“Was he a saint? Not if a saint is entirely flawless.”
Oxford University Press in the United Kingdom has agreed to publish a five volume series called The Oxford History of Anglicanism.
Looking for a movie or perhaps a graphic novel? Here are two interesting lists.
Canada’s federal prison system has chosen a private contractor to provide chaplaincy services across the country
The Religion News Service has released their first-ever interfaith holiday shopping guide for the hard-to-shop for religious (or non-religious) folks on your list. Meanwhile, the folks who brought us Lent Madness have given into to the crass commercialism of the season.
This month marks an event that took place fifty years ago that has shaped and influenced our culture.
We are talking, of course, of Dr. Who.
Some people are apparently a little weary of all the remembering going on today. Which is strange coming from a tradition built on anamnesis.
Deacon Diane Riley of Diocese of Newark says that the state’s food banks cannot make up for the $90 million annual cuts in SNAP benefits. The advocacy director of the Community FoodBank says that these cuts will affect 873,000 people — 10 percent of the population of New Jersy, the vast majority being children, elderly or the working poor.
Fifty years ago, the Rev. William Holmes stood in the pulpit of his Methodist Church in Dallas, Texas, and spoke hard truths to his community and avoided comfortable platitudes.
The Very Rev Kelvin Holdsworth, Provost of St Mary’s Cathedral in Glasgow, writes about watching the debate unfold.