Sunday, March 25, 2012

Church mood

  • Who are the happiest people? According to a new report from Gallup, its those who regularly go to a place of worship, whether it be a church, mosque or synagogue.
  • (Huffington Post)
  • Going to church regularly could boost your mood — and chase away the Sunday blues. A new Gallup analysis finds that Americans who attend a church, mosque or synagogue regularly are generally cheerier than those who dont.
  • (msnbc.com)
  • Pathfinders Mood Disorder Support Group: 6-7:30 p.m. in Room 210 of the Trinity United Methodist Church Annex, 729 Paul W. Bryant Drive.
  • (Tuscaloosa News)
  • The mood appears to be fluctuating in the international art market with an iconic work by 90-year-old contemporary pioneer S.H. Raza, Village with Church, finding no takers at a Sothebys auction in New York last week.
  • (Webindia 123)
  • My spouse started having violent mood swings. Hot and cold drinks would be thrown over me, full dinner plates would be smashed over my head, any work I did within the church would be mocked, I would forcibly be told of my own worthless and uselessness.
  • (Christian Today)
  • They used to say, Joe, I want to dance with you. Put me on your card. The mood inside the church leading up to and during the ceremony was naturally more subdued. Some paused to look at a collage of photos set up in the churchs vestibule.
  • (Pocono Record)
  • The mood was happy and casual, though no one felt the need to talk The fundamentalist pastor Jerry Falwell founded his mega-church, then his university and then, most significantly, his evangelical lobby, the Moral Majority in 1979.
  • (Sydney Morning Herald)
  • Also on the upswing are Denver band the Lumineers, who made the most of a 20-minute set inside a church.
  • (Chicago Tribune)
  • It is a unique mixture of all these components, some more than others. In that respect the UUP is more like a church than a political party.
  • (Belfast Telegraph)

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