Tag: homosexuality

  • PERGAS Official Statement on #WearWhite Campaign

    Singapore Islamic Scholars & Religious Teachers Association (PERGAS)
    Singapore Islamic Scholars & Religious Teachers Association (PERGAS)
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    Singapore Islamic Scholars & Religious Teachers Association (PERGAS)
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    Singapore Islamic Scholars & Religious Teachers Association (PERGAS)
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    Singapore Islamic Scholars & Religious Teachers Association (PERGAS)

     

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  • FMSA Official Statement on #WearWhite Campaign

    FMSA

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    Fellowship of Muslim Students Association (FMSA)
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    Fellowship of Muslim Students Association (FMSA)
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    Fellowship of Muslim Students Association (FMSA)
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    Fellowship of Muslim Students Association (FMSA)

    FMSA official position on #wearwhite online campaign.

    We also seek readers to refer to statements by MUIS, Pergas and other MalayMuslim Organisations (MMOs) to have a better understanding on the matter we are addressing here.— with Damanhuri Abas and Hairudin Hamid.

    READ RELATED ARTICLES ON PINKDOT SG & #WEARWHITE MOVEMENT

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  • Pastor Lawrence Khong Supports Muslim #WearWhite Movement

    Credit: ST
    Credit: ST
    https://www.facebook.com/lawrence.khong.fcbc
    https://www.facebook.com/lawrence.khong.fcbc

    I’m so happy that Singapore’s Muslim community is making a vocal and visual stand for morality and Family. I fully support the ‘wear white’ campaign. FCBC, together with the LoveSingapore network of churches, will follow suit on the weekend of 28 and 29 June, island-wide. I look forward to celebrating the Family with the Muslim community and I am pleased to partner with them in championing virtue and purity for the good of our nation!

    LoveSingapore will also be supporting an online Family campaign called FamFest Singapore (www.facebook.com/FamFestSingapore ). This is a unique FaceBook page by TOUCH Family Services. It promotes the right Family values. It celebrates the contributions of the Family in Singapore.

    The family unit is the lifeblood of our nation. The time to stand and defend what is right is NOW.

    Authored by Pastor Lawrence Khong of FCBC

    EDITOR’S NOTE

    Are you supporting the Freedom to Love or are you supporting the Traditional Values of Marriage and Family

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  • 94% Singapore Muslims Are Against Same Sex Relationship

    TODAY
    TODAY

    SINGAPORE — Religion is important to their identity, and Muslims and Protestant Christians are the two religious groups that are most affected by and most disapproving when friends or family members of the same faith give up their religious beliefs.

    They also feel more strongly than their Buddhist, Hindu, Catholic and other counterparts about moral issues such as homosexual sex, sex before marriage, adoption of children by gay couples and gambling.

    These were among the findings in a study on religiosity and management of religious harmony released yesterday by the Institute of Policy Studies (IPS).

    The study’s authors said: “Considering that for many Muslims, Protestants and Catholics, a mark of the good person includes the teaching of one’s morals, it is important that they temper this with a respect for those who do not share such values.”

    About two-thirds of Muslims and 44 per cent of Protestants said religion was very important to their sense of identity — significantly higher numbers than those of other faiths. About 69 per cent of Muslims and half the Protestants said they disapproved of family members of their faith giving up their religious beliefs, compared with 20 per cent of Buddhists and 31 per cent of Hindus, for example.

    The study’s authors noted that giving up religious beliefs is more disconcerting among religious groups where there are higher levels of religious participation and identity.

    Lead author, IPS senior research fellow Mathew Mathews, said greater religiosity among Muslims here was observed a few decades ago and coincided with increased global Muslim piety. Many Muslims in Malaysia and the region also take their religion very seriously and this is increasingly so, he noted. As for Protestants, the dominant form of Protestant Christianity here is of a “conservative variety where there is an emphasis on doing the right thing”.

    Many Singaporean Protestants are first-generation Christians and “you expect converts to be a lot more fervent about their faith, especially since they made a choice to embrace the religion”, Dr Mathew said.

    Mr Noor Mohamed Marican, president of Inter-Religious Organisation, said it is important that Muslim and Protestant leaders have strong ties and communication with different religious leaders, as inter-faith dialogues based on goodwill will prevent misunderstandings. “We must learn to respectfully agree to disagree and see above and beyond our disagreements,” he said.

    Speaking in his capacity as Bishop of the Lutheran Church, Reverend Terry Kee said: “If you look at the survey, it’s not just Muslim and Christians … almost all the faiths had similar conviction in terms of the importance of good strong morals. With the increase of non-religious influence … (and) in the face of eroding moral fabric of our society, this actually brings the religious community closer together … on how we can work together to preserve and protect the moral value of our nation.”

    Rev Kee, who is also a vice-president of the National Council of Churches of Singapore, added: “So this would not be a problem between different religions but, rather, it may become a problem between a more united religious community versus the non-religious.”

    Literary and cultural critic Nazry Bahrawi of the Singapore University of Technology and Design also felt Singapore’s biggest challenge with regard to harmony is not inter-religious. “Rather, our developing ‘culture war’ really has to do with how Protestants and Muslims react to changing views of sexuality,” he said, urging both religious groups to consider theology from multiple traditions and perspectives.

    Singapore could consider ethics instead of moral education modules in schools to promote more empathy and less judgment of others, he suggested.

    The study’s authors also warned that vibrant religious centres elsewhere are likely to have some influence on believers in Singapore through constant exchanges and the Internet. With immigrant flows, there is the possibility of intra-religious conflicts over theology, religious practice and other issues.

    Established religious structures here should also be open to incorporating “splinter groups” with their own interpretation of religion and “steer them clear from tendencies that may destabilise religious harmony”, they wrote. Additional reporting by Laura Philomin

    Source: http://www.todayonline.com/singapore/religious-identity-strongest-muslims-protestants

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    Kebanyakan rakyat Singapura agak senang dengan keadaan sekarang apabila membincangkan soal ruang bersama bagi amalan keagamaan.
    Hanya suku yang mengatakan kumpulan-kumpulan agama patut diberi lebih banyak hak daripada yang sedia ada.

    Demikian menurut dapatan terbaru mengenai kehidupan beragama di sini, yang dikeluarkan Institut Pengajian Dasar, IPS. 

    Dan masyarakat Muslim ternyata masih mencatat kadar tertinggi mempertahankan nilai-nilai agama, berbanding penganut agama lain.

    Dapatan tertinggi – 94% Muslim menganggap hubungan sejenis adalah salah.

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  • ‘Homosexuals’ Need To Educate Conservative SG Muslims

    This is a response to the recent posting made by Azman Ivan Tan who asserted that homosexuals are “delusional”.

    Sexual identity and religion are sensitive and contradictory issues in Singapore. Only a few are willing to discuss them open-mindedly. Most are likely to say that having a different sexual preference is a perversion of religion and a betrayal of human nature or social norms.

    The strict adherence to the varied messages that can be taken from the Quran, and the staunch opposition to homosexuality that exists within the Islamic faith, form the foundation of many of the issues that LGBT Muslims face.

    But there are still some in the Muslim community who feel that homosexuality is a “delusion”, a “mental illness” or a “phenomenon”, and who stress an avoidance of one’s homosexual desires in an effort to keep in line with their Islamic beliefs. Fellow Muslim brothers Azman Ivan Tan and Ustaz Noor Deros who started this Wear White Movement have clearly illustrated this in the most unpalatable way.

    The notion of being gay and Muslim at the same time is very tough when we see how stereotypical views about gay people are still present in our society. Most people grossly conflate gayness with pedophilia, promiscuity, social pathology and other stigmas.

    It is therefore imperative to foster dialogue between religious groups and gay communities to bridge the difference. Instead of renouncing gay people as deviant, religious groups should embrace them and learn how to synchronize their situation with Islam.

    Gay people, therefore, need to explain their situations sincerely by either coming out in public when they are ready for it, or feeling comfortable with their personal state before expecting society to understand them.

    In fact, two-way communication to bring different perspectives about sexual identity and to convey the message that it is a fluid concept should be encouraged in order to create commonalities among components of society.

    The stigma still exists. It will take time to change that.

    Azman Ivan Tan Shariff

    Authored by Ash lee

    READ MORE ON LGBT & PINKDOTSG HERE

     

    EDITOR’S NOTE

    Are you supporting the Freedom to Love or are you supporting the Traditional Values of Marriage and Family

    Which side are you on? Share your opinion with us at Rilek1Corner.

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