News

Bishops march for action on global poverty

Hundreds of Anglican bishops marched passed Parliament and Downing Street today in what Prime Minister Gordon Brown called the "greatest public demonstration of faith" ever to take place in Britain.

Scripture Union launches free online resources for Bible Sunday

Scripture Union has launched free online resources to help churches prepare for Bible Sunday, which takes place this year on Sunday 26 October.

Film 'Wanted': Exploring the relationship between choices and identity

Tony Watkins and Tom Price discussing the action film 'Wanted' starring James McAvoy and Angelina Jolie. They consider the relationship between choices and identity for the central character, Wesley Gibson (McAvoy). Wanted is directed by Timur Bekmambetov, based on the comic book series by Mark Millar and J.G. Jones.

Voting begins in crunch Glasgow election

Voters in Scotland went to the polls on Thursday for a parliamentary by-election that Gordon Brown's party is expected to win, but which could dramatically dent the prime minister's standing if it is lost.

More jobseekers in London but pay holds up

Layoffs and less job security in the City of London financial sector drove more professionals to look for jobs in June, but City salaries hardly moved from lofty year-ago levels.

Digital revolution could be Olympics' salvation

For the Olympic movement, the digital revolution is armed with a double-edged sword - it has lured the younger generation away from sport but could open up the Olympic experience to a far wider audience.

Bishops in walk to demand world leaders keep promises to poor

The Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr Rowan Williams, will join forces with Prime Minister, Gordon Brown, at a rally in Lambeth Palace later today to warn governments around the world that starvation, disease and death will follow unless they keep their pledges to deliver on eight Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).

Catholics, Anglicans must grow in unity for more effective mission

The Roman Catholic Church's top official on evangelisation issues, Cardinal Ivan Dias, told Anglicans meeting at the Lambeth Conference this week that the two Churches must work harder on the issues that unite them if both their mission efforts are to be effective.

French MPs end compulsory 35-hour week

France's parliament passed a law on Wednesday that will allow companies to bypass compulsory 35-hour working week limits, effectively burying one of the flagship reforms of the former Socialist government.

Obama speech expected to draw huge crowd in Berlin

U.S. presidential candidate Barack Obama travels to Berlin on Thursday to give the only public speech of a week-long foreign tour, an outdoor address on transatlantic ties that is likely to draw tens of thousands.

Obama visits Jerusalem's Western Wall

U.S. Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama made a surprise pre-dawn visit to Jerusalem's Western Wall on Thursday, at the end of a trip aimed at showing his strong support for Israel.

Evangelist Brian Mclaren challenges Lambeth on emerging culture

One of the emerging church's foremost figures, US evangelist Brian Mclaren, challenged the Lambeth Conference earlier this week to speak the Gospel into the world's ever-changing cultures.

Strong quake jolts north Japan

A strong earthquake jolted northern Japan early on Thursday, injuring more than 100 people, trapping hundreds in halted trains and affecting production at some high-tech factories.

China security forces vow to thwart Games threats

Ranks of Chinese paramilitary police swore to prevent terrorist attacks or "political incidents" disrupting the Beijing Olympics in a show of force at the Games' main stadium, a state newspaper reported on Thursday.

WTO talks make 'some progress,' but mood sombre

Urgent talks to salvage a global trade deal made "some progress" in the early hours of Thursday, ministers said, but officials warned the mood was dark behind closed doors at the World Trade Organisation.

Three Hong Kong children jailed for armed holdup

Three Hong Kong children have jailed for more than three years for the armed hold-up of a jewellery shop, a newspaper said on Thursday, with the court saying the stiff sentence was in the public interest.