A moral deficit
Barak Obama preached at Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta yesterday. But he was doing more than appealing for votes in this symbolic and important congregation.
Barak Obama preached at Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta yesterday. But he was doing more than appealing for votes in this symbolic and important congregation.
Sarah Vowell reflects on a holiday dedicated to radical love: Here’s what Dr. King got out of the Sermon on the Mount. On Nov. 17,
A brief profile of Katharine Jefferts Schori describes how she keeps her cool in a very stressful job. Daniel Burke of Religious News Service says
Last Saturday, Episcopalian in the Diocese of Albany prayed together, listened to each other, and reached across the divide that afflicts the church these days/
Updated Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams has written to Canadian Primate Archbishop Fred Hiltz to say that he “cannot support or sanction” foreign interventions in
Seventy percent of the world’s Anglican bishops have registered for the Lambeth Conference with more on the way. This is a signal, says Rowan Williams,
The Right Rev. Musonda Trevor Mwamba of Botswana, spoke to the convention of the Diocese of North Carolina Saturday, and he wondered out loud “When
What started out as a time of prayer by an Episcopal priest and nun a century ago is now observed by Christians around the world
“The Archbishop of Canterbury condemns unequivocally the use of state machinery to intimidate opponents of the deposed bishop of Harare, Nolbert Kunonga, and is appalled by recent reports of Zimbabwean police forcibly stopping Sunday services in several churches in Harare where clergy have publicly and bravely refused to acknowledge Kunonga’s Episcopal authority. Kunonga’s position has become increasingly untenable within the Anglican Church over the last year, as he has consistently refused to maintain appropriate levels of independence from the Zimbabwean Government.”
The Anglican Church in Aotearoa, New Zealand and Polynesia and The Anglican Church of Scotland have both weighed in on the proposed Anglican Covenant. They are both respectful but clear about what they see as shortcomings to the document as proposed and leery of the assumptions behind it. Both offer alternate ways forward.