News

It’s been an unsettling summer with a world full of problems pushing at us for our attention. It’s hard to know how to respond or whether there is anything we can do in response to troubling news on the other side of the world. Madison-based WE International has a suggestion.

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COTTAGE GROVE — “This is going to be the best week of your life” is a bold promise from the team members of Totus Tuus, but for most of the participants at all levels — it was indeed one of the best weeks of their lives. Totus Tuus is a summer Catholic youth program dedicated to sharing the Gospel and promoting the Catholic faith through evangelization, catechesis, Christian witness, and Eucharistic worship.

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New York City is known as the city that never sleeps. It’s not as well known for the vibrancy of it’s religious faith, although that is changing. So perhaps there’s hope for Madison.What would it be like if Madison was criss-crossed with people prayer walking?

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Last week City Church invited the saints in Madison to explore what it means to have intimacy with God.  All of the messages can be accessed here.  The assumption is that one who is intimate with God is free and empowered to love as God loves, see as God sees, feel as God feels, and to act as God would want us to act to fulfill our God-given purpose in the world. The Bible promises so much more than most of us experience on a day to day basis.

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Last November, the Freedom From Religion Foundation won a stunning court victory. The Madison organization had taken aim at a longstanding Internal Revenue Service rule that allows a house of worship to designate part of a clergy member’s cash compensation as a tax-free housing allowance. This federal tax break grants ministers special treatment and causes the rest of us to pay higher taxes, the foundation argued. U.S. District Judge Barbara Crabb ruled in the foundation’s favor, finding the tax break unconstitutional because it “provides a benefit to religious persons and no one else.” The federal government has appealed. If the…

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This is a story about stories. Bill White learned their power early. As a boy, White accompanied a favored uncle who spun yarns in a rural Wisconsin barbershop. Men gathered nightly to listen. There was status in holding an audience, and his uncle had them rapt. “It was a delightful and enchanting experience,” White noted later. He went home to Viroqua, the bedroom he shared with a younger brother, and began telling tales of his own. White knew he’d succeeded when his brother began trying to script the endings, pleading for a happy close to a made-up story of adventure.…

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