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| St. James Episcopal Church, Milton-Freewater, Oregan, Closed January 18, 2026 |
Pastoring an Angry Church and Leading a Ministry You Didn't Start with Rich Villodas
I caught up with Rich Villodas backstage at Exponential to talk about the learnable skills that keep leaders and congregations non-anxious in an angry age, and the unique challenges and gifting needed to lead a church you didn't plant.
Clergy Transitioning at Local Episcopal Churches
The Episcopal Church of Christ the King in Sturgeon Bay and Holy Nativity in Jacksonport are preparing to bid farewell to their priest and welcome another.
Note the ages of the departing vicar and his replacement. This and the part–time appointment of the vicar for the two yoked churches does not bode well for their future!Ocean City church won’t close shelter after city threatens ‘enforcement action’
Nearly six weeks after St. Paul’s by-the-Sea Episcopal Church in downtown Ocean City, Maryland, opened its overnight shelter for unhoused people inside its building, city officials charged the parish with a zoning violation. The city is now demanding the church close the shelter by June 8 at 9 a.m. or be fined an unspecified amount daily until operations cease and face “further enforcement action.”
Canadian Diocese Wants to Save its Cathedral
Christ Church Cathedral in Fredericton, New Brunswick, Canada is in dire need of repairs, and the diocesan synod has voted not to take the quick-fix route of selling it to a secular entity. The repairs could cost $17-$18 million, and the diocese wants to raise another $5 million to create an endowment.
The cathedral is nearly 175 years old and is on Canada’s Register of Historic Places, which praises it as an example of Gothic Revival architecture.
ACNA: Imagination Forfeited
We have mule churches. We need rabbit churches.
Too many ACNA clergy and congregations display the same lack of enthusiasm and even distate for planting new churches and making new disciples that has contributed to the decline of the Episcopal Church.Anglican Denominations & Communions: A Guide to Global Alignments
The landscape of global Anglicanism can be confusing, even for those well acquainted with it. In a single US city, one can find Anglican churches from two or three different dioceses of the Anglican Church in North America (ACNA), along with other congregations connected to the Anglican Province of America, the Anglican Mission in the Americas, the Anglican Catholic Church, the United Episcopal Church of North America, and The Episcopal Church.
All present themselves as Anglican. Yet even a little casual digging reveals more than minor differences in worship expression and ethos, including some major variance in doctrine and even disparate definitions of what constitutes the gospel. Matters become more confusing when the Anglican Church in North American and The Episcopal Church both claim to be part of the Anglican Communion while denying that status to the other.
Who are all these groups, and how does a church belong to the Anglican Communion, if such a thing exists?
Faith communities must lead on the hunger crisis — but they can't substitute for US policy
The need for faith-based leadership on hunger is a sign American policy is not working.
Are You Really Filled with the Spirit?
When I was a college student, a classmate asked me whether I had been filled with the Holy Spirit. At that time, I wasn’t sure how to answer that question. Now, I know that the Bible tells me everything I need to know about the filling of the Spirit.
Let’s ask and answer three questions of the Bible about the Spirit’s filling: Who in Scripture is “filled with the Spirit”? What does this expression actually mean? How can I pursue and experience this filling of the Spirit?
3 Keys to Healthy Disciple Making Relationships
Whether you’re leading a discipleship ministry or personally discipling someone, we all make missteps in these relationships.
How to Discover Your God-Given Purpose
Let’s take a brief look at how to discover your God-given purpose. I’ve never met a person who didn’t want to know why they exist and how to make a difference in their sphere of influence.
There are at least three things you can do that will help in the process of discovery.
Want to Share the Good News? Ask Good Questions
People like talking about themselves. They want to discuss the things they love, the things they hate, and the reasons you should love and hate those same things. This is powerful information for evangelism. If we want more opportunities to share the gospel with people, we need to get them talking about their beliefs. And one of the best ways to get people talking is to ask good questions.
Image Credit: St. James Episcopal Church, Milton-Freewater, Oregan













