16 responses to “Should churches use e-mail? Or indeed blogging?”
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Not everyone who chooses not to use Facebook, or e-mail is “digitally poor”. They may actually have enough going on in their lives already to waste time on such matters.
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As you so strongly suggest, Agatha. It is for many people simply their own choice and these at least should be least indulged if they moan about not being included in things.
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I cannot imagine how people save time by not using email or social media. Maybe they just don’t communicate at all.
Previous Posts
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All I'm saying is…
… cat laxatives.
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Liberal Theology – Making your mind up
Fr Gadgetvicar, amongst others, points towards Oliver Donovan’s learnèd diatribe against Liberalism on the Fulcrum website.Who would be a Liberal believer after reading all that? As polemic goes, it is all very clever, but it does rather miss the point by refraining from asking where and why people find faith and nourishment in liberal thinking.…
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Throwing a good party
One of the things that Bishop David quoted in the sermon he preached at my Installation just over a month ago was members of St Saviour’s who had said that "no-one throws a party like Kelvin".I’m interested in how literally this has been taken. For, I’ve no doubt that the B of A folk were…
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New piscy blogger sighted
Reports are coming in of a new Scottish Episcopal [clergy] blogger.All the way from rural Perthshire, welcome to the blogfest, Tim Bennison.

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