How art inspires and impedes faith
Tobias Wolff’s essay in a fie-year-old issue of The New Yorker is about “the power of aesthetics to shape our lives,” but the anecdote around
Tobias Wolff’s essay in a fie-year-old issue of The New Yorker is about “the power of aesthetics to shape our lives,” but the anecdote around
Monday, December 16, 2013 — Week of Advent 3, Year Two [Go to Mission St Clare for an online version of the Daily Office including
The Rev. Sharon Temple
If we don’t care at least as much as the gun lobby, if we don’t become, in the president’s words, “obsessed” with curbing gun violence, what right do we have to expect that things will be any different, even after the next mass shooting or wave of urban gun deaths?
We’re not saying that editors at The New York Times were listening in to our conversations about how the church should make itself visible during
by Doug Fisher Part 2 of 2 Amidst the current debate over gun regulation that has been marked by polarized conflict, Christians are called to
Psalm 63:1-8(9-11), 98 (Morning) Psalm 103 (Evening) “We have met the enemy and he is us.” As we reach the end of this book, today’s
The Associated Press has an update of its earlier story: Retired Archbishop Desmond Tutu changed course Saturday night and announced plans to attend the funeral
A food pantry at an Episcopal Church in Clay Center, Kansas, is trying to make Congress understand that faith communities are not going to be
Archbishop Desmond Tutu says he won’t be attending Nelson Mandela’s funeral because he was not invited. The Associated Press has the story: