News

WHILE teenage ballerinas and midriff-baring hip- hoppers cluster in the halls of the New Dance Group building on West 38th Street in Midtown Manhattan, inside one studio a very different type of dance class is starting. Twenty-five women are bowed on their knees in a circle, eyes closed, their foreheads resting on the floor.“We thank you, God, that you created the dance and you made it pure. Father, we want to dance your words through our limbs.” Wendy Heagy’s voice rises as she leads the circle in prayer. She is the founder of Raise Him Up Praise Dance School and…

Read More

COMMENTARY "The Power of Faith: How Religion Impacts Our World" is the cover and title of the International Edition of a September 2006 Spiegel Special that just came my way. It’s a stunning issue published in a nation stunned by evidences of vital religion almost everywhere in the world except Western Europe and, closest to home, Germany itself. Half the issue is given to "World Religions" and half to "Faith and Values" and "Christianity." Fair enough. (There’s much on Islam in Europe, too.)Read more of this story.

Read More

The fittest survive, but rarely alone. Resourceful Robinson Crusoe needed his man Friday. Keep busy working together and if you work with a song in your heart, tragedy may touch you but not kill you. That’s how dancer and singer Shimmy Jiyame sees it.He should know. The Soweto native has seen a world of suffering but he also knows the power of song, especially gospel music.Read more of this story.

Read More

Located at the southeastern entrance to the city of Madison, just north of the intersection of the Beltine and Stoughton Road, Evangel Life Center is home to a stunning variety of ministry activities that belies the relatively small size of the Assembly of God congregation. Small, that is, when compared to a handful of other churches in the Madison area which regularly attract more than 1,000 to their weekly services.

Read More

Sex, drugs and rock ‘n’ roll used to be the Big Three of rebellion. Some families are adding religion to that list.An increasing number of teens and young adults who were raised in nonreligious or nominally religious families are getting swept up in religious fervor. This is creating a complicated and sometimes painful family dynamic.Read more of this story.

Read More

Arthur Fletcher, the 6 feet 4 inch former defensive end for the Los Angeles Rams and republican architect of affirmative action, died at 80 years of age this past summer. As the head of the United Negro College Fund in the 1970’s, he coined the phrase, “A mind is a terrible thing to waste.” In 1996, he ran for the presidency of the United States after fellow republican Robert Dole repudiated affirmative action. Neither Fletcher nor Dole won the White House but the controversy over affirmative programs is as heated after his death, as it was in his lifetime.Read more…

Read More