After Boston: finding your people, saying prayers
The Episcopal Church can feel like a place of only one or two degrees of separation on those days when a tragedy strikes, and everyone
The Episcopal Church can feel like a place of only one or two degrees of separation on those days when a tragedy strikes, and everyone
[This] recasts the Shroud as a testament to Christ’s Resurrection, and not, as currently revered, a relic of Christ’s passion and death. This is a crucial reconception, one that makes sense of the scriptural record, and suggests that the morbid, and ultimately destructive, fascination of Christianity with the suffering of Christ is misplaced.
The Supreme Court is going to consider the questions around gene patenting. What ethical and moral issues are arising. Where should the church stand?
UPDATE: The Episcopal Café offers prayers for all affected by the explosions today at the Marathon.
The Rev. Canon Huffington Post:
John McQuiston II, writing at
A Toronto artist is trying to find a home for his sculpture of Jesus as a homeless person. The
What if the church today were to adopt Jesus’ agenda? We wouldn’t be too popular either.
The Constitutional Convention held in Ireland has voted 79% in favor of marriage equality according to