From The Living Church <[email protected]>
Subject TLC Weekly: Trinity Wall Street Grants Millions for Racial Justice; Soup and Service in Honduras; The Future of Multicultural Anglicanism.
Date June 26, 2020 11:31 AM
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Millions Granted
For Racial Justice

By Kirk Petersen
Trinity Church Wall Street announced $7 million in grants to 57 non-profit organizations dedicated to eliminating systemic racism in New York City. The church's philanthropic grants have totaled nearly $12 million so far this year, a record, and there's another grant cycle in the fall.
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Soup, Service & God's Love in Honduras

By Ignacio Gama and Kristen Gunn
The pandemic has created significant challenges in Honduras, where just under half the population lives in poverty and many do not have internet access in their homes.
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Racism Talk Wins
UK Theology Slam

By Kristin Gunn
After being denied a curacy in part because of his race, Augustine Tanner-Ihm delivered a talk on theology and race that won the UK’s second Theology Slam competition.
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Finding God
On Cwm Cau

By Mark Clavier
My treks into changeless wildernesses like Cwm Cau are like inhabited parables, natural illustrations of what has been revealed. Even within creation my deepest affections can be engaged by that which seems never to change.
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Multicultural Anglicanism Podcast

What happens when your cultural or racial identity feels at odds with your religious identity? Is Anglicanism truly “multicultural” because it’s global? Esau McCaulley, Mark Clavier, and Christopher Wells discuss the future possibilities of multicultural Anglicanism.
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Meaninglessness
In the Time of COVID

By Landon Moore
Can we really believe in the promises of Christ amid this profound hardship? Can we believe in the promises of God if a loved one passes away from COVID-19? Can we believe in the promises of the living God when we cannot provide for our family? If calamity comes, may the Lord give you the grace to affirm your identity in Christ.
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White Christian Fallacies

By Stewart Clem
We are too much like the “white moderate” in King’s “Letter from a Birmingham Jail,” “who is more devoted to ‘order’ than to justice; who prefers a negative peace which is the absence of tension to a positive peace which is the presence of justice; who constantly says: ‘I agree with you in the goal you seek, but I cannot agree with your methods of direct action’."
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Caregivers

By Patrick Twomey
People who take care of other people are taking care of Christ. People who take care of other people are themselves another incarnation of Christ. And yet these caregivers do not make a living wage; many do not have adequate medical insurance; many are trapped in poverty to qualify for public assistance; many have little or no job security. Now, they are essential; they are heroes.
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