pewforum.org Religion News on the Web

Religion News on the Web

Selected religion-related news from around the Web
Toronto Star: Call it a conspiracy, but Vatican leaks show power struggle in Holy See
Call it Conspiracy City. Call it Scandal City. Call it Leak City. These days this holy city has been in the news for anything but holy reasons.
The Times: Christianity on the rack as judge bans public prayer
The right of Christian worship in schools and Parliament faces a fresh assault after a High Court judge banned prayers at council meetings.
The Guardian: Church of England reaches compromise on women bishops
The archbishops of Canterbury and York has avoided humiliation in the Church of England's law-making body, the General Synod, by putting off a split over the ordination of women bishops.
Scotsman: ‘Dangerous’ radical Muslim cleric Abu Qatada to be freed within days
A RADICAL Muslim cleric, once described as “Osama bin Laden’s right-hand man in Europe” by a Spanish judge, is to be released on bail in a ruling which has infuriated the Home Office.
AFP: Victims’ groups slam Vatican sex abuse conference as window dressing
Pope Benedict XVI on Monday urged “profound renewal” of the Roman Catholic Church to prevent child abuse, as the Vatican held its first-ever summit on the issue despite protests by victims.
Independent: Prominent Tory disowns 'religious right' and supports gay marriage
A prominent Conservative has broken ranks with his allies on the "religious right" by declaring his support for the Government's controversial plans to legalise gay marriage.
Irish Times: Archbishop says pope has been invited but timing may not be right
POPE BENEDICT would visit Ireland “soon rather than later” and was “actively considering” an invitation to this summer’s Eucharistic Congress, Archbishop of Dublin Diarmuid Martin has said.
Irish Times: Court upholds Scientology fraud ruling in France
A FRENCH appeals court has upheld fraud charges and a €600,000 fine against the Church of Scientology for cajoling followers into paying large sums for bogus personality tests and cures.
AP: Islamists defend Arab democracy, stress inclusion
Newly empowered Islamist leaders stood up for Arab democracy Friday, saying extremists need to be brought into the fold and chiding the West for objectifying women and income inequalities.
AP: Dutch move closer to banning the burqa
The Dutch Cabinet moved a step closer Friday to banning the burqa, making good on an election promise that is largely symbolic but has broad public support.
Guardian: Alain de Botton reveals plans for 'temple to atheism' in heart of London
Plans to build a £1m "temple for atheists" among the international banks and medieval church spires of the City of London have sparked a clash between two of Britain's most prominent non-believers.
Irish Times: Dean criticises Catholic Church's 'lack of ecumenism'
The demoralised state of the Catholic Church in Ireland “may have something to do with its lack of ecumenism”, the Very Rev Robert MacCarthy (71), Dean of St Patrick’s Cathedral in Dublin, has said.
NYT: Genocide bill angers Turks as it passes in France
Relations between France and Turkey dipped to a nadir as the French Senate approved a bill late Monday criminalizing the denial of officially recognized genocides, including the Armenian genocide begun in 1915.
Independent: Tory MPs go to war over gay marriage
Conservative MPs are trying to sabotage David Cameron's plan to legalise gay marriage, threatening a rebellion bigger than the one in which 81 voted against the Government on Europe.
The Times: Dealing with the rising tide of Muslims in our prisons
As Muslim adviser to the Prison Service, Ahtsham Ali has one of the most sensitive jobs in the penal system.
AP: The price of communism: Czech churches to get $6.6 billion in compensation
Churches were seized, priests jailed or even executed and those allowed to lead religious services did so under the watchful eye of the secret police
AP: Czech gov't to pay back religious groups
Churches were seized, priests jailed or even executed and those allowed to lead religious services did so under the watchful eye of the secret police.
NYT: Head of Russian church says leaders must listen to protests
The Russian Orthodox Church continued what appeared to be an effort to get the authorities to address Russians’ grievances over the political system, with Patriarch Kirill I, the church’s leader, saying in a televised interview that it would be “a very bad sign” if the country’s leaders failed to heed recent protests over perceived electoral fraud.
Irish Times: Catholic majority in Northern Ireland to present dilemma for Britain and Republic
The British and Irish governments and the people of Northern Ireland are facing the prospect – and sooner than most people might think – of how to manage a transformed constitutional situation where the majority in the North are likely to be from a Catholic background.
AP: Pope Benedict XVI: ‘Young people’ need to be ‘builders of peace’
Pope Benedict XVI in his New Year’s homily Sunday praised young people as key to securing a future of hope despite what he called “shadows on the horizon of today’s world.”
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