Churches must work together

Leader of African council seeks an ecumenical effort

posted on February 1, 2006 in News

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Africa's greatest challenge is not the widespread poverty keeping the continent from moving forward, the HIV/AIDS pandemic that is decimating its population, or the civil wars that funnel resources away from real solutions. It is, says Bishop Mvume Dandala, general secretary of the All Africa Council of Churches, inspiring Africa's churches and their Western partners to work together to eradicate these problems.

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Evangel Hall theft

posted on February 1, 2006 in News

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A thief stole, altered and cashed a cheque for nearly $200,000 from Evangel Hall that should have gone to the Presbyterian Church, according to a story in the Globe and Mail.

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Denouncing hereticism

posted on February 1, 2006 in News

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(ENI) — Prominent religious leaders in Indonesia are urging Muslims not to join extremist forces believed responsible for a series of well-publicized suicide bombings in the country.

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Jews most targetted

posted on February 1, 2006 in News

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(ENI) — Jews remained by far the greatest target of religious-based hate crimes in the United States in 2004, according to a recently-released report by the Federal Bureau of Investigation.

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Remaining faithful, now and in the future

Lambton-West Middlesex examines this time of transition

posted on February 1, 2006 in Presbytery Profile

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The strong rural connection enjoyed by many of the congregations in the Presbytery of Lambton-West Middlesex is evident at the two-point charge of St. Andrew's, Watford, and Knox, Thedford, where they set aside a Sunday each year to pray for their farm families and to focus on the gift and responsibility of being keepers of God's earth. "I am a strong advocate for everyone being involved," said Rev. Christine O'Reilly. "Church is not a spectator sport!"

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Planning for marriage, not just a wedding

illustrated by Eleanor Dowson

posted on February 1, 2006 in Features

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The average Canadian wedding costs about $20,000 and the American wedding industry pulls in about $72 billion each year. When stressed-out brides are frantically planning for the dress, the flowers, the cake and photographer, who is planning for the marriage?

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The West is decadent and decayed

We have managed to convert so much that is golden into base metal

posted on February 1, 2006 in Michael Coren

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It's very comforting for us to dismiss as extreme, unreasonable and even insane all of the demands and complaints of Islamic fundamentalism. In an unstable age it reassures us of our own decency and righteousness.

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Church-state debate

posted on February 1, 2006 in News

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(ENI) — Since the Lutheran-led reformation in 1537, Norway's dominant church — the (Lutheran) Church of Norway — has had the reigning king as its formal head.

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Making connections in Nicaragua

Canadians help orphans, cancer patients and small churches

posted on February 1, 2006 in Mission Knocks

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When Annette Vickers first travelled to Nicaragua in 1996 as part of a small mission team looking for a project to support, she had no idea where the fact-finding journey would lead her. Nearly 10 years later, Vickers is active as the director of PAN—Presbyterians Aiding Nicaraguans—facilitating eight to 12 group mission trips to the Central American country each year. "I love it!" she said. "There's nothing more satisfying than seeing the fruits of your labour with your own eyes. That's why the teams like it, they get to leave something tangible behind and they bond with the people they meet."

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'Tis the season to remain teachable

Disciples don't have to know it all, but must be prepared to learn constantly

posted on February 1, 2006 in For the Journey

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Last year for Lent I wrote about a little tit-bird that ended up causing me to eat a large crow. In said article I waxed eloquent about how we westerners, unlike the lowly easterner who has to rely on a hairy-tailed rodent to tell them when spring will occur, have a much better way to recognize the end of winter. I wrote how we westerners have the lovely little western wood-pewee who sings its plaintiff little "peee-weee song at the first harbinger of spring." Said article spawned two letters to the editor. One letter, published the following month, indicated a person irked at the implied put down of uppity Upper Canadians that I had attempted as a fringe benefit in the article, a charge to which I should probably plead guilty.

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Meat aids Foodgrains

posted on February 1, 2006 in News

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In a unique fundraiser, started by a group of farmers in Southern Manitoba, the sale of ground beef made from donated cows will have a double benefit. Youth groups, church groups, and community clubs will sell ground beef instead of chocolates this year. From each $20-box they will recieve five dollars for their own fundraising campaign. The remainder, after processing costs will be donated to Canadian Foodgrains Bank, an organization which collects donations of cash, grain and other agricultural commodities for distribution to the world's hungry.

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Churches continue aid efforts

posted on February 1, 2006 in News

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The Presbyterian Church continues to help rebuild the many areas devastated in 2005. The following are updates on four supported by Presbyterian World Service and Development:

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Don't squirm — but God loves you!

posted on February 1, 2006 in For the Record

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Recently at church the preacher was expounding on the baptism of Jesus in the context of four infant baptisms. She pointed out that parents' love for their children begins even before they are born, then blossoms at birth, even though infants cannot possibly return that love.

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Faith, Love, Marriage and Family

A traditional couple share their non-traditional secrets and prayers

posted on February 1, 2006 in Features

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Ours is a traditional marriage, nurtured and supported by participation in the Christian church and by faith that was shaped in our original family and church experiences. We met at a PYPS meeting in 1957 and married in 1962.

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Update on Sheila

posted on February 1, 2006 in News

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The Record told the story of Sheila Conkey last April. In the aftermath of her mother's death Sheila still lives in the family home, though under very different circumstances. Her father, Frank, moved into a retirement home, donating the family house to Community Living. Sheila shares her home with Joan and Mario, helps with meals and is out daily, shopping, bowling, swimming or working. She attends St. Timothy's, Ajax, Ont., where she continues to share her faith. – L. June Stevenson

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Montreal helps Saskatoon

posted on February 1, 2006 in News

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Rev. Stewart Folster, of the Saskatoon Native Circle Ministry, has the keys to the latest member of his ministry family: a slightly used, 15-passenger Dodge Ram van. Folster, with help from his wife Terry, has led the mission since 1992. In 2000, a relationship was formalized with St. Andrew and St. Paul, Montreal. The outreach interest group supporting the twinning within the Montreal church has named itself A&P Neechewagon, a Cree word meaning friends. A&P Neechewagon raised $15,000 (which included an important contribution from the Presbytery of Montreal), and was matched by a grant from the Cooke's Fund of the Presbytery of East Toronto, to purchase the van that will enable Folster to multiply his outreach. – Keith Randall, Church of St. Andrew and St. Paul, Montreal

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Feeding the sheep

Evergreen ministry far exceeds standard Valentine definitions of love

posted on February 1, 2006 in From the Moderator

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Many years ago I heard somebody say that February was the longest month. By our calendars it's the shortest month, even in the leap year. But it wasn't chronological time they were counting; it was the feeling that February goes on forever. Stuck between all the newness of January and the possibility of the coming of spring in March, February is caught between what has been and what might be. Stuck in between can feel like a long, lonely place.

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Searching for peace

The first step is to bring peace to those we meet

posted on February 1, 2006 in News

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On Nov. 26, four members of Christian Peacemaker Teams were abducted in Iraq and held hostage by a group calling themselves Swords of Righteousness Brigade. The group claimed the hostages—Canadians Jim Loney of Sault Ste. Marie, Ont., and Harmeet Singh Sooden, formerly of Montreal, American Tom Fox and Briton Norman Kember—were spies and set a Dec. 11 deadline for them to be executed unless the U.S. and British governments released Iraqi prisoners. The deadline passed without news. As of press time, the hostages' fate was unknown.

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The end is nigh, or not

Wherein the columnist equates his mortality to the apocalypse

posted on February 1, 2006 in Pop Christianity

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I have already lived more than half the years I am expected to live according to trusted statistics about the average lifespan of males in Canada. And, as I celebrate yet another birth anniversary this month and the anniversary of my father's death, my thoughts turn, naturally, to the imminent apocalypse. Here, in no particular order, are sure signs the end is nigh:

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Armageddon uncovered

posted on February 1, 2006 in News

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Israeli archaeologists have uncovered what they believe could be the oldest church ever found in the Holy Land — a discovery experts say may shed new light on early Christianity. However, some scholars are calling it a publicity stunt.

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