Year: 2007

Canadian primate meets with Archbishop of Canterbury

“It’s always nice to hear someone like the Archbishop of Canterbury or from the Anglican Communion Office say you’re handling this coherently, cautiously, judiciously, and you’ve got some things I would hold up as a model for others to consider as they grapple with the issue,” said Archbishop Hiltz.

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Facing the Facebook world

Yes, I got a Facebook page. I really shouldn’t have one. I’m not in the proper generation (I’m at the tail end of the Baby Boom, and age 50 is looming into view). My kids, who ARE in the proper generation — Milliennials — have told me repeatedly that Facebook is their world and that I should stay out. But….

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Alfred the Great

We pray to you, O Lord, who are the supreme Truth, and all truth is from you. We beseech you, O Lord, who are the highest Wisdom, and all the wise depend on you for their wisdom. You are the supreme Joy, and all who are happy owe it to you.

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Anglicans back to Rome

Scattered across the news feeds are reports of Anglican parishes “defecting to Rome.” The request seems to have come out of Ireland, joined by others from 12 countries. If approved by the Vatican, the move would allow 400,000 traditional Anglicans worldwide to be admitted into the Catholic Church–in fact, would see the entire parish communities received into the Catholic Church.

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Friends, family remember slain soldier

Episcope points us to an article about Corporal Ciara Durkin, a National Guard soldier serving in Afghanistan who was found dead from a gunshot wound last month. Durkin, a lesbian and an Episcopalian, “was killed on a secure U.S. military base, and according to her family she had told them prior to her death that she had concerns for her safety and that they were to push for an investigation if anything happened to her.”

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There’s something about Mary

U.S. Anglican and Roman Catholic leaders met last week at Virginia Theological Seminary in Alexandria, Va., to discuss the role of the Virgin Mary and the progress in ecumenical relations between the two churches.

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Bishop and Cardinal in row over climate change

In Australia this week, the Anglican general synod in Canberra has passed a canon “recognising that climate change was a serious threat to present and future generations and seeking to reduce the environmental footprint of the church and its agencies,” according to The Age. But what’s more curious about the matter of climate change is the public argument going on between the Anglican bishop of Canberra, George Browning, and the Roman Catholic Archbishop of Sydney, George Pell.

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Cain on trial

This past Saturday, D.C. Superior Court Judge Zoe Bush opened her courtroom to a mock grand jury. Their charge? Whether to indict Cain for the murder of Abel. The courtroom was filled with families who got to see the familiar story played out in a modern context. But the event was more than a contemporary retelling of the Genesis story, according to Bush. It’s a hard look at “the first murder” to help examine violent crime in today’s society.

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O, the mighty gulf

With surgery declined, St. Elizabeth’s discharged my mother to one of three fates: eat food and bleed; drink fluids and grow weak; have surgery and return to health. When I arrived at the front apartment, she was obviously happy to be home. Her choice was to drink fluids until she got her nerve up to have the surgery. She had a permanent IV line dangling from her black and blue arm.

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