Sad news
Our prayers go out to the Rev. Bosco Peters, his wife Helen and son Jonathan, after the sudden accidental death of their daughter Catharine during a University-sponsored Alpine Club outing in New Zealand.
Our prayers go out to the Rev. Bosco Peters, his wife Helen and son Jonathan, after the sudden accidental death of their daughter Catharine during a University-sponsored Alpine Club outing in New Zealand.
An Argentinian bank created an ad that says that if a bank can change and be generous, then maybe we can too. Watch it here.
The first meeting of the Anglican Consultative Council’s International Anglican Women’s Network (IAWN) took place last week at the Desmond Tutu Center in New York.
The Archbishop of Province de l’Eglise Anglicane du Burundi, Bernard Ntahoturi, has said that his province “doesn’t want the crossing of borders” by Bishops and
The Church of Ireland Gazette believes that the Primates Meeting should remain a place of consultative fellowship and stay away from a more formal Primates Council.
It appears that the American Bible Society might have inserted itself into the Anglican family squabble by dropping the Episcopal Church from its list of denominations able to use their web-site building service called ForMinistry.
The Associated Press reports that Temple Emanu-El, the only synagogue in Dothan, Alabama, has found a way to reverse their shrinking attendance and aging membership trends: offer “Jewish families as much as $50,000 to relocate and get involved” in the congregation.
The Guardian posed this question to four writers this past week. The question mirrors similar concerns in the United States where Christians often find negotiating a secular, pluralist society jarring.
If Jesus had Twitter, what would Jesus tweet? The Church of England’s Love Life Love Lent outreach via social networking sites Twitter and Facebook may have the answer.
A new church in Moline, Illinois formed out of the split in the Diocese of Quincy has held its worship in its new home and is getting ready for a visit in April by the Presiding Bishop. The members describe themselves as a “happy bunch” and who are getting more people in church than they expected.