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- See more at: http://www.onenewsnow.com/culture/2014/08/28/pastor-alarmed-by-occult-theme-of-teen-library-books#.VAIi-2Poa7B
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BREAKING! ISIS CAPTURES UN CROSSING/ISRAEL&SYRIA
Pastor alarmed by occult theme of teen library books - Neither the ministerial alliance nor the city council care
Culture
Pastor alarmed by occult theme of teen library books
Charlie Butts
(OneNewsNow.com)
Thursday, August 28, 2014
A Texas pastor is fighting to get books on the occult off library shelves and away from children.
Phillip Missick is the pastor of King of Saints Tabernacle in Cleveland, Texas, near Houston. On a recent visit to the city library, out of curiosity he walked to the youth section to look at the books on those shelves.
“When I looked these books were about vampires, dating vampires, courting vampires, witchcraft - book after book, shelf after shelf,” he tells OneNewsNow. “I looked up on top of the shelf and there was a witch's hat and what looked like a demon to me, and I was appalled.”
Those types of books primarily target teen girls 12-14 years old. Missick brought it up before the ministerial alliance of which he is a member, asking pastors to sign a petition to remove the books. Only 10 of about 40 pastors did sign, but Missick was later called aside and told the alliance didn't deal with such issues.
“Like [American Family Association founder] Don Wildmon used to say, we're responsible for what goes into the minds of our children,” he explains. “And I thought, you know, what could be greater garbage than seducing your daughter into having a fantasy affair with a vampire? It's crazy.”
Missick also spoke very briefly before the city council but to no avail, and he feels abandoned. He didn't read the books, saying you don't have to "wade through a sewer to know what it's full of." He suggests putting books into the teen section that deal with Texas heroes, men and women of character.
Phillip Missick is the pastor of King of Saints Tabernacle in Cleveland, Texas, near Houston. On a recent visit to the city library, out of curiosity he walked to the youth section to look at the books on those shelves.
“When I looked these books were about vampires, dating vampires, courting vampires, witchcraft - book after book, shelf after shelf,” he tells OneNewsNow. “I looked up on top of the shelf and there was a witch's hat and what looked like a demon to me, and I was appalled.”
Those types of books primarily target teen girls 12-14 years old. Missick brought it up before the ministerial alliance of which he is a member, asking pastors to sign a petition to remove the books. Only 10 of about 40 pastors did sign, but Missick was later called aside and told the alliance didn't deal with such issues.
“Like [American Family Association founder] Don Wildmon used to say, we're responsible for what goes into the minds of our children,” he explains. “And I thought, you know, what could be greater garbage than seducing your daughter into having a fantasy affair with a vampire? It's crazy.”
Missick also spoke very briefly before the city council but to no avail, and he feels abandoned. He didn't read the books, saying you don't have to "wade through a sewer to know what it's full of." He suggests putting books into the teen section that deal with Texas heroes, men and women of character.
Pastor alarmed by occult theme of teen library books
Charlie Butts
(OneNewsNow.com)
Thursday, August 28, 2014
A Texas pastor is fighting to get books on the occult off library shelves and away from children.
Phillip Missick is the pastor of King of Saints Tabernacle in Cleveland, Texas, near Houston. On a recent visit to the city library, out of curiosity he walked to the youth section to look at the books on those shelves.
“When I looked these books were about vampires, dating vampires, courting vampires, witchcraft - book after book, shelf after shelf,” he tells OneNewsNow. “I looked up on top of the shelf and there was a witch's hat and what looked like a demon to me, and I was appalled.”
Those types of books primarily target teen girls 12-14 years old. Missick brought it up before the ministerial alliance of which he is a member, asking pastors to sign a petition to remove the books. Only 10 of about 40 pastors did sign, but Missick was later called aside and told the alliance didn't deal with such issues.
“Like [American Family Association founder] Don Wildmon used to say, we're responsible for what goes into the minds of our children,” he explains. “And I thought, you know, what could be greater garbage than seducing your daughter into having a fantasy affair with a vampire? It's crazy.”
Missick also spoke very briefly before the city council but to no avail, and he feels abandoned. He didn't read the books, saying you don't have to "wade through a sewer to know what it's full of." He suggests putting books into the teen section that deal with Texas heroes, men and women of character.
- See more at: http://www.onenewsnow.com/culture/2014/08/28/pastor-alarmed-by-occult-theme-of-teen-library-books#.VAIi-2Poa7BPhillip Missick is the pastor of King of Saints Tabernacle in Cleveland, Texas, near Houston. On a recent visit to the city library, out of curiosity he walked to the youth section to look at the books on those shelves.
“When I looked these books were about vampires, dating vampires, courting vampires, witchcraft - book after book, shelf after shelf,” he tells OneNewsNow. “I looked up on top of the shelf and there was a witch's hat and what looked like a demon to me, and I was appalled.”
Those types of books primarily target teen girls 12-14 years old. Missick brought it up before the ministerial alliance of which he is a member, asking pastors to sign a petition to remove the books. Only 10 of about 40 pastors did sign, but Missick was later called aside and told the alliance didn't deal with such issues.
“Like [American Family Association founder] Don Wildmon used to say, we're responsible for what goes into the minds of our children,” he explains. “And I thought, you know, what could be greater garbage than seducing your daughter into having a fantasy affair with a vampire? It's crazy.”
Missick also spoke very briefly before the city council but to no avail, and he feels abandoned. He didn't read the books, saying you don't have to "wade through a sewer to know what it's full of." He suggests putting books into the teen section that deal with Texas heroes, men and women of character.
Pastor alarmed by occult theme of teen library books
Charlie Butts
(OneNewsNow.com)
Thursday, August 28, 2014
A Texas pastor is fighting to get books on the occult off library shelves and away from children.
Phillip Missick is the pastor of King of Saints Tabernacle in Cleveland, Texas, near Houston. On a recent visit to the city library, out of curiosity he walked to the youth section to look at the books on those shelves.
“When I looked these books were about vampires, dating vampires, courting vampires, witchcraft - book after book, shelf after shelf,” he tells OneNewsNow. “I looked up on top of the shelf and there was a witch's hat and what looked like a demon to me, and I was appalled.”
Those types of books primarily target teen girls 12-14 years old. Missick brought it up before the ministerial alliance of which he is a member, asking pastors to sign a petition to remove the books. Only 10 of about 40 pastors did sign, but Missick was later called aside and told the alliance didn't deal with such issues.
“Like [American Family Association founder] Don Wildmon used to say, we're responsible for what goes into the minds of our children,” he explains. “And I thought, you know, what could be greater garbage than seducing your daughter into having a fantasy affair with a vampire? It's crazy.”
Missick also spoke very briefly before the city council but to no avail, and he feels abandoned. He didn't read the books, saying you don't have to "wade through a sewer to know what it's full of." He suggests putting books into the teen section that deal with Texas heroes, men and women of character.
- See more at: http://www.onenewsnow.com/culture/2014/08/28/pastor-alarmed-by-occult-theme-of-teen-library-books#.VAIi-2Poa7BPhillip Missick is the pastor of King of Saints Tabernacle in Cleveland, Texas, near Houston. On a recent visit to the city library, out of curiosity he walked to the youth section to look at the books on those shelves.
“When I looked these books were about vampires, dating vampires, courting vampires, witchcraft - book after book, shelf after shelf,” he tells OneNewsNow. “I looked up on top of the shelf and there was a witch's hat and what looked like a demon to me, and I was appalled.”
Those types of books primarily target teen girls 12-14 years old. Missick brought it up before the ministerial alliance of which he is a member, asking pastors to sign a petition to remove the books. Only 10 of about 40 pastors did sign, but Missick was later called aside and told the alliance didn't deal with such issues.
“Like [American Family Association founder] Don Wildmon used to say, we're responsible for what goes into the minds of our children,” he explains. “And I thought, you know, what could be greater garbage than seducing your daughter into having a fantasy affair with a vampire? It's crazy.”
Missick also spoke very briefly before the city council but to no avail, and he feels abandoned. He didn't read the books, saying you don't have to "wade through a sewer to know what it's full of." He suggests putting books into the teen section that deal with Texas heroes, men and women of character.
Pastor alarmed by occult theme of teen library books
Charlie Butts
(OneNewsNow.com)
Thursday, August 28, 2014
A Texas pastor is fighting to get books on the occult off library shelves and away from children.
Phillip Missick is the pastor of King of Saints Tabernacle in Cleveland, Texas, near Houston. On a recent visit to the city library, out of curiosity he walked to the youth section to look at the books on those shelves.
“When I looked these books were about vampires, dating vampires, courting vampires, witchcraft - book after book, shelf after shelf,” he tells OneNewsNow. “I looked up on top of the shelf and there was a witch's hat and what looked like a demon to me, and I was appalled.”
Those types of books primarily target teen girls 12-14 years old. Missick brought it up before the ministerial alliance of which he is a member, asking pastors to sign a petition to remove the books. Only 10 of about 40 pastors did sign, but Missick was later called aside and told the alliance didn't deal with such issues.
“Like [American Family Association founder] Don Wildmon used to say, we're responsible for what goes into the minds of our children,” he explains. “And I thought, you know, what could be greater garbage than seducing your daughter into having a fantasy affair with a vampire? It's crazy.”
Missick also spoke very briefly before the city council but to no avail, and he feels abandoned. He didn't read the books, saying you don't have to "wade through a sewer to know what it's full of." He suggests putting books into the teen section that deal with Texas heroes, men and women of character.
- See more at: http://www.onenewsnow.com/culture/2014/08/28/pastor-alarmed-by-occult-theme-of-teen-library-books#.VAIi-2Poa7BPhillip Missick is the pastor of King of Saints Tabernacle in Cleveland, Texas, near Houston. On a recent visit to the city library, out of curiosity he walked to the youth section to look at the books on those shelves.
“When I looked these books were about vampires, dating vampires, courting vampires, witchcraft - book after book, shelf after shelf,” he tells OneNewsNow. “I looked up on top of the shelf and there was a witch's hat and what looked like a demon to me, and I was appalled.”
Those types of books primarily target teen girls 12-14 years old. Missick brought it up before the ministerial alliance of which he is a member, asking pastors to sign a petition to remove the books. Only 10 of about 40 pastors did sign, but Missick was later called aside and told the alliance didn't deal with such issues.
“Like [American Family Association founder] Don Wildmon used to say, we're responsible for what goes into the minds of our children,” he explains. “And I thought, you know, what could be greater garbage than seducing your daughter into having a fantasy affair with a vampire? It's crazy.”
Missick also spoke very briefly before the city council but to no avail, and he feels abandoned. He didn't read the books, saying you don't have to "wade through a sewer to know what it's full of." He suggests putting books into the teen section that deal with Texas heroes, men and women of character.