Day of prayer to broadcast from around the world

Published in Announcements on May 25, 2009
The Global Day of Prayer is celebrated by millions of Christians every year on Pentecost Sunday. This year, GOD TV will broadcast the marathon events from locations around the world.
Hosted by GOD TV founders Rory & Wendy Alec in the network’s studio in the US capital, the three-part programme will air on GOD EUROPE on Sunday 31 May with live satellite crossings to Hong Kong at 8.00 BST and Abidjan in the Ivory Coast live at 16.00. The day’s coverage concludes at 22.00 with a final programme from the city of Bela Horizonte in Brazil, recorded earlier in the day.
Click here to read the entire story on the Christian Today Web site.

43rd World Communications Day

Published in Announcements on May 24, 2009

On May 24, 2009, we invite everyone to reflect upon the gifts and challenges inherent in new technologies and relationships as Roman Catholics celebrate the 43rd World Communications Day. As our world becomes increasingly connected, we realize the ministry of spiritual direction receives gifts and challenges through technology and new relationships fostered by technology. This is important in our own story, in the lives of those we companion, for communities, and everyone on the margins.

The 2009 theme for the 43rd World Communications Day provides valuable reflection and challenge: "New Technologies, New Relationships. Promoting a Culture of Respect, Dialogue and Friendship." Pope Benedict XVI writes:

World Communications Day, I would like to address to you some reflections on the theme chosen for this year—New Technologies, New Relationships: Promoting a culture of Respect, Dialogue and Friendship. The new digital technologies are, indeed, bringing about fundamental shifts in patterns of communication and human relationships. These changes are particularly evident among those young people who have grown up with the new technologies and are at home in a digital world that often seems quite foreign to those of us who, as adults, have had to learn to understand and appreciate the opportunities it has to offer for communications. In this year’s message, I am conscious of those who constitute the so-called digital generation and I would like to share with them, in particular, some ideas concerning the extraordinary potential of the new technologies, if they are used to promote human understanding and solidarity. These technologies are truly a gift to humanity and we must endeavour to ensure that the benefits they offer are put at the service of all human individuals and communities, especially those who are most disadvantaged and vulnerable.

 


The spiritual value of food

Published in Announcements on May 12, 2009

Growing numbers of Jews are choosing to express their spiritual values through culinary consciousness, according to an article by Mary MacVean and Duke Helfand in the Los Angeles Times.

The movement has become so popular in recent years that synagogues increasingly are forging relationships with farmers, farm education programs are starting up and Jewish "sustainability" conferences are attracting sold-out crowds. At a three-day gathering in Northern California in December, volunteers even learned how to kill, pluck, salt and rinse their own turkeys.

"Food is the most intimate relationship we have to the nonhuman world," said Zelig Golden, a San Francisco lawyer who co-chaired that gathering. It was the third food conference sponsored by Hazon, a New York-based environmental organization that in 2004 branched out into food issues. It has since become the primary force behind many programs in the sustainability movement—an effort to use natural resources responsibly to avoid depleting them.
To read the entire article, click here.

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