USA Today features faith bloggers from a variety of denominations and points of view. Episcopal Cafe, Louie Crew, TitusOneNine, and others are mentioned as Episcopal sites.
The 2003 triennial General Convention of the Episcopal Church, the U.S. branch of the worldwide Anglican Communion, inspired scores of new blogs in full battle cry over the vote by bishops, clergy and lay leaders to accept the election of an openly homosexual bishop in New Hampshire.
Blogging your beliefs is a lonely venture [for David] Virtue, “Even my wife doesn’t altogether agree with me.”
“It’s hard to keep your day job” given all the research and reading required, says conservative Anglican blogger the Rev. Kendall Harmon. Harmon is canon theologian for the diocese of South Carolina, along with blogging at TitusOneNine.
“There is a truth and reliability quotient. I post stuff I virulently disagree with. The idea is to influence the discussion,” Harmon says.
Canon Jim Naughton of the Diocese of Washington, D.C., creator of the Daily Episcopalian, a liberal blog, has seen it transformed into a multi-blogger site featuring art, essays, news and posts on faith “in the spirit of charity,” the home page of Episcopal Cafe says.
Read the full article by Cathy Lynn Grossman, who covers religion for USA Today here