The Anglican Journal welcomes letters to the editor. Preference is given to letters under 100 words. All letters are subject to editing for length, grammar and clarity. Please include a mailing address.
Category: February 2010, Letters

Are your church pews half-empty? In my experience, having worshipped in many different parishes across Canada, a sincere and spontaneous salutation, recognizing and acknowledging the resident, traveller, tourist and the...
Category: February 2010, Letters

The fifty-something guy sitting next to me on the GO train looked like any other frazzled commuter who had put in a hard day’s work. “If only I could win the Lotto,” he told me, “I’d get out of this rat race so fast they’d never know I was here in the first place.”
Category: February 2010, Letters
The Anglican Journal welcomes letters to the editor. Preference is given to letters under 100 words. All letters are subject to editing for length, grammar and clarity. Please include a mailing address.
Category: January 2010, Letters

I recently took part in Canada’s favourite cultural pastime by attending a hockey game. Sadly, the division-topping Vancouver Giants were defeated 5-0 by their rival Seattle Thunderbirds.
Category: January 2010, Letters

The Anglican Journal welcomes letters to the editor. Preference is given to letters under 100 words. All letters are subject to editing for length, grammar and clarity. Please include a mailing address
Category: December 2009, Letters

IT’S CHRISTMAS EVE in my new hometown. The weather calls for snow as I search the web for Anglican churches offering Midnight Mass. I choose the city’s cathedral and make my way downtown. The processional begins with a swirl of...
Category: December 2009, Letters
The Anglican Journal welcomes letters to the editor. Preference is given to letters under 100 words. All letters are subject to editing for length, grammar and clarity. Please include a mailing address.
Category: November 2009, Letters

Landed immigrants who hope to become Canadian citizens are required to know a number of basic things about the country they are going to adopt, and rightly so. However, when your turn comes to take out senior citizenship, you will in all probability find yourself a stranger in a strange country without a road map.
Category: November 2009, Letters
The Anglican Journal welcomes letters to the editor. Preference is given to letters under 100 words. All letters are subject to editing for length, grammar and clarity. Please include a mailing address.
Category: October 2009, Letters