Daily Archives: March 11, 2025

(MTR) The cheapest way to supercharge America’s power grid

US electricity consumption is rising faster than it has in decades, thanks in part to the boom in data center development, the resurgence in manufacturing, and the increasing popularity of electric vehicles. 

Accommodating that growth will require building wind turbines, solar farms, and other power plants faster than we ever have before—and expanding the network of wires needed to connect those facilities to the grid.

But one major problem is that it’s expensive and slow to secure permits for new transmission lines and build them across the country. This challenge has created one of the biggest obstacles to getting more electricity generation online, reducing investment in new power plants and stranding others in years-long “interconnection queues” while they wait to join the grid.

Fortunately, there are some shortcuts that could expand the capacity of the existing system without requiring completely new infrastructure: a suite of hardware and software tools known as advanced transmission technologies (ATTs), which can increase both the capacity and the efficiency of the power sector.

ATTs have the potential to radically reduce timelines for grid upgrades, avoid tricky permitting issues, and yield billions in annual savings for US consumers.

Read it all.

Posted in * Economics, Politics, Corporations/Corporate Life, Economy, Energy, Natural Resources, Science & Technology

(NYT) What Slowdown? Xi Says China Must Win the Global Tech Race

Throughout China’s annual legislative meeting, the national leader Xi Jinping made clear that he wants nothing to hold back his plans for China to march past its rivals by becoming a technological superpower. Not the economic slowdown or heavy local government debt, nor a trade war with the United States.

The meeting in Beijing, called the National People’s Congress, was once a stage for Communist Party leaders to make a show of public consultation. Congress delegates, although handpicked by the party, sometimes chided officials over problems like pollution. There were even rare flashes of discord among senior officials.

Mr. Xi, though, has turned the meeting into a meticulously orchestrated, weeklong salute to himself and his vision. This time, he urged China to forge ahead in advanced technologies including artificial intelligence, biotechnology and new weapons.

“Xi has seen how decades of investment into science by the U.S. government after World War II was a knockout success for the United States, and wants to replicate that,” said Jimmy Goodrich, who studies China’s science policies as a senior adviser at RAND Corporation.

Read it all.

Posted in China

(CT) on Stanley Hauerwas’ new book–‘Come as You Are’ Is Not a Slogan for the Church

In her introduction to your latest book, Jesus Changes Everything, Tish Harrison Warren mentions something many Christians are concerned about: that we live in a post-Christian world. She’s wondering if we actually are living in a pre-Christian world and whether that might not be such a bad place to be. What’s your take on the time in which we live and the opportunities in front of the church?

Well, the mainstream Protestant church is dying. And I don’t think that’s a bad thing. It makes us free. I mean, for some time people argued that the world would go to hell if it were not Christian. That may be the case. But being Christian doesn’t mean you need a Christian America. 

What I think we’re experiencing is the ultimate working out of nihilism, which so often goes with liberalism. Liberalism is the presumption that you should have no story except the story you chose when you had no story.

Read it all.

Posted in America/U.S.A., Anthropology, Books, Church History, Ethics / Moral Theology, History, Parish Ministry, Politics in General, Religion & Culture, Theology

A Provincial Letter from Archbishop Steve Wood

(Via email-KSH).

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ,

Grace and peace to you from God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ.

I am sending my quarterly Provincial Letter a few weeks early as I have good news to report.

First, greetings from Christ Church Plano, where I am attending the G25 GAFCON Global Mini Conference, along with 120 Primates and Bishops from around the world. This gathering, organized by +Paul Donison, the General Secretary for GAFCON, is an endeavor to introduce our most recently elected Bishops to the history of, and our deep roots in, GAFCON.

As I have reported in previous updates, over the past several months we have been engaging in a restructuring process, which has included a review of our current provincial staff structure and functions, the audit and assessment of our current internal systems and platforms, the development of a new organizational chart, and the recruitment and screening of candidates for four new Director roles.

Before I introduce you to our four new Directors, I wanted to offer a few words of thanks. First, and most profoundly, I am grateful to and appreciate the work of Deborah Tepley. Her commitment to Jesus Christ and His church is deep, inspiring, and gives guidance to her life and work. Deborah has led our restructuring work these past several months with excellence and the whole of our Province is indebted to her.

Secondly, our Restructuring Committee, an ad hoc committee of the Executive Committee, has been meeting regularly since November and guiding this process for the Province. The work of this Committee, comprised of Dr. Joan Deeks, Sheryl Vittitoe, Bishop Ryan Reed, and Deborah Tepley, is now completed. I am incredibly grateful for the time, effort and expertise this Committee has contributed over these past months. I am also grateful for the support of those who made up our interview teams, which included Jonathan Millard+, +Steve Breedlove, Sheryl Vittitoe, Lee Hilts, and Jeff Weber+.

As a part of our overall structural changes, we are changing Deborah Tepley’s title from Chief Operating Officer to Executive Director, as this reflects the full extent of her role and is a title typical in a non-profit setting. 

Now, onto introductions. We have hired four Directors: Director of Outreach and Development, Director of Administration and Operations, Director of Safeguarding and Canonical Affairs, and Director of Finance (fractional). I am providing the names and bios of our four new hires below. Please join me in welcoming this incredibly talented and experienced group to the Provincial staff team. 

Kate Harris, our new Director of Outreach and Development, brings a diverse background in non-profit and ministry leadership, most recently serving as the founder and principal of Pulley Advising, a strategy firm helping mission-driven clients grow their impact. She began her career as a press officer for the Colorado State Senate and worked in strategic communications for U.S. Senate leadership. She later helped found and manage stakeholder relationships for Wedgwood Circle, supported business development for the University of Oxford Estates Division, and managed special projects for Oxford Analytica, a global consultancy. Subsequently, Kate served as Interim Executive Director of The Fellows Initiative and as Executive Director of The Washington Institute for Faith, Vocation, and Culture, where she authored Wonder Woman: Navigating the Challenges of Motherhood, Career, and Identity (Zondervan, 2014) and was Assistant Producer of ReFrame, a 10-week film-based course developed by Regent College to help Christians connect their faith with all areas of life. She has an MA in English Literature, was an Ingram scholar at Vanderbilt University, and graduated with a BS in Journalism from the University of Colorado at Boulder.

Kate and her family are active members of Restoration Anglican Church (Diocese of the Mid-Atlantic) in Arlington, Virginia, a church plant of The Falls Church Anglican, where she worshipped for more than 17 years after first arriving as a Falls Church Fellow in 2002. Kate is wife to a good man and mother to their four children. Kate says, “I am so grateful for Anglicanism’s faithful witness and practices that prioritize unity and shared hope in Christ. I am excited to learn from all of the amazing ministry leaders who have built the Church into what it is today, and I’m eager to help discern and contribute to its next season of mission and growth.”

Dr. Tiffany Butler, our new Director of Safeguarding and Canonical Affairs, possesses a rare blend of extensive religious and theological studies focused on practical theology, canon law, and ethics, practical experience supporting the canonical presence of the church in the world and in ecumenical dialogue, and approximately six years’ professional experience as an Ethics and Compliance Specialist focused on Safeguarding with World Concern, a Christian international transformational development organization. Dr. Butler holds a PhD in Ethics and Practical Theology from the University of Edinburgh’s School of Divinity. Her thesis examined the intersection of migration, ecclesiologies, and canon law. Dr. Butler also holds an MDiv from Fuller Theological Seminary with an emphasis in Just Peacemaking and two BAs – one from Seattle Bible College in Practical Theology with a Global Outreach major and another from the University of Washington’s Jackson School of International Studies in the Foreign Policy, Diplomacy, Peace, and Security track. Dr. Butler is a competent, fluent, and sympathetic communicator, and she has over 20 years of experience working locally and internationally among faith-based organizations in Belize, Brazil, Ecuador, Mexico, and Kenya.

Dr. Butler has been a member of the ACNA and her local parish of Holy Trinity Edmonds (Diocese of Cascadia) in Washington State since 2018. She quickly became involved as a researcher for the Orthodox Church in America and the Anglican Church in North America (OCA/ACNA) Ecumenical Dialogue Task Force, particularly concerning rapprochement and canonical affairs. Dr. Butler also served as a lay member of the Cascadia Diocesan Council and a lay representative at GAFCON 2023.

Dr. Butler enjoys worshiping with her local church family at Holy Trinity Edmonds, and she is excited to serve the wider ACNA Province as the Director of Safeguarding and Canonical Affairs. She says, “I am passionate about the Church being a safe place for all, particularly for vulnerable individuals. My vocational means of serving Christ’s Church is through relationships expressed in the living canons. Alexander Schmemann defined the quality of canonicity as that which serves to ‘assure, express, defend, and fulfill the Church as Divinely given Unity.’ My heart is to work diligently by the grace of God in Christ Jesus to ensure that our actions as a Province meet this high calling for the good of the whole in love.”

Dan Hassler, our new Director of Administration and Operations, brings a significant breadth of experience from his 14 years of service at The Moody Bible Institute. As Director of Change Management, Dan led projects and initiatives spanning every aspect of the Institute, including Education, Publishing, Finance, HR, Operations, IT, and Advancement. In his most recent position, Dan has served as the Manager of Business Analysis for the Information Technology Services department at Moody. In this role, he has been instrumental in implementing new software, meeting complex needs with efficient solutions, and developing and shepherding a team of IT experts. His greatest professional joy is identifying organizational needs and crafting meaningful solutions. Dan holds a BA degree from The Master’s College.

Dan and his family are active members of Cornerstone Anglican Church (Diocese of the Upper Midwest) in the Portage Park neighborhood of Chicago, IL, where Dan serves on the Vestry as the Treasurer. He is married to Desirée, his beloved wife of 26 years and father to four amazing kids. They live in Oak Park, IL, a Chicago suburb. In his free time, Dan enjoys reading (extensively) and playing bluegrass banjo (poorly). Dan says, “The Anglican Church has played a pivotal role in my spiritual growth in recent years and I am honored to have this opportunity to use my giftings to ensure that the ACNA flourishes for years to come.”

Keith Moore, our interim fractional Director of Finance, came to Christ at 21 and has been a serial small-business entrepreneur since graduating from Covenant College in 1976. In 2000, he decided to take his business experience and use it on behalf of churches and faith-based nonprofits. He worked with numerous nonprofits such as Mission to the World, World Hope International and International Justice Mission on enterprise software projects and served as Project Director for a multi-mission back-office support group. He served as the Director of Finance Manager at Grace DC, a PCA network of churches in Washington, DC, where he resides and also is a member. In 2014 he began working on the concept of remote business support for churches which led to founding Auxilio in 2019 which today supports over 150 churches and nonprofits in 33 states.

Keith is married to Patty (50 years this June) and they are blessed with four children and 15 grandchildren. Keith says, “I am very excited to be part of this journey that God has the ACNA on and to help the Provincial office and staff become an even more strategic, missional and helpful support to the dioceses, congregations and congregants.”

We are currently hiring for a Content and Media Relations Manager, who will support Kate Harris, as well as an Events Manager, who will report to Dan Hassler.

Last but not least, we are preparing for Provincial Council, which will be held at Trinity Anglican Seminary’s new Trophimus Center on June 18-20. This will be a smaller event for Bishops and diocesan delegates.

Please know that this letter comes with my gratitude for our shared ministry and my continued prayers.

Yours in Christ, 

Archbishop Steve Wood

Posted in Anglican Church in North America (ACNA)

(Economist) How Trump provoked a stockmarket sell-off

The sell-off shows no sign of stopping. America’s S&P 500 index dropped by another 3% on March 10th, leaving the world’s most watched stockmarket down by almost 9% since its peak last month. The NASDAQ, dominated by tech firms, has fallen by 13%. It is not quite the bold new era of American growth that President Donald Trump had in mind.

His unpredictable trade policies got things going. Tariffs of 25% on imports from Canada and Mexico—which were instituted on March 4th, before being suspended for a month on March 6th—top investors’ list of concerns. But after years of impressive growth, the future of the American economy is a growing source of anxiety, too, with worries provoked by a steady drip of discouraging data. Such news is beginning to undermine belief in American exceptionalism: after all, investors have seen much better returns in China and Europe this year. And as is often the case when markets fall, each development has revealed fresh things to lose sleep over.

Read it all.

Posted in * Economics, Politics, Economy, President Donald Trump, Stock Market

A prayer for the day from B F Westcott

Blessed Lord, who wast tempted in all things like as we are, have mercy upon our frailty.  Out of weakness give us strength; grant to us thy fear, that we may fear thee only; support us in time of temptation; embolden us in time of danger; help us to do thy work with good courage, and to continue thy faithful soldiers and servants unto our life’s end.

Posted in Lent, Spirituality/Prayer

From the Morning Scripture Readings

Therefore, holy brethren, who share in a heavenly call, consider Jesus, the apostle and high priest of our confession. He was faithful to him who appointed him, just as Moses also was faithful in God’s house. Yet Jesus has been counted worthy of as much more glory than Moses as the builder of a house has more honor than the house. (For every house is built by some one, but the builder of all things is God.) Now Moses was faithful in all God’s house as a servant, to testify to the things that were to be spoken later, but Christ was faithful over God’s house as a son. And we are his house if we hold fast our confidence and pride in our hope.
Therefore, as the Holy Spirit says,

“Today, when you hear his voice,
do not harden your hearts as in the rebellion,
on the day of testing in the wilderness,
where your fathers put me to the test
and saw my works for forty years.
Therefore I was provoked with that generation,
and said, “‘They always go astray in their hearts;
they have not known my ways.’
As I swore in my wrath,
“‘They shall never enter my rest.’”

–Hebrews 3:1-11

Posted in Theology: Scripture