A
Test of Faith School Religion
Exam | A.D. 2000 AUSTRALIA
- Since
1998, the Sydney Catholic Education Office has been running a religious education
test for Grade Six students in the archdiocese. In June 2002, over 5,000
sat for the test, including, for the first time, children from five Armidale
Diocese schools. The test covers the areas of beliefs and symbols, decision-making,
Mass and the Eucharist, sacraments, saints, Church, prayer, liturgy and Scripture.
Michael Gilchrist of A.D. 2000 has
more...>LISTEN |
 | Driving Force The Church and Poverty | THE SOUTHERN CROSS
SOUTH AFRICA -
Addressing
a Christian business forum at St Joseph's church in Durban, Archbishop Emeritus
Denis Hurley challenged businessmen to tackle the issue of economic inequality.
Is it possible to contemplate a huge effort throughout
the church to solve the devastating problem of poverty?
Gunther Simmermacher of The Southern Cross has more...>LISTEN | |
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 | | | Outreach to Hispanics Welcome the immigrant | OUR SUNDAY VISITOR USA
- When she lived in New York,
in the 1980s, parish volunteer Teresa Aldahondo lobbied
for a Spanish-language weekend Mass for the Hispanic
immigrants arriving from the Caribbean. The time slot
her pastor allotted for the Spanish Mass was at 2
p.m. on Saturdays - in the basement of the church,
recalled the Puerto Rican-born woman.
In 1987,
Aldahondo moved to Raleigh, N.C., where she started
volunteering with Hispanic ministry in the early 1990s.
Just a decade ago, the Spanish-speaking population
in North Carolina almost entirely comprised Mexican
farm workers who spent their summers around Raleigh,
Durham, and Chapel Hill.
Gerald Korson, editor of Our Sunday Visitor...>LISTEN
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|  | War with Iraq Must Catholics Be Opposed? | THE CATHOLIC HERALD
UK -
As war in Iraq -- despite current manoeuvrings by the
French and German governments to impede the forward momentum of Anglo-American
policy -- seems to become ever more inevitable, how are we to perceive the
moral issues involved?
For Catholics, it might now seem, the issues
have been made clear beyond any doubt, by the virtually unanimous consensus
of the world's bishops. In the words of the bishops of South Africa, "to
wage war at this stage is immoral and illegal, and therefore must be excluded.
The fight against terrorism cannot be achieved through a war that will inevitably
kill hundreds of thousands of innocent people."
Simon Caldwell of The Catholic
Herald has more......>LISTEN |
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