News Updates

News Updates

8/31/2005

Featured

  • Bishop Jenkins: Aftermath is a Nightmare, and Worsening

    “Louisiana south of Interstate-10 is a wasteland”, the Rt. Rev. Charles E. Jenkins, III, told The Living Church in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. “We cannot reach some of our clergy, we cannot reach our families:” it is a “nightmare” and the situation is “worsening as we speak.”

  • Ministry to the Homeless

    The problem of homelessness knows no boundaries, geographic, racial, age or gender.

  • Many Benefits of a Sister Parish

    The establishment and maintenance of a sister parish relationship is a low-cost program which can provide many benefits to a congregation and its members. Such a relationship can be much more than what "we" do for "them."

  • Why We Don't Grow

    It has occurred to me that maybe the church does not want to grow.

  • Preaching as Sacred Play

    Preaching is hard work. Good preaching is even harder work. Former Archbishop of Canterbury Donald Coggin described the homiletical discipline as a "joyful tyranny." Most preachers are well acquainted with the noun Lord Coggin uses, but many have little if any sense of the adjective.

  • It's the Congregation, Not the Diocese

    I don’t think it’s possible to follow Jesus as Lord and Savior without doing so in a local Christian community.

  • Giving a Boost to Good Preachers

    Let's be honest about this right up front. The Episcopal Church is not known for great preaching. Having said that, let's take note of what some people in St. Louis are doing about that.

  • Twenty Five Notable Years

    On June 9, the Rev. Canon John Andrew will retire as rector of St. Thomas' Church, Fifth Avenue, New York City's famous church, and return to his native England to live. When in Washington recently, he shared some thoughts about his 25 years in the Episcopal Church - a ministry notable for traditional worship, great music, liturgy and preaching, pastoral care and community outreach.

  • Boston Landmark Thrives Again

    While the church building of Trinity Church, Boston, the congregation began to shrink ominously, beginning in the mid 1960s. But the church has made a healthy turnaround.

  • Six Coastal Mississippi Churches Demolished

    The whereabouts and safety of all but two of Mississippi’s Gulf Coast clergy have been confirmed, according to the diocese’s canon to the ordinary. But Hurricane Katrina has demolished at least six of the 10 parishes in the Coastal Convocation.

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