Features

Acclaimed Worship Spaces

  • Thursday, January 17, 2013

Compiled by Lauren Anderson
A survey of five award-winning architectural designs.

Gerre Hancock’s Improvised Fun

  • Tuesday, April 17, 2012

“It was like a great trailer truck, a lorry juggernaut, backing into a garage from a New York side street.”

Editorial: Getting to Yes

  • Saturday, February 25, 2012

The proposed Anglican Communion Covenant has taken a battering lately in a handful of diocesan synods of the Church of England, thanks in part to an influential, if incoherent, campaign by the No A

Walking Together in Haiti

  • Friday, February 24, 2012

By Mark Harris
Haiti is more than Port-au-Prince, more than the earthquake of 2010, more than “the poorest nation in the Western Hemisphere,” more than a place that needs our help.

A Tale of Two Grandmothers

  • Friday, January 20, 2012

By Boyd Wright
If God granted the prayers of one side and denied the others, did he consider the North right and moral and the South wrong and evil? Abraham Lincoln, for one, refused to believe this.

T. Grayson Dashiell: Secretary and Envoy

  • Friday, January 13, 2012

By Worth E. Norman, Jr.
Probably no one else in the history of the Diocese of Virginia served the church in as many critical positions as T. Grayson Dashiell did over his career.

Dag Hammarskjold: Christian Peacemaker

  • Friday, January 6, 2012

By Nigel A. Renton
In June the Standing Commission on Liturgy and Music’s weblog began listing names of folk to be considered for the latest iteration of the Episcopal Church’s Sanctoral Calendar (Holy Women, Holy Men, in trial use during this triennium). The list neglected a worthy nominee in Dag Hammarskjöld, who died in September 1961.

Recognizably Anglican

  • Friday, May 20, 2011

By George R. Sumner
Mission must balance both adaptation and a careful guarding of what is authentically Christian.

Building on a Solid Foundation

  • Thursday, May 5, 2011

By Ian Ernest
There is an urgency for all the stakeholders of this Communion to deal with the stranger within ourselves.

Section 4: Commitment in Word and Deed

  • Friday, April 29, 2011

By Andrew Goddard
The weakness of the Covenant lies not in the text and its alleged centralization but in the fact that many of the Covenant’s drafters and supporters now doubt that the standing committee and the instruments are sufficiently “fit for purpose.”

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