Dr. Mouneer Anis, Anglican Bishop of Egypt,
The Chinese may not welcome religion at home but they love to build churches in Africa.
Contrary to some press reports, we are not aware of any serious move to reintroduce the bill in the Ugandan Parliament as of this writing.
The Archbishop of Canterbury is traveling to Zimbabwe in hopes of being able to stop the ongoing violence caused by renegade Anglicans under the leadership of Bishop Nolbert Kunonga.
“I am hopeful that common sense will prevail,” . . . “how can he [Dr Kunonga] be given custodianship of properties of an organisation or which he is not a member?” The excommunicated bishop left the Church of the Province of Central Africa (CPCA) in 2007 to set up a rival church.
Andudu Adam Elnail, the bishop of Kadugli in Sudan testified before congress this week and detailed charged of ethnic cleansing being carried out by the northern government against the Nuba people in particular.
UPDATE: Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori
We don’t expect Anglican leaders like Rowan Williams to be able to stop this sort of thing singlehandedly. But isn’t it clear by now that the Anglican Communion’s policy of treating those who want to ordain LGBT people as though they are more dangerous than those who want to imprison or kill them, has delivered us to an ugly place?
The Archbishop of Canterbury has made an urgent appeal for donations to emergency relief activities in Somalia, Kenya and Ethiopia – currently facing one of the worst droughts for 60 years.
As a result of an overwhelming vote in favor of the partition of Sudan into two countries, Sudan and South Sudan, at midnight last night,