Why evangelicals ought to love the Book of Common Prayer
An American evangelical scholar looks at the Book of Common Prayer and likes what he reads.
An American evangelical scholar looks at the Book of Common Prayer and likes what he reads.
Lately, it has become fashionable that churches and charities should replace government in funding and managing social services. Mike Konczal calls this “the voluntarism fantasy.”
The sculpture “Homeless Jesus” has been installed at St. John’s Episcopal Church in Grand Haven, Michigan.
The Church of England has officially submitted its reason why civil partnership should be retained now that same-sex marriage is legal in the UK.
The Archbishop of Canterbury’s comments linking progress toward LGBT equality in American churches to the massacre of Christians in Africa continue to reverberate. The New
The Guardian: Archbishop Desmond Tutu has called for an anti-apartheid-style boycott and disinvestment campaign against the fossil fuel industry for driving dangerous global warming, just
The Atlantic, arriving late to the party, asks whether social media can be used for evangelism in a nice profile of Sister Helena Burns, a
The”Gospel of Jesus Wife” is not fraudulent, writes Lisa Wangsness of The Boston Globe. That’s different than saying it is an authentic account of past
“The American Bible Society’s latest State of the Bible survey documents steep skepticism that the Good Book is a God book,” writes Cathy Lynn Grossman
The Rev. Jon M. Richardson took to Facebook looking for some provocative feedback: So: fun idea that came out of meeting with church staff today