Update on Haiti aid from Episcopal Relief and Development
“Working through the Dominican Republic and utilizing our existing relationships with partners there is one of the most efficient initial approaches for meeting immediate needs.”
“Working through the Dominican Republic and utilizing our existing relationships with partners there is one of the most efficient initial approaches for meeting immediate needs.”
What would Dr. King have to say about the earthquake in Haiti? Likely, he would have stressed the interconnectedness between people, and the radical call to action on behalf of those who are poor and suffering.
Pope Benedict XVI has had a meeting with the mentally disturbed woman who knocked him over at Mass on Christmas Eve
The Archbishop of Canterbury has given a message of support to the people of Haiti affected by the devastation caused by Tuesday’s earthquake.
Some will see this and all such natural disasters as evidence against the God in whom we trust . . . Others will feel it necessary to defend the righteousness of God.
Washington Post personal finance columnist Michelle Singletary invites you to start 2010 right by curbing the need to consume.
It wasn’t April and I wasn’t longing to go on a pilgrimage to Canterbury in good company. Instead it was on a cold December day that I went to Canterbury behind the ambulance bearing my father to the Pilgrim’s Hospice where he would spend the last four days of his life. It would be the end of his struggle with cancer.
One does wonder at the scanty love of truth, the miserable levity of people born and bred within the Christian Church. . . . We have at least the supposition of the truth. We worship the truth, even though in works we deny Him. . . . People may hold true doctrines and think themselves Catholics, Orthodox, Evangelicals,
Raymond Joseph, the Haitian ambassador to the United States, responds to the strange and odious statements by Pat Robertson.