MC News

While most patients, religious or not, avoid aggressive end-of-life therapy to prolong their time on Earth, a new study shows that religious patients may seek it out at three times the rate of non-religious patients, a finding that leads some to question why doctors don’t address the issue of religion with their patients more often, when it informs so many medical decisions, particularly in end-of-life care. Read more of this story. Religious Patients More Likely to Seek End-of-Life Cancer Care – Bloomberg News

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When Joe Christian started planning church services 35 years ago, it meant spending hours flipping through hymnals and copying sheet music.Today, it’s point, click, worship.Christian, the music minister at Una Baptist Church in Nashville, is one of more than 12,000 people who have signed up for a new iTunes-like website called LifeWayworship.com. Read more of this story.

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CANTON, Ohio — It sounds like the beginning of a comedy routine. An Amish miracle heater? Really? "It’s a joke because the Amish couldn’t use the heater itself," said Donald Kraybill, an Amish expert at Elizabethtown College in Pennsylvania. "It’s kind of like Quakers selling Quaker guns. It’s sort of an oxymoron." Even so, Canton company Heat Surge has sold thousands of Roll-n-Glow electric fireplaces. Read more of this story.

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COMMENTARYLast year I visited the Hall of Presidents in Disney World, home of the walking, talking animatronic presidents. In the anteroom where they hold you before the show starts, they had paintings of all the important early presidents.There was Washington. Then John Adams, the second president. Then Thomas Jefferson, the third president. Then the fourth president, James Monroe.Wait. James Monroe? He was the fifth president. They’d skipped the fourth president, a short fellow named James Madison.Read more of this story.

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WASHINGTON – As Congress jostles and wrestles with one another over how to best spend billions of tax dollars to resuscitate the economy, a prison ministry approached the government with ideas on how to not spend and instead save billions. Pat Nolan, vice president of Prison Fellowship, moderated a panel discussion hosted by the Subcommittee on Crime, Terrorism and Homeland Security on Tuesday that examined how community-based re-entry programs are significantly more cost-effective and successful in keeping ex-inmates out of prison.Read more of this story.

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The amount of economic pain caused by the recession has varied among area churches as the attendance and spiritual needs of members go up while donations fluctuate and budgets are cut.A majority of churches have experienced an attendance increase that the recession hasn’t slowed. Craig Heilman, executive pastor of Door Creek Church in Madison, attributes the increase to a greater need for spiritual comfort in a time of uncertainty.Read more of this story. Pastor Asks Where’s My Bailout? – Christian PostIn Recession, Church Multiplies Money For Needy – National Public RadioBorrowing hurts churches – Associated Press

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The sanctuary of Lake City Church was filled with almost 1,000 area residents last night (March 15, 2009), joining together in an unusual three-hour Sunday evening service of prayer and worship music called Seeking God Together. There were no sermons, just short prayers from 22 different area pastors. The prayers were interspersed between the songs, which were played by worship bands from three different churches, one for each hour.

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Every winter, David DeWitt takes his biology class to the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural History, but for a purpose far different from that of other professors. DeWitt brings his Advanced Creation Studies class (CRST 390, Origins) up from Liberty University in Lynchburg, Va., hoping to strengthen his students’ belief in a biblical view of natural history, even in the lion’s den of evolution. Read more of this story.

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Read the Bible: Maybe it doesn’t make sense for most of us to read the whole Bible. After all, there are so many difficult, repellent, confusing, and boring passages. Why not skip them and cherry-pick the best bits? After spending a year with the good book, I’ve become a full-on Bible thumper. Everyone should read it—all of it! In fact, the less you believe, the more you should read. Let me explain why, in part by telling how reading the whole Bible has changed me.Read more of this story.

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