
Presiding Bishop encourages online worship for Easter
“It is important to emphasize that suspension of in-person gatherings is not a suspension of worship. I very much encourage and support online worship.”

“It is important to emphasize that suspension of in-person gatherings is not a suspension of worship. I very much encourage and support online worship.”

As we pray for the peace of Jerusalem, as the Bible teaches us, we must find ways to work for the peace of Jerusalem, which will be found where there is true equality for all, true justice for all and true freedom for everyone.

The days say to us: Enter. Come experience. Come live. Come savor. These days are ours to know. Ours to enter. Ours to walk.

There is a creativity and love at the center of existence that transforms brokenness. It reaches through and beyond suffering. It even vanquishes death.

As clergy and laity across the church meet to renew their baptismal and ordination vows during Holy Week, the Diocese of Atlanta has made an unusual invitation.

It seems as if I was just asking how your Lent was going, and now we’re embarking on the holiest of weeks.

“Open my lips, O Lord, and my mouth shall proclaim your praise.” These words strike a note to begin a fresh new day. They become a reminder, a way to approach challenging relationships, a lens through which to see day-to-day life.

Instead of focusing on dyeing Easter Eggs or doing the church flowers, I will be thinking about Jesus knowing true separation from God so that he could bring us all closer to God.

Twenty-plus years after the formal end of apartheid and the election of government that reflects the majority of citizens in South Africa, the nation continues to struggle with the legacies of racism and colonialism. In an editorial in the Journalist Ace Moloi calls into question both the Church’s complicity and its paucity of meaningful action.

The Bishop of Leeds encouarges a new look at the way in which the tradition speaks of Judas Iscariot, notorious for the betrayal of Jesus