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Archive for October, 2009

Army makes an exception

The role of religion in the military has long been a touchy subject. For the sake of unity, there is a lot of regulation on how religion is practiced among troops. It is generally understood that everything in the military is uniform for a reason: cohesion. However, a recent article, “Army Allows a Sikh Doctor [...]

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The Crossing Church is holding a special holiday event this year called “Surviving the Holidays” to help divorced and separated men and women deal with the holiday season. It’s open to the whole community. The program is designed to help bring comfort to those who are hurting during the holiday season.
The event is from 10 [...]

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St. Andrew’s Lutheran Church is beginning a stewardship and capital campaign called “Building for Christ’s Mission.” This 2-part campaign is trying to help raise money to support St. Andrew’s growing ministry and also raise funds for renovations to the church building. The stewardship campaign asks members to continue tithing or to begin tithing. The capital [...]

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Did the Catholic church open up a larger problem by allowing married Anglican priests to return to the church? It opens up a long-time issue in the Catholic Church: celibacy.
I opened my  New York Times update  today, and there was another article about it called “Offer Raises Idea of Marriage for Catholic Priests.” Now some [...]

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Is Moses the man?

I was reading a USA Today article called “Is Moses the man who shaped America?” this morning and it struck me as very odd. The article was about author Bruce Feiler and his new book “America’s Prophet: Moses and the American Story.” In the book Feiler asserts that Moses has been more influential in American [...]

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There have been stories in the New York Times and USA Today about the most recent move of the Catholic Church. In an announcement Tuesday, the Catholic Church said it would allow conservative members of the Anglican church to reenter the Catholic Church. According to the USA Today article, they would be able to keep [...]

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A new exhibition hall at the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History is set to open in March. This new permanent exhibit is on the “discovery and understanding of human origins.” There will be a panel of experts there during the opening  to help navigate the space between religion and science. The exhibit is scientific [...]

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I’ve been doing a series of articles about the CROP Hunger Walk that happened in Columbia on Oct. 4, 2009. CROP stands for Communities Responding to Overcome Poverty. It was really the first series I’ve ever written, and I enjoyed being able to see the event from start to finish. Obviously I wasn’t there for [...]

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Children’s Health Fair
A Children’s Health Fair will be held at from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday in the Missouri United Methodist Church’s connector area at 204 S. Ninth St. The fair will feature MO-CHIP (Missouri Child Identification Program) and interactive exhibits from the Columbia Fire Department, Columbia Safe Kids Coalition, Columbia Parks & Recreation, [...]

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Religious renderings

I’ve neglected to post this (doing so does reek just a little bit of self-promotion), but yesterday’s print edition of the Missourian had a Faith cover story that carried my name. The MU Museum of Art & Archaeology’s exhibit “The Sacred Feminine, Prehistory to Postmodernity” showcases images of women in religion throughout history, raising broader [...]

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