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 25-05-2012 10:34 A recent fatwa issued by a Wahhabi mufti calls for destruction of all churches in the Arabian Peninsula. He issued the fatwa in late March 2012 in response to a Kuwaiti lawmaker who asked if Kuwait could ban church construction in Kuwait. The fatwa paves the way for adding an article to the new Kuwaiti constitution that forbids building of new churches. Ahl al-Bait assembly condemns the fatwa saying that it is contrary to both Shia and Sunni traditions, and has no precedence in Islamic jurisprudential schools. The assembly also slams the "deadly silence" of Muslim scholars in the face of such fatwa that distort the image of Islam. It also criticizes international human right organizations as well as Western and Christian governments for their support of Saudi regime and Wahhabi doctrine. The chairman of a group of European Catholic Bishops slams the Saudi Mufti by saying that his fatwa "shows no respect for the religious freedom and free co-existence of religions". This week's Islam and Life asks: What is the view of Islam on building Christian churches in Muslim lands? Watch this video on our Website: Follow our Facebook on: Follow our Twitter on:
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What is view of Islam on building Christian churches in Muslim lands?-Islam and Life-05-24-2012 - Video
 
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 25-05-2012 12:48 Professional grade personal 2-way radios are now available for church, construction, hospital, manufacturing, retail and school users with prices starting at under $150. This new generation of micro-sized communicators are available in both VHF and UHF versions. One model even offers a long range headset or speaker-microphone option with a range of up to 30 feet away from the radio !
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On-Site Personal 2-Way Radios - Video
 
    PASCAGOULA, Mississippi -- According to building permits that    have been issued from January 2011 through this month from the    Jackson County Planning Department, as well as from planners    from the surrounding municipalities, there are few church    constructions under way.  
    The newest church building going up in the county is The    Greater Antioch Missionary Baptist Church in Pascagoula.  
    Antioch's sanctuary burned to the ground on Aug. 26, 2010. The    smoke could be seen for miles around. The fire apparently    started in a storage area on the north end of the building.  
    In November 2011, a groundbreaking for a new sanctuary was held    at 1028 Denny Ave., the original site of the church.  
    Architect Dennis Cowart of Ocean Springs, who designed the new    metal building, said the two-story sanctuary will feature    stadium seating and be wired for up-to-date technology.  
    The new construction will include 10 Sunday school classrooms,    two fellowship halls, meeting rooms, a board room and a choir    rehearsal room.  
    The new building will cost about $3 million and is being    constructed by TCM Construction of Long Beach.  
    In the city of Ocean Springs, aside from small additions to a    few churches, there are no new churches being built.  
    In the city of Moss Point, a building permit was issued in    September 2011 for the construction of Greater First Baptist    Church on 6313 Plymouth St.  
    In the city of Gautier, "there are no churches under    construction at this time," said Babs Logan, a planning    technician with the city.  
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Outlook: Greater Antioch's new church rising in Pascagoula
 
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POSTED: 5:09 pm MDT May 25, 2012  UPDATED: 6:30 pm MDT May 25, 2012      AFTON, Wyo.    -- The LDS Church announced the site for its Star    Valley Wyoming Temple on Friday.The temple will be east of U.S.    Highway 89 on the Haderlie Farm property south of Afton.Our    (Latter-day Saint) community members are elated at the    prospects of a temple in our valley, said Afton Mayor Loni    Hillyard in a news release from the church. I view the temple    as an asset and am certain it will have a positive effect on    our entire community. We look forward to working with the    architect and Church representatives as they move forward on    this project.The temple was announced at The Church of Jesus    Christ of Latter-day Saints conference in October 2011.The    church said Friday that temple construction is expected to take    two years. When built, the temple will serve church members in    western Wyoming. Members now travel to Idaho Falls and Rexburg    to attend the temple.We truly believe this new temple will be    a great asset not only to members of the Church but also to the    people of the surrounding community, who will benefit from the    peace and beauty a temple brings, said Jerry Hansen, local    spokesman for the church. Temples are where members    participate in the highest sacraments of our faith  where we    make and renew promises to God and to our families.The church    has 137 temples, with 29 planned or under construction.LDS    leaders haven't supplied details on the building itself yet.    Doug Anderson with the LDS Church Media Department told the    station earlier this month that he doesn't know if it will be    built as a full-size version like the ones in Idaho Falls and    Rexburg or on a smaller scale.  View  the discussion thread.blog comments powered by
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LDS Church Announces Star Valley Temple Site
 
      DAVID HALLETT/Fairfax NZ    
      LOWERED: Christ Church Cathedral continues to come down      despite efforts to stop it being demolished    
    A poll of 359 Cantabrians found the region torn over the fate    of Christ Church Cathedral with a majority favoured demolition.  
    However, the comments from those polled revealed it was a    tussle between our hearts and our heads. The former reflecting    our emotional attachment to the iconic heritage building, the    latter understanding that repairs for the cathedral would be    costly and potentially dangerous.  
    You can read their comments here:  
    Reasons from those who think the Christ Church    Cathedral should be demolished:  
    I don't like the idea of a church being the centre of the city.    30 - 59, Male  
    It seems too far gone. It seems to be a bit of a risk. 18 - 29,    Male  
    I am anti-religion. 18 - 29, Male  
    The ground is not solid underneath the building, any quake that    happens would ruin the building again. 18 - 29, Male  
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Christ Church Cathedral - readers' comments
 
    by Dermot Cole/    cole@newsminer.com Fairbanks Daily News    Miner  
            A crew from HC Contractors uncovers the water lines            running into Immaculate Conception Church just past the            north end of the Cushman Street bridge.          
    To help protect the church from excessive vibration, electronic    monitoring equipment has been set up inside the building that    will send an alarm to a structural engineer when the movement    reaches 40 percent of the level that a building of that age is    able to handle.  
    Structural engineer Keith Korri, of Anchorage, is keeping close    tabs on the building via the equipment that is set up to give    him an alert on his mobile phone when the 40 percent level is    reached. So far the movement has been below that standard,    which he said provides a good margin of safety.  
    He has also told the church workers to talk to HC Contractors    if and when something seems amiss.  
    Inside the church the first sign that vibration preparations    are an issue is the temporary removal of the crucifix from the    front of the church.  
    In addition, the statues of Mary and Joseph have been removed    from their elevated perches and placed on the main floor of the    church.  
    Korri has monitored the vibration levels in the church on three    previous occasions, going back to the early 1990s.  
    When the heavy equipment is operating within six feet of a    building and right next to a fire hydrant and water pipes, the    mechanical arm has to be handled by an operator who knows that    every inch counts.  
    Regarding the vibration inside the church, the industry    standard for movement is 0.5 inches per second for a building    like ICC, Korri said. The machine he has installed in the crawl    space is set to go off when the movement is 0.2 inches per    second. He said he wants to solve any problem before it becomes    a problem and the 40 percent threshold offers that protection.  
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Road work outside historic Fairbanks church requires careful digging
 
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 20-05-2012 08:04 The beautyfull La Sagrada Familia in Barcelona, Spain. The video is taken on a sunny day using Samsung HD videocamera. Gaudí devoted his last years to the project and at the time of his death in 1926, less than a quarter of the project was complete. Sagrada Família's construction progressed slowly as it relied on private donations and was interrupted by the Spanish Civil War—only to resume intermittent progress in the 1950s. Construction passed the mid-point in 2010 with some of the project's greatest challenges remaining and an anticipated completion date of 2026—the centennial of Gaudí's death. The basílica has a long history of dividing the citizens of Barcelona—over the initial possibility it might compete with Barcelona's cathedral, over Gaudí's design itself, over the possibility that work after Gaudí's death disregarded his design, and the recent possibility that an underground tunnel of Spain's high-speed train could disturb its stability. Describing Sagrada Familia, art Critic Rainer Zerbst said "it is probably impossible to find a church building anything like it in the entire history of art" and Paul Goldberger called it 'the most extraordinary personal interpretation of Gothic architecture since the Middle Ages'
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La Sagrada Familia (HD) - Barcelona - Video
 
A Dangerous Coincidence -
May 22, 2012 by
Mr HomeBuilder
 
        BRADY TOWNSHIP, CLEARFIELD COUNTY - Salem United Methodist    Church decided to build theirnew church further away    fromRoute 219than where it sat for over 80 years    out of a fear it would be destroyed again.  
    April 25, 2011 the church came off of its foundation when a log    truck skidded of the road and logs slammed into the structure.  
    After a year of planning, the Church hired Hallstrom    Construction to demolish their current church and build new.  
    They, along with Hallstrom, decided to build further off of the    road and Tuesday afternoon they realized what a good decision    that was.  
    "The first thing they said to me was it happened again. A car    had veered off of the road and into a utility pole. It is a    good thing the church is not where the old one was because the    car would have landed in the fifth or sixth pew of the old    church" said Chris Satterlee of Hallstrom Construction.  
    No one, including the 18 year old driver, was hurt in the    accident, but it definitely made the workers decide never to    park their cars in harms way again.  
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A Dangerous Coincidence
 
    BAINBRIDGE ISLAND  There was a    disagreement among members of the Port Madison Lutheran Church    when it came time to start work on their first sanctuary 100    years ago.  
    Some in the congregation wanted to build it small. Others    wanted a larger space. Eventually, proponents of the small    church prevailed and staked out the corners of a modestly-sized    structure.  
    But according to island lore, a few congregants sneaked onto    the construction site on the night before the groundbreaking    and moved the corner stakes out wider. When work began the next    day, no one noticed the change and a more spacious church was    built.  
    It was probably for the best.  
    The congregation grew to fill its new space and remained strong    through a century of change.  
    The health of the church was evident Sunday as Pastor Lori    Hoyum welcomed 98 congregants to a special worship service    marking the 100-year anniversary of the chapel on Madison    Avenue NE.  
    Also joining the celebration was Bishop John Bradosky, who    visited from the newly-established North American Lutheran    Church in Ohio. Port Madison Lutheran opted to join NALC    earlier this year.  
    Bradosky said the 100th anniversary of the sanctuary was an    impressive milestone for the island church.  
    "It's another opportunity for the congregation to rejoice,"    Bradosky said before the service. "Their faithfulness has    spread over a century."  
    Minnie Sorenson O'Brien, the first baby baptized in the    sanctuary, wasn't able to attend the service as planned. But    congregation members say the 100-year-old Yelm resident remains    "a firecracker."  
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Bainbridge Island church marks 100 years
 
    The nonprofit Pioneer Heritage    Corporation will not go through with raising the $1.8 million    necessary to acquire the Old Rock Church and turn it into a    community center, citing a lack of interest from the    community.  
    Dale Astle, the chairman of the    corporation and a Providence City Council member, said the    building will remain in its current form as the Providence Inn    Bed and Breakfast, as well as a venue for weddings and special    events.  
    Weve cut that discussion off, as the board voted not to    continue that, Astle said. Weve evaluated the results of    community surveys, and then theres the issue of what would we    do with the building after we acquired it. Theres just not a    lot of interest on the part of the community, especially to    turn it into an office building.  
    Last fall, with the help of the Logan-based Cache Landmark    construction company, the Heritage Corporation floated color    artists renderings of what the new Old Rock Church could look    like as a future headquarters for city government offices, a    multi-purpose community gathering place, a cultural heritage    center, and a community gardens and park. The hope was that    such a makeover would revitalize the historic downtown area of    Providence.  
    In October, Astle and the Heritage Corporation hosted an open    house event at the building to gauge community interest in the    proposed project. After the event, Astle said he was very    disappointed in the events response.  
    Then the group asked a Utah State University political science    class to conduct a survey of 1,000 registered voters in    Providence. Potential for the project might have seemed    positive on the surface, as it showed that two-thirds of survey    participants supported turning the building into a community    center.  
    However, only 10 percent of those surveyed were willing to put    dollars toward it, said Astle. Also, only about 45 percent said    theyd be willing to put time or dollars toward it. Most of    all, 90 percent of respondents did not support a tax increase    to help pay for the project.  
    Astle said he feels very comfortable about the decision not    to move forward with the Old Rock Church project. The cost for    the project, in addition to the acquisition, would have been an    estimated $4.3 million, according to Astle.  
    I think the very best use for that church is to get it to be    an ongoing successful business and for (Karl Seethaler, the    owner) to continue what hes doing there. I dont see that it    would work as a city center; it would be too expensive.  
    An ad-hoc group of Providence residents, called Friends of the    Old Rock Church, will help Seethaler with better marketing of    the bed and breakfast and reception center, Astle said.  
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Old Rock Church drama persists: Nonprofit backs out of discussions to acquire Providence landmark
 
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