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Weblog Friday Update: New Catholic Archbishop of Warsaw Said to Be Communist Collaborator Plus: Religion in the new Congress, and other stories from online sources around the world. Compiled by Ted Olsen
January 5, 2007
Slow news day. Links only today. Congress | Politics | Romney and Mormonism | Australia | U.K. | Life ethics | Sex and marriage | Abuse | Crime | Money and business | Theology and ethics | Church life | Catholicism | Education | Books and history | These kids today | Other stories of interest Congress: - On Capitol Hill, mixing faith and politics | How much of a role will religion play in the new Congress? In a special live broadcast from Capitol Hill, congressmen talk about how their religion factors into their thinking and voting (Talk of the Nation, NPR)
- New majority's choice: should GOP policies be reversed? | As they take control of Congress, Democrats are divided on how much energy to spend trying to undo tax cuts, deregulation and abortion restrictions (The New York Times)
- Jefferson's Koran used in ceremony | Rep. Peter Hoekstra, Michigan Republican, said, "It was much ado about nothing. All 435 members just took the oath, en masse, without anyone putting their hand on any book. (The Washington Times)
- Also: Ellison uses Thomas Jefferson's Quran | And now he wants to talk about something else (Associated Press)
- Lawmakers take swearing-in oath twice | Religious texts were used for the re-enactments, but not for the group swearing-ins (Associated Press)
- Sen. Boxer pulls award to Muslim leader | "We made a bad mistake not researching" the Council on American-Islamic Relations, she said (Associated Press)
- 'What happened to
religious tolerance?' | Rep. Mazie Hirono was raised in the Buddhist tradition but doesn't actively practice the religion (The Honolulu Advertiser)
Back to index Politics: - Ford and faith | Though "quiet and off the record," religious beliefs shaped the former president (Edward E. Plowman, World)
- The Sunday alcohol sales debate: Laws stand on secular grounds | Despite the strongly religious origin of these laws, beginning before the eighteenth century, nonreligious arguments for Sunday closing began to be heard more distinctly and the statutes began to lose some of their totally religious flavor (The Atlanta Journal-Constitution)
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