From the Chapter

Will You Be a Micaiah?
Rebecca Terhune Rebecca Terhune

Will You Be a Micaiah?

By The Rev. Cameron MacMillan, ‘16

These truths are not hard for most of us preachers to preach. It feels good to say them. We know they are true. We know how crucial it is to make much of God's love. Probably most of our words barely touch on the depths of his love, linguistically limited creatures that we are. 

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Bringing the Priesthood into Corporate America
Rebecca Terhune Rebecca Terhune

Bringing the Priesthood into Corporate America

By The Rev. Greg McBrayer

The 1990s had been a very turbulent time for our airline and our industry. Many carriers were already struggling before 9/11, but after that day the struggles quickly intensified to an unhealthy, unsafe level, and there was no end in sight. That’s when I suddenly found God using me more and more pastorally in my workplace than in my church. In the very challenging months that followed, the need for a spiritual presence continued to grow, and it fed my desire to serve God in a more profound capacity.

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Military Chaplains and the Local Church
Ministry, Spiritual Formation Rebecca Terhune Ministry, Spiritual Formation Rebecca Terhune

Military Chaplains and the Local Church

By The Rev. Canon Kelly O'Lear, Canon Theologian to the Jurisdiction of the Armed Forces and Chaplaincy

When thinking about Anglican priests serving in the military as chaplains, it’s helpful to take perspective on what a select and small group comprises this cohort. About 0.4% of the U.S. population presently serves in the entire active-duty military. Unless a congregation is near a military base, few of those worshipping in an Anglican parish might actually know someone in uniform.

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A Leader, Not a Follower: Bishop Kemper and Apostolic Ministry
Nashotah House, Spiritual Formation, Theology Rebecca Terhune Nashotah House, Spiritual Formation, Theology Rebecca Terhune

A Leader, Not a Follower: Bishop Kemper and Apostolic Ministry

By Mark Michael

The Sunday after the Ascension, May 24, marks a century and half since the death of the Rt. Rev. Jackson Kemper, the Episcopal Church’s first missionary bishop. The current crisis won’t allow for a proper celebration, though perhaps a few pilgrims will gather by his tomb at Nashotah that day for reverent, if socially distanced, prayers of thanksgiving.

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