63% of Americans know little of Muslims; 50% don’t like them
A poll about Americans’ views on Islam concludes that the strongest predictor of prejudice against Muslims is whether a person holds similar feelings about Jews.
A poll about Americans’ views on Islam concludes that the strongest predictor of prejudice against Muslims is whether a person holds similar feelings about Jews.
Sometimes, reading the papers, you get the impression that the church exists to provide a forum for arguing about sexual mores. Then disaster strikes, and you get a glimpse of what the church has been up to all along.
Café news blogger, the Very Rev. Nicholas Knisely, dean of Trinity Cathedral in Phoenix, Ariz., is one of four candidates chosen by the search committee to stand for election as Bishop of Kentucky.
Marcy Ference, Haiti Partnership program coordinator at St. Patrick’s Episcopal Church in northwest Washington, D. C. is featured in Religion and Ethics Newsweekly’s coverage of
A brief look at some of the good work being done by Episcopal Churches this week.
In studying first, then, the nature of tolerance, that much-belauded and much-represented grace of our own time, we want to start with this assertion,—which is, indeed the key-assertion of all I have to say,—that it is composed of two elements, both of which are necessary to its true existence,