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Bosnian monks make a comeback with gourmet cheese

(ENI) -- Roman Catholic monks in Bosnia-Herzegovina have resumed production of a world-famous cheese after they were forced to stop by the Balkans war in the mid-1990s.

"Our numbers fell and we were forced to cut back — and in 1996, we stopped making it completely when the last brother who knew the recipe died," explained Zvonko Topic, one of two surviving Trappist monks at the Marija Zvijezda, or Mary Star, monastery near Banja Luka. "But we've now decided to bring it back to consumers here, and we'll be opening a small shop soon for tourists and visitors."

Jeffrey Lawrence named publisher of Presbyterians Today

LOUISVILLE — Jeffrey Lawrence, a New Yorker whose working life has taken him from law to real estate to advertising to parish ministry, has been named publisher of Presbyterians Today magazine. He began his new work on Jan. 5.

         “I think I bring a unique perspective to the magazine as a seasoned businessman and Christian minister,” Lawrence told Presbyterian News Service in an interview. “Presbyterians Today is a critical mission of Christ’s church and I knew as soon as I applied that this was the right fit for me.”

PC(USA) clergywoman embraces contemplative life as a Benedictine

LOUISVILLE — When Lynne Smith was a girl growing up in El Paso, Texas, she said she wanted to be a nun.

And so Smith followed the more conventional path … to ordained Presbyterian ministry and a first pastorate in Dodge City, Kan. But the yearning for a more contemplative spiritual life was never far from her mind.

Commentary: Neuhaus’ influence felt far and wide

Richard John Neuhaus (1936-2009) was a Canadian become American, a Lutheran pastor become Catholic priest, a political liberal become conservative, and an all-around intellectual. His life journey made for an interesting mix of convictions and perspectives that, frankly, speak the language of so many post-moderns being dubbed the “O-generation” (hint: “O” for Obama).

Church leaders buoyed by secular parties’ win in Bangladesh vote

(ENI)--Church leaders in Muslim-majority Bangladesh have hailed the landslide victory of secular parties in national elections two years after a state of emergency was declared due to political violence.

"We are really exited about this result. It is a New Year gift to the nation," Elgin Saha, outgoing president of the National Christian Council of Bangladesh told Ecumenical News International on January 9 from Dhaka.

Zimbabwe crisis is a “slow genocide,” says South African bishop

(ENI)--A South African bishop who came to prominence fighting apartheid has called Zimbabwe's crisis a slow genocide. He was speaking during the launch by a civil society grouping of a campaign to highlight the "immoral" role played by South African government in supporting Zimbabwean leader Robert Mugabe.

Bishop Paul Verryn, of the Central Methodist Church in Johannesburg, which is housing hundreds of Zimbabwean refugees, said on January 8, "We are witnessing a slow genocide in Zimbabwe."

Verryn spoke at a media briefing on an undercover mission in December to Zimbabwe by members of “Civicus,” an international alliance of non-governmental organizations. It announced it would send a DVD "video letter" entitled "Time2Act" to leaders of Zimbabwe's neighboring countries.

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