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TLC and #GivingTuesday

From the editors:

If you’re reading this, The Living Church is probably already your daily blog, news source, or Daily Devotional. We hope we’re coming to your mailbox twice a month. Maybe we’ve even seen you in person lately, as the co-host of a theology conference at your local parish.

On #GivingTuesday, as we approach Advent and a season of reflective giving, would you also remember that we’re a 501(c)(3)?

This is what your gifts and donations made possible in 2019:

  • Continued circulation of The Living Church magazine
  • Production of CovenantIlluminations, and the Daily Devotional
  • Crucial conference at Lambeth Palace with global church leaders
  • Pilgrimage to Rome with seminarians
  • Teaching events in the U.S.
  • Launch of the “Anglicans Believe” pamphlet series

To stay at the cutting edges of faithful reporting, teaching, and leadership in the Episcopal Church today, The Living Church Foundation, like any religious non-profit, depends on God’s generosity and the generosity of others.

The Living Church only continues when faithful donors give. We rely financially on fellow Episcopalians — lay leaders, students, and clergy alike. No gift is too large or too small.

Will you commit to keep us thriving in 2020? Whether it’s $1, or a repeated gift of $10,000+, we will use your investment to prayerfully pay forward into the life, leadership, and future of the Episcopal Church and Anglicanism worldwide.

Put us in your calendar for Dec. 3, or give now.

You can also learn more about giving to The Living Church, including testimonials and investment information, here.

God bless you.

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Suffragan Bishop Joey Royal Resigns

In Ottawa, Bishop Royal will become the international relations and operations manager with the Christian Embassy of Canada.

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In this clearly written book, T.L. Holtzen explains why the complicated debates about the doctrine of justification before and after the Reformation still matter today.

S. African Priests Protest Rejection of Same-Sex Blessings

The Rev. Canon Chris Ahrends: “It’s time for a form of ‘civil disobedience’ within the church — call it ‘ecclesiastical disobedience’ — by clergy of conscience.”

St. David’s of Denton, Texas, Celebrates Larger Space

The Rev. Paul Nesta, rector: “We aren’t here today because a building was consecrated [in the 1950s]. We’re here because a people were consecrated and given good work to advance.”