What the Church of England teaches and what its members believe
Writing in The Church Times, Linda Woodhead reports that on issues of personal and public morality, members of the Church of England are not in
Writing in The Church Times, Linda Woodhead reports that on issues of personal and public morality, members of the Church of England are not in
the Rev. David Sellery serves as an Episcopal priest that seeks to proclaim the good news of God in Christ in worship, pastoral care, education,
by Kathy Staudt I have been reading with interest about the new movement among atheists to found churches. (poetproph. She works as a teacher, poet,
To paint is a mysterious and individual act which could almost be self-sufficient due to the intimacy of the approach: painting is so personal and
Recently the Café ran an essay on
If there is no solution except for UTO to become totally subsumed into the DFMS, then this tells TREC that there is no way to reconfigure the Episcopal Church making it more a network of nationally active Episcopal Church related agencies and less a centralized regulatory system for management.
Dominican friar, writer, and advocate for the humane treatment of the indigenous people of the Americas, was one of the most important religious figures of the 16th-century Spanish world.
… there are also women (and men) selling sex voluntarily. But the notion that the sex industry is a playground of freely consenting adults who find pleasure in their work is delusional self-flattery by johns. Sex trafficking is one of the most severe human rights violations in America today. In some cases, it amounts to a modern form of slavery.
Monday, October 14, 2013 — Week of Proper 23, Year One [Go to Mission St Clare for an online version of the Daily Office including
… we the UTO Four, remain faithful supporters of the United Thank Offering and the Board that is responsible for its policies and procedures; we are saddened at being dismissed as “members with no reasonable basis in fact to do so, …” We perceived a genuine threat to the continuing place of the United Thank Offering in the life of the Episcopal Church.