Women of Faith is just days away

Someone always asks me a question that’s easy to answer about this time of year: Why are all these women — thousands — crowding into the Ford Center?

It’s because Women of Faith 2009 is here … just days away, in fact.sandipatty

With the theme “A Grand New Day,” the conference will be Friday and Saturday at the Ford Center, 100 W Reno.

Judging from years past, there will indeed be thousands of women flocking to downtown Oklahoma City come Friday.

Women of Faith’s core presenters include Oklahoma native and contemporary Christian recording artist Sandi Patty (at right), Marilyn Meburg, Sheila Walsh, Patsy Clairmont and Luci Swindoll. Lisa Whelchel (pictured below), star of NBC TV’s’1970’s-80’s sitcom “The Facts of Life,” will be one of the guest presenters.

lisawhelchel2Women from all over Oklahoma and some other states in the region are expected to attend the two-day conference.

See you there …

Carla Hinton

Religion Editor  


Tweeting nuns on the road

TULSA — The “Flying Nun” of TV yesteryear was make-believe.sisterchristine

Here come the real-life tweeting nuns of today.

Calling it “Chris and Barb’s excellent adventure,” two Benedictine sisters with St. Joseph’s Monastery in Tulsa joined Twitter this week to tweet about their experiences on a recent road trip.

Sister Christine Ereiser, the monastery’s prioress, said she and Sister Barbara Austin, left Tulsa earlier this week headed for Chicago, Ill., where the pair plan to attend an annual meeting of Benedictine women from throughout the U.S. and Mexico.

Ereiser said they chose to travel on old Route 66 and wanted to stay in touch with Ereiser’s 87-year-old mother who lives in Tulsa.

Ereiser said she decided to try Twitter as a way to keep Mom informed and also several friends and the St. Joseph’s community.

Speaking by phone Thursday night after arriving just outside Chicago, Ereiser said she enjoyed sending tweets as part of the Twitter social network. The trip through the old towns on the old highway was “meditative,” she said.

“It’s rejuvenating to travel at a slower pace.”

Ereiser, who sends tweets as ChristineOSB, said she had to think a little about what details would be off interest to family and friends following her tweets.

She’s had some return tweets.

“Some people weren’t aware of some attractions that I’ve mentioned. Some people were giving advice to us to get off (the highway) in different places”

Will she continue tweeting now that she’s found Twitter?

Possibly, but probably not on a daily basis, Ereiser said.

“I think it’s important to have something to say.”    

(ABOVE PHOTO BY JIM BECKEL, THE OKLAHOMAN: Sister Christine Ereiser, prioress of St. Joseph Monastery in Tulsa, poses for this 2007 photo at the monastery.) 

 

Carla Hinton

Religion Editor


Roe v. Wade anniversary

abortionpic1.jpgA final reflection today is really not so final after all.

Today, thousands across the country marked the 36th anniversary of Roe v. Wade,  the Supreme Court decision to legalize abortion in America.

The anniversary, coming as it did on the week of the presidential inauguration of a pro-choice president, has produced a groundswell of protests, vigils and other activities designed to promote the sanctity of human life.

Here’s just a few examples of the types of activities that are now under way or beign planned:

– Pro-life advocates in about 118 cities across 41 states, plus four Canadian provinces and Austrailia, are preparing for simultaneous 40 Days for Life campaigns from Feb. 25 through April 5. The campaign will consist of prayer and fasting for an end to abortion, 40 days of constant, peaceful vigil outside abortion centers and Planned Parenthood offices and 40 days of pro-life community outreach. Incidentally, those dates coincide with the Christian season of Lent, a fact noted in a recent news release.

“Lent is a season of prayer, fasting, repentance and renewal,” Shawn Carney, spring campaign director said. “It’s a perfect match.”

– As part of the Birmingham Letter Project in Washington, D.C., a prayer vigil at Planned Parenthood was held on Wednesday, along with a March to the White House and the Supreme Court. Today a March for Life was held and Friday, the Rev. Alveda King, niece of slain civil rights leader, the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., will lead a prayer and memorial service in which 1,400 flowers will be laid in front of the White House to honor the 1,400 black children that die every day from abortion. On Saturday, as part of the project (named after MLK’s famous “Letter from a Birmingham Jail” and coordinated by the Christian Defense Coalition) activists plan to leave pro-life messages and artwork on Pennsylvania Avenue in front of the White House.

– Members of the Silent No More Awareness Campaign planned to give their personal abortion testimonies at the Washington, D.C. March for Life and at San Francisco’s Walk for Life West Coast on Saturday. Janet Morana, the group’s co-founder, said men and women who have suffered years of torment because of abortion will stand in front of the Supreme Court and on the streets of San Francisco to “proclaim that the time for healing has begun. To be pro-life is to be pro-woman.”

– Prolife Witness and Pro-Life Unity have joined forces to introduce Organized for Life, a new initiative aimed at taking the abortion and pro-life issues battle beyond the streets and clinics and into the homes of American families. The initiative will include outreach to discuss the abortion issue person to person, door to door, block by block and city by city.

(AP PHOTO: With one woman holding a large picture of the Virgin Mary, a group of about 200 pro-life supporters march on the grounds at the state Capitol in Hartford, Conn., today on the 36th anniversary of the controversial Roe v. Wade U.S Supreme Court decision on abortion.)

Carla Hinton

Religion Editor 

    


Sign me “Tickled Pink”

tickledpink1.jpgWith October designated as Breast Cancer Awareness Month, there are any number of activities, products and specialty items featured with the breast cancer awareness color of pink.

Now comes the “Tickled Pink: Prayer Devotion (Group Publishing, $7.99),” designed as a personal way for women to connect with God and refresh their heart and mind.

“Tickled Pink” comes in a small box that includes several items: a spinning top, a fan, feather, mini-umbrella and a piece of clay.

I talked to Amy Nappa, senior women’s editor at Group Publishing which created the prayer devotion. She said each item serves to inspire women in various circumstances.

For example, the pink clay calls women to meditate and create art of their own that reflects how God is forming and shaping them.

Nappa said “Tickled Pink” was created after the success of a similar product, “Chocolate Prayer Devotion.”

She said “Tickled Pink” is “the perfect inspiration for women who need to reflect and be uplifted by spending quiet time alone with God or in prayer.

“What’s unique about ‘Tickled Pink’ is that we created it specifically in recognition of women affected by breast cancer — everything inside the box is pink!”

In a news release, Joani Schultz, author, speaker and CCO at Group Publishing, said the prayer devotion is for all women, not just breast cancer survivors, who need to take a moment of pause.

She called it a “mini-retreat.”

Carla  Hinton

Religion Editor