New document offers ways to foster Catholic-Methodist relationships
Feb 21, 2021 catholic news service
Bishop David P. Talley of Memphis, Tenn., is seen in this 2019 file photo. He co-chaired the eighth round of the dialogue between the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops and the United Methodist Church. (Credit: Rick Musacchio/Tennessee Register via CNS.)
A two-part publication emerging from the most recent round of dialogue between representatives of the U.S. Catholic bishops and the United Methodist Church offers practical helps and words of inspiration for day-to-day lives.
CLEVELAND A two-part publication emerging from the most recent round of dialogue between representatives of the U.S. Catholic bishops and the United Methodist Church offers practical helps and words of inspiration for day-to-day lives.
New document offers ways to foster Catholic-Methodist relationships ucanews.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from ucanews.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Kim Griffin
By Kim Griffin • Posted December 16, 2020
Pro-lifers are often accused of being “pro-birth” only. The charge is once a mother does choose life she is left to struggle with poverty, single motherhood and an unforgiving world alone. The support of the church isn’t there for her or her baby.
However, a new initiative started by the U.S. Catholic bishops called “Walking with Moms in Need: A Year of Service” challenges this cynical argument.
The inspiration behind the year of service came from St. John Paul II’s encyclical “Evangelium Vitae” (“The Gospel of Life”) in which he condemns abortion and euthanasia, the major attacks on human life at its beginning and end.
Dec 15, 2020 catholic news service
Paul Jarzembowski, an assistant director in the U.S. bishops Secretariat of Laity, Marriage, Family Life and Youth, is pictured in Rome in this 2017 photo. Jarzembowski is the secretariat s assistant director of youth and young adult ministries and lay ecclesial ministry. (Credit: Junno Arocho Esteves/CNS.)
There was a recurring theme during a Dec. 7-11 young adult ministry conference: Zoom encounters were adequate in the early months of the COVID-19 pandemic, but they quickly became a poor substitute for in-person ministry and worship.
WASHINGTON, D.C. There was a recurring theme during a Dec. 7-11 young adult ministry conference: Zoom encounters were adequate in the early months of the COVID-19 pandemic, but they quickly became a poor substitute for in-person ministry and worship.