Religion News

The Wasilla Bible Church sign sits by the road in front of the church in Wasilla, Alaska Saturday, Sept. 6, 2008.  The Wasilla church where Democratic vice presidential candidate, Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, attends is promoting a program that promises to convert homosexuals to heterosexuals through the power of  Jesus Christ and prayer.  (AP Photo/Al Grillo)

Palin church promotes converting gays

AP - Sat Sep 6, 5:18 PM ET

ANCHORAGE, Alaska - Gov. Sarah Palin's church is promoting a conference that promises to convert gays into heterosexuals through the power of prayer.

  • Republican presidential candidate John McCain and his wife Cindy wave after McCain's speech at the Republican National Convention in St Paul, Minnesota, on September 4. McCain has vowed to fight for America as long as he draws breath, in a patriotic pledge to bring political change as he accepted the Republican presidential nomination.(AFP/Robyn Beck)
    McCain campaign courts critical Catholic vote AP - Fri Sep 5, 4:52 AM ET

    ST. PAUL, Minn. - Shortly after a priest's opening prayer and a screening of a short film on John McCain's faith, Sen. Sam Brownback stepped to the microphone and didn't waste words.

  • Members of a Muslim congregation bow as they say a prayer at an Islamic Center in Falls Church, Virginia. As Islam makes inroads in the United States, American Muslims are setting up mega-mosques. Modelled on the huge, non-Catholic churches that offer their congregations of at least 2,000 members several different sites for worship, US mega-mosques have become a necessity in some places.(AFP/Getty Images/File/Alex Wong)
    US mega-mosques: Muslim tradition with US convenience AFP - Thu Sep 4, 9:42 AM ET

    WASHINGTON (AFP) - As Islam makes inroads in the United States, American Muslims are setting up mega-mosques that combine religious tradition with typical American convenience.

  • Religion today AP - Thu Sep 4, 8:20 AM ET

    PROVIDENCE, R.I. - The motto of Roman Catholic Bishop Thomas Tobin comes from a Bible verse reminding believers that God has given them "no cowardly spirit."

  • Religion news in brief AP - Thu Sep 4, 8:20 AM ET

    MONTGOMERY, Ala. - It's hard to find much brotherly love on the campaign trail, particularly in a hard-fought, high-profile race for an open seat in the U.S. House.

  • An Indian Hindu devotee carries home an idol of Elephant headed Hindu God Lord Ganesha in Mumbai. Hindus across the world on Wednesday began celebrating the Ganesha festival, the annual worship of the elephant-headed god, with major celebrations in the Indian city of Mumbai.(AFP/Indranil Mukherjee)
    Hindus begin Ganesha festival celebrations AFP - Wed Sep 3, 12:27 PM ET

    MUMBAI (AFP) - Hindus across the world on Wednesday began celebrating the Ganesha festival, the annual worship of the elephant-headed god, with major celebrations in the Indian city of Mumbai.

  • Russian archaeologists find long-lost Jewish capital AFP - Wed Sep 3, 12:08 PM ET

    MOSCOW (AFP) - Russian archaeologists said Wednesday they had found the long-lost capital of the Khazar kingdom in southern Russia, a breakthrough for research on the ancient Jewish state.

  • Evangelicals: Palin's Daughter Not an Issue U.S. News & World Report - Tue Sep 2, 1:25 PM ET

    ST. PAUL--Less than two hours after expected Republican vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin and her husband announced that their unmarried 17-year-old daughter is pregnant, evangelical leaders told U.S. News that they don't believe the revelation will harm the GOP ticket within the conservative faith community.

  • Tyler Gregory, a pastor at Eagle Brook Church in Lino Lakes, Minn., talks to parishioners after service on Sunday, Aug. 31, 2008. The Republican National Convention is scheduled to begin in nearby St. Paul on Monday. (AP Photo/Janet Hostetter)
    Opinions vary at church that shuns politics AP - Mon Sep 1, 9:49 PM ET

    LINO LAKES, Minn. - The message from the pulpit was "Wine, Water and Worship" — with no mention of the other "W," George W. Bush.

  • Photo provided by the Vatican's L'Osservatore Romano newspaper showing former hostage Ingrid Betancourt, right, with Pope Benedict XVI during a meeting at the papal summer retreat of Castel Gandolfo, near Rome, Monday Sept. 1, 2008. Betancourt met with the pontiff Monday to thank him for his prayers during her captivity, the Vatican said. Betancourt, who was released July 2, had expressed a desire to meet the pontiff. The former presidential candidate in Colombia credited her religious faith with helping her survive more than six years of captivity in the Colombian jungle at the hands of leftist rebels known as FARC. (AP Photo/L'Osservatore Romano, HO)
    Betancourt: meeting pope 'a dream come true' AP - Mon Sep 1, 1:22 PM ET

    ROME - Former hostage Ingrid Betancourt on Monday was able at last to thank Pope Benedict XVI, the man whose voice she said reached deep into the Colombian jungle "like a light" to comfort her during captivity.

  • A Palestinian man walks in the old city of Hebron on the first day of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan. Muslims around the world this week begin the fasting and feasting month of Ramadan amid hopes of violence easing in some of the Islamic world's conflict hotspots but hit hard by rising food prices.(AFP/Hazem Bader)
    Fasting not fighting as Muslims mark Ramadan AFP - Mon Sep 1, 1:20 PM ET

    CAIRO (AFP) - Muslims around the world this week begin the fasting and feasting month of Ramadan amid hopes of violence easing in some of the Islamic world's conflict hotspots but hit hard by rising food prices.

  • Conchita Enad, 47, looks on as her children play in front of their shanty house in the Tondo neighbourhood of Manila, on August 28. In a country where three babies are born each minute and the Catholic Church exerts heavy influence, the long battle for a family planning programme could finally be reaching its climax.(AFP/File/Jes Aznar)
    Philippines' first family planning programme faces church hurdles AFP - Sun Aug 31, 12:30 AM ET

    MANILA (AFP) - In a country where three babies are born each minute and the Catholic Church exerts heavy influence, the long battle for a family planning programme could finally be reaching its climax.

  • Ali attends Chicago memorial for longtime manager AP - Sat Aug 30, 10:54 PM ET

    CHICAGO - Muhammad Ali and Nation of Islam Minister Louis Farrakhan were among those paying respects Saturday to Ali's former manager and the son of a former minister of the Nation of Islam.

  • Polygamous church sues to reverse court judgment AP - Fri Aug 29, 10:39 PM ET

    SALT LAKE CITY - Attorneys for a polygamous church sued a court-appointed accountant on Friday, seeking to reverse an $8.8 million judgment against its $110 million property trust.

  • Mourners pay respects to late Ohio congresswoman AP - Fri Aug 29, 1:55 PM ET

    CLEVELAND - Hundreds of mourners filed into a church Friday to pay their respects to the late U.S. Rep. Stephanie Tubbs Jones, the first black woman to represent Ohio in Congress.

  • School children attend a prayer meeting to pay tributes to the victims of the recent clashes between Hindus and Christians in Orissa, in the northern Indian city of Shimla, August 29, 2008. (Anil Dayal/Reuters)
    Thousands seek refuge from India religious attacks Reuters - Fri Aug 29, 7:48 AM ET

    BHUBANESWAR, India (Reuters) - Thousands of people, most of them Christians, have sought shelter in makeshift government camps in eastern India, driven from their homes by religious violence which has killed at least 13 people this week.

  • In this photo taken May 24, 2008 a view of a green frog nailed to a cross outside an office, during a protest inside the 'Museion' museum in Bolzano , northern Italy.   Museum officials said Thursday Aug. 28, 2008 the sculpture that has angered Pope Benedict XVI and local officials will continue to be on display. The board of the foundation of the 'Museion', voted to keep the work by the late German artist Martin Kippenberger, the museum said in a statement. Earlier in August the pope had written a letter to Franz Pahl, the president of the Trentino-Alto Adige region that includes Bolzano, denouncing the sculpture. '(It) has offended the religious feelings of many people who consider the cross a symbol of God's love and of our redemption,'  (AP Photo/Othmar Seehauser)
    Italy museum defies pope anger over crucified frog AP - Thu Aug 28, 4:39 PM ET

    ROME - An art museum in northern Italy said Thursday it will continue displaying a sculpture portraying a green frog nailed to a cross that has angered Pope Benedict XVI and local officials.

  • After 1,500 years, pagans plan Acropolis prayer AP - Thu Aug 28, 3:18 PM ET

    ATHENS, Greece - A small group of pagans pledged Thursday to hold a protest prayer among the ruined Acropolis temples, more than 1,500 years after Christians stamped out worship of the ancient Greek gods.

  • House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., asks for nomination by acclamation for Democratic vice presidential candidate Sen. Joe Biden, D-Del., at the Democratic National Convention in Denver, Wednesday, Aug. 27, 2008. (AP Photo/Ron Edmonds)
    Pelosi gets unwanted lesson in Catholic theology AP - Thu Aug 28, 3:12 AM ET

    Politics can be treacherous. But House Speaker Nancy Pelosi walked on even riskier ground in a recent TV interview when she attempted a theological defense of her support for abortion rights.

  • Man convicted for child cruely in Muslim ceremony AP - Wed Aug 27, 8:02 PM ET

    LONDON - A man accused of involving two teenage boys in self-flagellation as part of a Muslim religious ritual was convicted of child cruelty Wednesday.

  • Southern Baptists lead get-out-the-vote prayer AP - Tue Aug 26, 3:26 PM ET

    Southern Baptists are organizing a nationwide prayer campaign to accompany their values-voter registration drive, seeking spiritual renewal for families and churches, and God's favor for public officials who are guided by the Bible.

  • Catholic bishops correct Pelosi on abortion AP - Mon Aug 25, 11:41 PM ET

    DENVER - Two prominent Roman Catholic archbishops say House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, a Catholic Democrat, misstated church teachings about abortion in a recent television appearance, the latest sign that the U.S. Catholic hierarchy will not stay silent about politics this election year.

  • British Muslims Ruhal Ahmed (L) and Shafiq Rasul (R), who are former detainees of Guantanamo Bay US detention camp speak to reporters during a press conference in Tokyo in 2007. Four Britons released from Guantanamo in 2004 after two years' detention, requested the US Supreme Court to rule on the right of prisoners "to worship and ... not to be tortured."(AFP/File/Yoshikazu Tsuno)
    Ex-Guantanamo detainees appeal to US Supreme Court AFP - Mon Aug 25, 5:52 PM ET

    WASHINGTON (AFP) - Four Britons released from Guantanamo in 2004 after two years' detention, requested the US Supreme Court to rule on the right of prisoners "to worship and ... not to be tortured."

  • Participants applaud speakers in the Faith in Action Interfaith Gathering at the Wells Fargo Theater in the Colorado convention Center in Denver on Sunday Aug. 24, 2008. (AP Photo/Bill Ross)
    Democrats open faith-filled convention with prayer AP - Sun Aug 24, 10:48 PM ET

    DENVER - At the first official event Sunday of the Democratic National Convention, a choir belted out a gospel song and was followed by a rabbi reciting a Torah reading about forgiveness and the future.

  • New York Fire Department employees Rick Snyder, left, and Christine Lee share a hug after the ceremony of the cross made of steel from the north tower of the Word Trade Center at the Shanksville Volunteer Fire Co  in Shanksville, Pa. Sunday, Aug. 24, 2008. (AP Photo/Keith Srakocic)
    Steel cross installed near Flight 93 site in Pa. AP - Sun Aug 24, 7:00 PM ET

    SHANKSVILLE, Pa. - As hundreds of firefighters bowed their heads in prayer, a cross made out of steel from the World Trade Center was dedicated Sunday near where United Airlines Flight 93 crashed into the ground on Sept. 11.

  • Egyptian Maher Ahmed who was born a Muslim and converted to Christianity walks in downtown Cairo on August 7, 2008. Thirty years after converting from Islam to Christianity Maher is now seeking to formalise his conversion in the Egyptian courts. In Egypt converting to Christianity, while not illegal, is practically impossible.(AFP/File/Str)
    An Egyptian Muslim's long journey towards Christianity AFP - Sun Aug 24, 3:01 PM ET

    CAIRO (AFP) - Maher al-Gohari converted to Christianity 30 years ago, but the Muslim-born Egyptian only recently took the decision to make his conversion public.

  • An unidentified Nepalese sherpa poses on August 20, 2008 as he works as a waiter in a bar of the mountainous region of Tirol. Thirty Nepalese sherpas work in Austrian mountain huts over the summer to earn some money and learn Western-style lodge management.(AFP/File/Ho)
    Nepalese sherpas bring a little Asian flair to Austrian Alps AFP - Sun Aug 24, 2:53 PM ET

    LIENZ, Austria, Aug 24, 2008 (AFP) - A young and pretty Asian girl with a big smile and long black hair bows with her hands in prayer, the Nepalese way, as she says hello: welcome to the Austrian Alps.

  • Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., left, jogs up the steps as Pastor John Kerr waits at the entrance of the First Lutheran Church before attending a service in Eau Claire, Wis., Sunday, Aug. 24, 2008.(AP Photo/Alex Brandon)z
    Obama practices humility preached to him AP - Sun Aug 24, 4:09 PM ET

    EAU CLAIRE, Wis. - Barack Obama took a sermon on humility to heart Sunday, predicting his presidential acceptance speech might not be the best at this week's Democratic convention despite his famous oratory skills.

  • Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., listens as vice presidential running mate Sen. Joe Biden, D-Del., speaks at a rally in front of the Old State Capitol in Springfield, Ill., Saturday, Aug. 23, 2008.(AP Photo/Alex Brandon)
    Biden's Catholic faith offers risks, rewards AP - Sun Aug 24, 12:43 PM ET

    DENVER - When Joe Biden underwent brain surgery for a life-threatening aneurysm in 1988, he asked doctors whether he could tuck his rosary beads under his pillow. The six-term Democratic senator from Delaware also has offered to shove his rosary down the throat of the next Republican who tells him he isn't religious.

  • Sen. Evan Bayh, D-Ind., leaves his home in Washington, Friday, Aug. 22, 2008. The Indiana senator is thought to be considered as a possible vice president choice for Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill.    (AP Photo/Kevin Wolf)
    Today on the presidential campaign trail AP - Fri Aug 22, 3:54 PM ET

    Obama prepares to name vice presidential running mate ... Young evangelical accepts, then declines, invitation to say prayer at Democratic convention

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