Banner

  About Us

  • At Concerned Christians Canada, we are committed to speaking out and bringing the truth of God's word to bare on all aspects of society and life. Speaking into the culture is in fact being the salt of this world that Christ called us to be.

    Click here to see some ways CCC is being salt in this world

     

  • Christ said we are the light of the world. He said that we are not to hide this light under a bushel but that we are to live as examples of holiness and Godliness in this dark world. With our projects, which are focused on serving and blessing, we are committed to demonstrating the love of Christ without forsaking the gospel. We regognize that we are to be salt and light, not salt or light.

    Click here to see some ways CCC is being a light in this dark world.

     

  • Concerned Christians Canada is encouraging Christians, who are called by Christ's name to stand for Christ, and when they have done all to stand, to stand having girded themselves with the armor of God. We are sounding the trumpet call to all men and women that love the Lord to be the watchmen over the nation that we are called to be.

    Our nation, although founded by men who believed in the God of the Bible, has markedly departed not only from holding the Bible up as THE authority for and above all men, but has substancially departed from honoring the God of the Bible.

     

  • There are many attacks on the Biblical definition of the family. God has blessed his definition of marriage, other choices bring curses, not only on the adults but also on the children and on the society that embraces those choices.

    CCC is committed to explaining the benefits for God's design for marriage. As an organization, we are also committed to promoting God's model, to individuals, groups and politicians.

  • In this day and age, youth are hurting. Whether it be that they have been wounded by sexual, physical, emotional or spiritual abuse, at home or elsewhere, or broken by "dating" which has left them abandoned and broken, whether they have had stability and security robbed from them due to their parents divorcing, or any of a myriad of other problems, children are more and more hopeless and need to know that Christ is for them if the turn to Him. Find out how CCC is reaching out to youth.

     

  • We need your prayer support.

    God is our source and our provider, but he uses people like us to pray for one another, to edify one another and to build each other up in the faith. He uses people like us working together in the Spirit of Christ to change lives. Find out how CCC is encouraging the body of Christ to work together to Pray, Act and Make a Difference!

Search:

CCC Needs You


Please support Concerned Christians Canada with a donation.
CCC exists through private support alone, we are not governmentally or organizationally funded.

Political Poll

Do you believe that Christians are persecuted for their faith in Canada?
 
Calgary street preacher smells bias in the city’s unwillingness to deal with occupiers PDF Print E-mail
(0 votes, average 0 out of 5)
Media - Christianity

Reference: National Post

post_preacher_2
Artur Pawlowski, who preaches to Calgary's homeless, says the city’s unwillingness to ticket or prosecute Occupy Calgary protesters openly violating bylaws he himself has been charged for many times is proof that the city has a bias against Christians.

National Post Staff Nov 2, 2011 – 6:45 AM ET | Last Updated: Nov 2, 2011 8:52 AM ET

Kevin Libin
In Calgary

Three young men emerge from their tents at the "Occupy Calgary" encampment at Calgary's Olympic Plaza on a weekday afternoon and make a beeline for a café a few dozen yards away. One of them plants his money on the counter and orders a shot of tequila.

"No. Don't do it," shouts a man sitting by the window. "It will ruin your life."

"Yeah, but it warms the belly," the customer smiles back.

The man at the table is Artur Pawlowski. He is the preacher who runs Calgary's Street Church. He does this a lot: sermonizing to the city's scruffier elements — the homeless, the drug addicts, the alcoholics and the drifters. They know him. Four times a week he sets up shop, just across the street, on the steps of City Hall and cooks meals and dispenses clothing, along with sermons, to the needy. Lately he's been running into a lot of the Occupy Calgary types. They've been crossing Macleod Trail for the food. And he's spent time in their camp, trying to talk to them about Jesus. He addressed one of their twice-daily "general assemblies" with his message. His message hasn't been received terribly well.

Mr. Pawlowski shrugs. He's used to his work not always being popular and he's as tenacious and patient as anyone you'll find. For the past six years the city has hit him with injunctions, fines and arrests. He posts copies of the tickets on his Street Church website; they go on for pages. Police have confiscated his signs and his Bibles. He's moved to the steps of city hall in protest, after being driven out of the needle parks and underpasses where he used to minister to dealers and prostitutes.

He's spent hundreds of thousands of dollars, mortgaging his home twice in the process, in legal battles over what he believes is his constitutional right to preach the gospel, and help the needful, on city streets. The city, too, has spent a fortune prosecuting him. He's long believed the city had a bias against Christians. The fact that the anti-capitalist occupiers have been left to openly flout, for two weeks, many of the same bylaws that he's been routinely ticketed and arrested for, he says, is proof of it.

"I have stood over 70 times in the courts. We have been charged over 100 times. Eight arrests," he says. "Just because I believe in Jesus Christ, I'm treated differently."

Mr. Pawlowski isn't calling, as many Calgarians are, for the occupy tent city to be cleared out. "I respect them and I respect their rights to free speech," he says. He just wants the same tolerance from City Hall for his church's anti-materialist message as the city has shown for the anti-materialist message of the couple of dozen tent dwellers planted on a patch of grass along Calgary's pedestrian mall since mid-October. The city has requested the self-styled occupiers leave; they've refused. They stayed put over the weekend when the city's Muslim community was forced to hold a cultural festival around them, having booked and paid to legally rent Olympic Plaza. They crashed Mayor Naheed Nenshi's food truck exhibition there on Monday afternoon, wading in with signs about food justice. The city says they've caused $40,000 worth of damage to the park.

Calgary officials, as in most other "occupied" cities, have laid off. They've ignored flagrant bylaw violations. Most obviously the protesters are camping overnight in a city park, which is against the rules. But they're erecting signs on city property too—about crushing capitalism, jailing corporate pigs and the like — an offence that Mr. Pawlowski's church has been charged with on several occasions. His church's signs say things like "Jesus is Lord" and quotes from the Bible, such as "Let us not become weary in doing good."

The protesters serve communal meals without permits; Mr. Pawlowski has been ordered to get licensed by the health department to feed soup and sandwiches to the homeless. Police have said they've handed "occupiers" tickets for smoking, dogs, and open liquor, but no one seriously thinks they've been strict about the letter of the law. Mr. Pawlowski was once fined for running an extension cord over a city sidewalk. One time, police handcuffed him and hauled him in after organizers of a street festival complained he was bothering them by reading a Bible aloud.

Mr. Nenshi has been trying to play all sides of the argument. It isn't easy. He's reminded us that we "live in a society where people have freedom of expression." But since that right has obviously never been absolute on city property, he's added also that "for better or worse" (as if it wasn't quite clear which) the campers are "setting themselves up as people who have special access to [public] space others don't have." When reporters press him about ending that double standard, he warns about fascism. "Thankfully we live in a world where politicians don't have personal strike forces," he told the Calgary Sun a few days ago. But then, on Tuesday, he told the Herald, "the city certainly has the strong arm of enforcement and if we have to use it, we will." Clearly he's hoping the campers will soon politely pack up and leave voluntarily, saving him an inevitable confrontation.

They won't. In fact, a confrontation is surely what they're waiting for, says Calgary alderman Jim Stevenson. "Some of these people would love to get their picture on the news being pulled out screaming and kicking," Mr. Stevenson says. He maintains, as the mayor has, that it's the city's legal department that's holding back a high-handed response, agonizing, reportedly, over the group's Charter rights.

They seemed not to agonize nearly as much over Mr. Pawloski's rights — even though he's beat the city again and again in court. One dismayed judge remarked in a 2009 decision favouring Mr. Pawlowski that the city's deployment of bylaw officers and police officers to restrict his preaching "fall precariously close to being excessive and, to any reasonable observer, an abuse of power."

It's plain to Mr. Pawlowski that the city simply fears the fact that the tented pseudo-Marxists will holler and fight any move against them in a way that he never has. What he doesn't mention is that the reason that prospect worries the city so is because some Calgarians, watching a spectacle like that on the news, might feel sympathy for these "occupiers" in a way they never have for an embattled Christian street minister. The evidence certainly seems to back up Mr. Pawlowski's claim about the city administration's bias against Christian missionaries. But the difference in public interest between his rights and the occupiers' suggests the administration isn't alone.

National Post
• Email: This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it

Posted in: Holy Post Tags: Artur Pawlowski, Calgary, Jim Stevenson, Macleod Trail, Naheed Nenshi, Occupy Calgary, Olympic Plaza

Last Updated on Thursday, 03 November 2011 00:02
 

Add comment


Security code
Refresh

Banner

Login Form



Connect on Social Networks

  • CCC Blogger Account
  • National Chairman on Facebook
  • CCC Networking Group on Facebook
  • Become a CCC Fan on Facebook
  • National Chairman on LinkedIn
  • CCC Updates on LinkedIn
  • National Chairman on MySpace
  • National Chairman on Meetup.com
  • National Chairman on Twitter

Connect on Media Networks

  • YouTube Broadcasts
  • CCC on Flicker