Boston, MA
Roberto Miranda, pastor of Lion of Judah, prominent Boston church, has died
(RNS) — A distinguished Boston Hispanic Pentecostal pastor, identified for his church’s social packages and conservative educating, has died, based on his church.
Pastor Robert Miranda’s dying was introduced Sunday (Might 22) throughout companies at Congregation Lion of Judah in Boston, which was streamed on-line.
“So a lot of these of you who’re becoming a member of us watching this and listening to this for the very first time, we’re simply merely letting them know that our senior pastor, beloved of all of us, Roberto Miranda, has graduated,” stated Brandt Gillespie, who was main the service at Lion of Judah.
“He has gone. He’s within the presence of the Lord.”
The announcement got here after the congregation at Lion of Judah, a bi-lingual church often known as Congregación Leon de Judá, sang “It Is Properly With My Soul,” a preferred hymn with lyrics written by Horatio Spafford within the 1870s, after his youngsters died in a shipwreck. The story of the music’s writing had been instructed throughout a sermon on the church the earlier week.
Gillespie led the congregation in singing a chorus of the hymn and instructed them it was alright to grieve their beloved pastor.
“It’s going to take a protracted journey to come back to grips with this,” stated Gillespie.
Lion of Judah church straddles Boston’s two worlds
Miranda, who was born in 1955, grew to become pastor of what was a modest Hispanic congregation of about 60 folks after incomes a doctorate from Harvard. He had hoped to turn into a professor of Romance languages however gave up his goals of educating for the pastorate.
Below his management, Lion of Judah grew to a congregation of about 1,000 folks, which pulls folks from 30 international locations. The congregation runs social packages to minister to immigrants, serve the poor and assist folks overcome “something that stops folks from turning into what God supposed them to be,” Miranda instructed Faith Information Service in 2019.
He additionally didn’t draw back from addressing sizzling button points from the pulpit, together with his help for pro-immigration insurance policies and his opposition to same-sex marriage.
“Folks felt that I had a type of suicide advanced,” he instructed RNS in 2019. “To undertake these points from the pulpit was type of harmful, inflammatory and frightening … However I felt in my coronary heart that I wanted for folks to know the way I believed and the way I felt about sure points.”
Miranda was born within the Dominican Republic and immigrated to the US as a toddler to hitch his father. Academically gifted, he graduated from Phillips Academy, a distinguished prep faculty whose alumni embrace presidents George H.W. Bush and George W. Bush and later attended Princeton and Harvard.
“He’s out of the demographic of most Pentecostal pastors,” Arlene Sanchez-Walsh, an skilled on Latino Pentecostalism at Azusa Pacific College in Los Angeles, instructed RNS in 2019. “The bulk are both self-taught or come from Bible faculties and evangelical seminaries.”
Miranda was additionally identified for believing that a lot of his work concerned religious warfare.
“I’ve delivered folks from demonic powers proper the place you might be sitting,” he instructed an RNS reporter who was seated on a sofa in his workplace in 2019. “I’ve engaged in exorcisms over time many, many instances.”
Even after three a long time of ministry, Miranda was nonetheless trying ahead to the long run.
“I see myself as a soldier, put in a lonely outpost, fulfilling an order and awaiting the following transfer,” Miranda stated in 2019. “I’m undecided what it’s. However I do know it’s on the market.”
A Mexican American evangelical examines how Latino id is formed by religion
Boston, MA
Karen Read analysis | What latest hearings say about coming retrial
No two trials are the same — and it appears that’ll be true for the high-profile Karen Read case as well.
Prosecutors have been working to keep several defense witnesses off the stand in the upcoming retrial over the killing of her boyfriend, Boston Police Officer John O’Keefe.
“It’s not surprising to me to at all that, with new lawyers on the case and fresh looks at the evidence, that they’re making a determination as to which pieces of evidence they think they have real chance of excluding,” NBC10 Boston legal analyst Michael Coyne said.
The witnesses whom the prosecution moved to exclude from the case are a doctor whose expertise includes dog bites, a forensic expert who challenged the now infamous Google search, “hos long to die in the snow,” as well as two accident reconstruction experts whose testimony under cut the state’s version of how O’Keefe died.
Prosecutors in the Karen Read trial spent the day in court trying to discredit the expertise of the defense’s dog bite expert, Dr. Marie Russell, so she can’t testify in the retrial.
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Judge Beverly Cannone will decide if the witnesses testify. She allowed them at the first trial and Coyne said it could create problems if she says no for the next trial.
“It does put her in a difficult point to be able to now reverse herself, and I don’t think that’s likely to happen,” he said.
Special Assistant District Attorney Hank Brennan is now leading the state’s case, and he plans to cut down the number of witnesses while bringing a different style than the original lead prosecutor, Adam Lally.
“Hank’s approach is like an everyman’s approach,” said Coyne, who knows the experienced defense lawyer. “He’s understated. He’s very quick on his feet. I think he’ll be well received by the jury.”
Read’s team remains intact, but she said Tuesday outside one of the witness hearings that they’re taking a second look, too.
“We’re going to re-tool everything. Maybe something will stay similar but we’re gonna shuffle a lot of things around,” she said.
Much of this preparation could be moot if the state’s Supreme Judicial Court decides to throw out two of the charges against Read.
The Norfolk County District Attorney’s Office says one of Karen Read’s key arguments has been “debunked” in a legal filing seeking to prevent testimony from a defense witness in the upcoming retrial.
Boston, MA
What are those giant pink inflatable sculptures in downtown Boston?
BOSTON – It’s a peculiar sight in downtown Boston: Giant pink people peering into restaurant windows and hanging out in alleyways.
These sculptures that are making their debut in the United States are called “Monsieur Rose” or “Mr. Pink” in English. It’s a new art installation designed to catch your attention and lift your spirits.
“These characters transform the streets into playful places and our daily travels into delightful, colorful journeys,” a website for the exhibit says.
“Cute-ism” art
Their collective name in French roughly translates to “cute-ism” from artist Philippe Katerine. The inflatable sculptures are part of this year’s Winteractive art walk.
Winteractive is the same event that brought floating clown heads to the city last year. The Downtown Boston Alliance says the reaction encouraged them to up the ante this year.
Changing people’s days
Michael Nichols with the Downtown Boston Alliance says the organization is exploring “different ways of using our downtown to have fun.”
“It is the darkest, drabbest time of year in Boston. It’s gray … just cold and bitter,” he said. “And pops of pink color, bubblegum pink dotting the downtown in now six different locations is changing people’s day.”
Mr. Pink is only the beginning of the experience – new installations will be added to the collection every day for the next week. On Thursday morning there was another eye-catching sight: A display that appeared to show a satellite or small spacecraft that had crashed onto the hood of a car.
Boston, MA
ICE blasts Boston: Feds say BPD refused 198 immigration detainer requests for ‘egregious crime’ in 2024, not 15
Federal authorities said the Boston Police Department refused to act on 198 immigration detainer requests last year, far exceeding the 15 reported by BPD’s commissioner, while blasting the city for jeopardizing “public safety and national security.”
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