
Vowing to Follow
Not only did she vow to embrace us as people who had done our work to determine God’s will for us, but she accepted our leadership in the matter. Where we went, our faith community would go
Not only did she vow to embrace us as people who had done our work to determine God’s will for us, but she accepted our leadership in the matter. Where we went, our faith community would go
Open Doors reports that Christian oppression globally is intensifying at an alarming rate.
In the bleak, cold mornings of a northern winter, we pray for glimmers of light, shiny, to catch the eye and the spirit.
Mudslides in southern California have killed at least 13 as storms hit soil left bare by last year’s wildfires. Montecito has been particularly hard hit.
“For the decision I have made I ask your understanding and respect. In the work we still have to do together I ask your patience and perseverance. Know that I remain ever grateful for your prayers.”
Identifying as Republican is a greater indicator for ranking clergy as honest and ethical than identifying as a Christian.
The internet is so loud. So full of stuff. So angry. So confusing. So controversial. But there is goodness to be found. There is hope in this piece of the world that connects us.
When Rev Canon Anne Dyer was appointed as the latest bishop of the Diocese of Aberdeen and Orkney, not everyone was pleased.
Katherine Stewart wrote an opinion piece about the recently opened Museum of the Bible in Washington, D.C., saying that it is the focal point for many Christian Nationalists, hosting an “intensely politicized religion.”
We look at the state of technology use in our churches and discuss how it might enhance worship as well as why it so often seems to feel disconnected from it.