbytery of PCI, my dad in Clough Presbyterian Church; Lord Alderdice’s dad in Wellington Street Presbyterian Church.

Information and allegations surrounding the current crisis may leak out in dribs and drabs. But surely the time has also come for my earlier call for there to be a dedicated trade union for clerics to become a reality.

For me as a communicant member of PCI, the church has been a bedrock in my spiritual journey. But as a minister’s son, I have also experienced at times what I can only describe as the brutality and abuse of being in PCI.
 
Follow Dr John Coulter on Twitter @JohnAHCoulter
John is a Director for Belfast’s Christian radio station, Sunshine 1049 FM. 

Has Safe-Guarding Crisis The Potential To Bankrupt PCI?

Lynx By Ten To The Power Of One Thousand Nine Eight Hundred And Eighteen

 

Pastords @ 21

 

A Morning Thought @ 2999

Dixie Elliot ✊I remember it well.

Why Sinn Fein should hang its head in shame over Scappaticci silence

Adams, McGuinness, and Gerry Kelly - all faces which would demand respect among those still stupid enough to believe that they were solid Republicans.

And there was also Danny 'The Rat in a Hat' Morrison who is a bigger liar than even Gerry himself.
I remember McGuinness using the term, 'Dissident Journalists' at some point and thought, 'ah f*ck off, you're ripping the arse out of it now!'

But it was Morrison who went on to contradict their 2003 defence of Scappaticci in an 2016 interview with the Irish News in which he said that he, Scappaticci, had been stood down in 1990, under a cloud of suspicion, after 'the Sandy Lynch affair.'

If he had been stood down back in 1990 under a 'cloud of suspicion' why were they so forceful in their defence of him in 2003?

It's not that they had taken Scappaticci away to some remote cottage and given him the same treatment as his own victims before him.

This was, after all 1990, and the war was still four years away from the ceasefire. They had no problem doing it to Caroline Mooreland a few weeks before that ceasefire - in the full knowledge it was coming - and dumped her body at the side of the road.

In regards to Scappaticci the so called leadership of Adams, McGuinness, Gerry Kelly and their faithful lackey Danny Morrison have as many questions to answer as British Intelligence do.

Thomas Dixie Elliot is a Derry artist and a former H Block Blanketman.
Follow Dixie Elliot on Twitter @IsMise_Dixie

Many Questions

Anthony McIntyre ⚽ Mo Salah returned to the Liverpool match squad yesterday after a period of absence extended by a post match outburst in an interview after last week's away fixture at Leeds.

His simmering ego hit boiling point as a result of not making it off the subs bench during the 3-3 draw at Elland Road. Yesterday at Anfield he made an early introduction to the action courtesy of an injury to Joe Gomez. It gave him more playing time than his underwhelming performances this campaign merited. Despite his return to the pitch there was no real sign of a return to the peak that made him such a crucial and popular figure to the Kop. Against Brighton he was unable to outpace defenders, and missed a brace of easy opportunities. The one noticeable difference was a willingness to pass the ball rather than zero in on goal. Even then his decisions can be called into question. Why pass when a better opportunity exists to score by going it alone?

Salah voraciously demands and devours a lot of money to play for Liverpool, so at the very least can be expected to earn his way. Liverpool has never been the UK government's favourite city. Impoverished, 'one part of Merseyside ranks among England's top ten most deprived.' Many fans, if they can afford the ticket, will see their household budget scream under the strain. Salah should forego his sense of entitlement and instead of taking his exorbitant wage might consider it - given his performances - 'immoral earnings' which the food banks and homeless charities throughout the city are more in need of than he is. Apart from Stormont MLAs, well known for giving themselves lucrative pay increases for work they fail to do - 'unfinished business' has acquired a new meaning in that iniquitous club - soccer players are a narcissistic breed in that they expect to be paid for delivery failure.

Discussing the Salah situation with my son, who also supports Liverpool, I commented that were he to go to college, hand in no projects, put his feet on the desk, his arms behind his head, then tell the tutor he has a right to be top student given his performances in recent years, his class mates would laugh at him and the tutor would tell him where to go.

No Mo, you no longer deserve your place or your dough. You have fallen asleep at the wheel and are not entitled to be carried as a passenger by your more industrious colleagues. The supporters who ultimately pay a large part of your wages should not have to finance your lavish lifestyle. Soccer should be your passion not your pension.

Play or get off the pitch.
Follow on Twitter @AnthonyMcIntyre.


No Mo

National Secular Society ★ CPS: unanaesthetised circumcision was "gratuitous infliction of pain" and "deliberate disregard" for child welfare.


The Government has "no plans" to require ritual circumcisers to use anaesthesia, and refuses to say whether unanaesthetised non-therapeutic circumcisions are even legal.

Responding to a series of parliamentary questions from Lib Dem peer Paul Scriven, the Government would only acknowledge that there is no legal requirement for circumcisers to be medically trained or to have "proven expertise".

The National Secular Society campaigns to protect all children from non-therapeutic genital cutting. Male circumcision is performed on babies and children for religious reasons in some Jewish, Muslim and Christian communities.

'Gratuitous infliction of pain'


Earlier this year, ritual circumciser Mohammad Siddiqui was convicted of child cruelty for performing an unanaesthetised circumcision on an infant.

In court, the Crown Prosecution Service described this as "gratuitous infliction of pain" and a "deliberate disregard" for the child's welfare.

The judge in the case called for "safeguards and protections" to be put in place as a "matter of urgency, to ensure that babies and young children are protected."

Despite this, religious groups openly perform unanaesthetised circumcisions. 

Continue @ NSS.

Government Greenlights No Anaesthesia Circumcision Of Boys

Right Wing Watch 👀 Written by Peter Montgomery.


Rep. Nancy Mace, who is running for governor of South Carolina in a crowded Republican primary field, sent campaign emails to several right-wing email lists Sunday and Monday with the subject line, “Christ is Lord. Do you agree?”

“Patriot, it’s Nancy Mace,” begins the email. “Today, I’m thanking Jesus—not just for another day, but for the fire in my soul to keep going.”

Mace's email claims that "The Left is trying to erase Christ from every part of American life."

The landing page for her fundraising ask reads:

If you’re a proud Christian who’s sick of the attacks on faith, freedom, and basic biology, I’m asking you to stand with me.
This is your reminder: ✝️ CHRIST IS LORD
I need YOU, Patriot, to help me defend that truth from the Governor’s mansion.

This emphasis appears to be the latest example of Mace’s political malleability as well as evidence of the MAGA movement’s open embrace of Christian nationalism.

In 2022, when journalist Jack Jenkins asked Mace about Rep. Marjorie Taylor Green’s assertion that the GOP should become the party of Christian nationalism, Mace said that the separation of church and state “should continue to be a guiding principle of our Republic.”

But when Bill Maher asked her about Christian nationalism this September, she said, “You’re making it sound like it’s a bad thing.”

Rep. Nancy Mace Makes Christian Nationalist Appeal In Bid To Become South Carolina Governor

Lynx By Ten To The Power Of One Thousand Nine Eight Hundred And Seventeen

 

A Morning Thought @ 2998

Anthony McIntyre    It never eases up in Gaza.

First hit by the Israeli genocide and now Storm Byron storm, each devastating in their own way, leaving in their wake a trail of destruction and human misery. 

The storm at least is impersonal. Blind, it does not see the victims it claims, deaf, it does not hear their anguished cries.  The storm is not cruel, merely nature working itself through the ecosystem. That sixteen Palestinian lives have been lost thus far - including three children from exposure to the cold, one only months old and born during the genocide - is not down to any cruelty on the part of the storm and very much down to Israeli malevolence. Zionist barbarism has left people defenceless and unable to adequately shelter themselves from the harsh elements.

Perhaps some preaching pastord will proclaim it the work of the Lord, sending yet another biblical plague so that the home of the Palestinians can be auctioned off to some Brooklyn Jew who previously never set foot in the territory. A New Yorker with no roots in Palestine can go there but a refugee family has no right to return. There is a callous cruelty about Israel that no storm, regardless of its ferocity, possesses.

At noon, we will gather again in West Street as part of Drogheda Stands With Palestine, probably shuffling from foot to foot and shivering in response to the overnight temperature drop. None of us will hum the cretinous lyric from the Bono-Geldof collaboration of yesteryear, Well, tonight thank God it’s them instead of you. You probably would need to be a millionaire or an evangelical pastor, to think there is a god worth thanking for having inflicted misery on someone else rather than on you.

As we leave here today to return to warm homes and shelter, the warning of the World Heath  Organisation will help propel us back to the same spot next Saturday; that thousands of Gazan families were:

sheltering in low-lying or debris-filled coastal areas with no drainage or protective barriers . . . Winter conditions, combined with poor water and sanitation, are expected to drive a surge in acute respiratory infections.

Meanwhile, our governing class - that can race with Olympian speed to oppose the renaming of Herzog Park in Dublin - ensures its feet are firmly anchored in quicksand when asked to sort out the Occupied Territories Bill. To get it to move will require a Storm Byron of protest, a tsunami of public anger. It is  deeply shameful that a government of a society forged in the crucible of anti-imperialist struggle can be so deferential to what is a Western imperialist mindset. Irish people more than many have an experiential understanding that Western tolerance for and indeed approval of genocide, is rooted in a long tradition of colonialism, imperialism and racism. UN investigator Francesca Albanese nailed it in her comment:

Palestinians aren’t counted as civilians, doctors, lawyers…they are killable and torturable just because they are Palestinians.

She also went on to lambast the British Labour government which is more determined to prosecute pensioners for opposing genocide than it is to preventing the genocide that is being opposed, capturing in her observations a lineage from Israel all the way back to the British state.

Israel inherited practices from the British mandate to enforce on the Palestinians, such as home demolitions and the systemisation of torture. It was part of a colonial architecture through which the British established their presence in Palestine then gave away a land that was never theirs to give . . . We can’t understand what’s happening today without going back to British colonialism.

And yet, what we get from the Fine Fail/Fine Gael duopoly are thoughts and prayers. 

Just prior to the storm reaching Gaza Israeli settlers made an intrusion into the territory. One invader said on video:

The entire land of Israel is ours, and after the terrible massacre we experienced, we need to understand this and internalise it and treat the enemy accordingly. Take territory, occupy and settle.

Storm Byron will most likely not return anytime soon. The same cannot be said of Storm Zion. It has never gone away.

Follow on Twitter @AnthonyMcIntyre.

Gaza Storm

Labour Heartlands ☭ Written by Paul Knaggs.

Graham Linehan’s long, punishing clash with gender-identity activists has taken yet another turn. After years of being hounded, blacklisted, and professionally destroyed for speaking out on what he argued were material, sex-based realities, the Father Ted co-creator has now been cleared of harassing a teenage trans activist online, though Westminster Magistrates’ Court convicted him of damaging her phone.

The case stems from an incident outside a gender-identity conference in London last October, where Graham’s path collided with 18-year-old Sophia Brooks, a trans woman born male. The court heard that Graham “deliberately whacked” her phone from her hand before it landed in the road. Graham denied this was intentional, insisting it was a “reflex response” as Brooks filmed him aggressively at close range.

Prosecutors attempted to paint Graham as a relentless online pursuer, claiming he had posted abusive comments about Brooks across social media platforms. Yet on Tuesday the judge dismissed all harassment allegations, ruling that Graham’s posts, while critical and uncompromising, did not cross the threshold into criminal harassment. It is a rare institutional acknowledgement that criticising gender-identity ideology, or calling out activists’ behaviour, is not in itself a crime.

Continue @ Labour Heartlands.

Graham Linehan’s Years Of Persecution 🪶 Court Clears Him Of Harassment

Muiris Ó Súilleabháin ✍ I consider myself to be one of the lucky ones, never having met Freddie Scap in his professional capacity as interrogator and executioner in chief for the IRA. 

I recall bumping into him in a crowded Emerald Bar, Dundalk, in 1993, and then a few years later in a pub in Belfast. These encounters were social and accidental and on both occasions my company, who would have been widely respected Republicans in their own right, left me in no doubt as to his standing within the movement.

The first happenstance was the more remarkable of the two, because Scap was with another “fallen angel” John Joe Magee. John Joe who was plastered was keen to impress the crowd with a display of his physique which was not that dissimilar to the wrestler Big Daddy. Having dispensed of his shirt and his vest in a packed bar with the arrogance of the untouchable, someone decided that flicking a lit cigarette butt at his obese torso was their idea of fun.

Things started to get out of hand, and it was only the intervention of Alex Maskey that prevented an awkward escalation into fisticuffs or worse for a young republican from Belfast. Order was eventually restored but it was the first occasion that I heard the watchword “ScapMageed”.

Timelines are important when dealing with the past and the truth, and I clearly remember both encounters. The first was on the Sunday night that the Sinn Fein Ard Fheis ended in Dundalk in 1993. The second was 96/97 when a team of people who had been on “interface” standby over July were having some much-needed pints at the end of an arduous few weeks. Scap was already in the bar, and he joined the small group that I was with. Just like our first encounter, I was in the company of people of authority within the movement, people who would have known if Scap had been stood down or been dismissed as alleged in January 1991. Quaffing pints and engaging in “bar talk” with persona non grata or suspected informers would just not have been the done thing for these boys.

The next time Scap entered my radar was the beginning of May 2003, when the cover up into his criminality, war, crimes and collusion was entering overdrive. Contrary to the brazenly absurd commentary by John Finucane MP on Kenova, the cover up at this stage was being instigated and managed by the hierarchy of the IRA. That IRA cover up continues to this day and remains the greatest barrier to the truth being established.

O’Mulleoir and Livingstone, somehow manged to get an exclusive interview with Scap which headlined in what its critics described as the Provo weekly. Their scoop detailed how Scap, the mild-mannered bricklayer and good neighbour had been maligned by the spooks and was aghast at the allegations that he was an informer or a murderer. The detail that Andytown’s Woodward and Bernstein failed to disclose to their readership was that during the stage-managed interview and photoshoot, Scap was in close proximity at all times to senior members of the Republican movement. Likewise, when Scap went public with his solicitor, he was once again shadowed by his IRA handlers.

Perhaps young John, MP, is blissfully unaware that the most widely used photograph of Scap, is the one taken outside the offices of the Andytout News. A photo taken on the day when the Republican Movement approved a Scap interview in the local Pravda, in an attempt to cover up his bestial crimes.

Mary Lou, not to be outdone by the stupidity of her northern comrade, has once again raucously called out the Brits. Kenova, she says, 'confirms that the British state played a central role in the murder of Irish Citizens north and south.'

Displaying a neck like a jockey’s bollocks, the President of Sinn Fein failed to mention that Kenova primarily confirms without a shadow of a doubt that the IRA also murdered and tortured Irish Citizens north and south. Kenova further verifies that the IRA shattered international humanitarian laws and the laws of war (Article 8 of the Rome Statute) by kidnapping, torturing and murdering civilians and its own members.

In committing what can legitimately be described as war crimes, the leadership of the IRA - those who unleashed the luciferous Internal Security Unit, those who dispatched young men and women to be “scapmageed” - are more culpable than the foot soldiers who carried out their orders. Scap, as inhuman as he was, could not have committed a single murder or a single act of torture without the imprimatur of the IRA Army Council.

Therin lies the rub; Kenova’s outcome was predetermined by the main protagonists from the start. I have no misgivings about Jon Boutchers sincerity or the lengths that his team went to in furtherance of the investigation. He gives the impression of someone who was genuinely moved by the stories of the families and shocked by the horrors that he heard.

The British establishment was always going to protect itself and likewise the IRA establishment was never going to cooperate with Kenova. The British and the IRA hold enough information to bring much-needed closure to all of the families concerned. That both establishments chose not to share their information with Kenova, says much for the future of legacy investigations in the north and demonstrates a sordid commodification of truth by both in their ongoing legacy wars.

The British authorities and Sinn Fein authorities yet again displayed little concern for the needs of the families, for victims and survivors. Their set piece responses to the publication of Kenova reflect the absence of either contrition for wrongdoing or any sense of guilt for what was essentially a joint enterprise.

The response by Relatives For Justice in particular was partisan and macabre to say the least, and their call to reattribute the murders of the IRA to the British was repulsive as it deliberately overlooked the role of IRA in the killings.

Thus, we see a strategy to protect PIRA’s leadership while simultaneously frustrating its fighters, not necessarily killing them. In the end the Northern Ireland conflict was ended not by the insurgents who were killed, but by those who lived - Colonel Richard Irons

Freddie Scappaticci was Stakeknife. Stakeknife was the IRA establishment and Stakeknife was the British establishment, in equal parts. He served both masters loyally. 

Muiris Ó Súilleabháin was a member of the Republican Movement until he retired in 2006 after 20 years of service. Fiche bhliain ag fás.

The Dog That Didn’t Bark 🪶 Operation Kenova