Beyond Ethics: Transcendence, Prayer and Spirit
In our May 2024 feature section, you will find:
Allan Rudy-Froese got sick of sermons—including his own—in which ethics overshadowed God, so he took a deep dive into grace.
In our May 2024 feature section, you will find:
Allan Rudy-Froese got sick of sermons—including his own—in which ethics overshadowed God, so he took a deep dive into grace.
The tilet is a quintessential feature of Ethiopian traditional attire, deeply rooted in our religious, ethnic and identity symbolism.
A new book offers practices for leaders and communities to foster healthier cultures during a time of ecological devastation.
Our society is in the middle of a painful, promising and complicated shift. We know we need to stop burning fossil fuels.
Mennonite Central Committee (MCC) B.C. made headlines across Canada when it announced last September that it had received a gift of property worth $229.6 million.
As I write this, we are in the midst of planting our garden. But don’t get the wrong image; when I say garden, I mean a field worked by hand to grow our own f
My interview with the pastoral search committee was wrapping up when one of the members asked me if I had any questions.
Allan Rudy-Froese says he “got sick” of hearing sermons that spoke more about “what we should do” than the life of faith.
God comes to us in many ways. Sometimes we are keenly aware of God’s presence; at other times we just don’t pay attention.
“I think you are a contemplative.” Spoken by my spiritual director, those words caught
“This is my beloved son, in whom I am well pleased” (Matthew 3:17).
"Mommy, why are those ladies wearing sheets?” I loudly asked my divorced mother. I was a young boy, and a group of nuns were standing in the dairy corne
Over 200 people from 75 of the 110 Mennonite Church Eastern Canada congregations attended the MCEC annual gathering at the UMEI high school in Leamington, Ontario on April 26 and 27.
Does CM support Trump?
A call from Christians in Palestine to lament and pray for people suffering in Gaza prompted Mennonites in Winnipeg to organize a service.