J.K. Rowling ‘fesses up
J.K. Rowling, the author of the best selling series of books about Harry Potter, “the boy who lived” has revealed in an interview with MTV
J.K. Rowling, the author of the best selling series of books about Harry Potter, “the boy who lived” has revealed in an interview with MTV
It’s tough to walk with God when you have all of these options staring you in the face. I think the last thing the Christian community needs is another person who says they have it all together, a 12-step process for being perfect. That doesn’t exist. I can help people by being honest.
I cannot even express what it was like to learn that perhaps all my questions were not signs of sinfulness or fault; I can’t begin to explain the overwhelming and startling joy at encountering a God who did not look at me only to see where I had failed, but who accepted me and called me to higher places.
Good Shepherd of the Hills of Cave Creek, Arizona and its involvement in issues of migration and day laborers will be seen on ABC’s Nightline.
In 1988, the Episcopal Church endorsed a new set of guidelines governing Christian-Jewish relations. Supersessionism’s repercussions, the guidelines read, had been “fateful.”
Bob Stumbles, chancellor of the Diocese of Harare, brings blessed clarity to the confusing saga of Bishop Nolbert Kunonga, the pro-Mugabe leader of that diocese, and makes it clear that the bishop is using the issue of homosexuality as a smoke screen to divert attention from his personal misdeeds. Stumbles also makes it clear that the reports of the province’s dissolution are in error.
Ten men and women are singing a cappella, “Bless the Lord, O my soul, and all that is within me bless his holy name,” and their voices drench us fugitive worshippers kneeling, naked, trembling, needy, in the knowledge of grace, and when we arise and go out into Baltimore, the blessing follows us.
The Dalai Lama said, “I believe that this award sends a powerful message to those individuals who are dedicated to promoting peace.”
This is where that place of painful tension is found: in the attempt to value unity and relationship while at the same time valuing and insisting on justice and dignity toward a marginalized people.
This tension is, I think, precisely the tension of the Gospel, the tension in which Jesus himself lived and from which he carried out his ministry. He refuses to abandon relationships for the sake of justice, nor does he abandon justice for the sake of relationship.
The man whose ordination led to changes in the National Canons has died at 95. David Salmon was the first Athabascan to be ordained an Episcopal priest.