
Can you hear the hope?
For 40 days our prayers drew us closer to you, Lord. To the One who walks with us. The One who makes all things new.
Easter is here.
For 40 days our prayers drew us closer to you, Lord. To the One who walks with us. The One who makes all things new.
Easter is here.
As we pray for the peace of Jerusalem, as the Bible teaches us, we must find ways to work for the peace of Jerusalem, which will be found where there is true equality for all, true justice for all and true freedom for everyone.
Both the lectionary readings and the Daily Office readings for Holy Week tell again and again how Christ Jesus was seen after the Crucifixion. The
This feast is not one of chocolate and eggs. Nor is it one of hymns and lilies or forsythia and trumpets. It is rather a feast of dynamos and awakening. Jesus strides into our hells to burst them asunder
The Easter Sermon of St John Chrysostom
We want to hold on, don’t we? We want our loved ones to remain present and in their bodies because we don’t want our lives changed, now or ever. Not like that. There is attachment to the way things are. But, when Jesus was on his way to whatever is next, he said, “Let me go.”
We are confronted with the central mystery of Christian life, the resurrection of Christ – what are we to make of this confounding, amazing, and audacious act of God?
What is the view from the foot of the cross from one who stood there and grieved?
The healings presented in the Gospels and Acts are more than just the restoration of physical well-being, so much more.
On a provisional basis, we authorize the use of this name and this name only for the mission station: “St. James Episcopal Church.” In the weeks and months ahead, we invite you and your congregation to a time of prayerful discernment about whether – in view of prior events at the Via Lido property as well as those of 2013-17 – it may be in the interests of the congregation and diocesan community for the bishop to designate a different name.