Daily Dispatch

Trump considers ‘charismati­c Christian’ judge to replace Ginsburg

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People of Praise, a self-described charismati­c Christian community, faces renewed interest since US President Donald Trump put one of its purported members, judge Amy Coney Barrett of the 7th US Circuit Court of Appeals, on his shortlist of candidates for elevation to the Supreme Court.

The group describes itself as an ultraconse­rvative group with a mixture of Roman Catholic and Pentecosta­l traditions. Until 2018, it used the term ‘handmaid’ for its female leaders.

The group has declined to confirm or deny whether Barrett is a member since a New York Times article in 2017 said she was in the group.

The group’s spokespers­on, Sean Connolly, said women were not considered subservien­t in People of Praise and that many held leadership roles, such as directing schools and ministries.

Trump has said he planned to nominate a Supreme Court justice this week to replace Ruth Bader Ginsburg, who died last Friday. He said he was considerin­g Barrett as well as Barbara Lagoa of the 11th US Circuit Court of Appeals in Atlanta.

People of Praise has about 1,700 members in 22 cities in the US, Canada and the Caribbean, according to its website, and was founded in 1971 in South Bend, Indiana.

“We admire the first Christians

who were led by the Holy Spirit to form a community,” the website says, tracing its origins to the late 1960s when students and faculty at Notre Dame University experience­d “a renewal of Christian enthusiasm and fervour, together with charismati­c gifts such as speaking in tongues and physical healing”.

Its most devoted members make a lifelong commitment to the group, known as a covenant.

From 1970, women with leadership roles in the organisati­on were called handmaids, but that changed following the popular television series The Handmaid’s Tale, based on a 1985 book by Margaret Atwood. The dystopian story is set in a future US where the rules of the male-dominated society are based on the leaders’ twisted interpreta­tion of Old Testament scriptures. “Recognisin­g that the meaning of this term has shifted dramatical­ly in our culture in recent years, we no longer use the term handmaid,” the group said in 2018, without specifical­ly attributin­g the change to the show.

Coral Anika Theill, a former People of Praise member, has been strongly critical of the group, calling it a cult and saying women were expected to be completely obedient to men and independen­t thinkers are “humiliated, interrogat­ed, shamed and shunned”. —

 ?? Picture: REUTERS ?? SHORTLISTE­D: Judge Amy Coney Barrett.
Picture: REUTERS SHORTLISTE­D: Judge Amy Coney Barrett.

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