Good bye, part one: What I think I’ve learned
Dear friends, I am signing off today after 7 1/2 years as editor of the Episcopal Café. I think I have learned a few things
Dear friends, I am signing off today after 7 1/2 years as editor of the Episcopal Café. I think I have learned a few things
Michelle Boorstein of The Washington Post writes: A new poll released Friday shows major differences between faith groups on topics including concern over climate change,
Today is my last day as editor of Episcopal Cafe, and I hope to have a few thoughts about the church and my experience as
Monday, November 24, 2014 – Proper 29, Year Two [Go to Mission St Clare for an online version of the Daily Office including today’s scripture
Today’s Portland Press Herald features a column focusing on Christian hospitality and last week’s Islamic prayer service at the Washington National Cathedral: As children of
In an essay adapted from the Yale Institute of Sacred Music’s Kavanagh Lecture on October 24 2013, entitled “Have Hymnals Become Dinosaurs?: The Costs of
Psalm 118 (Morning) Psalm 145 (Evening) Zechariah 9:9-16 Trinity Episcopal Church and a postulant to the priesthood in the Kirkepiscatoid.
Over at the Lutheran, the magazine of our communion partner, the ELCA; they’re asking “Has God forgotten how to call young people?” Drawing on research
Sainsbury’s, a British grocery chain has released a Christmas TV commercial that has gone viral, set during the First World War, showing the Christmas Day
Reading from the Commemoration of Cecelia Then the three with one voice praised and glorified and blessed God in the furnace: ‘Blessed are you, O