Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lots of people coming from various religious traditions or none love Cedar Lane Unitarian.
For a more traditional experience, the Episcopal churches St. Dunstan's, Bethesda, and St. Columba's, DC might be worth checking out. St. Columba's is huge with a well-established youth program; St. Dunstan's is smaller and the rector is a mom to teenage boys with school chaplaincy experience, which might be useful. Both would definitely welcoming questioning newcomers.
+1 love St. Columba’s
These, or St. John's Norwood on Wisconsin and Bradley, which also has a youth program.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Fourth Presbyterian in Bethesda. Great youth program. Good music.
Agree. Good youth program but they do espouse a complentarian theological viewpoint which may be a dealbreaker for a lot of people who have a more egalitarian approach to gender.
I’m sorry. Would you rephrase that in English?
It’s a great church, Op, with a fun and active youth program. Kids from many different schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lots of people coming from various religious traditions or none love Cedar Lane Unitarian.
For a more traditional experience, the Episcopal churches St. Dunstan's, Bethesda, and St. Columba's, DC might be worth checking out. St. Columba's is huge with a well-established youth program; St. Dunstan's is smaller and the rector is a mom to teenage boys with school chaplaincy experience, which might be useful. Both would definitely welcoming questioning newcomers.
+1 love St. Columba’s
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Fourth Presbyterian in Bethesda. Great youth program. Good music.
Agree. Good youth program but they do espouse a complentarian theological viewpoint which may be a dealbreaker for a lot of people who have a more egalitarian approach to gender.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have him talk with Father James Morrison at Our Lady of Lourdes in Bethesda. Father James is a young priest who doesn't shy away from tough questions.
I think going from not a Christian household to a Catholic church might be a bit much but maybe it depends on what he is looking for.
Anonymous wrote:Lots of people coming from various religious traditions or none love Cedar Lane Unitarian.
For a more traditional experience, the Episcopal churches St. Dunstan's, Bethesda, and St. Columba's, DC might be worth checking out. St. Columba's is huge with a well-established youth program; St. Dunstan's is smaller and the rector is a mom to teenage boys with school chaplaincy experience, which might be useful. Both would definitely welcoming questioning newcomers.
Anonymous wrote:Have him talk with Father James Morrison at Our Lady of Lourdes in Bethesda. Father James is a young priest who doesn't shy away from tough questions.
Anonymous wrote:Fourth Presbyterian in Bethesda. Great youth program. Good music.
Anonymous wrote:Fourth Presbyterian in Bethesda. Great youth program. Good music.