Fewer Americans Belong To A House Of Worship What s Filling The God Gap? kosu.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from kosu.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
“
Walking With the Saints: My Writing Life,”
Ellsberg will reflect on his life and work as a saint-watcher, how this came to shape his own vocation and spiritual discipline, and what he hopes it might achieve.
Robert Ellsberg is the long-time editor-in-chief and publisher of Orbis Books. He holds a master’s degree in theology from Harvard Divinity School. In the late 1970s he worked with Dorothy Day in New York City, serving as managing editor of the
Catholic Worker newspaper. Since then he has edited Day’s selected writings, letters, and diaries, and now serves on the commission preparing her cause for canonization.
Imam Amr Dabour says people have become more involved in the SALAM Islamic Center during the pandemic.
When Sacramento State University classes went online because of the COVID-19 pandemic last year, 19 year-old Nicole Oneto moved back in with her parents about an hour south of Fresno, Calif. I was brought back into this bubble again, says Oneto about feeling isolated in her rural hometown of Woodlake. She lives on 10 acres and doesn t share some of the worldviews of her neighbors.
So earlier this year, after months back at home, she decided to start logging into the Sunday church services at the Unitarian Universalist Society of Sacramento, where her grandparents attend.
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Imam Amr Dabour says people have become more involved in the SALAM Islamic Center during the pandemic. // CapRadio, Andrew Nixon
When Sacramento State University classes went online because of the COVID-19 pandemic last year, 19 year-old Nicole Oneto moved back in with her parents about an hour south of Fresno, Calif. I was brought back into this bubble again, says Oneto about feeling isolated in her rural hometown of Woodlake. She lives on 10 acres and doesn t share some of the worldviews of her neighbors.
So earlier this year, after months back at home, she decided to start logging into the Sunday church services at the Unitarian Universalist Society of Sacramento, where her grandparents attend.
Andrew Nixon/CapRadio
toggle caption Andrew Nixon/CapRadio
Imam Amr Dabour says people have become more involved in the SALAM Islamic Center during the pandemic. Andrew Nixon/CapRadio
When Sacramento State University classes went online because of the COVID-19 pandemic last year, 19 year-old Nicole Oneto moved back in with her parents about an hour south of Fresno, Calif. I was brought back into this bubble again, says Oneto about feeling isolated in her rural hometown of Woodlake. She lives on 10 acres and doesn t share some of the worldviews of her neighbors.
So earlier this year, after months back at home, she decided to start logging into the Sunday church services at the Unitarian Universalist Society of Sacramento, where her grandparents attend.