Episcopal Church making uneven progress in repenting of racism
Last night at St. Philip’s Cathedral, Episcopalians in the Diocese of Atlanta attended a service of repentance and reconciliation in response to the sin of
Last night at St. Philip’s Cathedral, Episcopalians in the Diocese of Atlanta attended a service of repentance and reconciliation in response to the sin of
Jim Naughton: What set Jon apart was a firm understanding of the importance of the Café’s role as an independent source of church news, and a clear vision of how to sustain the site in the years ahead
Kristen Welch at the We Are that Family blog writes: Somehow collecting clothes for immigrants has become the perfect opportunity to get rid of stuff
Some strange and objectionable goings on in Houston, where lawyers for the city issued subpoenas for the sermons of five preachers who are trying to
Bishop Gene Robinson writes in The Daily Beast: This week’s working paper, released by the Synod on the Family taking place at the Vatican, is
The Archbishop of Canterbury’s reflection on how world leaders should respond to the threat posed by ISIS appear in the November issue of Prospect magazine
The Barna Group has a new report that plumbs the question of why fewer and fewer Americans are attending church. The document names five trends:
In an essay for America, the Jesuit weekly, Nathan Schneider places the ongoing crisis at General Theological Seminary in the context of labor relations in
The New York Times reports: Reaching across gulfs of age, gender, faith, nationality and even international celebrity, the Norwegian Nobel Committee awarded the 2014 peace
In early August, Ellen Bogan passed a vehicle on an Indiana road. State Trooper Brian Hamilton pulled her over. Then, as David Moye of Huffington