Posts in News
FaithTech Uses The IT Crowd For Spiritual Help, Not Just Technical

FaithTech is tapping into an underutilized population, people of faith who work in the tech industry, bringing those people together to brainstorm tech projects to help ministries and charities. One, for example, involved buying out website domains like “howtokillyourself.org” and redirecting them to support networks — and there are dozens more.

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Veterans Day: How Crosses And Mementos Help These Marines Remember Fallen Soldiers

(ANALYSIS) On Veterans Day, people across America thank veterans and active-duty military personnel for their service. But many members of the public don’t have a clear understanding of what service means to people in the military. How do they honor their own? What kind of spaces and activities help them reflect and remember?

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YouVersion Bible App Becomes First Faith-Based App To Hit 500 Million Installations

Bible app YouVersion has been installed 500 million times worldwide, marking a milestone in the app’s development. The app contains over 2,600 Bible versions including translations in 1,760 languages, and its users read or listened to about 64 billion chapters of the Bible this year.

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Video: Plague, Fire and Flood: This Bronx Church Triumphs Over Them All

During the coronavirus pandemic, the Promised Land Covenant Church in the Bronx lost 13 members to COVID-19 in six weeks, lost their building to a fire, and then months later, lost their new space to Hurricane Ida. Still, the church continues streaming worship online from temporary spaces and delivering food and resources in its community.

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In Crimea, Jehovah's Witnesses Jailed For 'Extremism,' Sent To Russian Labor Camps

A Crimean court jailed 49-year-old Jehovah's Witness Igor Schmidt for six years on extremism-related charges, to be followed by six years of restrictions, although the prosecution presented no victims of any wrongdoing in court. Schmidt is the fourth Crimean Jehovah's Witness handed a long jail term. At least 12 more face criminal cases.

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Japanese Temples Are Holding Funerals For Unwanted Dolls

Disposing of unwanted dolls and toys in Japan is not so easy. Throughout the year temples across Japan hold a “ningyo kuyo” (人形供養), a funeral ritual for unwanted dolls, especially traditional dolls. Held in both Buddhist and Shinto temples alike, the ceremony is a spiritual send-off to thank dolls for their service and properly put them to rest.

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Missionaries To Amazon Unwelcome By Indigenous People And Prohibited By Law

The vast Amazon basin has long drawn missionaries seeking to reach people who haven’t yet heard the gospel of Christ. But now, missionaries working with New Tribes Mission Brazil and other groups are facing a formidable foe: Indigenous groups backed by laws that protect small isolated tribes from both pandemics and proselytizing.

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‘Bible In A Year’ Among Apple’s Top Podcasts, Spanish Version Due Out Next Year

Mike Schmitz has become an unlikely podcast star. He isn’t only a Catholic priest, but Schmitz’s chart-topping daily podcast has become a huge hit since debuting on New Year’s Day. In January, the podcast debuted at No. 1 on Apple iTunes in all categories and over the past 10 months has become the greatest Catholic podcast ever.

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Kenya Bans Gay-Themed Movie, Sparking Debate On LGBTQ Rights

The Kenya Film Classification Board recently banned the documentary film “I am Samuel” about a religious gay man’s struggle for acceptance from his family and country, sparking debate on the rights of the LGBTQ community as well as interpretations of the Bible on same-sex relationships.

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South African Churches Pray Against COVID-19 At Election Day Polls

As millions of South Africans visited the polls this week, the South African Council of Churches prayed that the local municipal elections would not trigger more spread of COVID-19. The nation has been one of the world’s hardest hit during the pandemic in terms of coronavirus infections and death rate, with 2.92 million cases and 89,179 deaths.

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Women Rabbis In France Carve Their Own Path

During the pandemic this summer, 29-year-old Iris Ferreira became the first female rabbi ordained in France in the Reform tradition. A growing number of Jewish women in France are seeking to reform long-standing Jewish traditions, often going against the dominant Orthodox majority.

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Biden Says Pope Francis Called Him A ‘Good Catholic’ As Vatican Declines To Comment

President Joe Biden said Pope Francis told him on Friday that he’s “a good Catholic” who should continue to receive Holy Communion. The comments widen the rift between the pope and a group of U.S. bishops because of the president’s support for abortion rights. The Vatican declined to comment on the veracity of Biden’s statement.

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Video: A Dalit Family Shares The Discrimination, Violence It Faces In India

Jawahar Singh is one of the more than 160 million people in India once considered “untouchables” due to the caste hierarchy in Hinduism. In this episode of “The Dinner Table” produced by Newsreel Asia in partnership with ReligionUnplugged, the Jatavs explain the layers of discrimination from upper caste Hindus that exist in their village.

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New Study Finds Values Gap Between Gen Z And Religious Institutions

A new study shows that young Americans increasingly distanced themselves from religious institutions like churches, mosques and synagogues in 2020 — which they feel don’t care about social justice issues important to them. Instead, they found spirituality in practices like tarot card readings while sharing fears and musings in online spaces.

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Samaritans Number Less Than 1,000. Here's How Their Tradition Survives In Israel

(ANALYSIS) This week, Samaritans are celebrating Sukkot — one month after Jews. The ranks of the once mighty Samaritan people reached 3 million in biblical times but were reduced by persecution and apostasy to 146 by 1918. Today they number 814: Half live on a mountaintop in the West Bank, and half live along coastal plains in Israel.

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Catholicism Grows In Africa And Asia, Plummets In Europe, Report Says

The number of Roman Catholics across Africa and Asia continues to grow, according to a new report, while it has dropped in Europe. The Vatican report serves as a statistical snapshot of the church’s global population and institutions, comparing 2019 — the last year for which data is available — with the previous year.

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