Kelvin on Blogging: all may, none must, some should
Kelvin Holdsworth notes that many in Church leadership who are uncomfortable with bloggers are very uncomfortable with social media, where anyone with a smart phone
Kelvin Holdsworth notes that many in Church leadership who are uncomfortable with bloggers are very uncomfortable with social media, where anyone with a smart phone
Mark Silk, at Religion News Service, looks at the religious numbers of yesterday’s electorate. Most numbers were similar to recent elections past, with one exception:
Micah J. Murray, in the Huff Post Religion blog, talks about “growing up” in understanding about the neat and tidy version of Christianity:
As Americans’ fear of Ebola has been rising this week, a number of people are trying to remain calm, and properly direct peoples’ attention to
Mark Oppenheimer, in Tablet Magazine, extensively interviews The Rev. Bruce Shipman, the former chaplain of the Episcopal Church at Yale University, who in a letter
The Supreme Court’s decision not to hear any of the Marriage Equality decisions of the lower courts will quickly add states who will now have
These words are not too surprising for someone to say about the Episcopal Church, or any organized group. Usually, in doing so, the “I’m” refers
Nate Pyle, the lead pastor of Christ’s Community Church in Fishers, Indiana (the Reformed church of America) reviews the movie “Fight Church” on Rachel Held
What makes for a successful sermon? Keep it to eight minutes or less, and leave politics out, says the Rev. J. Perry Smith, a retired
Louie Clay (né Louie Crew), of the Diocese of Newark and a founder of Integrity, says that sometimes “LGBTQ folks scare me.”