Will a lunchtime of letters at Lambeth save the Anglican Communion?
In a last ditch attempt to reduce the tensions in the Anglican Communion the Archbishop of Canterbury has written to all the bishops.
In a last ditch attempt to reduce the tensions in the Anglican Communion the Archbishop of Canterbury has written to all the bishops.
Young men are feeling alienated by today's culture but the Church can provide the answer.
'In our utilitarian and utopian zeal, the right to die today may become the duty to die tomorrow,' warns Toronto physician Mark D'Souza.
The orthodox archbishops and bishops of the Anglican churches in Nigeria, Uganda and Rwanda are boycotting Lambeth 2022 because they are not prepared to compromise on marriage and sexuality. Given the politicking over the Call on Human Dignity, their stand has very arguably been vindicated.
Millions of orthodox Anglicans around the world are praying that the next two weeks will bring healing and life. The events of the past few days suggest it will be a challenge.
Before it has even started, the Archbishop of Canterbury's hope, "not to have the whole Lambeth Conference spent talking about issues of human sexuality," seems to have been dashed.
With an almighty row looming over sexual morality, the Lambeth Conference of Anglican bishops worldwide looks set to make the recent ructions in the Conservative Party look like a teddy bears' picnic at the vicarage.
As Anglican bishops from around the world gather for the 2022 Lambeth Conference in Canterbury, Kent, UK, this week, Rev Peter Crumpler recalls his part in the last Conference, back in 2008.
To mark World Day for Grandparents and the Elderly on 24 July, Wayne Bartle, Senior Carer for Pilgrims' Friend Society reflects on 20 years of laughter, encouragement and perspective.
Parents may sometimes be wrong and their attempts to protect their children may ultimately prove futile, but their beliefs and views should be respected.
Columnist David French recently expressed his hope that we have reached "peak woke." He defined this as "the peak (for now) of left-wing institutional intolerance and illiberalism regarding race, sex, and religion." I certainly hope he is right, since the alternative is hard to imagine.
The experience of Moses and Elijah in choosing their successors could teach us a thing or two for our present times.
As the numbers living in poverty continue to soar globally amid the cost of living crisis, the Church must go further when reaching out to the poor and ensure that we introduce them to Jesus in a way that they can relate to.