MC News
Clara Maria Goldstein says she created the Rabbi Jesus paintings to promote love, understanding and acceptance. But Goldstein admitted her 10 oil paintings are causing just the opposite reaction from some people after Gundersen Lutheran officials asked her to remove her paintings hanging in the hospital entryway because they could be controversial. Read more.
NEW YORK (ANS) — As a nine-year-old boy tending his family’s goats he witnessed his village burned by the Sudanese Army and many killed. Abducted and enslaved in northern Sudan less than a year later, he endured nightmarish treatment by his captors that made him feel like an animal. Read more.
Bishop Robert Morlino has a vision for a new cathedral for the Diocese of Madison that combines spiritual, charitable and philosophical missions in a new building on the site of the fire-ravaged St. Raphael. Read more.
CAMBRIDGE, ENGLAND (ANS) — I drove to Cambridge, England, on May 7 [1963] to interview Mr. Clive Staples Lewis, author of The Screwtape Letters and one of the world’s most brilliant and widely read Christian authors. I hoped to learn from him how young men and women could be encouraged to take up the defense of the faith through the written word. More, read part one. Read part two of this story.
More than 10,000 men and teenage boys are expected to gather at Milwaukee’s Bradley Center next weekend to cheer, clap, sing and pray at the first Promise Keepers rally to be held in the city since 2000. Read more.
THE MIDDLE EAST AND NORTH AFRICA (ANS) — The Middle East and North Africa are in a state of transformation. The Church has existed in this part of the world since the time of Christ. Around 20 million Arab Christians live in this region. 11 million are Orthodox Christians, 5.4 million are Catholic and 3.6 million are Protestants. But the Church in many Middle Eastern countries is shrinking. In 1900 Christians represented around 20% of the population of the Middle East. That number has fallen to less than 5% today. These numbers are even more striking in the Holy Land.…
For over 50 years new international students and scholars, who arrive at the University of Wisconsin campus in Madison at this time of year, have been invited to a free tour of their new home city offered by residents of the local community and facilitated by InterVarsity Christian Fellowship. After visiting some of the most interesting attractions in the city, the tour ends up at the homes of local residents, so internationals get to see how Madison families live. Read more.
Monsignor Paul Swain, vicar general of the Diocese of Madison, will become the bishop of Sioux Falls, S.D., the diocese announced today. Read more.
The one-year-anniversary of Hurricane Katrina is hardest on those still rebuilding there, but it’s been made easier by local volunteers. One survivor thanked those who helped him by phone Tuesday night. High Point Church in Madison is one of more than a dozen churches that are sending volunteers to Louisiana and Mississippi every month. On Tuesday night, they were told just how much they’ve accomplished. Read more.
Madalyn Murray O’Hair never petitioned the Federal Communications Commission to get religious broadcasting off the air. James Dobson never launched a petition drive to stop her. O’Hair died more than a decade ago, but the rumor about her FCC petition lives on. The commission has received millions of inquiries about it, many the result of church-sponsored letter-writing campaigns. Read more.
