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Paint thrown at church's bedroom billboard

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UPDATED: 4:40PM Thu, 17 Dec 2009 3:24p.m.
St Matthew-in-the-City Church's controversial new billboard has reportedly been attacked with paint.
 
It is not clear at this stage who did it, or why, but 3 News is on the scene.
 
The church's archdeacon says its mischievous biblical bedroom billboard has provoked support and disapproval in about equal measures.

The downtown Auckland church's billboard, erected today, shows Joseph looking down dejectedly and Mary looking sad. Underneath is a caption, "Poor Joseph. God is a hard act to follow."

Archdeacon Glynn Cardy said the church had received emails and phone calls since it made the public aware of the billboard yesterday.

"About 50 percent said they loved it, and about 50 percent said it was terribly offensive," he told NZPA.

"But that's out of about 20 responses - this is New Zealand."

Archdeacon Cardy said one person had threatened to rip the billboard down but nothing worse had been offered up.

The billboard has already raised the wrath of the traditional values pressure group Family First.

"The church can have its debate on the Virgin birth and its spiritual significance inside the church building, but to confront children and families with the concept as a street billboard is completely irresponsible and unnecessary," Family First national director Bob McCoskrie said.

"The church has failed to recognise that public billboards are exposed to all of the public including children and families who may be offended by the material."

Catholic Church spokeswoman Lyndsay Freer said the image was inappropriate and disrespectful.

The archdeacon said the plan behind the billboard was to lampoon the literal interpretation of the Christmas conception story.

"What we're trying to do is to get people to think more about what Christmas is all about," he told NZPA.

"Is it about a spiritual male God sending down sperm so a child would be born, or is it about the power of love in our midst as seen in Jesus?"

The billboard has already raised the wrath of the traditional values pressure group Family First.

Archdeacon Cardy said the church had asked an advertising agency to come up with a few ideas in November, and that the billboard they chose wasn't the most radical one offered up to them.

"One of the options we turned down had a sperm coming down with the words `Joy To The World'."

He said the true importance of Christmas "is in the radical hospitality Jesus offered to the poor, the despised, women, children, and the sick, and says: 'this is the essence of God'. His death was a consequence of the offensive nature of that hospitality and his resurrection a symbolic vindication".

The archdeacon said St Matthew-in-the-City was at the progressive end of the Christian continuum, and that he believed God was "more like a force but not a being in any sense".

He said some fundamentalist groups and churches would not be strong supporters of theirs, but that there were those in the Christian community who supported him.

Last week a campaign by New Zealand Atheist Bus Campaign raised $20,000 in public donations to fund bus ads which read "There's probably no God. Now stop worrying and enjoy your life".

Those ads created a storm when they ran on the London Underground and British buses this year. Similar ads have run in the United States, Canada, Italy, Spain, Australia, Finland and Germany.

NZPA / 3 News

 

 

Comments [7]

Terence
17 Dec 2009 10:01p.m.

The Anglican church needs to do a good deal of work on it's theological training as the archdeacon is somewhat confused on the virgin birth. However he has got people talking about Christmas

Warren Matthews
17 Dec 2009 9:46p.m.

I tried putting a spin on this to imagine how others would feel. What if it said Heathens were stupid and going to hell? What if I said most Arabs were terrorists? Sure it would encourage debate, but isn't it provocation? What does it say about the entity putting up this billboard, if they care more about the reaction, than the feelings of individuals? I am fully in support of freedom of speech. I just think the Church should have shown more respect to Christians before mocking their beliefs.

cynical
17 Dec 2009 6:45p.m.

The person who defaced this billboard should be charged with willful damage and make good the damage caused to someone else'e property, irrelevant if you agree with the billboard or not. Make him pay in full so that others think twice of damaging property.

katrina
17 Dec 2009 6:28p.m.

Why would you want to inspire people to think about sperm and the making of baby Jesus at Christmas as aparantly he wasn't even really born on Christmas day anyway

Wani
17 Dec 2009 6:17p.m.

Um, Bill, you're a wee bit off with when the commandments were written. I forget exactly, but I think it was roughly ~2000BC. Also, as a Christian, I found the billboard quite funny.

Lorraine
17 Dec 2009 4:52p.m.

well I think he would have a sense of humor too, after all he gave us a sense of humor. Too many other things in this world to worry about so while waste time worrying about this.

Bill
17 Dec 2009 4:33p.m.

There's something wrong with this story. Joseph and Mary were mean't to be married, but had never consummated the marriage as she was supposedly still a virgin. But then she committed adultery and gave birth to an illegitimate baby. Then they write some commandments, which one of them I believe says Thou shall not commit adultery. Sounds very hypocritical to me. But then again I believe all Religion is hypocritical.

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