Posts Tagged ‘Religion’

Memorial Day a time for prayers of remembrance from all faiths

Friday, May 25th, 2012

Memorial Day (originally called Decoration Day) began after the Civil War as a chance for the country to commemorate and visit the graves of citizens who died during military service. Some contributors to The Washington Post’s faith leader network shared their religion’s prayers of remembrance intended to honor those who have passed away. Read full article > >

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Memorial Day a time for prayers of remembrance from all faiths

Jesus Christ ice pops made from frozen, inadvertently blessed wine. No, we can’t believe we typed that, either.

Friday, May 18th, 2012

Sebastian Errazuriz has used art to take on an array of issues: New York's death rate, the Occupy movement, military suicide, children with disabilities, the brutal reign of Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet. Now, the Brooklyn-based artist is taking aim at what he sees as religious extremism. At a party this weekend celebrating New York Design Week, which begins today, the Chilean-born artist plans to hand out 100 “Christian Popsicles” made of “frozen holy wine transformed into the blood of Christ” and featuring a crucifix instead the tongue depressor that typically hosts the frozen treats, he said. An image of Jesus Christ positioned traditionally on the cross is visible once the ice pop is consumed. As for the frozen wine, Errazuriz said, he concealed it in a cooler and took it into a church, where it was “inadvertently blessed by the priest while turning wine into the blood of Christ during the Eucharist.” Read – Artist wants Jesus Popsicles to stand as statement on fanaticism, violence

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Jesus Christ ice pops made from frozen, inadvertently blessed wine. No, we can’t believe we typed that, either.

Romney at Liberty: The case for conservatism

Monday, May 14th, 2012

Mitt Romney did not rise on the power of his rhetoric. At the Detroit Economic Club in February, his speech was swallowed by its stadium venue, overshadowed by a gaffe (his wife’s “ couple of Cadillacs ”) and weighed down by leaden language. Early in the primaries, Romney’s attempts to wax poetic on the virtues of America — often by quoting patriotic hymns — were waxen. Read full article > >

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Romney at Liberty: The case for conservatism

Romney Woos Evangelicals at Liberty University

Saturday, May 12th, 2012

Mitt Romney spoke of family and faith in a commencement address at Liberty University, a Christian institution where some students expressed distrust of the Mormon religion.

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Romney Woos Evangelicals at Liberty University

Here comes the bride … and her dietary restrictions

Friday, May 11th, 2012

When it came time for Sivan Pardo, 31, to plan her wedding to her 28-year-old fiancé Scott Renwick, she knew she wanted a “big fat vegan wedding.” “As Scott and I are both vegans for ethical reasons, it was very clear to us that we wanted our wedding, and everything around it, to reflect our ethics and values,” said Pardo, the founder and director of “The Vegan Woman” website. Pardo has been vegan for one year and a vegetarian since she was 12. There will be no animal-derived products served at her reception on June 1. Scott Renwick and Sivan Pardo She is hardly the first bride to use her wedding menu to express her beliefs. In 2010, former first daughter Chelsea Clinton famously served a vegan menu and gluten-free cake during her nuptials to Marc Mezvinsky to reflect her own dietary choices. Clinton did, however, also offer the option of organic grass-fed beef to omnivorous attendees. She is among the brides and grooms meeting their guests halfway down the aisle on menu choices in the interest of making their big day more harmonious. It's a fine waltz between “it’s my wedding and I’ll serve seitan if I want to,” and appeasing the average guest’s palate. The compromise is one that Jennifer Fugo was willing to stomach. She was diagnosed with gluten sensitivity in 2008, and two years later, opted against a gluten-free wedding. “At first I wanted the entire wedding to be gluten-free, however I came to realize that the cost was just too much to bear,” said Philadelphia-based Fugo. She runs the “Gluten Free School,” an online educational resource for the gluten-free lifestyle. While her guests noshed on traditional wedding fare, Fugo enjoyed a personalized gluten-free meal. And when it came time to cut the cake, there was a gluten-free, vegan cupcake waiting for her. For those with gluten intolerance like Fugo, the flour in a regular wedding cake would have wreaked havoc on her digestive system. Sick and bloated is no way to spend your wedding day. “Most caterers should be able to accommodate health-related dietary restrictions individually and create a special meal for the bride or groom without serving it to all of the guests,” said Chicago-based wedding planner Camille McLamb . “But ultimately, whether the restrictions are health-related or due to religious or ethical reasons, it's the bride and groom's day, and they should choose a menu that they are most comfortable with.” For Pado and her fiancé, the menu with which they felt most at home was entirely vegan. “We could not imagine having our wedding tainted with the suffering of animals for the sake of keeping some of our guests pleased,” she said. “Especially as we know how wonderful, rich and exciting the world of vegan cuisine is , and that all people really need to do is just give it an honest try.” Among the items the couple will be serving: eggplant rolls with sun-dried tomatoes and vegan cream cheese, mushroom risotto, coconut milk-based penne pasta with peanuts and chives and honey-melon soup with mango sorbet. Pado says she and Scott are constantly invited to non-vegan events, and though the non-vegan food and drink “saddens” them, they attend as a sign of appreciation for the invitation – and hope for the same mutual respect on their big day. “We hope that by inviting our family and friends to an event that is cruelty-free, they will respect us and our chosen lifestyle on our very special day,” she said. McLamb says the menu can communicate something about the couple to the guests. “I've had couples that served curry to reflect their Indian heritage and hushpuppies to showcase their Southern roots,” she said. “Dietary restrictions based on religion, ethics, or beliefs are no different; they highlight something that's important to the couple and personalize the wedding.” When Siobhan Kent married her husband Aaron, they wanted to personalize their wedding with one of their favorite foods – Southern barbecue. The mother of the bride, however, advised the couple that since their officiating rabbi kept kosher, the reception should reflect the same, even if Siobhan's half-Catholic, half-Jewish family only kept kosher on major Jewish holidays. “I wasn't a bridezilla by any stretch, but I wasn't too mature about being denied bacon on what was supposed to be the best day of my life,” said Kent. In the end, her mother’s opinion meant more than her persuasion toward pork, especially since her parents paid for the wedding. No harm done. The Kents ended up getting more than their fill of barbecue on their big day, it just happened to be in the form of chicken. “The kicker on the whole day was that the rabbi ended up not being able to attend, so this delicious kosher buffet was served to an audience where absolutely no one kept kosher,” she said. Ultimately, the people invited to a wedding should know the bride and groom well enough to understand their choices. McLamb says a wedding should be treated like a dinner party; if you go to a vegetarian’s house for dinner, would you expect a T-bone? If guests know the hosts abide by certain dietary rules, they shouldn’t expect to be served outside those. And if your second cousin twice-removed does end up complaining because there isn’t any schnitzel, McLamb suggests the bride and groom can simply reply, “'I'm sorry you feel that way, but this is important to us.' In the end, most people understand that the bride and groom's preferences reign supreme on wedding day.” No further explanation needs to be served. Take Our Poll

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Here comes the bride … and her dietary restrictions

How do the Olympics handle religion?

Friday, March 30th, 2012

How do you handle nine religions at the Olympics?

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How do the Olympics handle religion?

In Cuba, Pope Benedict XVI calls for more freedom

Wednesday, March 28th, 2012

HAVANA — Standing at an altar in the Plaza of the Revolution, at an open-air Mass attended by several hundred thousand of the faithful, or the merely curious, Pope Benedict XVI appealed to Cuban authorities for greater freedom for the Catholic Church here and asked specifically that the government allow religion to be taught in schools and universities. Read full article > >

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In Cuba, Pope Benedict XVI calls for more freedom

Catholics in Cuba, no longer shunned, seek a new role

Tuesday, March 27th, 2012

Here in the working-class parish of Jesus de Monte, even the atheists come to church. For the free computer classes. Once shunned, Catholics in Cuba now openly practice their religion, as the church here and the visiting pope pursue soft-power politics, gently pushing for change. Read full article > >

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Catholics in Cuba, no longer shunned, seek a new role

Rick Santorum, cafeteria Catholic?

Thursday, March 22nd, 2012

He has seven children , attends a Latin Mass and has driven issues of reproductive rights back into the center of American politics. In 2002, he traveled to Rome to express his support for the founder of the ultra-conservative Catholic lay movement called Opus Dei. Read full article > >

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Rick Santorum, cafeteria Catholic?

Santorum Makes Case for Religion in Public Sphere

Monday, February 27th, 2012

With social concerns gaining prominence in the race, Rick Santorum defended religion’s role in public life, criticizing universities and John F. Kennedy’s famous speech.

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Santorum Makes Case for Religion in Public Sphere

Murray’s ‘Coming Apart’ misses our history

Monday, February 27th, 2012

In 1924, the sociologist couple Robert and Helen Lynd arrived in a small Midwestern city they called Middletown (it was Muncie, Ind.) to study and survey the place. Their classic 550-page “ Middletown ” described a community starkly split between a “working class” (factory workers and laborers totaling 71 percent of the population) and a “business class” (owners, managers and professionals comprising 29 percent). This division, the Lynds wrote, was Middletown’s “outstanding cleavage” and influenced work, marriage, religion, leisure — almost everything. Read full article > >

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Murray’s ‘Coming Apart’ misses our history

Mitt Romney at the Detroit Economic Club; Santorum in eastern Michigan

Friday, February 24th, 2012

One week after former senator Rick Santorum (R-Pa.) delivered an address to the Detroit Economic Club , former Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney (R) this morning addresses the group of executives. The visit is part of Romney’s ramped-up focus on economic issues after a few weeks in which the debate on the campaign trail has been largely dominated by discussion of social issues, religion and contraception . It’s also a chance for Romney to reclaim some momentum in the GOP race on the heels of a strong performance at Wednesday night’s debate in Mesa, Ariz . Read full article > >

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Mitt Romney at the Detroit Economic Club; Santorum in eastern Michigan

Boehner: Contraceptive Rule Won’t Stand

Wednesday, February 8th, 2012

Calls it an “attack on religion.”

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Boehner: Contraceptive Rule Won’t Stand

For Mormon Voters, Mitt Romney’s Faith a Factor, but Not The Only One

Tuesday, February 7th, 2012

As Mitt Romney approaches primaries in states where his religion could be an advantage, more supporters say his values are the bigger issue.

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For Mormon Voters, Mitt Romney’s Faith a Factor, but Not The Only One

Is Romney nicer because he’s Mormon?

Thursday, January 26th, 2012

Does religion make people nice? Mitt Romney’s tax returns prompt this question. According to those documents, which he released recently, Romney gives at least 10 percent of his earnings of about $20 million a year to the Mormon Church. Read full article > >

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Is Romney nicer because he’s Mormon?