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Show CllUrclieS alt fake frtbune President Working to Broaden Appeal Of National Catholic Womens Council multi-cu.tur- al d Witness for Peace is sponsoring an ecumenical program at the Unitarian Church, 569 S. 1300 East, Saturday at 1 p.m. The program will focus on the group's nonviolent opposition to the military attacks of the U.S. backed contras" against Nicaraguan civilians. The mcet...g will feature three local residents who have recently returned from Nicaragua. They will detail their impressions of Nicaragua and show a video presentation that will discuss the views of a Catholic on panels examining aging and other issues, in such a way women on a parish level could not serve. Mrs. Schwab sees her position as president of the national group as presenting a challenge. She has found the position to be both a joy and a burden, comparing it to raising children. She became involved in the NCCW through her parish council in the San Francisco area 20 years ago. At that time, the laity of the missionary now working in Nicaragua, regarding the conflict within the Catholic Church there. Also, statements of church leaders from the United States and Nicaragua will be read. Witness for Peace is an interdenominational group which seeks to confront injustice and war by maintaining a presence in the area of conflict, a spokesman said. Members have been keeping vigils and living in Nicarugua for more than a year. The program is open to the public Newman Center Series Catherine of Siena Parish (the Newman Center). 1327 E. 200 South, will continue its autumn lecture scries with "Understanding the Bible A St Hilltop Methodists To Hold Bazaar Tom On Oct. 30, the Rev on The McGrccvy will lecture " Meaning of Saints A Course on A new program. Prayer," will begin Thursday and will continue for three weeks During . the first session. Sister Norita director of the Catholic Diocesan Office of Liturgy, will speak on. ' Liturgy, the Prayer of Christ and the Christian Community " The second and third sessions will be presented by the Rev Patrick Curran, director of Our Lady of the Mountains Retreat House in Ogden Father Curran will discuss Prayer and Relationship With the Lord" on Nov 8 and "Prayer and Compassionate Action" on Nov 15 All these programs are free and npen to the public An A tut I fn up - In addition to handmade items, local artisans will offer pottery, flower arrangements, dolls, stenciling and wheat weaving A toy and book store will also be represented Specialities for children include face painting, grab bags and a table with inexpensive gifts thod-is- Women E 561 59ii t jme Hvm Murray Pa 03 Sou it Christian It An DllUwlM SUNDAY WS fe4d k H 1 My the Southern SheO'wrt; (Meeting 1 270 I. 8600 So., Sandy 9am IHin 'Oil Wet chip Service Chivch V hod lemes H lappnn Pastor 7417 56 WORSHIP SERVICES 8:4'. "The Gift of lite" PaOr.t Cary ( HlRCH SCHOOL 1 in JSAI-lor i 4 h u ADI I T SU DV 4 40 Th. I'l'um 11:00 ft WASATCH PRE$B AhD I7MP FAST r ,. f 4 7 7 If, f! TERI SOI 1wUO 7 I ' Sacrifice V, 1 m I, Wed pb 8 v " oor ; m k T o O 6 30 p m in The Gym" y E. THIRO (MUIKN tor OiHhen 9 CAfrtl wMpemlpr I Vfi St t ' I.-- Pe Arr. 1 306 f I1 Spring In ' tnt itr ijet vl'ir Wort1 ,)jrpr 01, If. n inr (6?no s or m 9 45 Gotf CtHihtn 454 i Hr gnrt Ip City 10 a 8 45 a m 164 ?373 Clan 8ft '0 30 3 15 F'lfhnf Patlnr 6pm So Evening FOURSQUARE CHURCHn.-'H.-'.nP'- i clC 847 , ,. f. XV 0, PASTOR GARY SINARDI Southeast Baptist Church 700pm Phone 2hb 3600 9 30 am a.m toa PtaitNhht" Worthy Vanfefrrft Wed 7pm Prayer 8 00. 9.30 9 30 & 1 & 1 1 hungry tare Provided Pastor Tom Ashbrook 700 Last Sandy 755 0 V 1 BAftiST CHURCH CENTRAL 1 4 Ave & ' "E St ,'Vhrrr 181 Sot Scikoo a m am ft t iQie Patfo Holden 363 5922 rntra ' t 7T Wedt Prayer and fetM Sftjdy Cottee Haute SBC 7pm 8 o TEACHING Of THE INNER CHRIST Meditation and Metaphyucs 775 South 10) Last SUNDAY SERVICE 1 1 A.M. THE LONG SENTENCE" Ethel Bradford AIL 5000 WATTS SALT LAKE PROVO AND 06DEN RELIGIOUS 1 UNITED FOR RADIO METHODIST FIRST 203 SO 200 E 328 8726 9 00 UU a m Worship Ser.i 5 Church School 10 00 am -t "What Belongt ar- - 1 c God?" ftnv Mnyl pMd Jitkrrwi Poor- ftv. fell MKntry Alter Poor- ft 7 15 a m. Mon. thru Fn. E. 1 m. Church School 9 30 a m. Nvnwy PedlttiMMartAvellebia ftp Iky M. and WIMJem liftvnan TRINITY 968 6891 4290 W 5415 SO, S m. 8.30 1 Worship Church School 9 45 a m (ferrnr Murwy PrpykMtd Nt fr Mimtter lewiitee E Hope of America" Vernon Schroeder rtwmpeen Hvrtmry CHRIST 3300 SO. 486 5473 a 9.30 A Worship Service 2375 985 favl St'AtlO'O Avf Wrvvhrp Sarvic S'jnnav S' lioo' fl.tvtfl CHapeL 700 Cot 7000 Soi6 943 2241 SUNDAY SCHOOL 9 4$ om WOASHIh 1100dm 1 WED PtAYEe MEET 7 00pm Mike Gray. Parlor 1 REDEEMER 4 7 1 8 15 ft U a m WotWtty 9 30 a m Sunday School ft ftib'c Clavi OMica 572375 John Fiona Paiior now School Pre ltd'e Lamb i togtiang VjS Lnt Paor ft f Ommt Lnt 9600 Sou Sunday Schmv ft 0Wa R Srttrjnk Paslor Youth Hope VN A4dmi SUNDAY Sunday School WortfMp Sennet Our Ctorcfc Has J 740 I Murray K 'SI H amm 9 45 Nnnhtf SooncA f mvlr o Y&iytf L fiijr gw ftfg 4400 South 7 tfT fk LUTHERAN CHURCHES wv ST. JOHN'S So 'iDUd Saf lake Musk Counsellor Mam Interpreter Available 1030 FJTp,T i .4rn lev ieiy h Mm Jiy &r4y 0 7 17 Posto jock Perry Sinqles Ministry Cj't 5 262-- 1 ScH Lake Alliance Qwrdi 0575 Christ r. 0:45 a m 0:45 a.m 7:00 p.m 7:00 p.m 1 Good Shepherd Lutheran DEAF SERVICES jtionjll Southeast Christian Church 7fW1 Hmm AM & Ron Groms, WASATCH TEACHING ol the INNER CHRIST I.C.A.C. MnAophywcs A AAodarn MyKtvn Worship Sunday School Bible School 9:30 a.m. 10:30 a.m. Worship Service 6:30 p.m. Evening Service Wednesday Bible Study 7:30 p.m. Robert Waggoner, Evangelist 1030 am Oenomin 8 30 a.m. 6 00 p m. 467-196- 9 00 a. m 9.00 Ami Jocobson Gorry Pierce "OPEN & Awn Ciut 13th i Mon 23rd SERVICES So. John Claeys. Pastor Family Worship Family Bible Hour Hour 9 30am I 52 272-845- of faccwnnmr Gorynunttj 8446 So 340 W Harrison St. rttkt 9r lull oTM 15l a fcteatmg 21 EVANGELICAL FREE CHURCH Church 662 O The Church ' 11 Intermountain Christian School 1th Carden Curriculum e Comm, S fft ' Oklahoma Christian College. The public is invited to the rally. Dr. AJIcne Remington t 16, M !S,I R snn KlOaw Cfirh StCOMD CHUVCN with the Eisenhower Church of Christ. He has conducted youth meetings throughout the United States over the past 12 years. In addition, he has served as a youth camp director and camp adviser, Lubbock Christian College Alumni adviser and has been a youth training seminar speaker at SUNDAY SERVICES 10:30 A.M. "The Irony ol Our Fate" Richard Henry, Minister Baird Care (Child 278-447- CILIKRATIOS OF Ol 1.' nn pri w h A H. The Highest Sunday School Service 10.00 a m. AN. Rev Rev. Rev Rev 8 FIRST I MTAHI c Hi ndi Form of Worship" The Rev. Donald H. Baird Dai Dr founder) said members must be productive. Idleness is discouraged. Wed. Family Night 569 1 13WM Street Active Youth and Adult Fellowship Everyone Welcome TH x 268-217- Church School 9:30 a.m. Church Worship 1 1 A.M. Sunday ProvMetfl . i' ,700 PM GRACE 1165 Foothill plained Bahaullah, (the faith's Morning Worship Evening Praise Assemblies of God M " Preaching the Word" 4630 fortuna Way (School) C,uet Speaker Ainrmn Ftjnrrrlrr 'bh' 352 full-tim- AM P South Temple at C 363 3889 Rev. Donald I CSurcfc Vog Church Presbyterian j I FIStT OMKM r i y Inlerprelotion for the deof CHRIST Third So Rally in the Valley." a two-daChristian youth rally, will conclude Saturday at the Salt Lake City Church of Christ, 662 E. 1300 South. Mike Myers, the youth minister for the Littleton Church of Christ, Littleton, Colo., will present The Lordship of Christ, as the theme of the rally. e He first became a youth minister in Odessa, Texas, working JJP' Suwt E Will-mett- e, Youth Rally Concludes Today 4300 South 700 East 5600 ? 77 He makes the trip to the national headquarters of the faith in 111., several times a year and eventually members of the National Assembly will be required to live in Willmette. However, Judge Nelson will continue to live in California, because that is where his work is. He ex- comparative religions compare religions from the viewpoint one religion is right and the others are wrong," Judge Nelson said. Judge Nelson said he found that a common thread runs through all religions, and that the purpose of creation is human happiness and development. He said his busy schedule as a dis A M l 11 A At 0dg pr of the world. gions. The problem is that most books on First Presbyterian v 4 Slat Miirrltet 50 70 10 h aith promotes the investigation of truth and those investigating the encouraL faith to investigate all faiths. Judge Nelson said he and his wife spent five years studying religion on a formal and informal basis During that time, they tried to find similarities in reli- Senior Paator lOn ORGAN Aget tm Meeting at Cottonwood-Mu- . ay Elks Club 4834 S. Slate Street 264-850- Ayer 1015 HANCOCK Bahai The Early Worship Christian Education ,. 10.50 . Worihtp karnca Sunday School ft I We Prior Mpftyti ftrynn Sunderman Ait Pastor Foursquare Church Sun. WORSHIP 10:30 a.m. Phil pvalle, Pastor fc MI m (Sc-- fforvftip Service Center of ignorance of the facts. Theyre sincere in their beliefs and often they change their minds when they find out their beliet s dont make sense." 945AM EVENING PRAISE WED FAMILY SERVICES SUNDAY MORNING Cati Judge James F. Nelson Speaks on Bahai Faith EXPERIENCE. WORSHIP IN TMK VALLtYTAT 8 30 WORSHIP MORNING WORSHIP Church of Religious Science of CHURCH OF CHRIST m five-yea- gag1 SUNDAY SCHOOL fetch. ng $nd SOUTHSIDC Valley somereligion was quasi-angething akin to pride that his religious beliefs must be right. Following his friend's transformatr ion, the couple made their study and they became Baha'is in October 1954. When they joined the faith, there were only 5,000 Bahais in the United States. No Paid Clergy The Bahai Faith has no paid clergy and members of local and national Spiritual Assemblies are elected by assembly members. "There is no campaigning or nominating. Everybody in an assembly is eligible and nobody declines when elected," Judge Nelson said. "Those elected cant be beholden to anyone because they don't know who elected them. They serve for the betterment r, UTAn $ADV EARLY ministry to your Of pretchmg' Lan-ners- 935 E 10600 South 600C S 300 mitow$hipf etching. growmQ Spirit Mod worship, ' Special to The Tribune SANDY Unique crafts and gifts, children's activities and a Christmas store will be available at the Hilltop Harvest Bazaar Saturday from 9am to 3 p m at Hilltop Methodist Church. His friend persuaded Judge Nelson and his wife to go to a comparative religion class where they found the similarities in religion. He said his first reaction to what he learned of ... by My Spirit Assembly 7 30 dress said. Ghrlsfcian Need for Interpretation" Tuesday at pm The Rev. Terry Proffitt, pastor of the University Baptist Church and campus minister, will give the ad- trict judge and as a leader in the National Spiritual Assembly are opportunities to serve. Anytime youre serving mankind you dont get tired," he said. Raised a Presbyterian Raised a Presbyterian, he became acquainted with the Bahai Faith through a fraternity brother in college. He said his friend underwent a personality transformation when he began attending Bahai meetings He said the Baha'i meetings just made him feel differently," the judge Mountain View COMMUNITY OF GRACE lutumn Bible Lecture Continues Mr Brings Out Emotions Religion brings out emotions in people faster than any other subject. When something affects human emotion as strongly as religion does, logic goes by the wayside, he said. Many people hold on to their prejudices out Catholic Church was addressing such legislative issues as civil rights. Mrs. Schwab found herself giving talks on the issues her parish was involved in and was asked to serve as information chairman. heext Frocceds fund the I'nio d Hinders Progress Rejection hinders any progress religion may make, Judge Nelson said. History is full of examples of religions rejecting prophets of another faith. Judge Nelson said most Hindus rejected the prophet Buddha, who came with answers to questions Hinduism does not address, and out of the multitudes Jesus addressed, he only got 12 converts initially. Judge Nelson admits there have been false prophets, but relies on the scriptures to determine true prophets. Jesus said it when he said you can tell a true prophet by the fruits of his labors. Although many prophets may wear wolves clothing, if there were no true ones prophets we wouldn't have needed the test, the judge said. Religion must unify or there wont be a mankind, and there are no alternatives, he said. Either mankind must become unified or perish, the judge said. Every hostility that arises today has the potential to become a nuclear war. Mary Ann Schwab, president of the National Conference of Catholic Women, says average age of the group is declining. Peace Group to Hold Program To Oppose Ties With Contras The group By Melinda Sowerby Tribune Church Editor Religion ought to be viewed as a source of unity rather than as a hindrance to progress, said Judge James F. Nelson, chairman of the National Spiritual Assembly of the Bahai faith of the United States. Mr. Nelson, a judge of the Municipal Court, Los Angeles Judicial District, was in Salt Lake City this week to talk about religions influence on society at the University of Utah and to discuss the Bahai Faith. Every religion has taught the same principles, however, every people have rejected the concept of unity in religion, Judge Nelson said. When that rejection manifests itself in hostility, it's a source of potential disaster. The hostility has manifested itself in holy wars and persecutions since the beginning of time, he said. The persecutions of the early Christians, the Mormons and now the Bahais in Iran are only some examples of one group trying to force their religious beliefs on another people. Americans who have heard about the persecutions of Baha'is in Iran will frequently ask about the faith and what members believe, the judge said. In order to keep attracting a variety of women, the NCCW is opening new horizons to meet the needs of not only the homemaker, but of working women, single women, divorced and separated women and women who are raising children alone. And what is offered in womens groups has changed, too. We have to be structured to fit their needs and wc have to offer something of substance, Mrs. Schwab said. Mrs. Schwab sees the NCCW as being a medium in which Catholic women can exercise a kind of influence in supporting Christian values. She explained the NCCW has a voice in government, serving 4 Page Chairman of Bahai Assembly Gives His Views on Faith Responding to Needs of Membership Mary Ann Schwab's challenge as president of the National Council of Catholic Women is to renew the base of the membership pyramid by making the organization attractive to women at the parish level. To do that means responding to the needs of todays woman, she said. And today's woman is not only a housewife or a career woman, but combines many roles, she continued. Mrs. Schwab spoke on the role of the NCCW and her position as president, during the group's biennial General Assembly held at the Salt Lake Sheraton last week. The group was invited to hold the General Assembly in Salt Lake City by the Catholic Diocese of Salt Lake City and by the city itself. While here, Mrs. Schwab said she marveled at the Catholic community in Utah. "I marveled that a Catholic community so widespread could show such spirit and dedication, she said, adding she found a very strong Council of Catholic Women here. The NCCW has a membership of several million women in about 8,000 affiliates in 120 dioceses across the country. The General Assembly meeting brings together leaders of the NCCW. Most of the women who have reached leadership positions are middle-aged- , presenting an Image the group is made up of older women. But on the parish level, that is not the case, Mrs. Schwab said, emphasizing the NCCWs membership is made up of a cross section of Catholic women throughout the country. At the NCCW convention held last year in Denver, there were many young women from parish units, Mrs. Schwab said. She explained the number of NCCW members diminished 15 years ago. But that has changed and now young women are again yearning for the things organizations can offer. We're attracting younger women and women, Mrs. Schwab said, claimwomens orgaing church-relatenizations are experiencing a new renaissance. She said a recent Gallup Poll shows working women want organizations. They want the regular and structured associations that go along with belonging to an organization. 20, 1984 Saturday Morning October Section B 1 nne FIRST CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH 2150 Foothill Rev Peter Drive R K 487-135- Brenner. HILLTOP 10600 SO. " Min, tUf$ry 8 30 & 1 1 a.m. Worship Service Church School 9 30 a m MrwiHr lav. (Ytlliaw liam w, 4;oy I" D Sunday School 9 30 & 10 30 a m. Worship Service 1 0 .30 a in .Q "You Are Unique -- r 1 A E K Brenner I ) |