The press has recently been full of talk about the voting habits of evangelicals. Reporters have learned not to call theologically traditional Protestants Fundamentalists. Now all members of “the religious right” are referred to as Evangelicals. But this also is a serious error.
YOGYAKARTA, Indonesia — While listening to a panel on Islamic economics in Sumatra, Indonesia, I surreptitiously watched the U.S. election returns on my wireless laptop. Strange. So far away and yet so close.
NEW YORK — (ENI) Millard Fuller, the founder of the humanitarian organization Habitat for Humanity International, who was later fired by its board, is being mourned as a visionary whose commitment to providing housing for the poor was rooted in his Christian faith.
LOUISVILLE — Bruce Reyes-Chow has never been to the Philippines, but his visit there this month will be a homecoming of sorts.
Reyes-Chow, the moderator of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.)’s 218th General Assembly, is a third-generation Filipino — his grandparents are from the Philippines.
LOUISVILLE — (PNS) Bruce Reyes-Chow, moderator of the 218th General Assembly (2008) of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.), has selected members for the General Assembly Special Committee to Study Issues of Civil Union and Christian Marriage.
LOUISVILLE — (PNS) I will admit it up front: This column is an unabashed promotion for the Big Tent event, June 11-13, in Atlanta.
The Big Tent will bring together several of our Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) summer conferences in one place at the same time so that participants might experience the breadth and width of the ministries of the PC(USA).
SAN ANTONIO — As a child growing up in California, Linda LeBron loved spending time at church with her mother, who was a director of Christian education. “I thought what she did was so much fun,” says LeBron.
On January 31, one of the nation’s great Presbyterians joined the Church Triumphant. It’s still hard for me to believe John Anderson is gone. By the sheer force of his amazing personality he made his mark on both the church and the world.
LOUISVILLE — John B. Evans, whose life of service to the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) included particular devotion to theological education, died Jan. 29 in Davidson, N.C. He had fought cancer for many years.
DULUTH, GA. (PNS) — Although Sue Youngsook Yon is intimately acquainted with loss, she has also experienced profound rebirth, most recently in following her call to become one of the first Korean-American women to be certified as a Christian educator in the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.).
LOUISVILLE — The annual conference of Presbyterian Men is all set for April 17-19 in Denver with the theme “Challenges Facing Men in the 21st Century.” It will include worship, workshops, fellowship, and a number of keynote speakers.
(ENI) — Thousands of people are gathering in Brazil for the World Social Forum to address exploitative globalization, while organizers say the economic crisis illustrates that its message, "another world is possible", is more essential and more possible than ever.
(ENI)--Calls for a return to basic banking and an economy propelled by values other than greed have been made in London, one of the world's financial capitals, at a conference of Christian thinkers examining the current economic crisis.
(ENI)--Human rights advocates are praising the decision of a Spanish judge to formally investigate the role of Salvadoran military members in the 1989 murders of six Jesuit priests and two others during El Salvador's 12-year civil war.
Anne Martin Wilson Rowe, 74, of Fredericksburg, Va., died January 24 at home after a long illness. A funeral service will be held at 11 a.m., Friday, January 30 in The Presbyterian Church in Fredericksburg.
(ENI)--Groups campaigning for changes in the Roman Catholic Church plan to convene a "worldwide assembly of the people of God" in Rome in 2015 to mark the 50th anniversary of the conclusion of the Second Vatican Council.
LOUISVILLE — Twenty years ago, Brad Smith, a seminary intern at Spring Valley Church in Columbia, S.C., asked worshipers to bring donations of canned goods and money on Super Bowl Sunday to help feed the local hungry.
In 1944, global economic leaders gathered at Bretton Woods to plan the massive economic recovery that would be necessary after the destruction of World War II. Out of that meeting came such financial institutions as the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund, and the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade.
After this year’s General Assembly, Lisa Larges, minister coordinator of That All May Freely Serve and Mieke Vandersall, coordinator of Presbyterian Welcome, realized that they shared an overwhelming desire: to bring change to the ongoing debate over homosexuality and ordination standards. “We need to change the tenor by giving people an opportunity to talk and listen to each other, one on one,” explains Paul Mowry of Presbyterian Welcome. “It’s easy to find out each other’s position on the issues,” Mowry continued. “But we wanted to help people find each other in true fellowship.”
Reprinted with permission from Presbyterians Today, 100 Witherspoon St., Louisville, Ky. 40202-1396. This article originally appeared in the December 2005 edition of PT. Subscription information is available at 1-800-558-1669.
During my theological education and early in my pastoral ministry, “multiculturalism” and “diversity within unity” were fashionable issues in seminaries and some church denominations. Then, some of the same church leaders and congregants who had made a public point to develop cross-cultural sensitivity among Christians turned their attention to developing “contemporary worship.”
There are three reasons for revising the language of G-6.0106b. First, the warrants adduced in the current version are flawed. Second, the requirement that an entire category of persons must take a vow of celibacy as a condition of living a Christian life (and thus qualified for leadership) denies a basic tenet of the Reformation heritage. Third, the ethical question regarding the morality of homosexuality cannot be decided merely by exegesis of the Bible.
This essay is adapted from a lecture presented at the 2008 Gathering of the Presbyterian Coalition, and adapted with permission from a workshop presentation at the Presbyterian Coalition Gathering, October, 2008, in Newport Beach, Calif. It was published in Theology Matters, Vol. 14, No. 5, Nov/Dec 2008. It is reprinted here with permission from each organization/publication.
A new research study has found distinct changes in the worship life of American congregations – including an increased reliance on technology and a growing informality in the way congregations worship.
Bethany R. Furkin, a recent honors graduate of the E.W. Scripps School of Journalism at Ohio University, has been named a reporter for the Presbyterian News Service. She begins work Feb. 2.
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