How are you marking #Lent?
Starting with #VirtualShrove and #ashtag, Lent’s online incarnation (if you’ll pardon the pun) has been substantial this year. Here’s a roundup of some of where
Starting with #VirtualShrove and #ashtag, Lent’s online incarnation (if you’ll pardon the pun) has been substantial this year. Here’s a roundup of some of where
The Church of England’s first woman bishop, Libby Lane, will be installed in her new position as eighth Bishop of Stockport on International Women’s Day,
The Tennessean has published a profile of Episcopal priest Rebecca Stevens, the founder of Magdalene Recovery Center, a residential program in Nashville, Tenn. for women
The Episcopal Cafe team has been enjoying this recent post at The Beaker Folk of Husborne Crawley, which provices a (mostly) tongue-in-cheek guide to church profile euphemisms.
In Inside Higher Ed, Colleen Flaherty reports on the presence and stigmatization of depression in academia, and specifically on a professor who has become a
The Episcopal Public Policy Network is addressing domestic and worldwide poverty, publishing blogs each Wednesday during Lent. Today’s post, “Engaging Poverty Through Housing,” explores the
The Reverend Weston Mathews, associate rector at St. Stephen’s Episcopal in Richmond, Va., and a contributing editor to Episcopal Cafe, was one of ten people
Brite Divinity School at Texas Christian University and the Episcopal Diocese of Fort Worth have announced the creation of the $2.5 million endowed Right Reverend
The Rt. Reverend Eugene Taylor Sutton’s Lenten message to the diocese acknowledges that “repentance is not a solitary act”: Repentance is a corporate act of
Over the weekend, the Washington Post published a piece on National Public Radio host Diane Rehm’s advocacy for death with dignity. Last year, Rehm’s husband