The NYTimes asks readers about the welcome of worship places
The Booming blog at the nytimes.com invites readers to tells stories of welcome at their places of worship.
The Booming blog at the nytimes.com invites readers to tells stories of welcome at their places of worship.
“This is saying ‘back off, we’ve got our own timetable’ … you can probaby take from that that the decision isn’t imminent.” – A church source
The struggle within Anglicanism is a struggle over our basic calling: are we a centralized church that enforces uniformity or a local church bound together in Catholic unity?
There will be no white smoke, and we know that the selection has to go to the Queen via the Prime Minister, but sometime today (or perhaps this weekend) we expect to hear who the next Archbishop of Canterbury will be. Giles Frasier prays that the next Archbishop will be given the gift of controversy. And here is a game you can play while you wait.
The Middle East is not the only place where the collision of media and religion can result in violence. Americans have their own history of conflict, often violent, over depictions of God, Christ and the saints in art and film.
by George Clifford The Economist recently featured a scathing indictment of how the Roman Catholic Church manages its finances (“Earthly Concerns,” pp. 19-23, August 18,
Mark 9.38-50 Each of us has one (or the other). We share having it and it connects us, past, present and future with the whole