
Speaking to the Soul: Playing on Holy Ground
Believing that worship can be fun and playful doesn’t take the seriousness away from church. I believe that the more serious we take church, the more we can be playful with church.

Believing that worship can be fun and playful doesn’t take the seriousness away from church. I believe that the more serious we take church, the more we can be playful with church.
In this episode, Jon, Jennifer, Amy, and Charles (sort of) crack open the BCP to see what works, what doesn’t and what we might want in a revised prayer book

So, in some sense, the work of the members is the work of the church. In other words, getting disciples to share the Good News and to serve the world, etc., is the work of the church. But in another sense, it’s worth thinking about a nuanced difference between the church’s work and the work of its members.

We are all doing the best we can, and that’s enough.

Even prison walls cannot hold back the Spirit of the Lord

We cannot receive the blessings of the overwhelming beauty and power of God’s creation without the gifts of air and light. Air moves, and we have the wind which sometimes blows gently against our bodies, and others moans through the cracks in our homes like a miserable ghost. Usually, I listen to the wind and consider that a friend has come to visit me

In the Magazine we’re looking at worship and its intersection with our lives. In this piece, Carrie Willard invites us to sit with her and calls upon us to extend the invitation to others – #sitbyme

At the Magazine this month we’re exploring worship in the Episcopal Church. In this piece, Carrie Willard speaks to the place of kids in church, and the place of church in our lives.
At the Magazine we’re looking into worship in the Episcopal Church. In this video, retired bishop Neff Powell gives witness to the power of communion n the life of the church

Derek Olsen reflects on what an Anglo-Catholic future looks like in the Episcopal Church.