Year: 2009

Something incredibly wonderful happens Part one

Because Frank believed questions were the heart of good science, he welcomed all questions. Frank’s class students’ experiments were real experiments. When something “didn’t work” Frank and his students were as interested in what actually happened in their “failure” as they were when they could duplicate other scientists’ successful results.

Read More »

The undoubted call

Sire, I had often heard and deeply considered the many and marvelous things which various persons—and those good judges in the matter, as having been themselves on the spot—report concerning a remarkable disposition which is observed in the island of Japan for the reception of our holy religion.

Read More »

They ordain women, don’t they?

A Catholic church in rural Australia had graciously offered its sanctuary for the ordination service of several undisaffected Anglican ordinands. But when it was learned that some of the ordinands were women, the Vatican stepped in.

Read More »

Membership down

ENS: The 2008 parochial reports show overall church membership at 2,225,682 people, with a total average Sunday attendance (ASA) at 747,376. Those totals compare with

Read More »

Scientific evidence to guide spending on MDGs

More than ever before, we have the scientific evidence to guide global policy. Practical and rigorously tested interventions exist that can inform policy to reduce poverty and, if massively scaled up, produce tangible and timely progress on the MDGs.

Read More »

It’s only a paper lie (okugumaaza)

An independent paper in Uganda, The Daily Monitor, runs an op-ed that says the real purpose of the Anti-Homosexual Bill is divert the public’s attention from the real crimes public corruption and incompetence.

Read More »

Winning battles but losing the war?

The weight of opinion, even in parishes staunchly loyal to and supportive of TEC, holds that blessing same-sex relationships, ordaining persons who openly live in committed same-sex relationships, and otherwise fully including everyone regardless of sexuality in the Church’s life will cost TEC members, mission momentum, and resources.

Read More »
Archives
Categories