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The Queen Invited Meghan Markle and Prince Harry to Church, Sending A Message of Solidarity


As Meghan Markle and Prince Harry wrap up their final royal engagements before heading back to their new lives in Canada, they spent some quality time with Queen Elizabeth II at church on Sunday morning, March 8.

The Queen invited the Duke and Duchess of Sussex to join her for church service in Windsor, marking what is believed to be the first time Markle will have seen the monarch since the couple announced they were stepping down from their roles as senior members of the royal family. (Prince Harry has sat down with his grandmother and other members of the Royal family several times since the announcement, but Markle remained in Canada with the couple’s son Archie.)

“It was a really sweet gesture that the Queen asked them to church,” a source told People. “It’s telling in the sense that these two are still her family. And as a family, they all love each other.”

In photos obtained by the outlet, Prince Harry was seen driving his wife to the Royal Chapel of All Saints as Markle smiled and waved at fans.

This is only the third time we’ve seen Markle since the pair announced they were stepping down from their royal duties. This week, the couple made a joint appearance at the annual Endeavour Fund Awards in London before attending the Mountbatten Festival of Music at the Royal Albert Hall in London in matching red ensembles.

The reunion follows the Queen’s emotional statement from earlier this year, emphasizing that “Harry, Meghan and Archie will always be much-loved members” of her family.

“I recognise the challenges they have experienced as a result of intense scrutiny over the last two years and support their wish for a more independent life,” she said in the statement. “I want to thank them for all their dedicated work across this country, the Commonwealth and beyond, and am particularly proud of how Meghan has so quickly become one of the family. It is my whole family’s hope that today’s agreement allows them to start building a happy and peaceful new life.”

The Sussexes are also set to attend the Commonwealth Day service on Monday, March 9, where they will reunite with Prince Charles, Camilla, Prince William, and Kate Middleton in public for the first time since this all began in January.



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Queen Elizabeth and Kate Middleton Twinned in Purple at Church


Kate Middleton has been getting a lot of time in with Queen Elizabeth lately. They’ve been spending the holiday at the royal matriarch’s home in Sandringham, and on Sunday, the family kicked off the new year by attending service at St. Mary Magdalena church on the estate. Middleton’s parents Carole and Michael also joined for the outing, but what most royal fans noticed about the group was that both Middleton and the Queen matched in elegant and put-together in coordinating purple outfits. (The Duchess of Cambridge has been known to twin with other royals, including her late mother-in-law, Princess Diana.)

Although they weren’t photographed together, a few images captured Middleton strolling into the service with Prince William. For the occasion, she wore a high-collared wool coat dress in dark purple featuring an orange print. She paired the coat with dark brown Stuart Weitzman knee-high boots and a bright violet fedora with brown accents. Queen Elizabeth made her way to the church in a separate car, where photographers captured her in a regal purple hat with a matching purple suit that she accessorized with a sparkling brooch. Clearly, both Kate and Queen Elizabeth were inspired by the same color when they got ready in the morning.

 Queen Elizabeth attends Sunday service at the Church of St Mary Magdalene on the Sandringham estate.

Max Mumby/Indigo/Getty Images

Kate Middleton Duchess of Cambridge attends Sunday service at the Church of St Mary Magdalene
Max Mumby/Indigo/Getty Images

The royal children—Prince George, Princess Charlotte, and Prince Louis—didn’t attend the service, but they’re also at Sandringham with their mom and dad. (Middleton and Prince William reportedly had a couple of surprises in store for them at Christmas and Prince George even had some cute baking time with his grandparents.) Apparently, the low-key family time has meant a lot to Kate: A source recently told Us Weekly that she’s really hoping for more of it in 2020 and, in particular, wants her kids to spend time with their cousin Archie. That might be a little hard since Meghan Markle and Prince Harry are on the other side of the pond currently on vacation, but Kate still seems to be enjoying her time bonding with other members of the family; In addition to matching with the Queen, she had an adorable twinning moment with Charlotte on Christmas Day.



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Megan Phelps-Roper on Leaving the Westboro Baptist Church: ‘I Abandoned My Faith’


For this year’s Women of the Year issue, we asked inspiring womenpast honorees, athletes, and more—to reflect on their life and work. At our 2019 Women of the Year Summit, we asked speaker, activist, and author Megan Phelps-Roper to do the same.

Phelps-Roper grew up in the thick of a notorious religious group: her grandfather founded the Westboro Baptist Church, a congregation known for its fire-and-brimstone beliefs and antagonistic picketing lines. As a member church’s founding family, Phelps-Roper didn’t question the rhetoric her the parish espoused during her childhood. The Westboro Baptist Church was right, and everyone else was wrong.

Then, Phelps-Roper joined Twitter at 23 years old—and learned that the beliefs she’d grown up treating as facts were fiction. Onstage at the Glamour Women of the Year Summit, she talked about publicly leaving the Westboro Baptist Church with her sister Grace in 2012. Read her moving speech below.


My life’s unraveling took place on an ordinary, brilliant afternoon in July 2012. A Wednesday. I was painting the walls of a friend’s basement when it suddenly dawned on me: The world was right; my views were wrong. I remember thinking it strange that a mind—an entire world—could shift so drastically and so spontaneously.

But let me back up for a second.

I was born and raised in the Westboro Baptist Church, an infamous congregation started by my grandfather and consisting almost entirely of my extended family.

I’d been protesting gays since the age of five, preaching God’s hatred for sinners on picket lines across the country. In my teens, I joined my family on sidewalks outside of military funerals, spitting on American flags and exultantly singing praises to God for the homemade bombs that were killing service members in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Westboro’s fire-and-brimstone message was the air I breathed all my life. But after joining Twitter at the age of 23, I encountered people who challenged my beliefs and unearthed contradictions my blind faith had missed. Why did we call for the death penalty for gay people when Jesus said only sinless people should “cast stones”? How could we claim to love our neighbor while also praying for God to destroy them? Discussing and dissecting opposing viewpoints with others on Twitter opened up a whole new way of thinking for me. Twitter helped others see me as a human being, and showed me their humanity, too. It would even eventually introduce me to the man I would marry.

And so on that afternoon in 2012, dripping paintbrush in hand, I felt the last traces of my zeal for Westboro extinguish under a pile of mounting doubts. I had come to a series of terrifying conclusions: We were wrong. I had spent my entire life antagonizing vulnerable people for no good reason. I had to leave. I also realized that my refusal to continue as a member of the church would cost me my family, my community, my home, my job at my family’s law firm—everything that had ever been important in my life.

And though I was afraid, I also knew that—in the strangest way—Westboro brought me there. My family taught me to be honest, even when the truth was painful. They taught me to stand up for what I believe in, no matter what it would cost me.

And the church gave me the tools I needed to see hate—even my own—not as an obstacle but as an opportunity to advocate for the kind of empathy that builds bridges, heals divisions, and changes hearts and minds for the better.

Find out more about Glamour‘s 2019 Women of the Year summit and awards ceremony here.



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Kate Middleton and Meghan Markle Wear Coordinating Crimson and Navy for Christmas Day Church Service


Now that we’ve more or less seen the photographic evidence that Meghan Markle and Kate Middleton‘s rumored feud has been put to bed (look at all of these pics of them smiling together!), we can focus on what’s truly important about the royals’ Christmas celebration: their outfits. We kid, we kid—but seriously, the two duchesses really outdid themselves this year.

The pair attended the traditional Christmas morning church service near the queen’s Sandringham estate in Norfolk alongside their husbands, Prince William and Prince Harry, as well as the Queen and Prince Charles. Not only did they look super-chic in their individual looks, but their outfits were so well-coordinated it was as if they’d planned it.

Kate wore head-to-toe reds, with everything from her hat down to her shoes showing off the shade. She paired her crimson ’40s-style coat—reportedly custom-made by one of her favorite designers, Catherine Walker—with a bordeaux Bayswater clutch by Mulberry, another favorite piece of hers (she also has it in two other colors).

PHOTO: Samir Hussein

The Royal Family Attend Church On Christmas Day

PHOTO: Samir Hussein

Completing the look? Bordeaux Gianvito Rossi heels and finished the look with a vintage-y “halo headband” by milliner Jane Taylor that encircled her loosely curled hair. Here it is from the side and back:

The Royal Family Attend Church On Christmas Day

PHOTO: UK Press Pool/UK Press via Getty Images

The Royal Family Attend Church On Christmas Day

PHOTO: UK Press Pool/UK Press via Getty Images

Her whole Christmas outfit almost identical to the forest green look she wore for this November’s Remembrance Day—down to a similar hair accessory and, yep, Catherine Walker coat.

The Queen Attends A Service At Westminster Abbey Marking The Centenary Of WW1

PHOTO: Max Mumby/Indigo/Getty Images

Meghan also opted for a monochromatic outfit, pairing a navy sheath dress with a Victoria Beckham coat and purse, as well as an ombré-feathered fascinator in the same classic shade of blue. She finished off her festive look with boots, also by Beckham, and her signature low bun.

The Royal Family Attend Church On Christmas Day

PHOTO: Mark Cuthbert

The Royal Family Attend Church On Christmas Day

PHOTO: Mark Cuthbert

This is Meghan’s second Christmas with the royals, but her first as an official member of the family. Last year, she went for a designer-heavy look that consisted of a wide-collar Sentaler coat, a Chloé bag, a Philip Treacy fascinator-ish hat, plus suede Stuart Weitzman boots.

Members Of The Royal Family Attend St Mary Magdalene Church In Sandringham

PHOTO: Chris Jackson/Getty Images

Kate Middleton’s 2017 outfit was equally as statement-making, thanks to an iconic $2,200 Miu Miu tartan coat.

Members Of The Royal Family Attend St Mary Magdalene Church In Sandringham

PHOTO: Chris Jackson

We’ll consider this all the royal inspiration we need to experiment with monochrome and shade-mixing. After all, it doesn’t get much more festive outfit-wise than these two duchesses’ looks.

Related Stories:

Why Meghan Markle Can’t Open Presents on Christmas Anymore

Here’s Why Kate Middleton and Prince William Won’t Stay With the Royal Family for Christmas

Everything I Hope Meghan and Kate Talked About at the Queen’s Christmas Lunch



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Here's Why Prince George and Princess Charlotte Didn't Attend Church With the Royal Family


After we were finished bursting with excitement at the fact that rumors of Kate Middleton and Meghan Markle‘s feud have officially been squashed after seeing pictures of them together on Christmas morning, we noticed something odd about the photos: Three very important (and very adorable) members of the royal family were missing. So, why weren’t Prince George, Princess Charlotte, and Prince Louis at the Christmas church service with their parents?

The answer is more or less an expected one: They’re just too young. George is 5 and Charlotte is 3 (and Prince Louis is only 8 months old), and junior royals don’t attend family services until they’re older—Prince Harry, in fact, wasn’t seen at his first Christmas service until he was 7. Although Prince George was, however, photographed attending a Christmas church service with Kate Middleton’s family in Berkshire in 2016, but this year at the royal Christmas, it just seems like he decided to stay home with his siblings.

Also absent from the royal event on the morning of the 25th? Prince Philip, who was said to be relaxing at home, and Camilla Parker Bowles, who is reportedly recovering from some sort of bug.

While the kids didn’t make it to church, there are still plenty of other royal Christmas traditions they’ll likely get to enjoy in honor of the holiday. They attended the Queen’s Christmas lunch with the rest of their family earlier this week, and will no doubt be feasting on some Christmas stew once presents have been unwrapped. “They’re getting excited for Christmas time because they’ve started all their Christmas songs, and Christmas trees are going up,” Kate Middleton said during a recent appearance. “It was really sweet.”

The best part? Next year, these three little royals will have a new little cousin to celebrate the holiday with.

Related Stories:

Meghan Markle, Kate Middleton, Prince William and Prince Harry Attend Christmas Church Service Together

Here’s Why Kate Middleton and Prince William Won’t Stay With the Royal Family for Christmas

Meghan Markle and Kate Middleton, Normal Sisters-in-Law, Both Attended the Queen’s Christmas Lunch



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Growing Up in the Church, I Know the Ariana Grande Groping Moment Well


The moment was the antithesis of one of Aretha Franklin’s most popular hits. As the world stopped to celebrate the homegoing of The Queen of Soul on Friday—the traditional black church gathering to celebrate Franklin’s transition from earthside to the Lord—the dark cloud of patriarchy and misogyny threatened to overshadow the service when a bishop failed to R-E-S-P-E-C-T pop star Ariana Grande, inappropriately touching her breast area for the world to see.

As part of the celebration, Grande sang Franklin’s hit, “(You Make Me Feel Like) A Natural Woman.” At the conclusion of her performance, Bishop Charles H. Ellis III called Grande to the pulpit, wrapped his arms around her (his fingers touching her breast) and made the racist remark that he’d thought “Ariana Grande” was a meal at Taco Bell. Some laughed and many cringed. But it was Bishop Ellis’ inappropriate touch that triggered most women, especially those who grew up in the church. It was a moment that, even a decade after Tarana Burke created #MeToo and its meteoric digital rise last year following the Harvey Weinstein accusations, proves that it is past time to publicly reckon with the mistreatment of girls and women in holy spaces.

Many church girls like me knew that moment. We’ve experienced it from pastors, deacons and older men who, under the guise of complimenting, have inappropriately commented on how nice we looked on Sundays. Later, how well we were growing into womanhood. Our girlhood, in church and on the street, cut short under the surveilling eyes of men. We made the same face as Grande (the embarrassed drop of the head, that uncomfortable chuckle) as we tried to maneuver out of unwelcomed embraces that lasted too long and lingering touches we never requested. And the shame was on us to carry. This behavior—almost always accepted or dismissed, even enabled—that made us coil our changing bodies inward, feeling the stinging humiliation of being fondled, the betrayal that our bodies were budding breasts and curves for the consumption of men.

Following Bishop Ellis’ apology and in response to those who came to his defense, many remembered when their complaints were dismissed with “that’s just how he is” and “he is just being friendly.” Others remembered why they never told anyone.

For many women, this is why they have turned away from the church. It’s the deeply embedded culture that allows for the violation of girls and women, that refusal to hear us when we say what we don’t want, and, in Grande’s case, the way we boomerang the blame back to the victim. (This was evident in the scrutiny of Grande’s black dress, which eventually evoked the rape culture rhetoric that it was what she wore to the funeral that resulted in her assault). This isn’t unique to the church—this violent culture of toxic masculinity that wrongly holds women accountable—but there’s something deeply troubling about the sexual violation of girls and women in sacred spaces. Especially when that environment is intended to be a balm to society’s ills.

The work of the #MeToo movement and other women’s movements has brought attention to the ways men abuse power in every sphere of society—and the church’s refusal to take seriously the issue of sexual misconduct is rooted in society’s investment in the power of men. For as beautiful as Franklin’s homegoing was, it represented every aspect of that reality. Heavily dominated by the presence of men, we were reminded that women are often only given room to sing and lift our spirits but rarely the space to preach and save our souls. As a preacher’s kid, teen mom, and one who pursued a secular career as opposed to gospel, Aretha Franklin often felt the sting of the church. And in the final celebration of her life, she felt it again.

Franklin, along with Grande and the women who have lived that moment before, deserved so much more from an institution many of us love and still believe in. And it has become clear that these conversations about the experiences of girls and women can no longer just be held in the privacy of our homes. It’s time to address this misconduct on a global scale.

We have no choice: If sexism and patriarchy could not take the day off to honor Aretha Franklin in the house of God, it will never stop its assault against us.


Candice Benbow is a writer and the creator of The Lemonade Syllabus, whose work focuses on faith, feminism and pop culture.

MORE: The Bishop Who Groped Ariana Grande at Aretha Franklin’s Funeral Has Apologized





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