When we are challenged by the notion of Anglicanism being a relatively recent phenomenon, occasioned by a crazy king, we need to remind ourselves that this beautiful Anglican way of adoration began long before the sixteenth century. Read more
When we are challenged by the notion of Anglicanism being a relatively recent phenomenon, occasioned by a crazy king, we need to remind ourselves that this beautiful Anglican way of adoration began long before the sixteenth century. Read more
Anglicanism is a via media between Catholicism and Protestantism while not being forever hostile to either. Read more
This is the first in a series of blogposts that will introduce the reader to the Anglican tradition at a deeper level of the tradition. Read more
Holy Saturday is one of those great mysteries that the early church pondered. Read more
A new book by Phil Ashey proposes a solution to the heresy and division of the Anglican Communion. Read more
Can an Anglican be a Zionist? Most of us think the answer is no, because when we think of Christian Zionism, we think of fundamentalist dispensationalists with crazy eschatologies. The term calls to mind date-setting, a rapture theology that suggests that Christians will not suffer, and the refusal to entertain criticism of the state of Israel. Most Anglicans have problems with all of these presumptions. Click here to see why, and the rest of this article. Read more
The Witherspoon Institute at Princeton University is sponsoring a five-day seminar in July (22-28) that will examine the relationship between religion and politics in the period of the American Revolution, founding, and early republic. Open to untenured faculty and post-doctoral scholars in history, political theory, law, and religion, the seminar will explore primary sources at the intersection of church and state—charters, constitutions, and legal texts, as well as sermons, pamphlets, essays, speeches, debates, and religious texts. Topics will range from... Read more
Register now for the conference “What Is Anglicanism?” at Beeson Divinity School in September. Top leaders and scholars from around the world will answer this question and chart a way forward for the world’s third-largest communion of Christians. Speakers include the recent Archbishop of Kenya Eliud Wabukala, Archbishop of Egypt and leader of the Global South Mouneer Anis, editor of Anglican News Barbara Gauthier, John Yates III, Ephraim Radner, and R.R. Reno, editor of First Things. Click here for more information. Read more
What would Solomon say to anxious young today? We have our answer in a remarkable book by Jordan Peterson, a Canadian academic (University of Toronto) psychologist. Read more
For famous stutterers from Moses to Marilyn, listen to this podcast. Read more