Posted on 01/28/2013 2:30:01 PM PST by NYer
Pastor Miller and his family
January 25, 2013 (LifeSiteNews.com) - "I have time for just a short note," wrote Mennonite pastor Kenneth Miller to his supporters as he awaited his inevitable arrest yesterday, "'...Whom having not seen ye love, though now ye see Him not, yet believing, ye rejoice with joy unspeakable and full of glory: receiving the end of your faith, even the salvation of your souls.' (1 Pet. 1:8-9) He is risen. His Kingdom reigns forever. All is well."
Hours later, Miller faced federal judge William Sessions III, and informed him that he would not testify before a grand jury against several acquaintances accused of helping the pastor arrange for the escape of Lisa Miller and her daughter, Isabella, from the United States in 2009. According to the Burlington Free Press, Kenneth Miller told the judge that testifying would be inconsistent with his religious beliefs.
After repeatedly urging the pastor to change his mind, Sessions found him in contempt of court and ordered him sent to jail for ten days, in an attempt to induce him to speak. "We can’t function as a criminal justice system without the grand jury," Sessions told Miller. "I appreciate your faithfulness to your religion and your moral beliefs, and perhaps there is an inherent conflict here."
Lisa Miller, who is not related to Kenneth Miller, decided to flee the U.S. after a Vermont judge insisted that she allow her daughter to have unsupervised visits with lesbian Janet Jenkins, with whom Miller had had a lesbian relationship before converting to Christianity.
Judge Richard Cohen ruled that Jenkins is Isabella's "mother," despite the fact that she has no biological relationship to the girl, and only knew her briefly after her birth before Miller ended the relationship. Jenkins' name does not appear on Isabella's birth certificate.
Judge Cohen refused to rescind his order despite testimony from Miller and several expert witnesses that indicated that Isabella was suffering psychological trauma from the visits. Following Lisa and Isabella's flight, Cohen issued a decision transferring full custody to Jenkins.
Pastor Miller has been convicted of helping Lisa and Isabella drive to Toronto, from where they allegedly flew to Nicaragua, to hide for several months. Their current whereabouts are unknown.
"These people they wanted him to testify against are fellow citizens of God’s kingdom," one of Miller's lawyers, also a Mennonite, told the Free Press. "And it’s like, you wanted me to be a rat, you know, to turn on my fellow citizens. That’s basically what it came down to."
The pastor's principled stand is shared by the Mennonites of the Nicaraguan Brotherhood, who initially sheltered Lisa and Isabella after they fled the U.S., and say they have been persecuted in Nicaragua for their actions.
The group wrote in letter last year that their battle to protect Isabella "is a war between good and evil, a battle between God and Satan. As congregations we stand united in this spiritual warfare against evil."
"The fact is that suddenly we find ourselves having to choose between obeying God and man made laws," they added. "We have chosen to obey God. We are willing to give up our rights, go to jail, or even die, for the cause of helping anyone become free from a sinful life and helping that person to live in obedience to God’s Word."
Pastor Miller has another date with a federal judge on March 4, where he will be sentenced to up to three years in prison for his role in the escape.
Related links:
Mennonite website supporting Pastor Kenneth Miller
Related LifeSiteNews.com coverage:
Mennonites: we are willing to die rather than betray girl to court-appointed lesbian ‘mother’
Experts testify to trauma experienced by Isabella Miller in sworn testimony now published online
Mennonite convicted of aiding ‘kidnapping’ for helping girl escape court-imposed lesbian ‘mother’
Homosexual’s ‘defamatory’ lawsuit seeks to silence pro-family groups: Liberty University attorney
Looks like you are right. I was thinking they had to grant total immunity in order to compel testimony, but lo and behold, the “interpreters” of the Constitution strike again:
“In Kastigar v. United States, 406 U.S. 441 (1972), the Supreme Court confronted the issue of which type of immunity, use or transactional, is constitutionally required in order to compel testimony. The Court ruled that the grant of “use and derivative use” immunity is sufficient.”
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Immunity_from_prosecution
Prayers up for this pastor and his family.
The Federal Leviathan is not your friend.
It was a great inaugural speech though.
Hopefully she’s in New Zealand by now, or some remote unnamed island.
‘Cuz he’s a righteous man who — entirely UNlike the Clintoons — won’t sat he don’t recall when he do recall.
But your deeper point is well-taken; it would be no difficult feat to provide answers that were both true, but uninformative on certain particulars.
My suspicion is, however, that the questions were constructed such that answers could legitimately be only “yes” or “no,” in which case there is no real out, but to keep silent, and take the abuse.
Utterly damnable any way you slice it.
Free Pastor Miller, Jailed for His Beliefs!
Free Pastor Miller, Jailed for His Beliefs!
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