Monday, October 10, 2022

RNS Morning Report: 3 Jewish women file suit against Kentucky abortion bans

RNS Morning Report

Top Stories

3 Jewish women file suit against Kentucky abortion bans on religious grounds

(RNS) — It's the third such suit brought by Jewish organizations or individuals since the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, claiming the state is imposing a Christian understanding of when life begins.
 

New poll finds 4 in 10 non-Catholic Latinos were once Catholic and left

(RNS) — Some were raised Protestant, but increasingly many are raised nonreligious, according to one scholar.
 

Are the culture wars changing how Christian students choose colleges?

(RNS) — 'You see it’s a Christian college, and then immediately ask, what kind of Christian college is it?' said one student.
 

Pope Francis to make ‘father of migrants’ a saint

(RNS) — Giovanni Battista Scalabrini's canonization is a reminder to Catholic leaders of the pontiff's focus on the plight of immigrants.
 

Photos of the Week: Durga Puja, Sukkot preparations

(RNS) — This week’s photo gallery includes Durga Puja and other Hindu festivals, Sukkot preparations and more.

RNS Opinion

Do it today

An obscure quote in an old Polish synagogue sent me on the search for the meaning of life.
 

The Herschel Walker case belies the case for religion in politics

(RNS) — At least when it comes to white evangelicals.
 

My evangelical Sukkot saviors

(RNS) — Every year as the Jewish holiday comes around, I remember Anthony.
 

Making monkeypox the new leprosy repeats our past public health mistakes

(RNS) — Leprosy has a long history of being used to disenfranchise already socially marginalized populations.
 

The greatest contemporary teacher of Judaism is a van driver in Israel

An unbelievable story that shook me and shaped me. The ultimate travel story to Israel.

ICYMI

LDS elder — a former college president — may have plagiarized General Conference talk

(RNS) — Elder David Bednar, a former BYU-Idaho president, failed to tell listeners he was using material from an obscure religious teacher and other sources in his address.
 

Tribes ask US Supreme Court to hear case over destruction of sacred land in Oregon

(RNS) — The sacred site at issue is known as Ana Kwna Nchi Nchi Patat (the ‘Place of Big Big Trees’), an acre of land that consisted of a burial ground, campground, old-growth trees and an ancient stone altar.

In Other News

Talk to Us
We want your feedback on the RNS Morning Report — what you think we're doing right and what we should be doing differently. Send us an email at Comments@ReligionNews.com

Subscribe to other RNS Newsletters.
Forward this email to a friend.
View the archive of past newsletters.
Religion News Service is free to read, but it's not free to produce. If you value our reporting, please consider making a donation today at religionnews.com/donate. If you prefer to mail a donation, please address to: Religion News Foundation, PO Box 1808, Columbia, MO 65205.

Yes, I support the work you're doing!
Forward this email to a friend
color-twitter-48.png color-facebook-48.png color-instagram-48.png color-youtube-48.png color-linkedin-48.png

No comments:

Post a Comment