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Vol. 88 No.4: Winter 2013The full "Farewell To Bishop Sisk" Winter 2013 Issue of the Episcopal New Yorker is available online.Read it nowYou may also download a pdf of the issue by clicking on the cover image in the right sidebar. |
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Vol. 88 No.3: Fall 2012The full Episcopal New Yorker is now available online.Read it now |
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| Vol. 88 No.2: Summer 2012 To read an interactive version of the latest Episcopal New Yorker, please go to: www.episcopalnewyorker.comTo read and participate in the Episcopal New Yorker's Online Discussions, please go to www.episcopalnewyorker.com/disc1 |
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| Vol. 88 No.1: Spring 2012 To read an interactive version of the latest Episcopal New Yorker, please go to: www.episcopalnewyorker.comTo read and participate in the Episcopal New Yorker's Online Discussions, please go to www.episcopalnewyorker.com/disc1 |
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Vol. 87 No.4: Winter 2011The complete Winter 2011 Episcopal New Yorker, together with past 5 issues, is available online at www.episcopalnewyorker.com.
This issue includes coverage of the special election convention at which the Rev. Canon Andrew M. Dietsche was elected bishop coadjutor, a section marking the 15th anniversary of the foundation of Episcopal Charities, a range of Christmas-related articles including one by the Vicar of Baghdad and others on the Holy Land, a riposte to 2010 Hobart lecturer's claim that there was no post-Reformation doctrine of earthly happiness, a review of the Dead Sea Scrolls exhibition at Discovery Times Square, and much more.
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Vol. 87 No.3: Fall 2011The complete Episcopal New Yorker is now available online at www.episcopalnewyorker.com
The Fall edition of the Episcopal New Yorker includes a number of articles on the vital role of water, and why it should matter to Christians, to accompany the major exhibition now in progress at the Cathedral of St. John the Divine, articles to mark the 10th anniversary last month of the 9/11 attacks, information on the nominees for election as bishop coadjutor on October 29, and details of the proposed 2012 diocesan budget to be presented at the annual Diocesan Convention on November 19. |
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| Vol. 87 No.2: Summer 2011 The Episcopal New Yorker is now available in an electronic edition. To read it, please go to
www.episcopalnewyorker.com
The Summer 2011 issue focuses on science and technology. A wide range of contributors includes the eminent Cambridge mathematical physicist and Anglican priest, The Rev. Dr. John Polkinghorne; Euan K. Cameron, the Henry Luce III professor of Reformation Church History at Union Theological Seminary; the Rev. Matthew Moretz (a.k.a. the YouTube Priest); and theologian Theo Hobson. |
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| Vol. 87 No.1: Spring 2011 This Spring 2011 issue of the Episcopal New Yorker is focused on women in the church. It includes an interview with Bishop Roskam, who celebrates the 15th Anniversary of her consecration this year and will retire at the end of it; a report on beneficiaries of the diocese's Global Women's Fund in New York for the UN Conference on the Status of Women; and a range of other articles.
Read full interactive issue onlineView clickable table of contents with links to printable text versions of pages Download a PDF You can now always go directly to the ENY by entering www.episcopalnewyorker.com. |
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Vol. 86 No.4: Winter 2010Winter 2010/2011 Convention round up; Bishop Sisk's address; Imam Mohamad Bashar Arafat's address; Interview with Ellen Charry; Bishop Christopher Senyonjo, and more.
Read full interactive issue onlineView clickable table of contents with links to printable pages Download a PDF |
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Vol. 86 No.3: Fall 2010New interactive online version now also available |
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| Vol. 86 No.2: Summer 2010 This issue is dedicated to "Worship" as part of the three essential elements of congregational life to which Bishop Sisk has dedicated his episcopacy: Worship, Nurture and Mission. It includes an interview with Bishop Sisk on that subject, and contributions from a wide range of other perspectives. All reviews published in this issue are available in our separate review section. |
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| Vol. 86 No.1: Spring The Spring 2010 Episcopal New Yorker has "mission as part of congregational life" as its theme. More by chance than by judgment, both of the main features in the issue touch on this -- the cover story about Haitians in New York in the aftermath of January's earthquake, and a report on the visit of the Archbishop of Canterbury to St. Ann's in the Bronx and a feeding program on the Upper West Side of Manhattan. Other topics covered are the theological argument for mission/outreach, prison ministries, All Our Children, Carpenter's Kids, the role of an early 20th century rector of Calvary Church in the formation of AA, the environment... |
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| Vol. 85 No.4: December 2009 The December issue includes coverage of November's Diocesan Convention, at which a resolution was passed to change the rates at which parishes contribute to diocesan expenses and to streamline and make more fair the process of appealing and adjusting those contributions (known as assessments). It also includes an interview with the Archbishop of Wales on the occasion of his delivery of the Hobart Lecture, a personal and highly moving account of her spiritual journey when diagnosed and treated for breast cancer by the Rev. Rhonda Rubinson, and a contrarian view of the role that government should play in improving the lot of the poor, by a parishioner of St. Augustine's in Croton. |
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| Vol. 85 No.3: September/October 2009 The September/October issue looks back to General Convention and forward to November's diocesan convention. The lead story is the draft report of the Special Committee on Diocesan Budget Process and Assessment, and its recommendations for changes in the assessment and in the adjustment process. |
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| Vol. 85 No.2: April/May 2009 |
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| Vol. 85 No.1: January/February/March 2009 |
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| Vol. 84 No.6: November/December 2008 |
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| Vol. 84 No.5: September/October 2008 The September-October issue of The Episcopal New Yorker discusses the McCain-Obama elections and the relationship of religion and politics. |
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| Vol. 84 No.4: July/August 2008 The July/August issue of The Episcopal New Yorker takes a look at our complicated relationship with money: how we spend our money has untold consequences. The cover story is a Q & A with the diocesan priest working in China about the earthquake in that country's Sichuan Province. The diocese bids farewell to urban ministry legend Archdeacon Michael S. Kendall with a two-page profile complete with photos. And Gene Robinson's book In the Eye of the Storm is reviewed in Views and Reviews. |
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As the official publication of the Episcopal Diocese of New York, The Episcopal New Yorker reaches more than 33,000 households representing every congregation in the diocese. Reaching laypersons and clergy, this newspaper informs, inspires, teaches and promotes understanding among the diverse constituencies in the diocese.