Julia Duin
Articles by Julia Duin
Catholic voters heavily favored Obama, analysis shows
Large numbers of Catholics and religiously unaffiliated voters heavily contributed to President-elect Barack Obama's huge margin of victory over Republican Sen. John McCain, according to an analysis of exit poll surveys by the Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life. Published November 7, 2008
DUIN: Evangelist Tomczak still a force
More than 30 years had passed since I last saw him, but Larry Tomczak looked like the same guy I'd seen leading a wildly successful series of youth prayer meetings in the 1970s called "Take And Give" (TAG). Published November 6, 2008
Catholics probe aid directed to ACORN
The U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops has hired forensic accounting specialists to investigate more than $1 million in church funding to voter-registration group ACORN, fearing the money may have been spent in partisan or fraudulent ways that could jeopardize the church's tax-exempt status. Published November 4, 2008
DUIN: Beliefs versus business
Next time you're in a pharmacy, take a closer look at those folks in white coats. They're on the front lines in a war of conscience versus contraceptives. Published October 30, 2008
Pro-choice Obama repels evangelicals
Abortion is the key issue keeping many social conservatives and religious voters - especially young ones - from supporting pro-choice Democrat Barack Obama for president, leaving most of them to throw their support to his pro-life Republican opponent, John McCain. Published October 30, 2008
DUIN: Episcopal Church losing members
Several people told me I needed to check out columnist George Will's recent column on the fading away of the Episcopal Church, once "America's upper crust at prayer," as he termed it. Published October 26, 2008
DUIN: 40 Days overlaps election
Several weeks ago, I began overhearing conversations among friends about whose turn it was to pray 24/7 in front of the Planned Parenthood clinic on 16th Street downtown. Published October 23, 2008
Full house greets ‘faith-based’ pharmacy
Divine Mercy Care Pharmacy, one of fewer than a dozen pharmacies in the country that refuse to stock any kind of birth control, cigarettes, pornography or condoms, opened with a Catholic bishop's blessing and sprinklings of holy water Tuesday in Chantilly. Published October 22, 2008
Va. pharmacy caters to pro-life customers
When Divine Mercy Care Pharmacy opens Tuesday in a Chantilly, Va., shopping center, it will have on display a picture of St. John Leonardi, the 16th-century patron saint of pharmacists. Published October 21, 2008
History muddies battle over church
Lawyers for the Episcopal Diocese of Virginia and nine conservative churches that broke away two years ago tangled Monday in Fairfax Circuit Court over who owns the Falls Church, a historic Northern Virginia parish that George Washington once attended. Published October 21, 2008
DUIN: Humanist take on Sunday school
When is a Sunday school not your typical Sunday school? When it is a secular Sunday school. Published October 19, 2008
19th-century deeds surface in church dispute
The Episcopal Diocese of Virginia and a group of 11 conservative breakaway congregations wrangled yesterday over ownership of the historic Falls Church, a 276-year-old congregation that until two years ago was one of the crown jewels of the denomination. Published October 16, 2008
DUIN: Christians persecuted in India
On my refrigerator, there is a laminated photo of a serious-looking man from India named Arakhita. Published October 16, 2008
Court rules church’s land belongs to departed parish
A Fairfax County judge ruled Tuesday that a piece of church property involved in a lawsuit pitting conservatives against liberals in the Episcopal Church belongs to the Truro Church in Fairfax, a leading traditional parish that left the denomination nearly two years ago. Published October 15, 2008
Wuerl in Rome for Bible synod
As the world's economy teeters on a precipice, 253 Catholic bishops are in Rome discussing one thing they consider rock solid in uncertain times Published October 13, 2008
DUIN: Artist focuses on biblical scenes
When Diane Knippers, the president of the Institute for Religion and Democracy, succumbed to colon cancer on April 18, 2005, she left behind her husband of nearly 33 years. Published October 12, 2008
DUIN: Reach out to homeless
As I headed for a nearby Starbucks one recent morning to fortify myself with some iced java, a man pulled up in a motorized wheelchair and positioned himself about 10 feet away from me. Published October 9, 2008
Young evangelicals’ voting habits differ
Young, white evangelicals are slightly less supportive of Republican presidential nominee Sen. John McCain than their older counterparts but aren't wholeheartedly embracing the Democratic Party, according to two recent polls on how they vote. Published October 9, 2008
Va. Episcopal church joins land dispute
Christ Episcopal Church of Alexandria, one of the most venerable parishes in the Diocese of Virginia, has joined a historic lawsuit against several Northern Virginia parishes attempting to leave the denomination. Published October 8, 2008
DUIN: Tortured animals need compassion
I am eating a piece of chicken as I write this. One of my co-workers had an extra portion from our cafeteria, and handed it off to me. By chowing down, I may be committing an immoral act. Published October 5, 2008