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TLC 247/1 online

The July 7 edition of The Living Church is available online to registered subscribers.

This edition features an essay by historian Worth Norman, Jr., about the Civil War’s effects on church and state. Also in this issue, Gary G. Yerkey reviews A Powerful Blessing: The Life of Charles Colcock Jones Carpenter, Sr., by the bishop’s son, the Rev. Douglas M. Carpenter.

News
Texas Gains $1 Billion in Sale

Features
The Civil War, Church, and State
By Worth “Woody” Norman, Jr.

Books
A Powerful Blessing by Douglas M. Carpenter
Review by Gary G. Yerkey

Healing Wisdom edited by Kathleen J. Grider
Discovering the Treasure Within by R. Carroll Travis
Decision Making and Spiritual Discernment 
by Nancy L. Bieber

Review by Robert D. Hughes III

Receiving David by Faye Knol
Review by Anna Masi

Family Theology by Carol J. Gallagher
Review by Emily Hylden

Sic et non
A Provisional Solution
By Mark McCall

Cultures

The Ethics of Dr. Spock
By Leonard Freeman

Summertime
By Ephraim Radner

Other Departments
Cæli enarrant
Sunday’s Readings
People & Places

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Province of Central Africa to Become Three National Churches

The Anglican Province of Central Africa confirmed its intention to divide into three autonomous national churches, and to allow dioceses to ordain women at a synod held this week in Bulawayo, Zimbabwe.

Teen’s Baptismal Journey Took 7,500 km

The teenager, identified only as Aaron, could not be baptized in his underground church, or in the state-approved Three-Self Patriotic Movement.

Pauli Murray Center Celebrates Groundbreaking Priest-Activist

The center, located in Murray’s childhood home in Durham, North Carolina, contains exhibits about her life and provides space for community and social-justice programs.

New EDS Dean Seeks to Fill Gaps in Theological Education

An unaccredited seminary with neither buildings nor faculty — yet buttressed by an $80 million endowment — Episcopal Divinity School is determining what offering it will bring to the church in its current iteration, says new dean and president Lydia Kelsey Bucklin.