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Tuesday, March 07, 2006
By Ann Rodgers, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
Fifty doctors, social workers, theologians and pastors from two continents will gather later this month at Pittsburgh Theological Seminary to talk about how faith and the church affect the local and global crisis of HIV/AIDS
"We are looking for a way to address it, new ways to minister in the midst of a pandemic crisis that has such a stigma attached to it that people don't want to talk about it," said the Rev. Jermaine McKinley, assistant director of the seminary's Metro-Urban Institute.
According to conference statistics, HIV/AIDS has killed more than 22 million people in sub-Saharan Africa. In the United States, African Americans account for 41 percent of reported AIDS cases, though they are just 12 percent of the population.
The conference will have an emphasis on predominantly black churches and their role in outreach.
Some speakers at the March 30-April 1 conference include Dr. Fastone Goma, dean of the University of Zambia Medical School, Karen Reddick, project director of the Center for Minority Health at the University of Pittsburgh Graduate School of Public Health and Kezia Ellison, a Pittsburgh teenager who founded an AIDS prevention outreach to teens.
A "pastors in conversation" segment will feature the Rev. Jason Barr, pastor of Macedonia Baptist Church in the Hill District, exchanging ideas with the Rev. Saindi Chiphangwi of Malawi, representing the Network of African Congregational Theology.
Dr. McKinley compares the role of the church to that of some men in the Gospels who made a hole in the roof of a house where Jesus was speaking in order to lower a handicapped friend down to him for healing.
"This conference is an opportunity for the faith community to come together and take the roof off and deal with sickness and a disease that is impacting the global community," she said.
"My hope is that once we have the facts and know what we are dealing with, then we can come back and minister out of our own particular tenets of faith."
The registration deadline is Monday. To register, call 412-441-3304, Ext. 2163, or visit www.mui-pts.org.
http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/06066/666233.stm
By Ann Rodgers, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
Fifty doctors, social workers, theologians and pastors from two continents will gather later this month at Pittsburgh Theological Seminary to talk about how faith and the church affect the local and global crisis of HIV/AIDS
"We are looking for a way to address it, new ways to minister in the midst of a pandemic crisis that has such a stigma attached to it that people don't want to talk about it," said the Rev. Jermaine McKinley, assistant director of the seminary's Metro-Urban Institute.
According to conference statistics, HIV/AIDS has killed more than 22 million people in sub-Saharan Africa. In the United States, African Americans account for 41 percent of reported AIDS cases, though they are just 12 percent of the population.
The conference will have an emphasis on predominantly black churches and their role in outreach.
Some speakers at the March 30-April 1 conference include Dr. Fastone Goma, dean of the University of Zambia Medical School, Karen Reddick, project director of the Center for Minority Health at the University of Pittsburgh Graduate School of Public Health and Kezia Ellison, a Pittsburgh teenager who founded an AIDS prevention outreach to teens.
A "pastors in conversation" segment will feature the Rev. Jason Barr, pastor of Macedonia Baptist Church in the Hill District, exchanging ideas with the Rev. Saindi Chiphangwi of Malawi, representing the Network of African Congregational Theology.
Dr. McKinley compares the role of the church to that of some men in the Gospels who made a hole in the roof of a house where Jesus was speaking in order to lower a handicapped friend down to him for healing.
"This conference is an opportunity for the faith community to come together and take the roof off and deal with sickness and a disease that is impacting the global community," she said.
"My hope is that once we have the facts and know what we are dealing with, then we can come back and minister out of our own particular tenets of faith."
The registration deadline is Monday. To register, call 412-441-3304, Ext. 2163, or visit www.mui-pts.org.
http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/06066/666233.stm