Category: The Lead

Presiding bishop gives thanks in Guam

Fresh from her visit to the peace conference in Korea, Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori visited Guam, which is estimated to have about 250 Episcopalians, according to the Pacific Daily News. Yesterday, she visited St. John’s School and delivered a sermon to the more than 500 students there, saying, “The basic reason you and I have come to a place like this is to say, ‘Thank you,'” she said. “Thank you for our blessings from God. Thank you for the abundance of life, … for our family, friends and neighbors.”

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Divisions are distracting us

“Drenched in Grace” is a residential conference offered up by Inclusive Church, and is going on now in England. The writers over at Inclusive Church Blog are providing recaps of the featured speakers. Notable was yesterday’s opening keynote, delivered by the Dr Jenny Plane Te Paa, who “lamented our obsession with drawing lines that exclude, which is distracting us from the enormous suffering so many people face.”

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Responses of the Primates to New Orleans communiqué

The Archbishop of Canterbury has written to Anglican Communion Primates and members of the Anglican Consultative Council (ACC) with a summary of their individual responses to the outcome of September House of Bishops meeting of the Episcopal Church (USA). He made it clear that he was not at this stage advancing his own interpretation of these responses.

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Rector invites entire congregation over for turkey

At Steve and Jean Keplinger’s Thanksgiving table, there will be turkey, ham and sauerkraut, mixed with traditional foods reflecting a potpourri of cultures. Nearly 200 people have been invited, and if you happen to show up, they’ll squeeze you in somehow. That the rector of St. David’s Episcopal Church has invited his entire congregation to dinner at home is not unusual….

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Anglican conference on peace in Korea

The driving force behind TOPIK (Towards Peace in Korea) is The Most Revd Francis Park, Primate of the Anglican Church of Korea (ACK). The conference is divided into three parts, each chaired by the Primate of one of the churches who have cooperated in preparing the Conference. The first element, chaired by the Most Revd Katharine Jefferts Schori, Presiding Bishop of the USA’s Episcopal Church, was a Peace Visit to North Korea – crossing through the demilitarised zone, the world’s most heavily fortified border.

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Stem cells and ethics

The new work shows that the direct reprogramming technique can also produce versatile cells that are genetically matched to a person. But it avoids several problems that have bedeviled the cloning approach. For one thing, it doesn’t require a supply of unfertilized human eggs, which are hard to obtain for research and subjects the women donating them to a surgical procedure. Using eggs also raises the ethical questions of whether women should be paid for them.

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Give thanks for free enterprise

After the Pilgrims had endured near-starvation for three winters, Bradford decided to experiment when it came time to plant in the spring of 1623. He set aside a plot of land for each family, that “they should set corne every man for his owne perticuler, and in that regard trust to themselves.”

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Just retired bishop renounces vows

Lipscomb (Southwest Florida) said he has written to Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori, asking “to be released from my ordination vows and the obligations and responsibilities of a member of the House of Bishops. I have taken this step in order to be received into the Catholic Church.”

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