Light in our dark times
Psalm 140, 142, 141 (Morning) Psalm 143:1-11(12) (Evening) Numbers 24:1-13 Romans 8:12-17 Matthew 22:15-22 Our Psalms today are from the “140’s”–in which several of them
Psalm 140, 142, 141 (Morning) Psalm 143:1-11(12) (Evening) Numbers 24:1-13 Romans 8:12-17 Matthew 22:15-22 Our Psalms today are from the “140’s”–in which several of them
Some faith leaders have issued a public letter asking the White House to provide religious groups an exemption from the president’s executive order barring LBGT
Pick one: “My religious liberty is at risk because: (A) I am not allowed to go to a religious service of my own choosing. OR (B) Others are allowed to go to religious services of their own choosing.”
The survivor of an abusive sexual relationship has written a powerful essay about her experience for On Faith. The pseudonymous Marie Jensen writes:
First, the inclusion, omission, and re-inclusion of Independence Day in the liturgical calendar should warn against equating nationalism and Christianity. For its first century and a half, Episcopalians viewed loyalty to Christ and not the nation as paramount.
When a federal judge in Wisconsin struck down the state’s ban on same-sex marriages last month, Episcopal dioceses in the state, none of which were
I recently helped facilitated some focus groups in which some of the newer members of an Episcopal community said that they found the liturgy of
Commemoration of Walter Rauschenbusch, Washington Gladden, and Jacob Riis, Prophetic Witnesses, (1918, 1918, 1914) Psalm 72:12-17 Isaiah 46:8-11 James 2:14-18 Matthew 7:7-12 One thing I
“91 percent of the seafood Americans eat comes from abroad, but one-third of the seafood Americans catch gets sold to other countries.” Paul Greenberg, author
Numerous articles and conversations on The Civil Rights Act of 1964, signed on July 2nd, 1964: NPR’s On Point with Tom Ashbrook dedicated its first