Thread: Meet the FOCAs... Board: Oblivion / Ship of Fools.


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Posted by Albertus (# 13356) on :
 
From today's Guardian report of the launch of the Fellowship of Confessing Anglicans at GAFCON

quote:
Details of Foca were finalised yesterday morning and the reading of the statement was greeted with standing ovations, spontaneous singing, hugging and tears of joy. One of those present said he thought the skies were about to open so the delegates could ascend to heaven.
Or, possibly, for the earth to open so that they could go the other way...
 
Posted by rabcpresbyterian (# 12060) on :
 
This surely must be the best thread title ever.
 
Posted by Cardinal Pole Vault (# 4193) on :
 
Is Archbishop Jensen the Head FOCA?
 
Posted by badman (# 9634) on :
 
Sounds like the FOCAs don't want to meet me.

If they can't stand the rest of the Anglican Communion, why are they still in it?

If they're still in it, why won't they come to Lambeth, recognise the authority of the Instruments of Unity, etc etc?

And as for Archbishop Akinola's promise at the GAFCON/FOCA press conference yesterday, that:-

quote:
"If you receive an SOS from anywhere in the world we will move in"
- the cure seems a great deal worse than the disease - at least, if you aim to be part of the one, holy, Catholic church with an episcopal structure in the apostolic tradition (which Jensen obviously doesn't).

[ 30. June 2008, 12:10: Message edited by: badman ]
 
Posted by Louise (# 30) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Cardinal Pole Vault:
Is Archbishop Jensen the Head FOCA?

It's Sydney - you certainly can't have a Mother FOCA.

L.
 
Posted by Scribehunter (# 12750) on :
 
Jensen will presumably not be included in the "Primate's Council", which is charged with mothering the focAs:
quote:
We, the participants in the Global Anglican Future Conference, do hereby acknowledge the participating Primates of GAFCON who have called us together, and encourage them to form the initial Council of the GAFCON movement. We look forward to the enlargement of the Council and entreat the Primates to organise and expand the fellowship of confessing Anglicans. Source: Gafcon Statement

 
Posted by ObadiahSlope (# 11010) on :
 
Stephen Noll posted at Standfirm

quote:
Note that the GAFCON Statement does not capitalize “Fellowship of Confessing Anglicans” or “Confessing Anglican Fellowship (CAF).” This was intentional. At this point it is best to speak of the “GAFCON movement” as a fellowship of confessing Anglicans. Perhaps at some later point the Primates’ Council may choose an official designation for the entity that emerges.
Sorry!
 
Posted by Tyler Durden (# 2996) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by rabcpresbyterian:
This surely must be the best thread title ever.

Amen to that!
 
Posted by Louise (# 30) on :
 
quote:
Posted by Stephen Noll on 06-30-2008 at 07:02 AM
An interpretation which surfaced only this morning, and well after hilarity had ensued!

Now it must be a headache to be on PR stable door closing duty for the geniuses who could come up with GAF[FE]CON as a name in the first place, but when it comes to clumsily attempting to latch Dietrich Bonhoeffer's glory to their cause, with this header

quote:
A Fellowship of Confessing Anglicans
they just didn't think their cunning plan all the way through, did they?

L.

[ 30. June 2008, 15:32: Message edited by: Louise ]
 
Posted by Honest Ron Bacardi (# 38) on :
 
Pssst, Louise.

Things have been moving...
 
Posted by Arrietty (# 45) on :
 
They'll always be FOCAs to me.

[ 30. June 2008, 16:24: Message edited by: Arrietty ]
 
Posted by ObadiahSlope (# 11010) on :
 
Nice theory Louise.
But if that were the case. it would be capitalised in the text as well as the subheads.
But it isn't.
quote:
A Fellowship of Confessing Anglicans

We, the participants in the Global Anglican Future Conference, are a fellowship of confessing Anglicans for the benefit of the Church and the furtherance of its mission. We are a fellowship of people united in the communion (koinonia) of the one Spirit and committed to work and pray together in the common mission of Christ. It is a confessing fellowship in that its members confess the faith of Christ crucified, stand firm for the gospel in the global and Anglican context, and affirm a contemporary rule, the Jerusalem Declaration, to guide the movement for the future.

The subheads follow the capitalise the big words style. So unless you believe, for example, "The Road Ahead" is the title of something, its just capitalisation in subheads.

Deplorable grammar. But no organisation named FOCA either.
 
Posted by Angloid (# 159) on :
 
An email from a friend today suggested these alternatives: Fellowship of Confessing Evangelical
Males; or Confraternity of Resentful Angry Prelates.

Or, in an attempt to portray themselves as decent fellows, CHAP: Confederation of Homophobic Anglican Prelates.
 
Posted by badman (# 9634) on :
 
The Archbishop of Canterbury has apparently met the FOCAs and doesn't like what he sees.

quote:
A ‘Primates’ Council’ which consists only of a self-selected group from among the Primates of the Communion will not pass the test of legitimacy for all in the Communion.
And

quote:
We have seen instances of intervention in dioceses whose leadership is unquestionably orthodox simply because of local difficulties of a personal and administrative nature. We have also seen instances of clergy disciplined for scandalous behaviour in one jurisdiction accepted in another, apparently without due process.
and

quote:
emerging from the legacy of colonialism must mean a new co-operation of equals, not a simple reversal of power. If those who speak for GAFCON are willing to share in a genuine renewal of all our patterns of reflection and decision-making in the Communion, they are welcome, especially in the shaping of an effective Covenant for our future together.

If they aren't willing, I suppose they aren't welcome.

His full response is here
 
Posted by Angloid (# 159) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by badman:

[The ABC's] full response is here

Also linked from the Lambeth v Jerusalem thread.

[Overused] [Overused] ++Rowan.
 
Posted by Tubifex Maximus (# 4874) on :
 
I'm sorry that it has come to schism, as it appears to have done. I think the thing that I find hard to understand as a non-anglican and, these days, as a Died Again Christian, is why this issue has been identified as the one straw that is breaking the camel's back. I know that traditionalists have always said that the real issue isn't homosexuality as such, but the authority of scripture. I can remember when no less a person than the Bishop of Durham cast doubt on a real and historical resurrection. There was a bit of a stink, but no schism.

Surely this was far more pressing touchstone issue to Christians than the sexual orientation of a bishop? The resurrection is cited in the creed, after all.

This seems to create a slightly wierd paradox for me that the FOCAs would be wholly against Jeffrey John because he's gay, in spite of the fact that he has spoken movingly on how important it is that the resurrection is real.

It also creates the wicked thought in the mind of evil, post modern, post Christian, commie, fag loving libruls like me that homosexuality really is the issue and not scripture at all...

Can anyone help me to understand this?
 
Posted by Arrietty (# 45) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Angloid:
[Overused] [Overused] ++Rowan.

Yes, I have to say his response is just what I wanted to see - politely and calmly pointing out the FOCAs' complete lack of legitimacy.
 
Posted by Angloid (# 159) on :
 
Most of us are as puzzled as you, Tubifex.

But I must defend the former (last but one) bishop of Durham. He's been repeatedly attacked for not believing the resurrection. In fact it is very clear that his faith is founded on the risen Christ. It's just that he doesn't understand it in a crudely literalist way. There is no way, even taking scripture at face value, that the risen body of Jesus was simply the flesh and blood of his earthly life. He could walk through walls!
 
Posted by Jolly Jape (# 3296) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Angloid:
Most of us are as puzzled as you, Tubifex.

But I must defend the former (last but one) bishop of Durham. He's been repeatedly attacked for not believing the resurrection. In fact it is very clear that his faith is founded on the risen Christ. It's just that he doesn't understand it in a crudely literalist way. There is no way, even taking scripture at face value, that the risen body of Jesus was simply the flesh and blood of his earthly life. He could walk through walls!

And let's not forget that the quotation was "The resurrection is much more than a mere conjouring trick with bones." It seems to this evangelical that he had more faith in the resurrection than his evangelical critics!
 
Posted by Geneviève (# 9098) on :
 
I agree, that is an impressive statement from ++Rowan.

However, I have to disagree with one phrase:
quote:
No-one should for a moment impute selfish or malicious motives to those who have offered pastoral oversight to congregations in other provinces;
From where I sit, intervention in dioceses has been motivated primarily by issues of power, publicity, and hoping to grab real estate.

ETA: to blab on and on about the Windsor Report, and how TEC is not in compliance, and then to repeatedly violate it is completely hypocritical.

[ 30. June 2008, 22:06: Message edited by: Geneviève ]
 
Posted by Lyda*Rose (# 4544) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Geneviève:
I agree, that is an impressive statement from ++Rowan.

However, I have to disagree with one phrase:
quote:
No-one should for a moment impute selfish or malicious motives to those who have offered pastoral oversight to congregations in other provinces;
From where I sit, intervention in dioceses has been motivated primarily by issues of power, publicity, and hoping to grab real estate.

ETA: to blab on and on about the Windsor Report, and how TEC is not in compliance, and then to repeatedly violate it is completely hypocritical.

That's because ++Rowan [Angel] is a nicer guy than you or me, Genevieve.

And I thought I was a fluffy bunny.
 
Posted by Martin L (# 11804) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by badman:
If they're still in it, why won't they come to Lambeth, recognise the authority of the Instruments of Unity, etc etc?

Martin most likely being stubborn, but trying to look at the situation from all possible sides (so please don't judge him harshly if he is visiting a dead horse issue or missing the obvious [Biased] ):

So, why don't they go to Lambeth? It seems to be exactly the place where they should be going.

I thought the Windsor Report seemed a bit harsh and finger-pointy, but I also thought that it leaned in favor of the conservative bishops. What if they all showed up at Lambeth and found out that they could actually get away with much more than they thought, perhaps in the way of ultimatums and/or passing new statements to rival or amend the Chicago-Lambeth Quadrilateral? Or, if the bishops do truly intend to make the Anglican Communion look less like the British Empire of yesteryear (a point which I actually think has a possibility of success), wouldn't Lambeth be the place to do it?

What reasons have been given for not showing up? The general global attitude seems to be against TEC and perhaps the AC-Can, so why not take chances?

[ 01. July 2008, 02:34: Message edited by: Martin L ]
 
Posted by Tubifex Maximus (# 4874) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Angloid:
Most of us are as puzzled as you, Tubifex.

But I must defend the former (last but one) bishop of Durham. He's been repeatedly attacked for not believing the resurrection. In fact it is very clear that his faith is founded on the risen Christ. It's just that he doesn't understand it in a crudely literalist way. There is no way, even taking scripture at face value, that the risen body of Jesus was simply the flesh and blood of his earthly life. He could walk through walls!

Indeed, and I agree with him, and you for that matter but still my suspicions remain. +David Jenkins' critics didn't see it the way you, I, or Jolly Jape do way and it stil wasn't worth splitting over. Nor was +David Jenkins the first; existential and 'non-realist' theology has been a major strand in Anglican Christianity over the last fifty years "Honest to God" anyone? Self describing traditionalists may have voted individually with their feet or sought parishes that welcomed them, but it took the issue of Christian Homosexuality to make a group of them stand up and be counted.

Of course, there may be a lot of other stuff about this group in Jerusalem now believing that they have the power because they have grown strong enough and wanting all those nice pretty churches. I was a Methodist and I always felt a bit envious of the C of E with all those lovely medieval parish churches...
 
Posted by Honest Ron Bacardi (# 38) on :
 
A couple of points in response to the last two posts (and as always, please bear in mind I am posting these to try and provide some context, NOT as statements of my own position (which I would be delighted to bore you with on another occasion).

Re. David Jenkins. I don't think he was a non-realist. The thing you do have to remember was that he loved the media spotlight and was a master of the canny phrase. A bit of a media whore as we might say nowadays. So when he came up with the phrase "not just a conjuring trick with old bones", he got his media attention. But what they said was that he was comparing the resurrection to a conjuring trick etc. He neither said it was such a trick, nor was he reported as such at the time. But that's how he is remembered now. He was at least a victim of his own desire for the limelight.

Re Lambeth. If you read their discussions on the matter, reasons vary. Some are indeed going, some believe it represents a form of communion with the American church (or the American & Canadian churches). Some simply see it as a waste of time (and that also includes non-GAFCONites).

In respect of the latter, there is currently a discussion on the go concerning the ability of Lambeth to actually do anything at all. Spawn has written on this in the CEN - a copy of his article is here. As to what will actually happen - we'll see. But you do need to bear in mind that there have been loud complaints over many years that TEC-seconded staff at the Anglican Communion offices have long been working to further TEC's POV through control of agendas and the like. One might dismiss such views as somewhat dramatic at best, and wild conspiracy theories at worst, were it not for the fact that a couple of internal papers turned up in public that seemed to give considerable credence to this. But in any event, to have Ian Douglas, the TEC representative on the Lambeth Design Group, to sit down alongside the Presiding Bishop of TEC and flatly deny Rowan (whose show the whole thing is) - and at present it would appear that Rowan has lost that one - is only going to be interpreted one way.
 
Posted by Saul the Apostle (# 13808) on :
 
As I understand it the FOCAs are inside the tent p***ing out not outside the ten p***ing in?

Saul the Apostle
 
Posted by Honest Ron Bacardi (# 38) on :
 
Saul the Apostle wrote
quote:
As I understand it the FOCAs are inside the tent p***ing out not outside the ten p***ing in?
For the time being, yes, I think so. Except in the USA (not sure about Canada).
 
Posted by Gill H (# 68) on :
 
Re the unintentional hilarity of the acronym - my organisation was almost called the Qualifications and National Curriculum Authority until someone pointed out that QNCA would most likely be pronounced 'Quanca' ... [Hot and Hormonal]

(ETA: still doesn't beat UCCF, which apparently was almost called the Fellowship of University and College Christian Unions.)

[ 01. July 2008, 09:16: Message edited by: Gill H ]
 
Posted by Zwingli (# 4438) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Tubifex Maximus:
I'm sorry that it has come to schism, as it appears to have done. I think the thing that I find hard to understand as a non-anglican and, these days, as a Died Again Christian, is why this issue has been identified as the one straw that is breaking the camel's back. I know that traditionalists have always said that the real issue isn't homosexuality as such, but the authority of scripture. I can remember when no less a person than the Bishop of Durham cast doubt on a real and historical resurrection. There was a bit of a stink, but no schism.

Surely this was far more pressing touchstone issue to Christians than the sexual orientation of a bishop? The resurrection is cited in the creed, after all.

I think this is a very good question, and one that many of the conservative bishops and primates would struggle to answer precisely.

Bear in mind, I'm writing as someone whose church split from mainstream Presbyterianism in the '60s due to liberal theology, specifically in relation to the Resurrection, so I'm also somewhat perplexed that it is homosexuality which is causing the latest schism.

Aspects of theology such as the exact meaning of the Resurrection and the divinity of Christ have been questioned and argued about since the start of the church, and in the CofE for at least a century, maybe two or more (I'm no historian, this could be incorrect). It has been an incremental change, with the liberals able to retort "you misunderstand us" or "we hold to classic Christian theology on these issues, which you misunderstand" to their orthodox critics. (Which side is correct is not what I am trying to argue here, just showing how the debate can be seen from the conservative side). This makes it much more difficult to have a united conservative front against liberal bishops or national churches in those areas. The homosexual issue, by contrast, is considerably more clear cut. If, for example, a priest in England is in an open relationship with a homosexual lover, then not just theologians but ordinary ministers and churchgoers all around the world can clearly see that this is at odds with traditional church teaching on sexual issues. That may not make the issue any more important, but it does make it far easier to build a coalition across different dioceses and nations and continents. Threatening schism can be as much about achieving critical mass as it is about deep points of doctrine.

Also, never underestimate how quickly society and the church has changed on sexuality, with homosexuality seeing perhaps the most rapid and complete change in attitudes. In about 40 years, male homosexual practice has gone from being criminalised in society at large, to being grudgingly allowed in wider society but condemned by the Church, to being mostly accepted in society, to being tolerated in the church among lay members, to being allowed among priests and bishops. It's difficult to think of any other belief or practice where all branches of the church and most people in society have condemned something, only for society to embrace it and parts of the church to accept it, in such a short period.
 
Posted by Zwingli (# 4438) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Gill H:


(ETA: still doesn't beat UCCF, which apparently was almost called the Fellowship of University and College Christian Unions.)

Given what went on at mine, that could well have been appropriate.

There's a trade union in Australia called the CFMEU*, which is universally, and appropriately, referred to as the Come F*** ME Union.

*Construction, Forestry, Mining and Energy Union.
 
Posted by Saul the Apostle (# 13808) on :
 
Zwingli said:
quote:
Also, never underestimate how quickly society and the church has changed on sexuality, with homosexuality seeing perhaps the most rapid and complete change in attitudes. In about 40 years, male homosexual practice has gone from being criminalised in society at large, to being grudgingly allowed in wider society but condemned by the Church, to being mostly accepted in society, to being tolerated in the church among lay members, to being allowed among priests and bishops. It's difficult to think of any other belief or practice where all branches of the church and most people in society have condemned something, only for society to embrace it and parts of the church to accept it, in such a short period.
I would actually diagree with that statement. Homosexual practice is still generally not accepted in most of British society, despite a film/mediachattering classes push to get it so.

There is a much more 'shrug of the shoulders' attitude to homosexuality than a while ago, but it is still a minority activity. Homosexuality has always been around but the whole thrust of scripture is simply that a better way is that of love between a man and a woman in marriage for life. We can make all the correct 'right on' bro noises we like but society generally has to understand that the Judaeo-Christian way does put checks and balances on behaviour however unfashionable such an approach may be in 2008.

Saul the Apostle
 
Posted by Barnabas62 (# 9110) on :
 
I'm not sure it's all that complicated. There's an increased appreciation that in general, homosexuals are born with that orientation and therefore it is perverse to argue that they make perverse choices.

Some people do make perverse choices about how they use their sexuality, and, guess what? That doesn't seem to correlate with orientation at all.
 
Posted by Zwingli (# 4438) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Barnabas62:
I'm not sure it's all that complicated. There's an increased appreciation that in general, homosexuals are born with that orientation and therefore it is perverse to argue that they make perverse choices.

Some people do make perverse choices about how they use their sexuality, and, guess what? That doesn't seem to correlate with orientation at all.

I won't go into it again on this thread, as it is somewhat off topic, and I explained a bit further in the recent Dead Horses thread, but the conservative view, or at least the Reformed view, has always been that homosexual sin, like all sin, is the result of original sin, with which we are born, and that our choices are then an inevitable consequence of that. We sin because we are born sinners, rather than we are sinners because we sin. So any new findings demonstrating that homosexuals are so predisposed from birth makes no difference.
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Barnabas62:
I'm not sure it's all that complicated. There's an increased appreciation that in general, homosexuals are born with that orientation and therefore it is perverse to argue that they make perverse choices.

That's a red herring (and probably a dead horse).

If you believe in the Fall, as most GAFCONites presumably do (and as I do) then it makes no difference whether or not someone was born with an orientation towards a particular sin. We are all born with an orientation towards sin, in some measure, and we all have a moral duty to resist those sins we are most liable to. Knowing we will fail without the grace of God to strengthen us.

That has nothing at all to do with the question of whether some action is a sin or not - we answer that from the Bible or from church tradition.
 
Posted by Cardinal Pole Vault (# 4193) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by ken:
quote:
Originally posted by Barnabas62:
I'm not sure it's all that complicated. There's an increased appreciation that in general, homosexuals are born with that orientation and therefore it is perverse to argue that they make perverse choices.

That's a red herring (and probably a dead horse).

If you believe in the Fall, as most GAFCONites presumably do (and as I do) then it makes no difference whether or not someone was born with an orientation towards a particular sin. We are all born with an orientation towards sin, in some measure, and we all have a moral duty to resist those sins we are most liable to. Knowing we will fail without the grace of God to strengthen us.

That has nothing at all to do with the question of whether some action is a sin or not - we answer that from the Bible or from church tradition.

So, GAFCONites and other evangelicals see the homosexual orientation as akin to a 'disease'. Because of the Fall, some human beings suffer from a warping of their sexual orientation. It's not their fault- they didn't choose it- but they're still 'sick'.

Um- I see all kinds of scary consequences of this line of thinking

I actually find this explanation bordering on the offensive (and just one reason why I had to jettison much of my former evangelicalism)
 
Posted by Zwingli (# 4438) on :
 
It's more a matter of we see everyone as fallen, of which homosexual orientation is one manifestation that affects some people (and by no means the most serious, or even one of the more serious, manifestations.)
 
Posted by Saul the Apostle (# 13808) on :
 
I don't know or understand the Anglican background to all of this but as stated:

sin is sin is sin, surely?

Sexual sin is:

a. not the unforgiveable sin,

b. sexual sin is sin if committed by a heterosexual or a homosexual.

Thats my understanding as a charismatic (aka wheezy asthmatic sometimes) evangelical.

Some of us Christian folks act like homosexual sin was the unforgiveable 'big one'. My view it is a sin, but it is forgiveable.

The FOCAs? Well I've never met them personally but I guess we share similar views on most things. As stated in another thread, having it out with the head mitre fella at Lambeth may have been a better way than meeting in Jerusalem, but I respect their choice and understand , to a degre, their frustrations.

Saul the Apostle
 
Posted by dj_ordinaire (# 4643) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by ken:
quote:
Originally posted by Barnabas62:
I'm not sure it's all that complicated. There's an increased appreciation that in general, homosexuals are born with that orientation and therefore it is perverse to argue that they make perverse choices.

That's a red herring (and probably a dead horse).

If you believe in the Fall, as most GAFCONites presumably do (and as I do) then it makes no difference whether or not someone was born with an orientation towards a particular sin. We are all born with an orientation towards sin, in some measure, and we all have a moral duty to resist those sins we are most liable to. Knowing we will fail without the grace of God to strengthen us.

That has nothing at all to do with the question of whether some action is a sin or not - we answer that from the Bible or from church tradition.

I'm still baffled. Even if we accept that argument, and we agree with the FOCAs that homosexual activity is sinful, then how does it lead to sexually active gay people being excluded from the priesthood? After all, gluttony is a sin, but we aren't schisming over the issue of fat bishops.

Nor does it explain why it isn't better for gay people to be married than not, just as it is for heterosexuals.
 
Posted by Matt Black (# 2210) on :
 
The issue is one of attitude towards sin. I'm a bit of a fat bastard myself, but I accept that eating too much is wrong, on a number of levels and for a number of reasons, and it's something with which I struggle on a daily basis (alright, weekly, maybe). What I don't do - and what I'm not free to do - is to pronounce that which is sinful as 'good'. That's the difference.
 
Posted by Barnabas62 (# 9110) on :
 
ken

It is a DH in one sense; on the other hand it was simply a personal observation on why folks are more inclined to "shrug their shoulders" these days (Zwingli and Saul discussion). It was a social observation, rather than a theological one. Its the way a fair number of folks think. "Why criticise people for the way they are born" has a certain straightforward appeal.

The extent to which it might factor into theology has been considered and I think I'll drop into the DH soon to have a looksee. It's Romans 1 territory. "Natural" and "perverse" are Romans 1 concepts.
 
Posted by Louise (# 30) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Barnabas62:
I'm not sure it's all that complicated. There's an increased appreciation that in general, homosexuals are born with that orientation and therefore it is perverse to argue that they make perverse choices.

Indeed, and it seems equally perverse to argue that the gay people we can all see around us these days, now gay people are visible, are anything but harmless and ordinary. Insisting that the evidence of people's eyes and the repeated findings of research are wrong and must be dismissed in the face of a few difficult to interpret Greek words in an ancient text is what seems really perverse to most people.

It puts Christians in the same light and moral standing as racists and the old fashioned Sectarian bigot who could show from the Bible that the Pope was Anti-Christ and that tolerating Catholics and giving them equal civil rights was wrong - regardless of how harmless and human your Catholic neighbours might be

I cut my teeth on the controversies of the 17th century churches when wars were fought over service books and Bishops and Divine Right (but really it was mostly about fear of Popery) and who apart from dinosaurs like Ian Paisley gives a monkeys about it now? The very 'Papist' and 'Puritan' extremes the 39 articles were written to define the C of E against are now signing up to them as their shibboleth and declaring themselves to be 'Traditional Anglicans'.

It's a mad world indeed, my masters, where the believers in lay presidency and the users of the English missal can say with a straight face that they're 'Traditional Anglicans' adhering to all the Early Modern documents of that church, but people who in the light of reason and charity have come to different conclusion on one small piece of teaching about sexuality, which was never part of the historical core of Anglicanism must be unchurched.

An apt analogy would be witch-hunting, when witches as the dangerous scourge the early modern world believed them to be turned out not to exist, the churches eventually managed to come to terms with that despite those who insisted on saying that 'Thou shalt not suffer a witch to live' was pretty clear scripture.

'The Sodomite' as the dangerous monster that traditional religion has imagined turns out like the witch, not to exist. Instead we have ordinary harmless gay folk and insisting that they are somehow inferior, polluting and to be shunned, and that this is one of The Most Important Issues in the World Today just makes the Church look paranoid, superstitious and slightly-mad


L.
 
Posted by Matt Black (# 2210) on :
 
Not really an accurate analogy, is it? This is not about persecution of one group by another. A better analogy is thinking of the Anglican Church as a type of club, which like all clubs has rules detailing what sort of behaviour is tolerated and what isn't. If you don't like the rules, then you're free to go and join another club that doesn't have the rules you dislike, or you can start a club of your own. What you're not free to do is loudly flout the rules of the club you're in. That's not persecution, that's just enforcing the club rules.
 
Posted by Jolly Jape (# 3296) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Zwingli:
quote:
Originally posted by Barnabas62:
I'm not sure it's all that complicated. There's an increased appreciation that in general, homosexuals are born with that orientation and therefore it is perverse to argue that they make perverse choices.

Some people do make perverse choices about how they use their sexuality, and, guess what? That doesn't seem to correlate with orientation at all.

I won't go into it again on this thread, as it is somewhat off topic, and I explained a bit further in the recent Dead Horses thread, but the conservative view, or at least the Reformed view, has always been that homosexual sin, like all sin, is the result of original sin, with which we are born, and that our choices are then an inevitable consequence of that. We sin because we are born sinners, rather than we are sinners because we sin. So any new findings demonstrating that homosexuals are so predisposed from birth makes no difference.
I agree with Barnabas here. The logical corollary to the fact that we are born sinners would be that both homosexual sinners and heterosexual sinners are born with a predisposition to sin, some of whom may sin in the matter of sexual activity. Thus some homosexuals may be promiscuoius, sexually abusive, and so on, and thus engage in porneia , sexual immorality. As may some heterosexuals. It doesn't follow from this , mediaeval distortions notwithstanding, that all homosexual activity is inherently sinful, any more than it follows from it that all heterosexual activity is inherently sinful. Because Paul condemns homosexual (and heterosexual) porneia does not mean he condemns homosexual sex per se, only the misuse of homosexual sex, by exact analogy with the way in which he condemns straight porneia.
 
Posted by Matt Black (# 2210) on :
 
I hope you're not dismissing Sacred Tradition as 'medieval distortions' ( [Disappointed] if you are...)
 
Posted by the_raptor (# 10533) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Barnabas62:
It is a DH in one sense; on the other hand it was simply a personal observation on why folks are more inclined to "shrug their shoulders" these days (Zwingli and Saul discussion). It was a social observation, rather than a theological one. Its the way a fair number of folks think. "Why criticise people for the way they are born" has a certain straightforward appeal.

It has a straightforward appeal if you want to ignore all sin. I was born with the desire to sleep with lots of women, and with a very bad temper.

"I was born that way" isn't an excuse because people can moderate their behaviour. And it hasn't even been proven that homosexuality is entirely genetic.
 
Posted by Jolly Jape (# 3296) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Matt Black:
Not really an accurate analogy, is it? This is not about persecution of one group by another. A better analogy is thinking of the Anglican Church as a type of club, which like all clubs has rules detailing what sort of behaviour is tolerated and what isn't. If you don't like the rules, then you're free to go and join another club that doesn't have the rules you dislike, or you can start a club of your own. What you're not free to do is loudly flout the rules of the club you're in. That's not persecution, that's just enforcing the club rules.

But it's not a club, is it. It's an expression of the body of Christ. And Paul has some pretty hard words about not discerning that body in communion. And, in any case, to suggest that entry into the "club" by adherence to a certain predefined code of rules is somewhat to stand scripture on its head, as Peter discovered.
 
Posted by Matt Black (# 2210) on :
 
Are we related? The only difference is that my desire to sleep with lots of women only really emerged from about the age of 13 onwards. Apart from that, snap!
 
Posted by dj_ordinaire (# 4643) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Matt Black:
Not really an accurate analogy, is it? This is not about persecution of one group by another.

What? [Eek!] It is precisely about the persecution of one group (a minority) by another (the majority). That's exactly what it is. Persecution which, for some of the Garcon archbishops, appears to legitimately include imprisonment, rape and torture.

As to your analogy: when gay clergy and laity obey the rules which the Church sets, they are deniedillegally rejected for jobs. Those who bless us, an act which indicates nothing more than that we are no less Godly than nuclear weapons – a pretty low bar, I think you’ll agree –are publically excoriated and threatened with dismissal. If people want to argue that we deserve to be persecuted, fine. But don’t pretend that persecution isn’t taking place.
 
Posted by Honest Ron Bacardi (# 38) on :
 
I'm not disagreeing with the thrust of your post, Louise, but would it not be fairer to say, rather than people who are gay are harmless, but they are as potential harmless - or as potentially harmful - as all the rest of us?

There is a point here (apart from a personal natural aversion to hagiographies). These discussions frequently devolve into one-sided diatribes, which end up with the poster letting us know how very evil everyone who disagrees with them is. Sure, that's more a problem elsewhere, but we have all seen it I'm sure. That's never going to convince anyone (other than perhaps convincing them to avoid our future posts). If we are going to be serious about this, then what we need to strive for is an acknowledgement that what we share is our full humanity, with all that that is heir to. That includes the right to be a prat, whether we are gay or straight. That's genuine non-discrimination.
 
Posted by Jolly Jape (# 3296) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Matt Black:
I hope you're not dismissing Sacred Tradition as 'medieval distortions' ( [Disappointed] if you are...)

I'm certainly saying that the mediaeval attitude to sex (ie, that it is inherently sinful) is a distortion of what we read in the scriptures, and I'd be surprised if you disagreed, so I'll assume you were being ironic.
 
Posted by Matt Black (# 2210) on :
 
(Missed edit window - my last reply was to The Raptor).

JJ, I'm not sure that one can apply the momentous changes in the Apostolic times as analogous to the purported changes afoot today. [ETA re your last post - I don't disagree with you that the medieval attitude to sex as being inherently sinful was a distortion but I would affirm that the Traditional view of same-sex activity as being sinful is not a distortion but a correct discernment of the 'mind of Christ'. So, not being ironic, really, just asking for clarification which you've kindly given.]

dj_ordinaire, if there is persecution, then I would deplore it - if there are clergy who are abiding by The Rules™ and yet being denied positions on the sole ground of sexual orientation, then I think that that is monstrous. And 'monstrous' is too mild a word for what I think of one or two gems that ++Peter Akinola has come up with re: treatment of gays.

[ 01. July 2008, 14:19: Message edited by: Matt Black ]
 
Posted by Louise (# 30) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Matt Black:
Not really an accurate analogy, is it? This is not about persecution of one group by another. A better analogy is thinking of the Anglican Church as a type of club, which like all clubs has rules detailing what sort of behaviour is tolerated and what isn't. If you don't like the rules, then you're free to go and join another club that doesn't have the rules you dislike, or you can start a club of your own. What you're not free to do is loudly flout the rules of the club you're in. That's not persecution, that's just enforcing the club rules.

If a national body which is claiming to set the highest and best standards for our morality allows itself to become a mouthpiece for denouncing a harmless group in our society as inferior and to be denied full rights and then makes links with people in other countries who go much further - supporting imprisonment, winking at rapes and murders, advocating 'cures', denouncing people from that harmless group as dangerous and evil, then they may call themselves a 'private club' but to put it mildly, they're bringing themselves and the game into national disrepute.

The Churches used to witch-hunt using scripture as their warrant but they 'got better'. I think they also need to 'get better' from a doctrine which is now turning out to be as superstitious and badly-based as believing that the old lady down the road has been having sex with Satan and therefore can afflict you with a plague of boils.

L.
 
Posted by Jolly Jape (# 3296) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by the_raptor:
quote:
Originally posted by Barnabas62:
It is a DH in one sense; on the other hand it was simply a personal observation on why folks are more inclined to "shrug their shoulders" these days (Zwingli and Saul discussion). It was a social observation, rather than a theological one. Its the way a fair number of folks think. "Why criticise people for the way they are born" has a certain straightforward appeal.

It has a straightforward appeal if you want to ignore all sin. I was born with the desire to sleep with lots of women, and with a very bad temper.

"I was born that way" isn't an excuse because people can moderate their behaviour. And it hasn't even been proven that homosexuality is entirely genetic.

Sorry, the logic is asymmetric. You have demonstrated here that you are a sinner (as I am) and that, for you, the way of obedience to Christ is not to indulge your passion to sleep with lots of women, but (assuming you are married - I don't know) to express what is a healthy and God given "drive" within the context of your marriage. The truely analogous position would be that, if you were gay, presumably you would have a passion to sleep with as many men as possible, and the path to holiness would be to keep that within the context of a relationship analagous to marriage.
 
Posted by Matt Black (# 2210) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Louise:
quote:
Originally posted by Matt Black:
Not really an accurate analogy, is it? This is not about persecution of one group by another. A better analogy is thinking of the Anglican Church as a type of club, which like all clubs has rules detailing what sort of behaviour is tolerated and what isn't. If you don't like the rules, then you're free to go and join another club that doesn't have the rules you dislike, or you can start a club of your own. What you're not free to do is loudly flout the rules of the club you're in. That's not persecution, that's just enforcing the club rules.

If a national body which is claiming to set the highest and best standards for our morality allows itself to become a mouthpiece for denouncing a harmless group in our society as inferior and to be denied full rights and then makes links with people in other countries who go much further - supporting imprisonment, winking at rapes and murders, advocating 'cures', denouncing people from that harmless group as dangerous and evil, then they may call themselves a 'private club' but to put it mildly, they're bringing themselves and the game into national disrepute.


So is the Establishment of the Church of England the context in which you object to the stance?

PS: on the persecution point, see my reply to dj_ordinaire, previous page.
 
Posted by Barnabas62 (# 9110) on :
 
Gosh. An inadvertent lighting of the blue touchpaper. I'm off to DH.

(BTW I agree with Louise).
 
Posted by mousethief (# 953) on :
 
Or, one could stay in the club and try to get the rules changed. Rules excluding blacks from playing at certain golf courses come to mind.
 
Posted by Matt Black (# 2210) on :
 
Another poor analogy, putting those who have concerns about certain types of behaviour in the same category as racists [Disappointed] * But, to indulge you, yes, those who disagree with the rules can stay in the club and try and change them, but if the club says 'no', you're not then free to flout the rules and stay in the club.

*I'm not sure whether being a racist is better or worse than being a witch-hunter in the moral evolutionary scale, but hey!
 
Posted by Louise (# 30) on :
 
PS Ron, I'm using harmless in the sense of no more likely to be dangerous to society than you or me (unless there's something terrible I don't know about you [Eek!] or something ghastly about me I'm not telling [Big Grin] )
 
Posted by Honest Ron Bacardi (# 38) on :
 
Ah, OK Louise. No, no other interest in your or my peccadillos!
 
Posted by Matt Black (# 2210) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Jolly Jape:
You have demonstrated here that you are a sinner (as I am) and that, for you, the way of obedience to Christ is not to indulge your passion to sleep with lots of women, but (assuming you are married - I don't know) to express what is a healthy and God given "drive" within the context of your marriage.

Or, if not married, to remain celibate.
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Cardinal Pole Vault:
So, GAFCONites and other evangelicals see the homosexual orientation as akin to a 'disease'. Because of the Fall, some human beings suffer from a warping of their sexual orientation. It's not their fault- they didn't choose it- but they're still 'sick'.

No, as Zwingli said, they will see ALL human beings as suffering to a greater or lesser extent from a tendency to sin, which takes different forms in different people.

quote:

I actually find this explanation bordering on the offensive (and just one reason why I had to jettison much of my former evangelicalism)

Its not (just) an evengelical explanation. Its the mainstream Christian one for at least the last 1500 years. Anselm, Aquinas and whoever wrote the new Catholic Catechism would have agreed with it - as would at least some of the Orthodox before they partly jettisoned it as a defensive measure against Rome.

quote:
Originally posted by Louise:
The very 'Papist' and 'Puritan' extremes the 39 articles were written to define the C of E against are now signing up to them as their shibboleth and declaring themselves to be 'Traditional Anglicans'.

Well, if this business of 1300 CofE clergy writing to the Archbishops is in fact true, the current liberal Establishment is being bracketed from both sides.
 
Posted by Spawn (# 4867) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Louise:
If a national body which is claiming to set the highest and best standards for our morality allows itself to become a mouthpiece for denouncing a harmless group in our society as inferior and to be denied full rights and then makes links with people in other countries who go much further - supporting imprisonment, winking at rapes and murders, advocating 'cures', denouncing people from that harmless group as dangerous and evil, then they may call themselves a 'private club' but to put it mildly, they're bringing themselves and the game into national disrepute.

The Churches used to witch-hunt using scripture as their warrant but they 'got better'. I think they also need to 'get better' from a doctrine which is now turning out to be as superstitious and badly-based as believing that the old lady down the road has been having sex with Satan and therefore can afflict you with a plague of boils.

L.

This is overblown rhetoric with no other purpose than to tar as blackly as possible those you simply disagree with. How is the Church of England doing what you claim it is doing?
 
Posted by Jolly Jape (# 3296) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Matt Black:
quote:
Originally posted by Jolly Jape:
You have demonstrated here that you are a sinner (as I am) and that, for you, the way of obedience to Christ is not to indulge your passion to sleep with lots of women, but (assuming you are married - I don't know) to express what is a healthy and God given "drive" within the context of your marriage.

Or, if not married, to remain celibate.
Even so, but this presumes a state for same sax couples analagous to marriage within which sexual expression is licit.
 
Posted by Matt Black (# 2210) on :
 
As is the racist comparison.
 
Posted by Jolly Jape (# 3296) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Matt Black:
As is the racist comparison.

I'm not sure it is, Matt. The movement for recognition and full inclusion of gays within the church was the result of reflection upon the way in which the church had excluded other groups, including other races.
 
Posted by Matt Black (# 2210) on :
 
The joys of cross-posting; my last reply was picking up on Spawn's first sentence.
quote:
Originally posted by Jolly Jape:
Even so, but this presumes a state for same sax couples analagous to marriage within which sexual expression is licit.

A presumption with which I would disagree.
 
Posted by the_raptor (# 10533) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Jolly Jape:
You have demonstrated here that you are a sinner (as I am) and that, for you, the way of obedience to Christ is not to indulge your passion to sleep with lots of women, but (assuming you are married - I don't know) to express what is a healthy and God given "drive" within the context of your marriage.

How is the desire to sleep with many women satisfied by marriage? You may as well claim it is satisfied by masturbation. It is not a lack of orgasms that is making me desire those women.

quote:
Originally posted by Jolly Jape:
The truely analogous position would be that, if you were gay, presumably you would have a passion to sleep with as many men as possible, and the path to holiness would be to keep that within the context of a relationship analagous to marriage.

Which is why I added "and a bad temper". There are aspects of me which I don't believe have any acceptable expression. I was "born" with them, that doesn't mean I get a free pass because I didn't choose to be that way.

If I actually gave in to my natural desires, it wouldn't be for heterosexual monogamy.
 
Posted by Jolly Jape (# 3296) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Matt Black:
The joys of cross-posting; my last reply was picking up on Spawn's first sentence.
quote:
Originally posted by Jolly Jape:
Even so, but this presumes a state for same sax couples analagous to marriage within which sexual expression is licit.

A presumption with which I would disagree.
I recognise that. Think you're wrong, though.

The point that I was making was that, without such provision, Raptor's argument is asymmetric.

[ 01. July 2008, 15:32: Message edited by: Jolly Jape ]
 
Posted by Zwingli (# 4438) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Jolly Jape:
I agree with Barnabas here. The logical corollary to the fact that we are born sinners would be that both homosexual sinners and heterosexual sinners are born with a predisposition to sin, some of whom may sin in the matter of sexual activity. Thus some homosexuals may be promiscuoius, sexually abusive, and so on, and thus engage in porneia , sexual immorality. As may some heterosexuals. It doesn't follow from this , mediaeval distortions notwithstanding, that all homosexual activity is inherently sinful, any more than it follows from it that all heterosexual activity is inherently sinful. Because Paul condemns homosexual (and heterosexual) porneia does not mean he condemns homosexual sex per se, only the misuse of homosexual sex, by exact analogy with the way in which he condemns straight porneia.

You are missing the (fairly straight forward) point. We are all born with a propensity to sin. But we are all born with different propensities, and different strengths of propensities, towards different sins. All of these are a result of our fallen nature, which manifests itself even before birth. Yes, homosexuals and heterosexuals are both born with a propensity towards sexual sin. That does not mean that there is exact symmetry in what is sinful and what is not; as in any other area of life, some may have a greater propensity to sin, others a lesser propensity. Honestly, it was all explained on the DH thread.

Oh, and I'm well aware that it's a dead horse, so I know we will never have a meaningful discussion on the topic, but the whole "the Bible doesn't really condemn homosexual practice, it's just that everyone in every denomination misinterpreted the Bible for two millennia, until sometime in about 1970 we worked out what Saint Paul really meant" crap is total, unmitigated bullshit, and everyone on both sides of the debate knows it. You're only lying to yourselves, and I doubt you even manage to honestly convince yourselves, which is why intelligent discussion of the topic is impossible.

Oh, and that sexual promiscuity is sinful is no more or less obvious from Scripture than that homosexual sex is sinful.
 
Posted by the_raptor (# 10533) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Jolly Jape:
The point that I was making was that, without such provision, Raptor's argument is asymmetric.

The argument that I was making was that being born with a desire, is not sufficient reason to classify that desire as good.
 
Posted by Oscar the Grouch (# 1916) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Saul the Apostle:
Homosexual practice is still generally not accepted in most of British society, despite a film/mediachattering classes push to get it so.

Which British society are you living in?

Certainly not the one I am in.

You may not like the changes in society, but it is undeniable that an enormous sea-change has occurred in a very short space of time and it is foolish to dismiss it as restricted to the media.

Just a couple of symptoms of this sea-change:

a) Almost everyone between the ages of 15 and 25 that I've talked to in the past few years has not only regarded homosexuality as absolutely acceptable, they have also regarded anti-homosexual attitudes with as much horror and disgust as racist attitudes. Make no mistake about it - the younger generations in the UK are overwhelmingly of the opinion that there is nothing wrong in being gay. Any church or organisation that maintains an anti-gay position is going to find itself increasingly alienated from the younger half of the population.

b) Even many people of an older generation have surprised me at their swift acceptance of homosexuality. Here I am thinking of devout and faithful Christians in their 60's and 70's who have turned round to me and talked openly and admiringly about gay couples they know. These are people who have been brought to regard homosexuality as disgusting and who just a few years ago would have been appalled at the idea of worshipping with gays or living next door to them. Not any more.

Now, of course, none of this in anyway proves that homosexuality is OK. It may well be that UK society is simply proving itself hopelessly degenerate. But it is foolish in the extreme to think that the pro-gay portion of the society is just a small minority.

Here is where I suspect FOCA will come unstuck (in the UK at least). FOCA is likely to quickly become known as the church of the homophobes. People won't hear anything else - they'll just hear the anti-gay tirades. And if they regard anti-gay to be equivalent to racism, they'll treat FOCA in the same way that they treat the BNP.
 
Posted by mousethief (# 953) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Jolly Jape:
quote:
Originally posted by Matt Black:
As is the racist comparison.

I'm not sure it is, Matt. The movement for recognition and full inclusion of gays within the church was the result of reflection upon the way in which the church had excluded other groups, including other races.
At any rate it wasn't a racist "comparison" - it was using a(n admittedly emotionally-laden) example to show why someone might disagree with club rules, yet still stay in and seek to change them. That wasn't an option that Matt gave earlier -- his view as explicated in his post was of the "my way or the highway" variety. I was saying there is a third option, and using an example to show how it is sometimes the morally right thing to do. Suggesting that I am comparing homophobes with racists is going far beyond the point of my argument. But it is something that nearly always comes up when somebody tries to argue by analogy on the ship. It's maddening.
 
Posted by Jolly Jape (# 3296) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by the_raptor:
quote:
Originally posted by Jolly Jape:
You have demonstrated here that you are a sinner (as I am) and that, for you, the way of obedience to Christ is not to indulge your passion to sleep with lots of women, but (assuming you are married - I don't know) to express what is a healthy and God given "drive" within the context of your marriage.

How is the desire to sleep with many women satisfied by marriage? You may as well claim it is satisfied by masturbation. It is not a lack of orgasms that is making me desire those women.

quote:
Originally posted by Jolly Jape:
The truely analogous position would be that, if you were gay, presumably you would have a passion to sleep with as many men as possible, and the path to holiness would be to keep that within the context of a relationship analagous to marriage.

Which is why I added "and a bad temper". There are aspects of me which I don't believe have any acceptable expression. I was "born" with them, that doesn't mean I get a free pass because I didn't choose to be that way.

If I actually gave in to my natural desires, it wouldn't be for heterosexual monogamy.

No, it's desire for intimacy that makes people desire lots of different women. That desire is a good thing.

I can presume that, for many homosexual people, their desire would not be for homosexual monogamy. I'm not sure why you think that I'm offering a "free pass" for anyone. And, of course, anger is a characteristic of some people whatever their sexuality. Since that isn't under debate, it seemed superfluous to respond to it.
 
Posted by Matt Black (# 2210) on :
 
Zwingli, [Overused]
 
Posted by The Great Gumby (# 10989) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Matt Black:
dj_ordinaire, if there is persecution, then I would deplore it - if there are clergy who are abiding by The Rules™ and yet being denied positions on the sole ground of sexual orientation, then I think that that is monstrous.

Isn't that what happened to Jeffrey John?
 
Posted by Cardinal Pole Vault (# 4193) on :
 
The Prayer Book spoke of marriage as being a 'remedy for sin'. It provides a context in which heterosexual sex can be 'managed': you might want to shag around, but marriage provides the remedy to that sinful desire: sex is to be had in a loving, stable relationship.

Now, the evangelicals are saying that the only remedy for the sinful state of homosexuality is celibacy. There is no appropriate context in which a homosexual may express themselves sexually.

I wonder whether evangelicals *really* allow themselves to reflect on the gravity and utter bleakness of this analysis.

It's all very well sighing and issuing platitudes such as 'we love you, but not your sinful inclinations' or 'it's the same for us- we're all sinners- you want to shag men, and I want to shag multiple partners' or whatever. Because it's not the same. A heterosexual is not being told by the church that the root of the sexual orientation is perverse- their orientation is not the problem- it's just the misuse of it.

The evo attitude to homosexuality (and yes, the teaching of the RC Church)is simply the condemnation of an entire group of people for simply being who they are. Being gay is not like wanting to commit adultry or whatever. It's not the orientation to do 'naughty things'. It's an orientation to love and to want to be loved in a particular way.

Perhaps it's a consequence of 'The Fall' that we have homosexuality- but let's not foget: no one's going to be married in heaven, either. So I don't think heterosexuals have much to be smug about
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Jolly Jape:
quote:
Originally posted by Matt Black:
As is the racist comparison.

I'm not sure it is, Matt. The movement for recognition and full inclusion of gays within the church was the result of reflection upon the way in which the church had excluded other groups, including other races.
Says who? I don't remember anyone making that comparison back in the 1970s and early 1980s, when there seemed to be more discussion on these issues in church than there is now.

I thought it was the result of gay men and women coming out and wanting to be treated equally - not any reflection on anyone else's part at all.

Yes, I meant "more discussion" then than now. There is a weird disconnection between real chruches and their media representation. Nowadays almost no-one ever mentions this whole business in church or in church meetings. What we see is a lot of journalists telling us that we are obsessed with homosexuality, or with sex in general, when in fact it is almost never talked about at all.

Certainly not in the pulpit. From the last few years I think I've heard two mentions of it as an issue in an actual chruch service - one rather egregious and unneccessary comment on the side from Sandy Millar in an otherwise rather good sermon that had nothign to do with the topic at all, and one comment from one of our clergy saying that he was proud to be a member of "inclusive church".

In our church business meetings one member of our congregation wanted to start some sort of discussion about homosexual partnerships but no-one else was keen at all so it never really happened.

There was a deanery synod when the issue was raised - I was there but I can't even remember what was said. All very bland and inoffensive I think.

But that's about it. In the 1970s and 1980s we used to have long, earnest, and sometimes painful debates on these things. And even Bible Studies. Now, if anyone is thinking about it at all, its not being done in church.

In the same period I have heard dozens of sermons about green issues, about politics, about poverty. We have talked about refugees and about local schools and about Brazilian favelas and about drug dealers and about Zimbabwe and about transport and about international debt. And about the Gifts of the Spirit and salvation and conversion and the nature of God.

But not about this at all.
 
Posted by the_raptor (# 10533) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Jolly Jape:
No, it's desire for intimacy that makes people desire lots of different women. That desire is a good thing.

Thank you for telling me the basis of my desires, but you are wrong. Desire for intimacy causes some people to seek it through promiscuous sexual encounters, that isn't what I am talking about.

quote:
Originally posted by Jolly Jape:
I can presume that, for many homosexual people, their desire would not be for homosexual monogamy. I'm not sure why you think that I'm offering a "free pass" for anyone.

I was responding to the argument "they are born that way, so it is okay".

quote:
Originally posted by Jolly Jape:
And, of course, anger is a characteristic of some people whatever their sexuality. Since that isn't under debate, it seemed superfluous to respond to it.

This argument isn't specifically about sexuality, or the acceptableness of certain sexualities. That is a dead horse.
 
Posted by Matt Black (# 2210) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by The Great Gumby:
quote:
Originally posted by Matt Black:
dj_ordinaire, if there is persecution, then I would deplore it - if there are clergy who are abiding by The Rules™ and yet being denied positions on the sole ground of sexual orientation, then I think that that is monstrous.

Isn't that what happened to Jeffrey John?
Yes and no. IIRC correctly (and do correct me if I'm wrong), whilst he was celibate at the time of the purported appointment, he wasn't prepared to say that same-sex relationships were wrong, which I think was the sticking point.
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Cardinal Pole Vault:
Now, the evangelicals are saying

[Disappointed] and the Catholics and the Orthodox [Disappointed]
 
Posted by the_raptor (# 10533) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Cardinal Pole Vault:
Being gay is not like wanting to commit adultry or whatever. It's not the orientation to do 'naughty things'. It's an orientation to love and to want to be loved in a particular way.

And the difference between being gay and being a polyamourist is?

Why do you get to define what is an acceptable expression of love between consenting adults?
 
Posted by Angloid (# 159) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Matt Black:
quote:
Originally posted by The Great Gumby:
quote:
Originally posted by Matt Black:
dj_ordinaire, if there is persecution, then I would deplore it - if there are clergy who are abiding by The Rules™ and yet being denied positions on the sole ground of sexual orientation, then I think that that is monstrous.

Isn't that what happened to Jeffrey John?
Yes and no. IIRC correctly (and do correct me if I'm wrong), whilst he was celibate at the time of the purported appointment, he wasn't prepared to say that same-sex relationships were wrong, which I think was the sticking point.
But nor, IIRC, was the man who was appointed Bishop of Reading instead of him. At least, he was on record as holding the same views on this issue as Jeffrey John, and I very much doubt he would have recanted them. Probably he wasn't even asked. Because, of course, he is a married heterosexual.

Which illustrates the irrational hypocrisy of some conservatives.
 
Posted by Spawn (# 4867) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Angloid:
But nor, IIRC, was the man who was appointed Bishop of Reading instead of him. At least, he was on record as holding the same views on this issue as Jeffrey John, and I very much doubt he would have recanted them. Probably he wasn't even asked. Because, of course, he is a married heterosexual.

Which illustrates the irrational hypocrisy of some conservatives.

What is illustrated here is the irrational inability of liberals to listen to any viewpoint but their own, and indeed the intolerance they have for other views. Throwing out canards like this, and ad hominem attacks rather than actually engaging in discussion.

This is a link to a letter written by some Oxford clergy setting out the reasons for their opposition to +John's appointment. I've explained time and again this point of view over the years on SOF - it seems that no-one is listening.
 
Posted by Cardinal Pole Vault (# 4193) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by the_raptor:
quote:
Originally posted by Cardinal Pole Vault:
Being gay is not like wanting to commit adultry or whatever. It's not the orientation to do 'naughty things'. It's an orientation to love and to want to be loved in a particular way.

And the difference between being gay and being a polyamourist is?


The fact that you even pose that question speaks volumes. Why not go the whole hog and ask how homosexuality differs from paedophilia?
 
Posted by Mystery of Faith (# 12176) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Spawn:
I've explained time and again this point of view over the years on SOF - it seems that no-one is listening.

Perhaps its simply that everyone knows what Anglican Mainstream and the likes of Chris Sugden stand for.
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mystery of Faith:
quote:
Originally posted by Spawn:
I've explained time and again this point of view over the years on SOF - it seems that no-one is listening.

Perhaps its simply that everyone knows what Anglican Mainstream and the likes of Chris Sugden stand for.
Well, with prats like the One New Now/American Family News Network queering the pitch its no wonder that everybody thinks evangelicals are brain-dead bigots [Frown]
 
Posted by Spawn (# 4867) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mystery of Faith:
quote:
Originally posted by Spawn:
I've explained time and again this point of view over the years on SOF - it seems that no-one is listening.

Perhaps its simply that everyone knows what Anglican Mainstream and the likes of Chris Sugden stand for.
Any excuse not to tackle the issues themselves. Is this perhaps because you don't have a strong argument?

Or do you want every liberal to be judged by the likes of Spong and Cupitt?
 
Posted by Spawn (# 4867) on :
 
Apologies for the multi-posting. My browser was doing strange things.
 
Posted by Barnabas62 (# 9110) on :
 
OK Spawn, I zapped them

Barnabas 62 Purg Host
 
Posted by Mystery of Faith (# 12176) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Spawn:
quote:
Originally posted by Mystery of Faith:
quote:
Originally posted by Spawn:
I've explained time and again this point of view over the years on SOF - it seems that no-one is listening.

Perhaps its simply that everyone knows what Anglican Mainstream and the likes of Chris Sugden stand for.
Any excuse not to tackle the issues themselves. Is this perhaps because you don't have a strong argument?

Or do you want every liberal to be judged by the likes of Spong and Cupitt?

Not wishing to enter DH territory, even if I could present the most scholarly theological argument from a more liberal perspective it wouldn't make any difference. Your mind is as made up and your ears as closed to listening as you claim liberal ears are. The difference is that the likes of Anglican Mainstream who you refer to aren't prepared to share the big tent with anyone else.
 
Posted by Saul the Apostle (# 13808) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by mousethief:
quote:
Originally posted by Jolly Jape:
quote:
Originally posted by Matt Black:
As is the racist comparison.

I'm not sure it is, Matt. The movement for recognition and full inclusion of gays within the church was the result of reflection upon the way in which the church had excluded other groups, including other races.
At any rate it wasn't a racist "comparison" - it was using a(n admittedly emotionally-laden) example to show why someone might disagree with club rules, yet still stay in and seek to change them. That wasn't an option that Matt gave earlier -- his view as explicated in his post was of the "my way or the highway" variety. I was saying there is a third option, and using an example to show how it is sometimes the morally right thing to do. Suggesting that I am comparing homophobes with racists is going far beyond the point of my argument. But it is something that nearly always comes up when somebody tries to argue by analogy on the ship. It's maddening.
I think what I was saying was that there are a set of guidelines and if we don't choose to follow them, well we live with the consequences. Generally, in the circles I mix in, and I don't live in a monastic retreat, homosexuality is tolerated with a shrug of the shoulders; but it is not as widespread as the media would like us to believe - in my humble view.

I may choose to eat as much as I want, but I will one day have the consequences visited upon me ie I'll probably be unhealthy sooner rather than later. Its the same with sexual sin but Paul tends to feel that sexual sin corrupts us 'faster' (not a good phrase I know) than other types of sin; that is, we become 'one' with the person we sin with.

I think the 'right on' rleative societal values that some Christian hold is clear goalpost moving and is disingenuous. Yes we do live in a more relativist society; but does that make sinning right? I think not. Its not just a question of where I stick my willy, thats not biologically the point, it is the profound spiritual and psychological knock on effects - be it heterosexual OR homosexual sin.

Sin is sin is sin and I think this is where some folk who are trying to run with foxes and hunt with the hounds get stuck in the proverbial. You may not like the fact that the Bible does not sanction homosexual relations or adultery, but hey, thats the Judaeo-Christian heritage and it comes as part of the package and maybe thats what GAFCON is trying to flag up?

Saul the A.
 
Posted by Saul the Apostle (# 13808) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by mousethief:
quote:
Originally posted by Jolly Jape:
quote:
Originally posted by Matt Black:
As is the racist comparison.

I'm not sure it is, Matt. The movement for recognition and full inclusion of gays within the church was the result of reflection upon the way in which the church had excluded other groups, including other races.
At any rate it wasn't a racist "comparison" - it was using a(n admittedly emotionally-laden) example to show why someone might disagree with club rules, yet still stay in and seek to change them. That wasn't an option that Matt gave earlier -- his view as explicated in his post was of the "my way or the highway" variety. I was saying there is a third option, and using an example to show how it is sometimes the morally right thing to do. Suggesting that I am comparing homophobes with racists is going far beyond the point of my argument. But it is something that nearly always comes up when somebody tries to argue by analogy on the ship. It's maddening.
I think what I was saying was that there are a set of guidelines and if we don't choose to follow them, well we live with the consequences. Generally, in the circles I mix in, and I don't live in a monastic retreat, homosexuality is tolerated with a shrug of the shoulders; but it is not as widespread as the media would like us to believe - in my humble view.

I may choose to eat as much as I want, but I will one day have the consequences visited upon me ie I'll probably be unhealthy sooner rather than later. Its the same with sexual sin but Paul tends to feel that sexual sin corrupts us 'faster' (not a good phrase I know) than other types of sin; that is, we become 'one' with the person we sin with.

I think the 'right on man' relative societal values that some Christians hold is clear goalpost moving and is disingenuous. Yes we do live in a more relativist secular society; but does that make sinning right? I think not.

Its not just a question of where I stick my willy, thats not biologically the point, it is the profound spiritual and psychological knock on effects - be it heterosexual OR homosexual sin.

Sin is sin is sin and I think this is where some folk who are trying to run with foxes and hunt with the hounds get stuck in the proverbial.

You may not like the fact that the Bible does not sanction homosexual relations or adultery, but hey, thats the Judaeo-Christian heritage and it comes as part of the package and maybe thats what GAFCON is trying to flag up?

Saul the Apostle

[ 01. July 2008, 18:49: Message edited by: Saul the Apostle ]
 
Posted by Barnabas62 (# 9110) on :
 
Mystery of Faith

1. Multiple posting appears to be infectious on this thread - anyway I've deleted your doublet.

2. Lets stick to issues, please.

Barnabas62
Purg Host

 
Posted by Spawn (# 4867) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mystery of Faith:
Not wishing to enter DH territory, even if I could present the most scholarly theological argument from a more liberal perspective it wouldn't make any difference. Your mind is as made up and your ears as closed to listening as you claim liberal ears are. The difference is that the likes of Anglican Mainstream who you refer to aren't prepared to share the big tent with anyone else.

I don't think there's any essential difference. Those who propose an inclusive church would sooner or later exclude the exclusive and intolerant. Some of your colleagues in Inclusive Church would do it sooner rather than later.

My ears aren't closed to the debate. There's a sense in which the Church could change its teaching on this issue, but I would prefer that to be on theological grounds rather than through politicking. I think the liberal arguments are weak, and tend to be strongest when they're based on revisionist grounds. That will not do, the argument has to come from a rigorous engagement with the bible and tradition.
 
Posted by Spiffy (# 5267) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Spawn:
I don't think there's any essential difference. Those who propose an inclusive church would sooner or later exclude the exclusive and intolerant. Some of your colleagues in Inclusive Church would do it sooner rather than later.

I've seen this play out in a small, family parish. The inclusive folks said, "Let's worship together! Let's not ignore our differences, but let us try to keep them from seperating us!"

The exclusive folks said, "No, we can't abide Those Persons worshipping alongside us."

There was a meeting, long into the night.

"Please let us worship with you."

"No."

"Please?"

"No!"

And the exclusive folks left, insisting that they were chased out.

There's no end to this story, no moralistic tale. Just a lot of broken hearts (mine included).
 
Posted by Alwyn (# 4380) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Zwingli:
... the whole "the Bible doesn't really condemn homosexual practice, it's just that everyone in every denomination misinterpreted the Bible for two millennia, until sometime in about 1970 we worked out what Saint Paul really meant" crap is total, unmitigated bullshit, and everyone on both sides of the debate knows it. You're only lying to yourselves, and I doubt you even manage to honestly convince yourselves, which is why intelligent discussion of the topic is impossible.

Did you just want to express anger and frustration or do you really believe that?

I've heard plenty of intelligent debate on this issue. I've heard your side's arguments expressed by an educated, intelligent and articulate speaker. Hearing him didn't convince me, but it increased my respect for Christians on your side of this issue.

If you, and people in FOCA, disregard people who think differently because you've decided that we're lying to ourselves, then intelligent debate is going to be harder to have. How would you react a claim that your views were "total, unnmitigated bullshit" and that you were lying to yourself?
 
Posted by Lyda*Rose (# 4544) on :
 
Zwingly:
quote:
Oh, and I'm well aware that it's a dead horse, so I know we will never have a meaningful discussion on the topic, but the whole "the Bible doesn't really condemn homosexual practice, it's just that everyone in every denomination misinterpreted the Bible for two millennia, until sometime in about 1970 we worked out what Saint Paul really meant" crap is total, unmitigated bullshit, and everyone on both sides of the debate knows it. You're only lying to yourselves, and I doubt you even manage to honestly convince yourselves, which is why intelligent discussion of the topic is impossible.

This is exactly why this subject is a Dead Horse. I mean, we've had dozens of threads, rather heated ones, on the subject of Mary, but I've yet to see a category of believers called liars because they assert Mary was Ever Virgin.

ETA: The "lying" charge is no better an argument than the liberal side saying that in actuality traditionalists are just hateful, raving homophobes justifying the Ick Factor. I know that kind of crap has been hurled, but it doesn't make it right. I think both sides are quite sincere in their beliefs.

I think I'd better go back up the thread to figure out why this part of the discussion is still in Purg. Obviously, I'm missing something.

[ 01. July 2008, 22:12: Message edited by: Lyda*Rose ]
 
Posted by Lyda*Rose (# 4544) on :
 
[Hot and Hormonal] Sorry for misspelling your name, Zwingli.
 
Posted by RuthW (# 13) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by ken:
quote:
Originally posted by Jolly Jape:
quote:
Originally posted by Matt Black:
As is the racist comparison.

I'm not sure it is, Matt. The movement for recognition and full inclusion of gays within the church was the result of reflection upon the way in which the church had excluded other groups, including other races.
Says who? I don't remember anyone making that comparison back in the 1970s and early 1980s, when there seemed to be more discussion on these issues in church than there is now.

I thought it was the result of gay men and women coming out and wanting to be treated equally - not any reflection on anyone else's part at all.

Yes, I meant "more discussion" then than now. There is a weird disconnection between real chruches and their media representation. Nowadays almost no-one ever mentions this whole business in church or in church meetings. What we see is a lot of journalists telling us that we are obsessed with homosexuality, or with sex in general, when in fact it is almost never talked about at all.

Not where you live, I guess. But certainly where I live it's a regular topic of discussion -- more so at church than outside church, in fact, since outside church homosexuality is generally accepted.

quote:
Certainly not in the pulpit. From the last few years I think I've heard two mentions of it as an issue in an actual chruch service - one rather egregious and unneccessary comment on the side from Sandy Millar in an otherwise rather good sermon that had nothign to do with the topic at all, and one comment from one of our clergy saying that he was proud to be a member of "inclusive church".
Whereas it is mentioned regularly in the pulpit of both the church I work for and the church I attend.

quote:
In our church business meetings one member of our congregation wanted to start some sort of discussion about homosexual partnerships but no-one else was keen at all so it never really happened.

There was a deanery synod when the issue was raised - I was there but I can't even remember what was said. All very bland and inoffensive I think.

At its last meeting, after much discussion, the vestry at my church voted to re-affirm our parish's commitment to treating equally all couples presenting themselves for marriage. The topic has come up again and again at annual diocesan meetings, and we have had a number of diocese-sponsored discussions outside of regular business meetings.

quote:
But that's about it. In the 1970s and 1980s we used to have long, earnest, and sometimes painful debates on these things. And even Bible Studies. Now, if anyone is thinking about it at all, its not being done in church.
We discuss what the Bible says about homosexuality on a regular basis. I lead a newcomer's class four times a year at my church, and someone asks about the church's interpretation of those six or seven verses dealing with same-gender sexual relations every single time.
 
Posted by Trudy Scrumptious (# 5647) on :
 
Many have heard the hoofbeats of the approaching Dead Horse. It seems this discussion can't continue without being a discussion of homosexuality, so off it goes to continue in the appropriate place. I shall be sad to lose it from Purgatory as it wins my personal award for best thread title of the year. You still have several other GAFCON threads to discuss relevant issues other than the rights and wrongs of homosexuality.

Trudy, Scrumptious Purgatory Host

[ 01. July 2008, 23:41: Message edited by: Trudy Scrumptious ]
 
Posted by Rossweisse (# 2349) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Louise:
...It's a mad world indeed, my masters, where the believers in lay presidency and the users of the English missal can say with a straight face that they're 'Traditional Anglicans' adhering to all the Early Modern documents of that church, but people who in the light of reason and charity have come to different conclusion on one small piece of teaching about sexuality, which was never part of the historical core of Anglicanism must be unchurched. ...

Louise: [Overused] [Overused] [Overused]

The only thing that holds the FOCAs (love it) together is their fear of the queer -- or, to be fair, in some cases, their traditionally-based and sincere objections to homosexuality.

As for why they don't simply go and start their own club, the answer seems fairly clear: They want to keep the property and the endowments.

Anyway, good for ++Rowan! [Overused] [Overused] [Overused]

Ross

[ 02. July 2008, 03:23: Message edited by: Rossweisse ]
 
Posted by TubaMirum (# 8282) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Matt Black:
The issue is one of attitude towards sin. I'm a bit of a fat bastard myself, but I accept that eating too much is wrong, on a number of levels and for a number of reasons, and it's something with which I struggle on a daily basis (alright, weekly, maybe). What I don't do - and what I'm not free to do - is to pronounce that which is sinful as 'good'. That's the difference.

Bad analogy, because of the "too much" part. Gay people have to cut out gayness entirely; there's no question of being gay in moderation.

BTW, you are pronouncing sin to be good, although you don't know it. Gay people are told every day that good - loving another person - is evil and that evil - repentance for loving another person - is good.

It's all really very twisted.
 
Posted by Robert Armin (# 182) on :
 
Zwingli:
quote:
Oh, and I'm well aware that it's a dead horse, so I know we will never have a meaningful discussion on the topic, but the whole "the Bible doesn't really condemn homosexual practice, it's just that everyone in every denomination misinterpreted the Bible for two millennia, until sometime in about 1970 we worked out what Saint Paul really meant" crap is total, unmitigated bullshit, and everyone on both sides of the debate knows it. You're only lying to yourselves, and I doubt you even manage to honestly convince yourselves, which is why intelligent discussion of the topic is impossible.
All those long sermons, which you are so proud of having listened to, seem to have equipped you well for the task of engaging in theological debate. Or possibly not.
 
Posted by Matt Black (# 2210) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by TubaMirum:
quote:
Originally posted by Matt Black:
The issue is one of attitude towards sin. I'm a bit of a fat bastard myself, but I accept that eating too much is wrong, on a number of levels and for a number of reasons, and it's something with which I struggle on a daily basis (alright, weekly, maybe). What I don't do - and what I'm not free to do - is to pronounce that which is sinful as 'good'. That's the difference.

Bad analogy, because of the "too much" part. Gay people have to cut out gayness entirely.

No, not the gayness but the same-sex activity.
 
Posted by Matt Black (# 2210) on :
 
(Missed edit window) a better analogy then would be one of my uncles: he drank too much in his youth owing to an over-fondness to alcohol which has resulted in his liver being damaged so much that he's been told by the medics never to have a drink again. He still has that over-fondness for alcohol and indeed it may be hard-wired into his genes but he hasn't touched a drop for over 5 years. Thus 'too much' has, for him, become 'nothing at all'.
 
Posted by Jolly Jape (# 3296) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by RuthW:
quote:
Originally posted by ken:
quote:
Originally posted by Jolly Jape:
quote:
Originally posted by Matt Black:
As is the racist comparison.

I'm not sure it is, Matt. The movement for recognition and full inclusion of gays within the church was the result of reflection upon the way in which the church had excluded other groups, including other races.
Says who? I don't remember anyone making that comparison back in the 1970s and early 1980s, when there seemed to be more discussion on these issues in church than there is now.

I thought it was the result of gay men and women coming out and wanting to be treated equally - not any reflection on anyone else's part at all.

Yes, I meant "more discussion" then than now. There is a weird disconnection between real chruches and their media representation. Nowadays almost no-one ever mentions this whole business in church or in church meetings. What we see is a lot of journalists telling us that we are obsessed with homosexuality, or with sex in general, when in fact it is almost never talked about at all.

Not where you live, I guess. But certainly where I live it's a regular topic of discussion -- more so at church than outside church, in fact, since outside church homosexuality is generally accepted.


I think that this may, indeed, be a pond difference. I can certainly relate to ken's point that it is pretty well absent from the pulpit. Funnily enough, the one occasion that I can rember this happening was with the self-same Sandy Millar, usually a gracioius and avuncular speaker, and again it was a sort of "snide-aside" thing, very out of character for him, I would have thought.

When I was in a more conservative church than that which I now attend, I can't remember it ever being raised, except once in conversation over coffee, where a stony silence ensued, and once at a social evening, where, amongst my group of friends, gay relationships were looked on with acceptance. I just assumed, I guess, that everyone considered it a topic of such low importance that it didn't really figure on the radar at all. Perhaps wrongly, I guess I assumed that most people shared my view, whereas maybe most people assumed that I shared their, more critical, view.

Nevertheless, we did, at one stage, examine the Tony Higton video material (a particularly conservative CofE vicar and prime mover in the attacks on +David Jenkins) and the overall consensus was that even the most mild mannered of the congo wanted to punch his lights out as soon as his face appeared on the screen.

All this was prior to the elevation of +VGR, so I suspect that might have brought the situation to a head, somewhat.

I guess things may be different away from the cities (I live near Manchester, which has a high profile gay community) but I think that, locally, there is near total acceptance outside the church for gay relationships. IME they raise as much of an eyebrow as finding out that someone supports Manchester City (the other soccer team in Manchester).
 
Posted by Jolly Jape (# 3296) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Matt Black:
(Missed edit window) a better analogy then would be one of my uncles: he drank too much in his youth owing to an over-fondness to alcohol which has resulted in his liver being damaged so much that he's been told by the medics never to have a drink again. He still has that over-fondness for alcohol and indeed it may be hard-wired into his genes but he hasn't touched a drop for over 5 years. Thus 'too much' has, for him, become 'nothing at all'.

Well, the best analogy of all would be heterosexual relationships. Some are given the charism by God of celibacy, but for others there is a legitimate place where sexual intimacy is not only allowed, but celebrated. I don't think that the validity of that analogy is challenged by a half dozen or so references of uncertain meaning in Paul's letters.
 
Posted by Matt Black (# 2210) on :
 
Not so uncertain given the weight of Church Tradition in interpreting them.
 
Posted by Jolly Jape (# 3296) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Matt Black:
Not so uncertain given the weight of Church Tradition in interpreting them.

This would, maybe, be the same Tradition that allowed the transporters of slaves in the 18 century to claim that they were doing nothing sinful?

The point I am making is that unless we have the courage to examine our presuppositions, how are we to allow the Holy Spirit to lead us into all truth. We each of us have a spiritual journey, where we change over time. I see no reason to think that the same thing is not true of Tradition. Unless Tradition allows for this, then it becomes moribund, I'm not saying that this gives us the right to rewrite Tradition in our own image, but I am saying that the church is to relate to society as it is, not as it was in the 1st, or 5th or 16th or 19th centuries. At each of those times in history, the change in social and societal conditions were spurs to a reinvestigation of what scripture has to say, and this reinvestigation led to Tradition experiencing change. That change has to start somewhere. I suggest that the best place for it to start is a prayerful listening to the Holy Spirit, but that doesn't rule out prophetic action necessarily.
 
Posted by dj_ordinaire (# 4643) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Spawn:
This is a link to a letter written by some Oxford clergy setting out the reasons for their opposition to +John's appointment. I've explained time and again this point of view over the years on SOF - it seems that no-one is listening.

It's not that we're not listening - but that the letter confirms what we're saying. Jeffrey John was considered unacceptable as a bishop because he was an openly gay man. The bit about him 'disrupting the common mind of the House of Bishops' is too stupid to require further comment, as our bishops differ over this issue and most others, including some which are actually important. A straight man whose attitudes were the same as his would have been acceptable - and, as has been pointed out, actually was acceptable in the event.
 
Posted by Matt Black (# 2210) on :
 
JJ, even accepting that your analogy of slavery is close to the present issue - which I don't - any prophetic action revising Church Tradition in the way described needs to be taken by the Church as a whole, not just a faction doing their own thing in clear defiance of...er...the whole Church.
 
Posted by dj_ordinaire (# 4643) on :
 
Is it possible to have a 'prophetic action' which is taken by the whole of the Church?

In any case, what Church are we talking about here? The obvious ones of parish, diocese and province have been rejected. Why should the Anglican Communion, a loose affiliation of historically tied yet independent churches, being the measure of 'the Church'? And if it is, then where does that leave all the other differences within us? Or the OoW for that matter?
 
Posted by Matt Black (# 2210) on :
 
I was talking in terms of the Anglican Communion and, in answer to your question, "why should it", my fear is "maybe it shouldn't".
 
Posted by Jolly Jape (# 3296) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Matt Black:
JJ, even accepting that your analogy of slavery is close to the present issue - which I don't - any prophetic action revising Church Tradition in the way described needs to be taken by the Church as a whole, not just a faction doing their own thing in clear defiance of...er...the whole Church.

I wasn't claiming that the issue of slavery, per se, was analogous to the issue of gay relationships per se (though I think they are closer than I guess that you would), but merely the way in which Tradition can change over time whilst remaining true to the Gospel, and the role of prophetic action in bringing that about. It's not as if "It's the natural order of things, it has always been thus, St Paul sanctioned it" were arguments unheard by Wilberforce et al. The point is that we can be blind to certain implications of the Gospel, and the Holy Spirit has, from time to time, to draw attention to that blindness, and to bring about a change in Tradition to rectify it.
 
Posted by Matt Black (# 2210) on :
 
The slavery analogy is not for me...er...analogous because there was no Church 'rule' forbidding the freeing of slaves* or the campaigning for the abolition of slavery; the Church at the time 'merely' (how lightly that word trips off the keys!) tolerated the existence of slavery. In due course of time, the Church came to see that the Clapham chaps were right and changed it's stance, and it may well be that it will do the same in due course with the New Hampshire chaps, which will of course pose an interesting dilemma for the likes of me! But in the meantime, the New Hampshire chaps are breaking ranks by doing something that the Church has specifically forbidded and are defying ecclesiastical discipline in a way that Wilberforce and Co never did.

[ETA-*to clarify, here I meant manumission as opposed to violent liberation a la John Brown]

[ 02. July 2008, 11:34: Message edited by: Matt Black ]
 
Posted by dj_ordinaire (# 4643) on :
 
So would Wilberforce's actions have been wrong if the Church had officially endorsed slave-ownership as in accord with the Gospel?
 
Posted by Matt Black (# 2210) on :
 
But it did effectively endorse it, didn't it? I suppose a more difficult question for me to answer would be if Wilberforce had gone around like a violent slave liberator and thus broken the civil/criminal law in defiance of the Church's backing for the same.
 
Posted by PataLeBon (# 5452) on :
 
Matt -

What about St. Francis, Martin Luther, or even *gasp* St. Paul? All three of them started down a path when the Church around them disagreed with them. What made their actions different? Why are they celebrated for deciding that Tradition should be changed?

(I'm sure there were others, but those come to mind quickly...)
 
Posted by Matt Black (# 2210) on :
 
The examples are good ones, albeit ones outside of the immediate contemporary context of the Anglican Communion. Of the three, Luther is the one who causes me the most problems, I guess, at first blush since both St Paul (Council of Jerusalem) and St Francis (+++Innocent III) had their actions subsequently commended by the Church pretty quickly. So that leaves Luther, who creates something of a problem for me in that his actions were not endorsed by the (Western) Church; however, unlike the present case, he did have a fair weight of Tradition on his side - as well as Scripture - as well as his beloved St Augustine and other ECFs, he also had more recent luminaries such as St Anselm on his side, and his break with Rome was about his insistence that the western Church revert to teaching as it had in the past and drop what (he at least perceived to be) recent innovative practices; he did not demand that it teach something which it had never taught before. The stance of the 'provisional NH wing' of TEC, on the other hand, seems to me to be, "Tradition is either wrong or needs to be reinterpreted (as does Scripture) on this subject, and the Church has consistently got it wrong for the last 2000 years. Sorry, but this customer ain't buying.
 
Posted by TubaMirum (# 8282) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Matt Black:
(Missed edit window) a better analogy then would be one of my uncles: he drank too much in his youth owing to an over-fondness to alcohol which has resulted in his liver being damaged so much that he's been told by the medics never to have a drink again. He still has that over-fondness for alcohol and indeed it may be hard-wired into his genes but he hasn't touched a drop for over 5 years. Thus 'too much' has, for him, become 'nothing at all'.

Another bad analogy. His "over-fondness to alcohol" has damaged him, and will kill him.

Gay folks merely desire love and companionship, as 99% of human beings do. Our "fondness" is really just fondness, and results in the betterment of our lives and happiness.

It is not good, after all, for the man to be alone.

(Hint: there isn't any good analogy. This one's a one-off, and the Church has been wrong all these centuries; and many people's lives and psyches have been severely damaged; sometimes they committed suicide or were killed by others. Don't worry: the Church has been wrong before; it taught some very nasty things about Jews, for instance, which also resulted in much damage. Also on the basis of Scripture, BTW.)

[ 02. July 2008, 14:25: Message edited by: TubaMirum ]
 
Posted by Jolly Jape (# 3296) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Matt Black:
The examples are good ones, albeit ones outside of the immediate contemporary context of the Anglican Communion. Of the three, Luther is the one who causes me the most problems, I guess, at first blush since both St Paul (Council of Jerusalem) and St Francis (+++Innocent III) had their actions subsequently commended by the Church pretty quickly. So that leaves Luther, who creates something of a problem for me in that his actions were not endorsed by the (Western) Church; however, unlike the present case, he did have a fair weight of Tradition on his side - as well as Scripture - as well as his beloved St Augustine and other ECFs, he also had more recent luminaries such as St Anselm on his side, and his break with Rome was about his insistence that the western Church revert to teaching as it had in the past and drop what (he at least perceived to be) recent innovative practices; he did not demand that it teach something which it had never taught before. The stance of the 'provisional NH wing' of TEC, on the other hand, seems to me to be, "Tradition is either wrong or needs to be reinterpreted (as does Scripture) on this subject, and the Church has consistently got it wrong for the last 2000 years. Sorry, but this customer ain't buying.

I don't think that anyone is asking you even to be a customer. You must sort out what you believe on this matter before God, as must I. I am not asking you to change your view, (though, clearly, I would be delighted if you did).
 
Posted by Matt Black (# 2210) on :
 
The use of 'customer' was unfortunate and smacks of consumerism, I guess; what I meant by it is that I'm being asked to remain in communion with those whose practices I regard as sinful. That gives me a problem.
 
Posted by TubaMirum (# 8282) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Matt Black:
The use of 'customer' was unfortunate and smacks of consumerism, I guess; what I meant by it is that I'm being asked to remain in communion with those whose practices I regard as sinful. That gives me a problem.

We are asked to remain in Communion with people whose actions and attitudes we regard as sinful.

And we do. Since, after all, all Christians - all people - are sinners.
 
Posted by Albertus (# 13356) on :
 
I'm sure there are a lot of people, individually,with whom I am in communion, whose practices I regard as sinful. But I don't see that as a good reason to break communion. Pacifist Anglicans don't declare themselves out of communion with those in the military; those of us who have reservations about the morality of modern capitalism don't break communion with Anglican in the City or mulitnational companies. For some (possibly pretty murky) reason, it only seems to be homosexuality that produces this reaction.
So my advice, MB, is just to live with it. By all means argue your corner, if you feel so strongly about it; but do so from within the bounds of communion and, we hope, thus of fellowship and mutual humility.
 
Posted by the_raptor (# 10533) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Cardinal Pole Vault:
quote:
Originally posted by the_raptor:
quote:
Originally posted by Cardinal Pole Vault:
Being gay is not like wanting to commit adultry or whatever. It's not the orientation to do 'naughty things'. It's an orientation to love and to want to be loved in a particular way.

And the difference between being gay and being a polyamourist is?


The fact that you even pose that question speaks volumes. Why not go the whole hog and ask how homosexuality differs from paedophilia?
Thanks for not understanding the difference between consensual and non-consensual relationships. Oh, and also marking yourself out as a bigot by comparing polyamoury with paedophilia.

Now, answer the question. Why are you accepting of monogamous relationships and not non-monogamous ones? Why are the FOCA's being called exclusivist hate mongers for not accepting gays, but it is okay to exclude polyamourists?
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by RuthW:
quote:
Originally posted by ken:
[QUOTE] There is a weird disconnection between real chuches and their media representation. Nowadays almost no-one ever mentions this whole business in church or in church meetings. What we see is a lot of journalists telling us that we are obsessed with homosexuality, or with sex in general, when in fact it is almost never talked about at all.

Not where you live, I guess. But certainly where I live it's a regular topic of discussion -- more so at church than outside church, in fact, since outside church homosexuality is generally accepted.

As it is here, more or less.

In practice Christians, even Evangelicals, do as well. Even those who do not think a homosexual partnership is the same thing as a marriage and do not think they should be marked in the same way in church.

quote:

We discuss what the Bible says about homosexuality on a regular basis. I lead a newcomer's class four times a year at my church, and someone asks about the church's interpretation of those six or seven verses dealing with same-gender sexual relations every single time.

As far as I can remember I have genuinely have not been part of such a discussion in church for about twenty years. We used to talk about it, then we stopped.

But then maybe I would if I went to newcomer's classes. (Which at our place are Alpha courses.)
 
Posted by TubaMirum (# 8282) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by the_raptor:
Now, answer the question. Why are you accepting of monogamous relationships and not non-monogamous ones? Why are the FOCA's being called exclusivist hate mongers for not accepting gays, but it is okay to exclude polyamourists?

Because polyamourists are not being utterly deprived of marriage and companionship, and gays are? Seems simple enough, to me. It is not good for the man to be alone.

Gay partnerships are exactly the same thing in every way as heterosexual ones are, with one exception that has no effect on what marriage is: the union two people who dedicate their lives to one another and to whatever children (or others) may become part of the family. Not at all the same thing as polyamoury, which explicitly breaks the "faithful, monogamous" definition (and essence, I believe) of Christian marriage.

[ 02. July 2008, 17:03: Message edited by: TubaMirum ]
 
Posted by Jolly Jape (# 3296) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Matt Black:
The use of 'customer' was unfortunate and smacks of consumerism, I guess; what I meant by it is that I'm being asked to remain in communion with those whose practices I regard as sinful. That gives me a problem.

I'm not sure if I'm reading you correctly here, Matt, but it seems that you are saying that what I interpreted your primary beef with ssm to be (ie unilateral action in the face of a lack of communion wide consensus) is, in a sense, secondary to your willingness to share communion with those who view these matters differently. Is this last statement of yours the your definative position? As I have said, I can appreciate a difference in view about the appropriateness or otherwise of a specific action by a specific group of people, such as the bishop and people of New Hampshire. I have certain reservations about that myself, though I think it hardly a communion breaking issue. But to refuse to share communion with others because you have an honestly held theological difference with them (ie the licitness of homosexual acts within a marriage-like committed and covenanted relationship) seems to me quite another thing. How do you reconcile that with Paul's warnings in Corinthians about failing to discern the body of Christ in communion? Isn't the logical upshot of this that you are actually saying that those who hold the contrary view are not Christians at all.
 
Posted by Adrian1 (# 3994) on :
 
I just think it's terribly sad that there are some in the Anglican Communion, most notably in what's sometimes referred to as the 'Global South' who are prepared to sacrifice the church's unity over an issue which is barely mentioned in the Bible and over which there's unlikely to ever be a consensus. Although I'm no Biblical scholar by any means, I'm very certain that Our Lord said nothing whatsoever in the Gospels about what grown up people who love each other choose to do in private. He did say a great deal about His followers loving one another and he prayed at some considerable length that they 'might be one' - united so that the world might believe. As a non-Biblical scholar, the only reference to homosexual practice that I'm aware of is in Romans Chapter 1 and it's by no means clear exactly what the writer's saying because he doesn't offer any elaboration on what is the briefest of brief statements. Even people who claim to have a scholarly knowledge of the Bible and, trust me, I'm not one of them, are by no means agreed as to what's referred to - hence the current situation. It is all very sad.

[ 02. July 2008, 21:07: Message edited by: Adrian1 ]
 
Posted by PataLeBon (# 5452) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Matt Black:
The examples are good ones, albeit ones outside of the immediate contemporary context of the Anglican Communion. Of the three, Luther is the one who causes me the most problems, I guess, at first blush since both St Paul (Council of Jerusalem) and St Francis (+++Innocent III) had their actions subsequently commended by the Church pretty quickly. So that leaves Luther, who creates something of a problem for me in that his actions were not endorsed by the (Western) Church; however, unlike the present case, he did have a fair weight of Tradition on his side - as well as Scripture - as well as his beloved St Augustine and other ECFs, he also had more recent luminaries such as St Anselm on his side, and his break with Rome was about his insistence that the western Church revert to teaching as it had in the past and drop what (he at least perceived to be) recent innovative practices; he did not demand that it teach something which it had never taught before. The stance of the 'provisional NH wing' of TEC, on the other hand, seems to me to be, "Tradition is either wrong or needs to be reinterpreted (as does Scripture) on this subject, and the Church has consistently got it wrong for the last 2000 years. Sorry, but this customer ain't buying.

You do realize that's your opinion (and the Western Protestant church's) for Luther. Ask a Roman Catholic or an Orthodox about the changes that Luthur brought about in Christianity and they will surely say that Luthur changed Tradition.

St. Francis certainly didn't go ask the church anything when he started. He simply did what he felt he had to do (and then got brought up to the church authorities after he ticked the local ones off). He started a new church without asking. He just decided that it had to be done (as he felt that the church was excluding people), so he did it.

And read much of Paul's writings and you see that the Jew/Gentile problem wasn't easily or quickly solved and Paul had to continue to push and pull against Tradition in order to get it changed. We see it as pretty clear cut. They didn't.
 
Posted by marsupial. (# 12458) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by ken:
quote:
Originally posted by RuthW:
Not where you live, I guess. But certainly where I live it's a regular topic of discussion -- more so at church than outside church, in fact, since outside church homosexuality is generally accepted.

As it is here, more or less.

In practice Christians, even Evangelicals, do [accept homosexuality?] as well. Even those who do not think a homosexual partnership is the same thing as a marriage and do not think they should be marked in the same way in church.

How is this supposed to cash out in practice? If I've understood your post correctly (correct me if I have filled out the square brackets incorrectly), you're suggesting that UK Christians are generally accepting of homosexuality. This implies (to me, at least) that there should be some way for gay and lesbian Christians to regularize their relationships in the eyes of the Church, whether or not this is actually identified with Christian marriage. But there are uncontradicted statements on this Board that Anglican clergy in the UK are allowed to bless (e.g.) nuclear submarines but not gay couples. What gives?

While I'm at it, AIUI, isn't the "innate vs. acquired" issue mentioned upthread really just one aspect of the general position now generally taken by the mental health community that the mental health and general well-being of gay and lesbian people is best promoted by intimate relationships that are consistent with their underlying sexual orientation? There is a sort of teleological argument from nature here that deserves to be given weight in any theological analysis -- arguably a much better teleological argument than the "perverted faculty" argument favoured by some kinds of natural law theorists.
 
Posted by the_raptor (# 10533) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by TubaMirum:
Gay partnerships are exactly the same thing in every way as heterosexual ones are, with one exception that has no effect on what marriage is: the union two people who dedicate their lives to one another and to whatever children (or others) may become part of the family. Not at all the same thing as polyamoury, which explicitly breaks the "faithful, monogamous" definition (and essence, I believe) of Christian marriage.

And the FOCA's would add "between a man and a woman" to "faithful and monogamous", and they would have extensive biblical support for that definition. Even if you argue away any biblical condemnation of homosexuality, you are left with the fact that every mention of marriage is in the context of heterosexuality.

And who says polyamourists can't be faithful inside their larger definition of "marriage" or "committed relationship"?

Pure bigotry. Gays are "people like us", and polyamourists are outsiders and scapegoats.
 
Posted by Rossweisse (# 2349) on :
 
No, an opposition to polyamory is not "pure bigotry." Monogamy is the clear Biblical standard; polygamy (or, more rarely, polyandry) leads to all sorts of problems. True equality is hard enough for a couple; it's impossible for larger groups.

Ross
 
Posted by the_raptor (# 10533) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Rossweisse:
Monogamy is the clear Biblical standard; polygamy

Heterosexual monogamy is the clear Biblical standard. If homosexual monogamy is permissible it certainly isn't clear in the Bible. The reasoning for accepting gays, is that it is okay as long as it is monogamous ("people like us"). Bigotry.
 
Posted by TubaMirum (# 8282) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by the_raptor:
And the FOCA's would add "between a man and a woman" to "faithful and monogamous", and they would have extensive biblical support for that definition. Even if you argue away any biblical condemnation of homosexuality, you are left with the fact that every mention of marriage is in the context of heterosexuality.

And who says polyamourists can't be faithful inside their larger definition of "marriage" or "committed relationship"?

Pure bigotry. Gays are "people like us", and polyamourists are outsiders and scapegoats.

So you would argue that gay people should never go on a date, or hold hands with a beloved, or kiss someone they love, or dedicate themselves to caring for another human being.

How do you defend this? Particularly given the fact that God Himself says, upon watching Adam among the creatures, that "It is not good for the man to be alone"? Why are you advocating exactly the opposite thing? You are violating a clear Biblical standard; how come?

(BTW, polyamourists are permitted all those things. Oh, unless they're gay, of course....)

[ 03. July 2008, 03:37: Message edited by: TubaMirum ]
 
Posted by the_raptor (# 10533) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by TubaMirum:
So you would argue that gay people should never go on a date, or hold hands with a beloved, or kiss someone they love, or dedicate themselves to caring for another human being.

No, I would argue that gay Christians should live celibate lives. Just as some heterosexual Christians do (eg if they can't find a Christian spouse).

Oh, and you can dedicate yourself to caring for another human being without needing to fuck them.

quote:
Originally posted by TubaMirum:
How do you defend this? Particularly given the fact that God Himself says, upon watching Adam among the creatures, that "It is not good for the man to be alone"?

And so God created Woman, and Marriage. Why didn't he just make another Man? Not exactly compelling argument.

quote:
Originally posted by TubaMirum:
Why are you advocating exactly the opposite thing? You are violating a clear Biblical standard; how come?

There is a clear Biblical standard that everyone needs to be in a sexual relationship?

quote:
Originally posted by TubaMirum:
(BTW, polyamourists are permitted all those things. Oh, unless they're gay, of course....)

The polyamourists I know wouldn't be satisfied by monogamy. Just like other people aren't satisfied by celibacy.

I don't think the highest priority of Christians is to be satisfied and fulfilled in this world.
 
Posted by Tubifex Maximus (# 4874) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Adrian1:
I just think it's terribly sad that there are some in the Anglican Communion, most notably in what's sometimes referred to as the 'Global South' who are prepared to sacrifice the church's unity over an issue which is barely mentioned in the Bible and over which there's unlikely to ever be a consensus. Although I'm no Biblical scholar by any means, I'm very certain that Our Lord said nothing whatsoever in the Gospels about what grown up people who love each other choose to do in private. He did say a great deal about His followers loving one another and he prayed at some considerable length that they 'might be one' - united so that the world might believe. As a non-Biblical scholar, the only reference to homosexual practice that I'm aware of is in Romans Chapter 1 and it's by no means clear exactly what the writer's saying because he doesn't offer any elaboration on what is the briefest of brief statements. Even people who claim to have a scholarly knowledge of the Bible and, trust me, I'm not one of them, are by no means agreed as to what's referred to - hence the current situation. It is all very sad.

I can only agree with you, Adrian1, I'm still mystified as to why this is even after Zwingli's reply to my earlier post.

quote:
Originally posted by the_raptor:
And who says polyamourists can't be faithful inside their larger definition of "marriage" or "committed relationship"?

Pure bigotry. Gays are "people like us", and polyamourists are outsiders and scapegoats.


I'm still more mystified by this. I'm not aware that the church sanctions polyamoury, apart from the fundementalist LDS. It's true that polygamy is to be found in the early part of the bible. In any case this is a difference of catagory, isn't it? A gay man or a straight man may choose to be polyamourous or Monogamous while remaining gay or straight. You seem to be confusing nature with choice.
 
Posted by Wiff Waff (# 10424) on :
 
Such a mini-schism as we are witnessing has the undoubted advantage of making easily identifiable the pharisaic neanderthals who equate books of rules with the spirit of Christ, just as the interminable threads like this do amongst Shipmates, many of whom seem to find my sex life a subject of enormous fascination - a feeling that is certainly not reciprocated.

Perhaps Lambeth will harden the lines, such is surely to be hoped, so that the FOCAs can flounce and build a little wall around themselves to protect themselves from contamination. Such a wall would have the added advantage of protecting those of us who take the commandment to love one another seriously from being distracted by arguments as to who or what is worthy of love within a FOCA framework.

Of course my being willfully and gratuitously offensive, if I am so judged, will not help any cause but then on this and similar threads I have been subject, albeit by proxy, to so much willful and gratuitous offence that frankly my dear I don't give a damn!

Perhaps Fred Phelps will now become a FOCA - let's face it, he has all the credentials!
 
Posted by Matt Black (# 2210) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Jolly Jape:
quote:
Originally posted by Matt Black:
The use of 'customer' was unfortunate and smacks of consumerism, I guess; what I meant by it is that I'm being asked to remain in communion with those whose practices I regard as sinful. That gives me a problem.

I'm not sure if I'm reading you correctly here, Matt, but it seems that you are saying that what I interpreted your primary beef with ssm to be (ie unilateral action in the face of a lack of communion wide consensus) is, in a sense, secondary to your willingness to share communion with those who view these matters differently. Is this last statement of yours the your definative position? As I have said, I can appreciate a difference in view about the appropriateness or otherwise of a specific action by a specific group of people, such as the bishop and people of New Hampshire. I have certain reservations about that myself, though I think it hardly a communion breaking issue. But to refuse to share communion with others because you have an honestly held theological difference with them (ie the licitness of homosexual acts within a marriage-like committed and covenanted relationship) seems to me quite another thing. How do you reconcile that with Paul's warnings in Corinthians about failing to discern the body of Christ in communion? Isn't the logical upshot of this that you are actually saying that those who hold the contrary view are not Christians at all.
With respect, there seem to be a couple of conceptual conflations going on above:-

1. The conflation of belief and practice. Opinion is one thing; the fact that I am in disagreement with other Anglicans as to whether same-sex sexual practices are sinful creates its own problems of course between us but not of the same order of magnitude as actions: the Anglican Communion has essentially (Lambeth 1998 and the Windsor Covenant) asked for certain actions not to be taken, and its discipline has been ignored. To give you a Catholic example, I know quite a few Catholics on the progressive wing of that Church who disagree with the Magisterium over issue such as the DH under discussion here, plus ordination of women and celibacy of the clergy; however none of these individuals would dream of eg: ordaining an practising homosexual, or a woman, or a married individual, in defiance of that Magisterium (or at least if they did they realise that they would be putting themselves beyond the pale). Rather they hope and pray (and talk) that the Magisterium will change tack on these issues. It's the hearty "f*** you" that certain parts of TEC and AC-Can have said to the rest of the AC that is, as I see it, the primary and potentially communion-breaking issue

2. Conflation of 'not being in communion with' with 'not regarding others as Christians'. Most of my mother's family are Catholic. As such, thanks to their Magisterium, they are not allowed to regard themselves as being in communion with me, yet none of them regards me as anything less than a Christian (as far as I know!). I guess that that is what I am possibly saying about the NH crowd and their supporters - they're Christians (as far as I know anyone to be Christian) but I'm not sure that we're still in full communion with each other as part of the same Church. Dunno. [Confused]
 
Posted by Matt Black (# 2210) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by PataLeBon:
quote:
Originally posted by Matt Black:
The examples are good ones, albeit ones outside of the immediate contemporary context of the Anglican Communion. Of the three, Luther is the one who causes me the most problems, I guess, at first blush since both St Paul (Council of Jerusalem) and St Francis (+++Innocent III) had their actions subsequently commended by the Church pretty quickly. So that leaves Luther, who creates something of a problem for me in that his actions were not endorsed by the (Western) Church; however, unlike the present case, he did have a fair weight of Tradition on his side - as well as Scripture - as well as his beloved St Augustine and other ECFs, he also had more recent luminaries such as St Anselm on his side, and his break with Rome was about his insistence that the western Church revert to teaching as it had in the past and drop what (he at least perceived to be) recent innovative practices; he did not demand that it teach something which it had never taught before. The stance of the 'provisional NH wing' of TEC, on the other hand, seems to me to be, "Tradition is either wrong or needs to be reinterpreted (as does Scripture) on this subject, and the Church has consistently got it wrong for the last 2000 years. Sorry, but this customer ain't buying.

You do realize that's your opinion (and the Western Protestant church's) for Luther. Ask a Roman Catholic or an Orthodox about the changes that Luthur brought about in Christianity and they will surely say that Luthur changed Tradition.
Yes and no; the Augsburg JDDJ certainly makes for interesting reading, at least from the Catholic POV

quote:
St. Francis certainly didn't go ask the church anything when he started. He simply did what he felt he had to do (and then got brought up to the church authorities after he ticked the local ones off). He started a new church without asking. He just decided that it had to be done (as he felt that the church was excluding people), so he did it.
Really?? I wasn't aware that St Francis had started a new church. What's it called?

quote:
And read much of Paul's writings and you see that the Jew/Gentile problem wasn't easily or quickly solved and Paul had to continue to push and pull against Tradition in order to get it changed. We see it as pretty clear cut. They didn't.
But no separate ecclesial body emerged - it was thrashed out through consensus.
 
Posted by Jolly Jape (# 3296) on :
 
quote:
2. Conflation of 'not being in communion with' with 'not regarding others as Christians'. Most of my mother's family are Catholic. As such, thanks to their Magisterium, they are not allowed to regard themselves as being in communion with me, yet none of them regards me as anything less than a Christian (as far as I know!). I guess that that is what I am possibly saying about the NH crowd and their supporters - they're Christians (as far as I know anyone to be Christian) but I'm not sure that we're still in full communion with each other as part of the same Church. Dunno.

I'm not sure that the two situations are equivalent. It's one thing to say, "It's not permitted for me to take communion in your church because I am a Catholic, and canon law forbids it" and quite a different thing to say "It is, in theory, possible for me to kneel next to you at he communion rail, but I am choosing not to, because in my view you are living a lifestyle of which I do not approve." The second of these scenarios seems, to me, to run perilously close to violating 1 Cor: 11:29. We are all one body because we all share one bread. Refusal to do this sort of implies that you don't think that they are part of the same "one body" as you are.
 
Posted by Matt Black (# 2210) on :
 
I think the two situations are more equivalent than you'd like in that behind the Catholic canonical prohibition lies the same sort of reasoning. So, is +++Benedict guilty of not discerning the body of Christ?
 
Posted by Jolly Jape (# 3296) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Matt Black:
I think the two situations are more equivalent than you'd like in that behind the Catholic canonical prohibition lies the same sort of reasoning. So, is +++Benedict guilty of not discerning the body of Christ?

Well, not him personally. Exclusive communions are the product of history, and the result of the Church missing the mark in past times, and, to be frank, neither side in either the Great Schism nor the Reformation can claim to be without responsibility. I do think that exclusive worship should be a source of sorrow rather than of pride, and look forward to the day when we can all share communion together. So I don't think that we should use the fact that the body of Chist is already and tragically divided as a way of defending futher fractures in it.
 
Posted by seasick (# 48) on :
 
I don't think they are equivalent - in one the sole criterion is membership of the (relevant) Church, whereas in the other the judgment is down to the individual. For example, one Catholic might completely disapprove of another Catholic's lifestyle and consider it completely contrary to the teaching of the Church. However, the question of whether the second Catholic should receive Communion is for that Catholic's conscience, under the guidance of his/her priest: it is none of the first Catholic's business.
 
Posted by Matt Black (# 2210) on :
 
But here we have a bishop of the AC saying and doing that which the AC has said 'no' to.
 
Posted by Jolly Jape (# 3296) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Matt Black:
But here we have a bishop of the AC saying and doing that which the AC has said 'no' to.

Does that give you the right to refuse to share communion with him. I'm not sure how whether the person with whom you are refusing to share communion is a Bishop or not is at all germane to the question. It's your attitude towards him/her that will surely be the deciding factor for you?
 
Posted by Matt Black (# 2210) on :
 
Returning to the Catholic parallel, the analogy there would be if say, +Crispian Hollis (the nearest Catholic bishop to where I'm typing) were to announce that he was living with his male partner and that he saw nothing wrong in that. What advice would you give a Catholic as to whether +Crispian was in full communion with him or her?
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
Matt, over on the Were Peter and Paul's views on sex anachronistic? thread we've been discussing the theology of homosexuality, and the NT verses concerned are not that cut and dried. They are far more ambiguous and have been interpreted differently at different times in history.

I would agree that the Leviticus and Deuteronomy verses are far more unequivocal, but there are an awful lot of unequivocal verses in Leviticus and Deuteronomy that are accepted to have been superseded by the teachings of Jesus. The ambiguity here has all arrived post Jesus, in the schism in Acts 15, when a number of OT laws were reintroduced by one group, and in the Pauline letters. Now divorce, that was within the teachings of Jesus, but not homosexuality.

And in answer to your question about a bishop in an open gay relationship - he has not been invited to take part in the Lambeth conference.
 
Posted by Jolly Jape (# 3296) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Matt Black:
Returning to the Catholic parallel, the analogy there would be if say, +Crispian Hollis (the nearest Catholic bishop to where I'm typing) were to announce that he was living with his male partner and that he saw nothing wrong in that. What advice would you give a Catholic as to whether +Crispian was in full communion with him or her?

Would not the Catholic response be that the efficacy of the sacrament is not affected by the worthiness of the minister. Of course, I think the Knights of St Columba would no doubt pay him a pretty swift visit! (joke!!). I thought (you probably know better than me) that refusing to receive from a duly appointed priest was regarded as sinful in Catholic teaching? But, as I say, the situation wouldn't arise, because the said priest would be suspended.
 
Posted by PataLeBon (# 5452) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Matt Black:
quote:
St. Francis certainly didn't go ask the church anything when he started. He simply did what he felt he had to do (and then got brought up to the church authorities after he ticked the local ones off). He started a new church without asking. He just decided that it had to be done (as he felt that the church was excluding people), so he did it.
Really?? I wasn't aware that St Francis had started a new church. What's it called?


Small c church not big C church. He started another church to serve the poor and needy in his community because he did not believe that the church in his community was actually spreading the gospel to them because they weren't the "proper" people to have around. He didn't break with the big C church, nor ever meant to (Of course, neither did Luther...)

quote:
quote:
And read much of Paul's writings and you see that the Jew/Gentile problem wasn't easily or quickly solved and Paul had to continue to push and pull against Tradition in order to get it changed. We see it as pretty clear cut. They didn't.
But no separate ecclesial body emerged - it was thrashed out through consensus.
Which took time. Time that neither side in this seems to want to have. All decisions must be made NOW not in a year or two after people have had time to calm down and to look at things with clear and level heads (and have the time to study scripture and pray for the promptings of the Holy Spirit - Who seems to have been lost in all of this...).

[ 03. July 2008, 12:30: Message edited by: PataLeBon ]
 
Posted by the_raptor (# 10533) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Tubifex Maximus:
quote:
Originally posted by the_raptor:
And who says polyamourists can't be faithful inside their larger definition of "marriage" or "committed relationship"?

Pure bigotry. Gays are "people like us", and polyamourists are outsiders and scapegoats.


I'm still more mystified by this. I'm not aware that the church sanctions polyamoury, apart from the fundementalist LDS. It's true that polygamy is to be found in the early part of the bible. In any case this is a difference of catagory, isn't it? A gay man or a straight man may choose to be polyamourous or Monogamous while remaining gay or straight. You seem to be confusing nature with choice.
You seem to believe that people choose to be polyamourous.

Lets rephrase it a bit:

"A gay man or a straight man may choose to be celibate or not celibate while remaining gay or straight. "

Why do people dismiss that? If you can choose between monogamy and promiscuity, why can't you choose between celibacy and being sexually active?

Bigotry. You can understand why gay people would struggle to remain celibate, but you can't understand why some people can't stay monogamous.
 
Posted by Cardinal Pole Vault (# 4193) on :
 
To the_raptor: are you saying that polyamoury is a sexual orientation?
 
Posted by Matt Black (# 2210) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by PataLeBon:
Which took time. Time that neither side in this seems to want to have. All decisions must be made NOW not in a year or two after people have had time to calm down and to look at things with clear and level heads (and have the time to study scripture and pray for the promptings of the Holy Spirit - Who seems to have been lost in all of this...).

Surely there has been that time - we've had two (?) years since ++Rowan's call for a 'time of reflection', five since +Robinson's consecration and 10 since the last Lambeth Conference. How much more time do you want?
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
And how many years of discernment did it take before the ordination of women was agreed in the Church of England? The Act of Synod was passed in 1992, but there was a resolution at the 1968 Lambeth Conference to involve women as much as possible in worship pending a decision on the ordination of women.
 
Posted by TubaMirum (# 8282) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by the_raptor:
No, I would argue that gay Christians should live celibate lives. Just as some heterosexual Christians do (eg if they can't find a Christian spouse).

Oh, and you can dedicate yourself to caring for another human being without needing to fuck them.

OK, let's try again. Gay people are commanded never to date, to kiss somebody they love, to hold another person in intimacy - for an entire lifetime.

Heterosexuals are, contrariwise, heartily encouraged to do all these things. The first date is a big, exciting moment; a first kiss is something one always remembers; marriage is considered the highlight of people's lives. It's the time when they swear to "love, honor, and cherish" their spouse, and to care for them for life. No heterosexual is ever told they are forbidden these things for the rest of their lives. Ever.

It's not, IOW, all about "fucking" someone; it's about living an ordinary human life in the world. But listen, I have an idea: why don't you yourself vow to live a celibate life and show us all how it's done? If you're married, you will simply have to leave your wife and family; after all, that's what you'd demand of a gay Christian. How about being a good sport and a role model?

If you're not willing to do this, I don't really know why anybody should listen to you. You don't seem to have any good reasons for what you're arguing, other than that it comes from your own particular worldview. But that's not really good enough for anybody who doesn't hold that particular worldview; for that, you need good arguments based in reason and in the faith itself.

And we have by far the better arguments based in reason and reality and faith, I'm afraid. Most people recognize that human beings do better when they have love in their lives. More people each day are starting to recognize that gay people shouldn't be punished for an unchosen orientation towards members of their own sex - and that gay relationships can show every bit as much "fruit of the spirit" as heterosexual ones do. Most people aren't falling for the "polyamoury" argument anymore; the two things are not comparable and everybody can see it. (In any case, gay Christians are willing to follow the "monogamy" stricture, if only on the basis that it will keep the peace in the community, which was at least part of the original intent, I'm sure, as well. There is, after all, no prohibition on polygamy in Scripture, either - so monogamy is a creation of the Church.) Fewer people will read Scripture literally going forward, but will work to try to understand its intent.

So you will lose the general argument in time. But that's OK; nobody will stop you from forbidding gay partnerships in your own denomination, or part of a denomination, I'm sure. We will continue to disagree on this - and I have no problem with that at all.

In any case: gay people will continue to be and become Christian. You can't control where the Gospel will go and what it will do.

[ 03. July 2008, 14:29: Message edited by: TubaMirum ]
 
Posted by Matt Black (# 2210) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Curiosity killed ...:
And how many years of discernment did it take before the ordination of women was agreed in the Church of England? The Act of Synod was passed in 1992, but there was a resolution at the 1968 Lambeth Conference to involve women as much as possible in worship pending a decision on the ordination of women.

Yes, but you didn't in the meantime have bishops going round and uniltarally ordaining women. And even 2-5 years is considerably longer than your 'NOW'.
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
'Scuse me, not my NOW

I'm as distressed as anyone over those taking unilateral action, I don't think it helps anyone.
 
Posted by Matt Black (# 2210) on :
 
Sorry, that was Pata [Hot and Hormonal] And you don't even have the same avatar!
 
Posted by TubaMirum (# 8282) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Matt Black:
To give you a Catholic example, I know quite a few Catholics on the progressive wing of that Church who disagree with the Magisterium over issue such as the DH under discussion here, plus ordination of women and celibacy of the clergy; however none of these individuals would dream of eg: ordaining an practising homosexual, or a woman, or a married individual, in defiance of that Magisterium (or at least if they did they realise that they would be putting themselves beyond the pale). Rather they hope and pray (and talk) that the Magisterium will change tack on these issues. It's the hearty "f*** you" that certain parts of TEC and AC-Can have said to the rest of the AC that is, as I see it, the primary and potentially communion-breaking issue

I actually agree with you about how the process should ideally have been approached - that is, about "hoping and praying and talking."

Part of the problem was, though, that gay folks continued to hear a "hearty 'f**** you" from the rest of the Communion (and the Christian world) on this subject, as well. There was, literally, no progress on the "listening process"; nobody was listening and nobody had to, because anti-gay-partnership Christians have a supermajority and thought we didn't have to be taken seriously. In addition, there's the problem that in some of the countries in the Communion, homosexuality itself is still illegal; there's just a huge gulf there, and I would think that nobody believed that any progress would have been made in a hundred years if we went by "majority rule."

Also: the pace of change in the world has been hugely speeded-up in the past 50 years or so, and the church seems positively medieval in comparison - although actually, it's not. There's been a great deal of change around this topic even in the past 10 years, in fact.

Something was going to give in any case, at some point. I agree that ideally the "talk and hope and pray" solution is a good one - and I agree that it's ridiculous to have elected a gay Bishop before we even have same-sex blessings! (OTOH, Gene Robinson had worked in his own diocese for 20 years or so, and was known to and and elevated by his own people, and it's hard to argue with that; that's exactly how things are supposed to work. And of course, if he could have gotten married he would have.)

But Canada has same-sex marriage now. England has civil partnerships. And there are a lot of gay priests. Something was going to give at some point, somewhere.

I truly am tired of all the hoo-hah, though. So I think GAFCON is actually for the best - because it's a way for both sides to distance themselves from the other. It hasn't been good for us, either.
 
Posted by TubaMirum (# 8282) on :
 
I would also like to point out that the attitude towards gay people by several of the Communion's Archbishops has still never really been challenged.

No Anglican Church except Canada censured Peter Akinola for his attempt to influence the writing of laws in Nigeria that would get gay people imprisoned merely for speaking about homosexuality. How can this be? This is a serious issue that nobody seems interested in, and a clear demonstration of what I'm talking about above - about the "hearty f*** you" towards gay people.

How can there be no response from the Communion at all about this? And which is worse: same-sex blessings, or Anglican support for the imprisonment of innocent people?

This is why this has all gone down the way it did; nobody seems interested in the way the Communion treats gay people. And again: which ought to be the more serious problems for Christians?
 
Posted by Matt Black (# 2210) on :
 
Surely it shouldn't have to be an either/or?
 
Posted by TubaMirum (# 8282) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Matt Black:
Surely it shouldn't have to be an either/or?

It is, though, isn't it? So why shouldn't TEC and others act on their own? No response seems to be forthcoming from anybody else anyway.

I'm afraid it's hard to take the Anglican Communion seriously when it comes to this whole issue; it really does, I'm afraid, seem to be based on simple hatred for gay people. That's what happens when Akinola says and does these things and there's no pushback at all. The American government condemned Akinola's efforts, but the Communion itself has nothing to say?

This does not give a very good impression of Anglicanism - or Christianity - I'm afraid.
 
Posted by Matt Black (# 2210) on :
 
I agree; but two wrongs don't make a right in my book.
 
Posted by dj_ordinaire (# 4643) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Matt Black:
Surely it shouldn't have to be an either/or?

But that is precisely the point - maybe it shouldn't be, but it is. If the conservative lobby had treated gay people like human beings throughout, whilst making clear their belief that we are called to celibacy, perhaps this would have been possible. Consider the pledges made in Lambeth 98 - listening to gay people, no discrimination based upon orientation alone, no homophobia. If these pledges had been honoured, then I have little doubt that it would have been possible to meet the election of +Robinson with a coalition of conservatives and liberals who accepted the need to apply the breaks for the sake of unity. Just look at the endless compromises the liberals have offered even despite the ill-treatment they've suffered!

Unfortunately, the conservatives have been comprehensively let down by their leaders, many of whom have behaved abominably. Consider the continued crossing of diocesan boundaries long after this was supposed to have ceased. Consider the legislation promoted by the Nigerian church. All leading up to the nauseating spectacle of two senior bishops being invited to condemn torture and refusing to do so. Such a movement is obviously untenable.

I've no doubt that a new compromise will be reached. But after all that's occurred, it will be much less generous to the conservatives. With any luck it will be based on local discretion, the only system that makes any sense.
 
Posted by the_raptor (# 10533) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by TubaMirum:
OK, let's try again. Gay people are commanded never to date, to kiss somebody they love, to hold another person in intimacy - for an entire lifetime.

Heterosexuals are, contrariwise, heartily encouraged to do all these things. The first date is a big, exciting moment; a first kiss is something one always remembers; marriage is considered the highlight of people's lives. It's the time when they swear to "love, honor, and cherish" their spouse, and to care for them for life.

I don't think that is the correct Christian attitude. The highlight of my life was getting saved, and I intend to not have a physical relationship with a women until we are at least engaged.

quote:
Originally posted by TubaMirum:
No heterosexual is ever told they are forbidden these things for the rest of their lives. Ever.

You mean apart from some denoms priests right?

quote:
Originally posted by TubaMirum:
It's not, IOW, all about "fucking" someone; it's about living an ordinary human life in the world.

Christians aren't called to live ordinary human lives.

quote:
Originally posted by TubaMirum:
But listen, I have an idea: why don't you yourself vow to live a celibate life and show us all how it's done? If you're married, you will simply have to leave your wife and family; after all, that's what you'd demand of a gay Christian. How about being a good sport and a role model? If you're not willing to do this, I don't really know why anybody should listen to you.

Why don't you kill yourself, check with God about the permissibility of homosexual unions, and get back to us?

quote:
Originally posted by TubaMirum:
You don't seem to have any good reasons for what you're arguing, other than that it comes from your own particular worldview.

*buzzzzzz*

I am bisexual (but I only fall in love with women), have always stood up for the civil rights of homosexuals, and have suffered discrimination because of my gay friends. Try again.

My reasoning is the Bible. You know the thing you base your claim on that monogamy is the only permissible context for sexual relations?

quote:
Originally posted by TubaMirum:
And we have by far the better arguments based in reason and reality and faith, I'm afraid.

"No you don't. Your argument wouldn't convince a child."

See how that works? Just saying your argument is better doesn't make it better. You also owe me a million dollars.

quote:
Originally posted by TubaMirum:
Most people recognize that human beings do better when they have love in their lives. More people each day are starting to recognize that gay people shouldn't be punished for an unchosen orientation towards members of their own sex

But people should still be punished for all the other unchosen desires that lead to sin? The same studies that show homosexuality is from birth, also show a lot of other things are from birth.

quote:
Originally posted by TubaMirum:
Most people aren't falling for the "polyamoury" argument anymore; the two things are not comparable and everybody can see it.

No, they are directly comparable. You are ignoring part of scripture to fit your world view, so why shouldn't we ignore a slightly different part of scripture?

quote:
Originally posted by TubaMirum:
Fewer people will read Scripture literally going forward, but will work to try to understand its intent.

Why read the scripture at all if you aren't going to attempt to take it seriously? You may as well go with your "feelings about God" and do whatever you want, despite how the Apostles warned about that repeatedly. But of course modern people know so much more than the people that actually had direct experience with the risen Christ.

quote:
Originally posted by TubaMirum:
In any case: gay people will continue to be and become Christian. You can't control where the Gospel will go and what it will do.

And neither can you. If you actually read some of the Gospel you might become convinced as I have that homosexuality isn't permissible.
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by the_raptor:

quote:
Originally posted by TubaMirum:
No heterosexual is ever told they are forbidden these things for the rest of their lives. Ever.

You mean apart from some denoms priests right?
That's a voluntary choice for priests. You can always choose not to be ordained, or leave the church once you are.

A better analogy would. be the RC attitude to divorced people. They cannot legitimately have sexual relationships of any kind according to the teachings of that church.
 
Posted by TubaMirum (# 8282) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by the_raptor:
I don't think that is the correct Christian attitude. The highlight of my life was getting saved, and I intend to not have a physical relationship with a women until we are at least engaged.

As I said: you are not forbidden a physical relationship for the rest of your life.

Priests, of course, and religious, choose to live as celibates - and many leave the priesthood and the monastery because they realize that they aren't called to it. Your idea, on the contrary, is to force it on other people so that your understanding of faith is upheld.

*buzzzzzz* Sorry. I don't share your point of view, although I have no problem with you having it.

And I'm just not convinced why I should do what you say. You really do need to convince us all - and the rest of the world - or else it's perfectly reasonable for me to say that my arguments are better. They do seem to be changing more peoples' minds than yours do.



quote:
Originally posted by the_raptor:
Christians aren't called to live ordinary human lives.

And yet you don't seem to be doing anything particularly out of the ordinary; put your money where your mouth is and become a celibate yourself. If this is so important to you, surely you'll help us out? We need to see that it's possible, and you're just the guy to provide the example for us. (BTW, the fact that you find my example so outlandish - you suggest that I "kill myself"! - sort of makes the point, doesn't it?)



quote:
Originally posted by the_raptor:
But people should still be punished for all the other unchosen desires that lead to sin? The same studies that show homosexuality is from birth, also show a lot of other things are from birth.

Uh-huh. And how, again, is homosexuality "sin"? You haven't convinced me. I'm convinced with most other things, but not this one. It's up to you to offer an argument that works - and again, remember that I don't share your views on what the Bible has to say on this topic. (Let me remind you again that I agree with and follow precisely what Leviticus says about "lying with a man."

I agree, IOW, that lying with men is an abomination. So what was the problem again?

[ 03. July 2008, 16:46: Message edited by: TubaMirum ]
 
Posted by the_raptor (# 10533) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by ken:
quote:
Originally posted by the_raptor:

quote:
Originally posted by TubaMirum:
No heterosexual is ever told they are forbidden these things for the rest of their lives. Ever.

You mean apart from some denoms priests right?
That's a voluntary choice for priests. You can always choose not to be ordained, or leave the church once you are.
They are still told "they are forbidden these things for the rest of their lives. Ever".
 
Posted by TubaMirum (# 8282) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by the_raptor:
quote:
Originally posted by ken:
quote:
Originally posted by the_raptor:

quote:
Originally posted by TubaMirum:
No heterosexual is ever told they are forbidden these things for the rest of their lives. Ever.

You mean apart from some denoms priests right?
That's a voluntary choice for priests. You can always choose not to be ordained, or leave the church once you are.
They are still told "they are forbidden these things for the rest of their lives. Ever".
No, they're not. They are only forbidden them if they choose to remain priests.
 
Posted by the_raptor (# 10533) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by TubaMirum:
Your idea, on the contrary, is to force it on other people so that your understanding of faith is upheld.

Yes, I shall ride through the country side with my legions of doom. And capture the naughty nympho homos in Euphemism camps.

Obviously saying something is wrong is the same as forcing people to do things.

quote:
Originally posted by TubaMirum:
You really do need to convince us all - and the rest of the world - or else it's perfectly reasonable for me to say that my arguments are better.

No, you do not understand how to conduct an argument. "My arguments are the best in the world and you can't deny it."

quote:
Originally posted by TubaMirum:
They do seem to be changing more peoples' minds than yours do.

If popularity is the ultimate decider of truth we should become Muslims or atheists.


quote:
Originally posted by TubaMirum:
quote:
Originally posted by the_raptor:
Christians aren't called to live ordinary human lives.

And yet you don't seem to be doing anything particularly out of the ordinary; put your money where your mouth is and become a celibate yourself.
How would you know what I am doing? You don't know me, and you don't know how I am living.

quote:
Originally posted by TubaMirum:
If this is so important to you, surely you'll help us out? We need to see that it's possible, and you're just the guy to provide the example for us.

You already know it is possibly, you even mentioned celibate priests. You are just using cheap rhetorical tricks.

quote:
Originally posted by TubaMirum:
(BTW, the fact that you find my example so outlandish - you suggest that I "kill myself"! - sort of makes the point, doesn't it?)

I don't find it outlandish, I find it a pathetic trick. Used by someone who apparently would rather play the man instead of the ball. Yet you keep telling me that you really have an excellent argument, it would be interesting to hear it.

quote:
Originally posted by TubaMirum:
quote:
Originally posted by the_raptor:
But people should still be punished for all the other unchosen desires that lead to sin? The same studies that show homosexuality is from birth, also show a lot of other things are from birth.

Uh-huh. And how, again, is homosexuality "sin"?
It was your argument that homosexuality wasn't sin because it was "unchosen".
 
Posted by TubaMirum (# 8282) on :
 
I'm waiting, still, raptor, for you to explain to me why homosexuality is "sin." I can easily explain why it's not, and already have.

Love is the highest and best Christian principle; Paul calls it the greatest of the three Christian virtues. Sex is a part of one particular kind of love relationship - a kind that almost every human being sees as an integral part of being human. As do you, since you hope to be married.

Physical intimacy is "unitive" between married couples; this is an argument the Catholic Church uses, and so does the Orthodox Church (I think), and so do Anglicans. Once again: nobody else in the world is forbidden physical intimacy, without exception, for life. Marriage and gay partnership are not merely about "fucking."

When heterosexual couples live together in love and care for one another and their families and neighbors and friends, it is considered the noblest and most Christian kind of life. When homosexual couples do the same things, they are condemned as sinners. Can you possibly be saying that it's the penis and the vagina that make the difference? That is truly and really very bizarre.

Heterosexual couples are encouraged to stay together forever and care for one another; homosexual couples are encouraged to break up and live alone. (And no, people don't usually agree to care for a lifetime for others they are not related to in some way.)

Heterosexual couples are told to love one another; gay couples are told to "repent" for loving one another. FYI, in the past, this resulted in gay people becoming addicts and committing suicide; you are too young to know about this, obviously, but I remember it well.

Paul says that "Love is patient, love is kind and is not jealous; love does not brag and is not arrogant, does not act unbecomingly; it does not seek its own, is not provoked, does not take into account a wrong suffered, does not rejoice in unrighteousness, but rejoices with the truth; Love bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things." He also says that "the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness and self-control. Against such things there is no law."

If gay couples are manifesting these attributes - and it's very clear that they can and do - then how can their partnership be called "sin"?

And, BTW, if the condemnation of homosexuality leads to addiction and depression and death and the destruction of people who aren't harming anybody - then how can it not be called "sin"?
 
Posted by TubaMirum (# 8282) on :
 
Also: I don't think you really understand the "lifelong celibacy" problem.

Here's the issue: it's fine for people to choose it, but it shouldn't be compulsory on the basis of somebody else's understanding of what's in the Bible. And that the example of the priest isn't, therefore, a good one, since the priest has chosen it - and since it isn't compulsory. At one time, about half of seminarians left the priesthood because they realized their call wasn't to celibacy.

It is, in other words, not analogous in any way to what gay people face: unchosen and compulsory celibacy for life. That's 70-80 years, without even a chance at a kiss.

And I hate to tell you, but when most heterosexuals marry for love - as is the case for almost everybody in the West and I would imagine most people in the world - the argument becomes even less tenable because there's really not much difference between gay and straight relationships at that point at all.
 
Posted by Tubifex Maximus (# 4874) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by The_Raptor
You seem to believe that people choose to be polyamourous.

I do. If you wish me to believe otherwise, you may make a case.

quote:

"a gay man or a straight man may choose to be celibate or not celibate while remaining gay or straight. "

He may

quote:
If you can choose between monogamy and promiscuity, why can't you choose between celibacy and being sexually active?


I do

quote:

You can understand why gay people would struggle to remain celibate, but you can't understand why some people can't stay monogamous.



I understand why a gay person would regard it as oppressive when they are told that they may make no other choice than to be celebate and that they may not seek an emotionally satisfying and loving relationship with another.

I also understand that some people choose not to be monogamous but I believe that there are many, many reasons why monogamy is a better choice than promiscuity.
 
Posted by Rossweisse (# 2349) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by the_raptor:
...Bigotry.

Bullshit.

You keep yammering about "bigotry" in an attempt to shut other people up. Based on what Jesus said to the Samaritan woman at the well, how do you think he would react to your claims?

Oh, I'll bet he was a bigot too.

Ross
 
Posted by Matt Black (# 2210) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Jolly Jape:
quote:
Originally posted by Matt Black:
But here we have a bishop of the AC saying and doing that which the AC has said 'no' to.

Does that give you the right to refuse to share communion with him. I'm not sure how whether the person with whom you are refusing to share communion is a Bishop or not is at all germane to the question. It's your attitude towards him/her that will surely be the deciding factor for you?
I was mulling this over further last night (yes, alright, I'm a sad, obsessive muppet!): surely there comes a point in the relationship between Party A and Party B when, if you have A saying constantly to B, "What you're doing is wrong and it annoys the heck out of me and please stop doing it" and B saying "No it's not wrong, I want to do it and I will keep on doing it regardless of what you say and it annoys the heck out of me that you keep telling not to do it", one would have to question the degree to which any kind of meaningful close relationship could continue to exist between the the parties.
 
Posted by Jolly Jape (# 3296) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Matt Black:
quote:
Originally posted by Jolly Jape:
quote:
Originally posted by Matt Black:
But here we have a bishop of the AC saying and doing that which the AC has said 'no' to.

Does that give you the right to refuse to share communion with him. I'm not sure how whether the person with whom you are refusing to share communion is a Bishop or not is at all germane to the question. It's your attitude towards him/her that will surely be the deciding factor for you?
I was mulling this over further last night (yes, alright, I'm a sad, obsessive muppet!): surely there comes a point in the relationship between Party A and Party B when, if you have A saying constantly to B, "What you're doing is wrong and it annoys the heck out of me and please stop doing it" and B saying "No it's not wrong, I want to do it and I will keep on doing it regardless of what you say and it annoys the heck out of me that you keep telling not to do it", one would have to question the degree to which any kind of meaningful close relationship could continue to exist between the the parties.
Oh, absolutely, I'm not saying that you would necessarily choose to associate with them. But that isn't quite the same thing. It's more like, say, one of your partners behaving in this way. You might not choose to go to lunch with them, but you have certain mutual responsibilities to fulfil towards each other, regardless of how irritating they might be. Especially if the Senior Partner tells you just to get on with it!

Actually, even that isn't a terribly good analogy, because in your work life you could always leave and seek employment elsewhere. That sort of isn't an option for Christians!
 
Posted by Louise (# 30) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Rossweisse:
quote:
Originally posted by the_raptor:
...Bigotry.

Bullshit.

You keep yammering about "bigotry" in an attempt to shut other people up. Based on what Jesus said to the Samaritan woman at the well, how do you think he would react to your claims?

Oh, I'll bet he was a bigot too.

Ross

This is starting to get heated - can people veer away from getting personal, please?

Personal arguments belong in Hell.

Louise


Dead Horses Host.
 
Posted by TubaMirum (# 8282) on :
 
One more thing, raptor: you've told me I was "playing the man and not the ball" by asking you to do what you expect gay folks to do - and you were right, of course.

It's because nobody ever pays any attention to the man at all; everybody's too busy playing the ball. All the anti-gay-partnership arguments depend entirely on not recognizing the humanity of gay people, and I was trying to get you to notice this by putting you in the position yourself.

This isn't theoretical and something to be discussed in the abstract; it needs to be enfleshed and made real. That is part of the argument, and has to be.
 
Posted by Tubifex Maximus (# 4874) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by TubaMirum:

everybody's too busy playing the ball. All the anti-gay-partnership arguments depend entirely on not recognizing the humanity of gay people, and I was trying to get you to notice this by putting you in the position yourself.

And this, for me, is the real big issue. The notion that people who believe that the divine can become incarnate in Human flesh should demean the humanity of a group of people. I have no other horse in this race. It seems clear to me that all the efforts to compare homosexuality with sins of doing such as promiscuity and pederasty are attempts to cover up the fact that the belief that to be homosexual is wrong is to criticise not someones doing but their being. I feel I must lay my cards on the table here and say that I believe this is heinous. Criticise someones actions by all means, but to say to someone, anyone what you are is wrong appalls me. This in the light of a scriptural witness that is, to put it mildly, thin and ambiguous.

These are vast claims made on little evidence. I would like to challenge those posting here who believe that homosexuality is so wrong to establish their claims as the prosecution beyond reasonable doubt or else to admit we cannot establish this to such a standard and out of principle as Christians we will accept our fellow human beings as ones for whom Christ died.

That's the issue for me, I'm fed up with all this, it makes me angry.
 
Posted by dj_ordinaire (# 4643) on :
 
But TM, there's a seventy-page thread in which many, many attempts have been made to do establish how wrong homosexuality is. Not one of them has stood up, but has anybody's mind changed?
 
Posted by Tubifex Maximus (# 4874) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by dj_ordinaire:
But TM, there's a seventy-page thread in which many, many attempts have been made to do establish how wrong homosexuality is. Not one of them has stood up, but has anybody's mind changed?

Hence the reason for my challenge and for describing clearly why I think it is necessary to make it. If nobody meets it, or promises to tread more lightly on their fellow human beings, then I will feel free to draw my own conclusions about what all this has to do with the way of Christ, or the Word of God.
 
Posted by TubaMirum (# 8282) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by dj_ordinaire:
But TM, there's a seventy-page thread in which many, many attempts have been made to do establish how wrong homosexuality is. Not one of them has stood up, but has anybody's mind changed?

I just realized, dj_ordinaire, that the argument from Scripture against homosexuality is entirely circular! I didn't know it before, but the other thread going right now has made it very clear.

The argument is this: Homosexuality is bad because the Bible says it's wrong - and the Bible says it's wrong because homosexuality is bad. Amazing!!!

Nobody ever seems to go beyond what they believe the Bible says to wonder, "Why"? What is the reason for the prohibition? If we believe in a God who created the universe out of Love, then how can this teaching possibly (as someone asked there) harmonize with that idea?

I'm stunned that after all these years I didn't recognize the circularity! And that, I think, is because it's really that big a taboo, one that has been completely accepted by everybody for so long. So I'm not actually surprised that other people (for whom this is not really a pressing kind of problem at all) didn't recognize it, either.

It's only when you go a bit further that you realize this problem. And it's also begun to dawn on me that everybody's so completely focused on the topic of sex that we haven't even begun to look at everything else. Romans 1:26-27 completely absorbs everybody's attention - but Romans 28-32 gets a total pass!

I can't remember ever hearing a sermon on 1 Corinthians 13 and the "Christian virtues," and what this means for all of us. And believe me: it shows in the Anglican dust-up about this. I'm not surprised, either, that so many people have such a negative view of Christianity, given the way we all behave - as if 1 Cor 13 had never been written.

So actually I think this is the beginning of something good, not just the end of something bad. Maybe we'll really begin to get down to the "Love" part at last.

[ 05. July 2008, 13:30: Message edited by: TubaMirum ]
 
Posted by dj_ordinaire (# 4643) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by TubaMirum:
I can't remember ever hearing a sermon on 1 Corinthians 13 and the "Christian virtues," and what this means for all of us. And believe me: it shows in the Anglican dust-up about this. I'm not surprised, either, that so many people have such a negative view of Christianity, given the way we all behave - as if 1 Cor 13 had never been written.

You've never heard a Sermon on 1 Cor 13? [Eek!] [Eek!] Do you really mean that? I'd be hard pressed to think of a chapter of Scripture I've heard more frequently preached upon (the ones describing the Annunciation, Nativity, Crucifixion and Resurrection aside).
 
Posted by TubaMirum (# 8282) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by dj_ordinaire:
quote:
Originally posted by TubaMirum:
I can't remember ever hearing a sermon on 1 Corinthians 13 and the "Christian virtues," and what this means for all of us. And believe me: it shows in the Anglican dust-up about this. I'm not surprised, either, that so many people have such a negative view of Christianity, given the way we all behave - as if 1 Cor 13 had never been written.

You've never heard a Sermon on 1 Cor 13? [Eek!] [Eek!] Do you really mean that? I'd be hard pressed to think of a chapter of Scripture I've heard more frequently preached upon (the ones describing the Annunciation, Nativity, Crucifixion and Resurrection aside).
Yes, I do mean it. Of course, I was completely out of the church for three decades until about 7 years ago, so it's not that surprising, really.

In fact, when a friend referred to "the Christian virtues," I had to go to Wikipedia to find out what this meant; I had, literally, no clue. (It could be partly due to our fairly dismal educational system in the States, I suppose!)

But, still: I can't remember hearing anything about it during the current "discussions" - when you'd think it would be front-and-center. Nobody ever brings it up to show how we ought to be treating one another, or how we should be conducting ourselves.

Shouldn't this be taught all the time? If faith, hope, and love are what we are uniquely about, shouldn't we be talking about this as a way of life? I don't think this is happening at all.

[ 05. July 2008, 13:55: Message edited by: TubaMirum ]
 
Posted by Oscar the Grouch (# 1916) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Matt Black:
surely there comes a point in the relationship between Party A and Party B when, if you have A saying constantly to B, "What you're doing is wrong and it annoys the heck out of me and please stop doing it" and B saying "No it's not wrong, I want to do it and I will keep on doing it regardless of what you say and it annoys the heck out of me that you keep telling not to do it", one would have to question the degree to which any kind of meaningful close relationship could continue to exist between the the parties.

That may be the case. But that is not, in my view, grounds for choosing to snub Christ and to refuse to share communion.

We share communion not because we have a "meaningful close relationship", but because we share faith in the same saving Christ.

We share communion not because we agree about everything - or even about all the really important things, but because we agree that in Christ is our salvation (however we may understand that).

Sharing communion is not the same thing as saying "I agree with you" or even "it doesn't matter that we disagree". Sharing communion IS saying "we may not agree about a lot of things, but we agree about seeking to follow Christ and be obedient to him".

Refusing to share communion is - to me - equivalent to claiming that the other person is not really a Christian. Or - to put it another way - if you can't share communion then don't pretend to be part of the same Church. Those who refuse to share communion are making sweeping judgements about the faith and integrity of those they are ignoring and rejecting.
 
Posted by Comper's Child (# 10580) on :
 
Quite right about sharing communion with those with whom we disagree. Can any of us (or them perhaps in this case) really say that at every Eucharist they are in complete harmony with each and every other communicant? ! I think not...
 
Posted by leo (# 1458) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by TubaMirum:
In fact, when a friend referred to "the Christian virtues," I had to go to Wikipedia to find out what this meant; I had, literally, no clue. (It could be partly due to our fairly dismal educational system in the States, I suppose!)

I have never heard of the term 'Christian virtues' and I have been churchgoing in the UK for the past 50 years.
 
Posted by Rossweisse (# 2349) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Comper's Child:
Quite right about sharing communion with those with whom we disagree. Can any of us (or them perhaps in this case) really say that at every Eucharist they are in complete harmony with each and every other communicant? ! I think not...

Nope. It's something to keep in mind -- and something the FOCAs should put higher up on their lists.

Hey, I practice what I preach -- I received the host from the hands of +John Shelby Spong not long ago!

[Big Grin]

Ross
 
Posted by TubaMirum (# 8282) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by leo:
quote:
Originally posted by TubaMirum:
In fact, when a friend referred to "the Christian virtues," I had to go to Wikipedia to find out what this meant; I had, literally, no clue. (It could be partly due to our fairly dismal educational system in the States, I suppose!)

I have never heard of the term 'Christian virtues' and I have been churchgoing in the UK for the past 50 years.
These are also called "the theological virtues" - but I always thought they were better described as "the Christian virtues" because they occur in the Epistles.

They are part of the Catholic Catechism, along with the "cardinal virtues," here.

[ 05. July 2008, 20:07: Message edited by: TubaMirum ]
 
Posted by TubaMirum (# 8282) on :
 
(There doesn't seem to be even any pretense at teaching these in Anglicanism, though - or in most of the Protestant world, as far as I know. I'm not sure whether their presence in the Catechism means that a great deal of attention is paid to them in the Catholic Church, either; I just don't know.

But if not, why not? Many theologians have written on these virtues - but nobody would ever know it. Everybody's too worried about sex all the time - and of course, lately, about gay sex.

I don't get it, to be honest.)
 
Posted by The Great Gumby (# 10989) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by TubaMirum:
Shouldn't this be taught all the time?

Could I ask where you got your Bible? Cos I've never heard of one that only contains one chapter of one book. Must be quite a collector's item.
 
Posted by TubaMirum (# 8282) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by The Great Gumby:
quote:
Originally posted by TubaMirum:
Shouldn't this be taught all the time?

Could I ask where you got your Bible? Cos I've never heard of one that only contains one chapter of one book. Must be quite a collector's item.
I didn't say it should read all the time.

But if these virtues are unique to Christianity, and as key as they seem to be - what else is anywhere near as important? - then surely everything else is related to them?

[ 05. July 2008, 23:02: Message edited by: TubaMirum ]
 
Posted by Paul M (# 37) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by TubaMirum:
But if these virtues are unique to Christianity,

It's probably a tangent to this thread but I don't think they are unique to Christianity. In particular, The Golden Rule is shared by most major religions.
 
Posted by TubaMirum (# 8282) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Paul M:
quote:
Originally posted by TubaMirum:
But if these virtues are unique to Christianity,

It's probably a tangent to this thread but I don't think they are unique to Christianity. In particular, The Golden Rule is shared by most major religions.
Well, we're talking about the three particular "theological virtues" of "faith, hope, and love" as articulated in 1 Cor 13 and developed and discussed by others afterwards.
 
Posted by TubaMirum (# 8282) on :
 
(I don't mean, BTW, that the virtues themselves can't be found elsewhere. I'm simply saying that 1 Cor 13 has given rise to a discussion across the ages of these three particular virtues as a unified group, and that theologians and poets (and others) have recognized these things as central to the Christian faith.

I'm not aware that this particular set of virtues occurs as a group elsewhere, although I could be wrong.)
 
Posted by Davy Wavy Morrison (# 12241) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by TubaMirum:
I just realized, dj_ordinaire, that the argument from Scripture against homosexuality is entirely circular! I didn't know it before, but the other thread going right now has made it very clear.

The argument is this: Homosexuality is bad because the Bible says it's wrong - and the Bible says it's wrong because homosexuality is bad. Amazing!!!


I don't understand. We know God is good because the Bible says it is so, and the Bible says it is so because in fact God IS good. Some of us believe that the Bible says that homosexual activity (i.e. physical sexual activity) is wrong, and it follows that the reason the Bible says that is because it is wrong, against the will of God. We may in fact be wrong, but I can't see how that is circular reasoning.

If I get a call from someone saying that a friend is ill, I believe the message because I trust the caller. The reason the caller gave me the message is because it is true. The Bible gives the message (so to speak) because it is true.

On another point, I am not aware that many people say that having homosexual attraction is wrong. It is doing, not being, that matters.

We are quite rightly told these days not to vilify gay people. It is nice when we are accorded the same courtesy (that's a general comment, not referring to anyone here).


quote:
Originally posted by Rossweisse:
Hey, I practice what I preach -- I received the host from the hands of +John Shelby Spong not long ago!

Some people have all the luck.

[code fixed - L]

[ 06. July 2008, 12:19: Message edited by: Louise ]
 
Posted by The Great Gumby (# 10989) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by TubaMirum:
I didn't say it should read all the time.

Indeed. You "only" said that it should be taught all the time, which makes it all so much better.
quote:
But if these virtues are unique to Christianity, and as key as they seem to be - what else is anywhere near as important? - then surely everything else is related to them?
That this one passage is unique and uniquely vital to Christianity is your interpretation, but I'm confused about what you want. I'm assuming that despite your initial complaint, you don't really think every sermon should begin "The text for today's sermon, as ever, will be 1Cor 13..." [cue groans from the congregation], but I don't see what you do want. A good sermon will naturally give a balanced account of Christianity and the Bible's message, but do you really think that can only be done with explicit reference to this one particular passage?
 
Posted by TubaMirum (# 8282) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by The Great Gumby:
That this one passage is unique and uniquely vital to Christianity is your interpretation, but I'm confused about what you want. I'm assuming that despite your initial complaint, you don't really think every sermon should begin "The text for today's sermon, as ever, will be 1Cor 13..." [cue groans from the congregation], but I don't see what you do want.

I think you're taking one statement way too literally; it wasn't meant that way. Here's my point: If "faith, hope, and love" are central to Christianity - and surely "love" is, since it is the Summary of the Law, and since we're even supposed to love our enemies! - then surely it should show up in our lives and actions towards others? I just don't see it much, particularly in the case of the current Anglican drama.

Further, I wasn't talking about sermons only (although I did mention them), but about teaching a practice and a way of life. It seems to me that Christianity is much less a way of life at present than a set of rules. I don't think, IOW, we're really very good at teaching these virtues - as I said, I've never heard a sermon on the topic - but why aren't we? They are central teachings of the faith - particularly the "love" part.
 
Posted by TubaMirum (# 8282) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Davy Wavy Morrison:
I don't understand. We know God is good because the Bible says it is so, and the Bible says it is so because in fact God IS good. Some of us believe that the Bible says that homosexual activity (i.e. physical sexual activity) is wrong, and it follows that the reason the Bible says that is because it is wrong, against the will of God. We may in fact be wrong, but I can't see how that is circular reasoning.

All arguments that comes solely from Scripture are circular, though: God wills it because the Bible says so, and the Bible says so because God wills it.

But people who don't accept the Bible as "inerrant" or "infallible" (depending on what you meant by that) won't accept such arguments; you need something else to argue from: reason.

And there isn't any reasonable argument against gay partnerships of the sort we're discussing; quite the contrary, I'd say. Reason is completely on our side.
 
Posted by dj_ordinaire (# 4643) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by TubaMirum:
(There doesn't seem to be even any pretense at teaching these in Anglicanism, though - or in most of the Protestant world, as far as I know.

I'm not entirely sure how you can say this when our lectionaries appoint the passage to be read at Sunday Eucharists, Evensongs, and midweek Feasts and devotions at least annually - as well as recommending it for use at weddings and funerals - the expectation being that it will often be mentioned in sermons on those occasions.

That's before we get on to the many hymns which have been inspired by it, representations of the virtues in glass or paintings, &c &c.

We may not be very good at expressing these virtues, but I don't think that this is due to any lack of familiarity!
 
Posted by Johnny S (# 12581) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by dj_ordinaire:
But TM, there's a seventy-page thread in which many, many attempts have been made to do establish how wrong homosexuality is. Not one of them has stood up, but has anybody's mind changed?

That is only half-true. It is equally true that on the keryg threads some have tried to demonstrate that (e.g.) Paul didn't really condemn homosexuality. None of them have stood up there either. No one has changed their mind there. You really mean that they haven't convinced you.

What is true is that neither side finds the other's arguments convincing, and that the debate is polarising.

And that is because neither side shares the other's presuppositions. Hence, FOCA's claim that it is really about scripture is only fair, from their POV.

quote:
Originally posted by TubaMirum:
But people who don't accept the Bible as "inerrant" or "infallible" (depending on what you meant by that) won't accept such arguments; you need something else to argue from: reason.

Depends what you are talking about. If you are referring to a societal ethic then sure.

However, if you are talking about a distinctly Christian ethic then you are basically demanding everyone else to accept your worldview before the discussion can begin. 'Reason' is not some neutral ground where we can all go to work this out.
 
Posted by Doc Tor (# 9748) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Johnny S:
Hence, FOCA's claim that it is really about scripture is only fair, from their POV.

As I've posted (much to Spawn's annoyance) on one of the other GAFCON threads - this claim would only hold up if they treated women priests and divorce/remarriage in the same scriptural way. That they haven't - deciding that these are secondary matters over which they can disagree - tends to make me, and a lot of other people, think "No, it's really about the gays."
 
Posted by TubaMirum (# 8282) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by dj_ordinaire:
I'm not entirely sure how you can say this when our lectionaries appoint the passage to be read at Sunday Eucharists, Evensongs, and midweek Feasts and devotions at least annually - as well as recommending it for use at weddings and funerals - the expectation being that it will often be mentioned in sermons on those occasions.

That's before we get on to the many hymns which have been inspired by it, representations of the virtues in glass or paintings, &c &c.

We may not be very good at expressing these virtues, but I don't think that this is due to any lack of familiarity!

Well, you're right about hymns. But I don't agree that a mere reading from the lectionary once a year constitutes a "teaching." (It's not appointed for funerals in the BCP 1979, although it is for weddings; unfortunately we have a lot more of the former than the latter at my parish, since we have many elderly members and hardly anybody in their 20s.)

But again, I'm really talking about a focus on teaching the virtues; it just doesn't seem to be part of the curriculum here, in any church, denomination, or sect. (From what you and others have said here, it may be different on your side of the Pond.)

I'm having Catechism Envy, is what it is; even that single page from the RCC's Catechism says more about the topic than I've ever heard anywhere, including in my childhood Methodist church. And there is very little teaching of any sort of practice of prayer, either; contemplative prayer would be an ideal method for this, and there are other possibilities, too.

Like I said, I'd never heard of the term "Christian (or Theological) Virtues" before this past year; that doesn't seem good. And when you read about the lack of esteem in which Christianity is held today, I think that's further evidence that I'm not talking completely out of my hat here.

But it could be worse here than there.
 
Posted by TubaMirum (# 8282) on :
 
(Just as an example about prayer in the American church: it is not required that priests say Morning and Evening Prayer daily, and it is almost impossible to find it in any except the largest parishes and the cathedrals here.

Most laypeople who want to pray the Office do it alone and on their own. But how can you develop "faith," for instance, without some sort of grooved habit of prayer? I don't see how it's possible - and there's not much encouragement to do this here, or any sort of laying out of the benefits.

Christianity is very negatively-focused here, in general, and very rule-based (i.e., what people shouldn't do). That doesn't leave much room for these three virtues, which are declared in a positive form. And this is because, I think, Christianity has become embroiled in the culture wars and in partisan politics.)

[ 06. July 2008, 19:29: Message edited by: TubaMirum ]
 
Posted by Rossweisse (# 2349) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Davy Wavy Morrison:
...Some of us believe that the Bible says that homosexual activity (i.e. physical sexual activity) is wrong, and it follows that the reason the Bible says that is because it is wrong, against the will of God. ...

And some of us have studied the Hebrew Law and noticed that any form of sexual behavior that wasn't likely to result in offspring was condemned. Some of us look at context, and come to the conclusion that a small embattled minority needed to keep the birthrate high -- and that the Law on these matters reflects that.
quote:
We are quite rightly told these days not to vilify gay people. It is nice when we are accorded the same courtesy (that's a general comment, not referring to anyone here).
Who vilifies straight people? I'm missing something here.
quote:
Some people have all the luck.
Good or bad?

At any rate, I'm sure it was a useful discipline for me.

Ross

[ 06. July 2008, 19:48: Message edited by: Rossweisse ]
 
Posted by Adrian1 (# 3994) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Albertus:
From today's Guardian report of the launch of the Fellowship of Confessing Anglicans at GAFCON

quote:
Details of Foca were finalised yesterday morning and the reading of the statement was greeted with standing ovations, spontaneous singing, hugging and tears of joy. One of those present said he thought the skies were about to open so the delegates could ascend to heaven.
Or, possibly, for the earth to open so that they could go the other way...
I read about the GAFCON meeting in Friday's Church Times including the 'Jerusalem Statement' which was printed as well. It wouldn't surprise me if a good number of shipmates have also done the same. What I find dangerous and alarming is the insistence by the GAFCON leaders that the Anglican tradition is a 'sola scriptura' one and that it can be justified by appeal to the Thirty Nine Articles and the Book of Common Prayer. Neither of these cornerstones of Anglicanism insist on Scripture being the last word or the sole source of authority. No, the true Anglican tradition which Cranmer, Latimer, Hooker, Andrewes and the other Caroline Divines would have understood is one of joint appeal to Scripture, Tradition and Reason. Secondly, GAFCON appear to propagate the idea that the churches of thev west are preaching a 'false Gospel' of relative values. This is dangerous nonsense and it needs to be exposed as such. The Church of England, ECUSA and the Canasdian Anglican Church have taught nothing but the traditional Gospel and done their best to interpret it in ways that meet th contemporary needs of modern people.

[ 06. July 2008, 20:36: Message edited by: Adrian1 ]
 
Posted by seasick (# 48) on :
 
There's a certain contradiction inherent in asserting sola scriptura on the basis of the 39 Articles and the Prayer Book (neither of those being, last time I checked, Sacred Scripture).
 
Posted by Rossweisse (# 2349) on :
 
Of course Anglicans aren't "sola scriptura." I want to know what the GAF-ers are smoking, because the whole idea of "confessional Anglicans" is just bizarre.

Bravo, Adrian1!

Ross
 
Posted by Spawn (# 4867) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Adrian1:
What I find dangerous and alarming is the insistence by the GAFCON leaders that the Anglican tradition is a 'sola scriptura' one and that it can be justified by appeal to the Thirty Nine Articles and the Book of Common Prayer. Neither of these cornerstones of Anglicanism insist on Scripture being the last word or the sole source of authority.

This idea of 'sola scriptura' is just a red herring. I've got my own criticisms of the Jerusalem Declaration (and I think they're a little better and more accurate than this one), but 'sola scriptura' has no application here. If you'd actually read the declaration you'd have noticed that the Bible is mentioned as containing all things necessary to salvation (to paraphrase) - I really didn't think that was in dispute. Furthermore, it recognises historic and consensual teaching of the Church, the Fathers, and the Councils, as well as other recent sources of authority - the Articles of Religion and the Book of Common Prayer. Hardly a 'sola scriptura' approach.

quote:
No, the true Anglican tradition which Cranmer, Latimer, Hooker, Andrewes and the other Caroline Divines would have understood is one of joint appeal to Scripture, Tradition and Reason.
Oh, it's the 'true Anglican tradition' is it? Who gave you the right to define it? Furthermore it's not a joint and equal appeal to scripture, tradition and reason. Scripture is always considered primary by the Caroline Divines.

quote:
The Church of England, ECUSA and the Canasdian Anglican Church have taught nothing but the traditional Gospel and done their best to interpret it in ways that meet th contemporary needs of modern people.
I love this line. Do you really think they've taught nothing but the traditional Gospel? That's a pretty major claim, and of course it is nonsense. I'd be laughing less if you had qualified it even a little.

[Killing me]
 
Posted by Rossweisse (# 2349) on :
 
No, a lot that's not "the traditional Gospel" has been taught (and pushed) by the liberal churches. Some of it, I believe, is a logical extension of the traditional Gospel as taught by Anglicanism (inclusion, in particular; using historical criticism, for another), and some of it is not.

On the other hand, a lot of the Jerusalem gang is doing things that are not remotely "traditional" in an Anglican sense.

And as for the whole thing about being "confessional Anglicans" -- I'd still like to know whence that particular neologism springs.

[Ultra confused]

Ross
 
Posted by Spawn (# 4867) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Rossweisse:
No, a lot that's not "the traditional Gospel" has been taught (and pushed) by the liberal churches. Some of it, I believe, is a logical extension of the traditional Gospel as taught by Anglicanism (inclusion, in particular; using historical criticism, for another), and some of it is not.

I can probably agree with that to some extent, under the proviso that to talk of 'inclusion' as an absolute value is certainly not traditional nor an extension thereof. The Archbishop of Canterbury distinguishes between 'inclusion' and 'welcome'. I'm with him on that.

quote:
On the other hand, a lot of the Jerusalem gang is doing things that are not remotely "traditional" in an Anglican sense.

And as for the whole thing about being "confessional Anglicans" -- I'd still like to know whence that particular neologism springs.

[Ultra confused]

Ross

It's interesting that it's those who claim they are are prioritising 'inclusion' who actually come up with rigid definitions of Anglicanism to exclude. It's a real danger for all of us to over-define Anglicanism in such a way that others are 'unchurched'. I can understand people taking offence at terms like 'false gospel' applied over-generally to the western churches, but would like you to note that both sides are playing the same game.

This article by Giles Fraser, Chair of Inclusive Church, is a case in point. Terms like 'puritan', fundamentalist, entryism etc are designed to bolster the credentials of liberal Anglicans and delegitimise conservatives in terms of the big, broad tent.

As for whether 'confessionalism' is a neologism to Anglicanism, I'm not so sure. There are the creeds after all, and historic documents such as the Articles of Religion. So I wouldn't say that confessionalism is alien to Anglicanism - unusual perhaps, but confessions are there in Anglican history.
 
Posted by Spawn (# 4867) on :
 
Sorry to double-post, but it's just struck me that TEC has its own kind of confessionalism based in the baptismal liturgy. The baptismal covenant, so often cited by Episcopalians, as a statement of identity and belief, is distinctive and innovative within modern-day Anglicanism. Is it not a form of confessionalism?
 
Posted by Matt Black (# 2210) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Oscar the Grouch:
quote:
Originally posted by Matt Black:
surely there comes a point in the relationship between Party A and Party B when, if you have A saying constantly to B, "What you're doing is wrong and it annoys the heck out of me and please stop doing it" and B saying "No it's not wrong, I want to do it and I will keep on doing it regardless of what you say and it annoys the heck out of me that you keep telling not to do it", one would have to question the degree to which any kind of meaningful close relationship could continue to exist between the the parties.

That may be the case. But that is not, in my view, grounds for choosing to snub Christ and to refuse to share communion.

We share communion not because we have a "meaningful close relationship", but because we share faith in the same saving Christ.

We share communion not because we agree about everything - or even about all the really important things, but because we agree that in Christ is our salvation (however we may understand that).

Sharing communion is not the same thing as saying "I agree with you" or even "it doesn't matter that we disagree". Sharing communion IS saying "we may not agree about a lot of things, but we agree about seeking to follow Christ and be obedient to him".

Refusing to share communion is - to me - equivalent to claiming that the other person is not really a Christian. Or - to put it another way - if you can't share communion then don't pretend to be part of the same Church. Those who refuse to share communion are making sweeping judgements about the faith and integrity of those they are ignoring and rejecting.

Again, this is a conflation of 'sharing Holy Communion/the Eucharist together' with 'being in communion as one Church/one ecclesial body'. You can do the former (in Anglicanism at least) without being the latter: at our CofE place at Holy Communion, for example, the direction is given that anyone who is a non-Anglican but in good standing with their own church is welcome to receive, and thus we have from time to time Methodists, Baptists etc receiving communion with us; that doesn't make them Anglicans though. For them to become Anglicans, there would need to be some kind of consent to, for want of a better term, 'Anglican core values'. Now we can argue to the cow's come home as to what those 'core values' are, but suffice it to say that I remain to be convinced that the actions of TEC and AC-Can are in accordance with those (doubtless there are posters here who would say the same about GAFCON) but this does raise an interesting further point:

It's been asked both here and on other threads why the issue of same-sex relationships is such a 'deal breaker' for conservatives. I'm not convinced that it is - on its own. But for many evangelicals, it comes as the culmination of a series of, as they see it, deviations from the Gospel by liberals over the last 50 years or so. For conservatives, the theological rot set in with the likes of +John Robinson's Honest to God way back in 1962 and perhaps the Church should have been 'honest with John' back then and said, "Yep, that's fine, you can have those views but we don't really think you should carry on as a bishop". But, rightly or wrongly, the Church didn't and, from the conservative perspective, it tolerated the existence of the liberals in its midst, albeit with much grumbling from time to time. I think that, given that background, the consecration of Gene Robinson was the last straw: in the words of Tolkien's dwarvish creation, Thrain, the conservative response to this was, "This cannot be borne!"

I'm just trying to put things from the con-evo POV; I would guess that the liberals would say similar things about us. I'm not sure however that there is a way back for either party from these increasingly entrenched positions, sadly.
 
Posted by Cardinal Pole Vault (# 4193) on :
 
quote:
Again, this is a conflation of 'sharing Holy Communion/the Eucharist together' with 'being in communion as one Church/one ecclesial body'. You can do the former (in Anglicanism at least) without being the latter:
Being in communion *is* most concretely expressed by sharing communion at the altar.

If you don't share communion, then you are not in communion

But taking communion (when not in 'formal' communion) is a sign of a desire to be in full communion (and all Christians are in 'communion' to an extent by virtue of baptism anyway)

The CofE's position on alowing other baptised Christians to partake is not meant to be a 'regular' thing. If an individual was going to be a regular communicant at an Anglican altar then they should enter into formal communion with the CofE.


But this is perhaps where Anglican practice confuses the theology/ecclesiology somewhat
 
Posted by Adrian1 (# 3994) on :
 
Spawn wrote:
quote:
quote:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Church of England, ECUSA and the Canasdian Anglican Church have taught nothing but the traditional Gospel and done their best to interpret it in ways that meet th contemporary needs of modern people.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

I love this line. Do you really think they've taught nothing but the traditional Gospel? That's a pretty major claim, and of course it is nonsense. I'd be laughing less if you had qualified it even a little.


I think a little clarification is called for here. What I meant was that that the churches in question haven't taught any other 'Gospel' than the traditional one. However they have to interpret it afresh for every generation and apply it in a way which is relevant to people living in the complex and challenging world of today. That necessarily involves a critical, scholarly and robust engagement with Scripture. What is palpable nonsense is the idea put forward by GAFCON that the western churches have propagated some sort of 'false Gospel' of which they need to repent. If anyone needs to repent it's the leaders and Primates of GAFCON who are doing a great deal of harm to the unity of the Anglican Communion by sowing the seeds of division.
 
Posted by Rossweisse (# 2349) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Spawn:
I can probably agree with that to some extent, under the proviso that to talk of 'inclusion' as an absolute value is certainly not traditional nor an extension thereof. The Archbishop of Canterbury distinguishes between 'inclusion' and 'welcome'. I'm with him on that.

"There is no male or female, Jew or Gentile, male or free, in Christ Jesus." I was brought up to believe that with all my heart -- and by a very conservative, Anglican-to-the-core great-great-etc. niece of +John Cosin, yet. Inclusion and welcome have always been essentially the same in my experience -- and, again, I'm from a conservative background. It's what distinguishes us from the illiberal and exclusionary, on both sides.
quote:
It's interesting that it's those who claim they are are prioritising 'inclusion' who actually come up with rigid definitions of Anglicanism to exclude....
I'm sorry, Spawn; I realize that these folks are your buddies, but I repeat: The notion of "confessional Anglicans" is a complete neologism, and simply too bizarre to be entertained.

Being conservative I understand (I used to be one -- and I still am, in certain quarters!), but abandoning the core of Anglicanism -- nope. Lutherans are confessional; we base our faith on the Creeds.

The Jensenistas should have the courage of their convictions, walk away from the precious property, and just join the Presbyterians. They'd be happier there, and the actual Anglicans in Sydney would be happier with them there, too.

Ross
 
Posted by Mertseger (# 4534) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Rossweisse:
The Jensenistas should have the courage of their convictions, walk away from the precious property, and just join the Presbyterians.

Hey, now, don't get mean. We Presbyterians may be confessional, but we're working our way towards the ordination of gays as well. (We got one approved by the Presbytery! Go Lisa!)

[fixed UBB]

[ 08. July 2008, 04:48: Message edited by: Mertseger ]
 
Posted by RuthW (# 13) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Rossweisse:
Lutherans are confessional; we base our faith on the Creeds.

A distinction without a difference. Especially considering that it's not unusual for a priest to invite people to say one of the creeds by saying, "Let us confess our faith in the words of the Nicene/Apostles Creed."
 
Posted by Spawn (# 4867) on :
 
I note that both you and Adrian1 have dropped the 'sola scriptura' claim. That's one less red herring to address.

quote:
Originally posted by Rossweisse:
"There is no male or female, Jew or Gentile, male or free, in Christ Jesus." I was brought up to believe that with all my heart -- and by a very conservative, Anglican-to-the-core great-great-etc. niece of +John Cosin, yet. Inclusion and welcome have always been essentially the same in my experience -- and, again, I'm from a conservative background. It's what distinguishes us from the illiberal and exclusionary, on both sides.

Welcome is unqualified, inclusion is qualified. As Anglicans we don't have completely open communion, we don't ordain everyone who comes through the church door. Welcome makes no expectations, inclusion does.

quote:
I'm sorry, Spawn; I realize that these folks are your buddies, but I repeat: The notion of "confessional Anglicans" is a complete neologism, and simply too bizarre to be entertained.
What Ruthw said, and what I said before. I've pointed to historic documents in Anglicanism which were confessions. You haven't addressed these points.

quote:
The Jensenistas should have the courage of their convictions, walk away from the precious property, and just join the Presbyterians. They'd be happier there, and the actual Anglicans in Sydney would be happier with them there, too.

Ross

I don't think this particular paragraph distinguishes you from the 'illiberal and exclusionary' you referred to above. In fact, your sense of irony is badly askew. Why single out Sydney and the Jensens in this context? Is that because it's too politically incorrect to tell the Nigerians, Ugandans and other Africans to get knotted? Why this obsession with Sydney? I don't think you've ever been there.

'True Anglicans', 'actual Anglicans'... I'd like to know who made you the arbiter of what an Anglican is?
 
Posted by Matt Black (# 2210) on :
 
What Spawn said; I would make a similar point wrt 'receiving Holy Communion with' -v- 'being in communion with'.
 
Posted by Cardinal Pole Vault (# 4193) on :
 
quote:
Spawn said: Welcome is unqualified, inclusion is qualified. As Anglicans we don't have completely open communion, we don't ordain everyone who comes through the church door. Welcome makes no expectations, inclusion does
But we do (more or less) baptise 'anyone who comes through the church doors'. That *is*inclusion. It's more than that- it's incorporation into the very Body of Christ.

Of course, 'Jesus loves us as we are, but loves us too much to let us stay that way': the Christian life is transformative. I guess we'll just have to agree to disagree on the issue of how and in what way gay members of the Body of Christ need to be transformed.
 
Posted by Matt Black (# 2210) on :
 
Yes, we do baptise pretty much everyone, but we don't confirm or admit just anyone to communion
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
Matt, the admittance to communion is becoming less determined by confirmation. It is now down to local parishes whether they allow children to take communion before confirmation. And most CofE churches would not turn away anyone who came up for communion.
 
Posted by Emma Louise (# 3571) on :
 
The C of E churches around here that I am familiar with admit anyone to communion who wants to come pretty much.

I've been in the C of E 4 years now and have no desire to be confirmed. I had an adult baptism and am happy with that, my faith has already been confirmed. None of the churches I have been in have ever asked me if I've been confirmed but accepted me as a full part of the church as a confessing christian.
 
Posted by Rossweisse (# 2349) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Spawn:
Welcome is unqualified, inclusion is qualified. As Anglicans we don't have completely open communion, we don't ordain everyone who comes through the church door. Welcome makes no expectations, inclusion does.

"Inclusion" as in "inclusion of all Christians." We do offer communion to all baptized persons.
quote:
I've pointed to historic documents in Anglicanism which were confessions. You haven't addressed these points.
We have never had "confessions" in the way that the Protestant churches did.
quote:
I don't think this particular paragraph distinguishes you from the 'illiberal and exclusionary' you referred to above. In fact, your sense of irony is badly askew. Why single out Sydney and the Jensens in this context? Is that because it's too politically incorrect to tell the Nigerians, Ugandans and other Africans to get knotted? Why this obsession with Sydney? I don't think you've ever been there.

'True Anglicans', 'actual Anglicans'... I'd like to know who made you the arbiter of what an Anglican is?

I don't like ++Akinola & Co. any more than I like the Jensenistas, and I'm sorry if I somehow gave the impression that I do.

I have never before been accused of being "politically correct" -- nice smear there, Spawn!

Actual Anglicans, in my experience, believe in maintaining the Apostolic Succession (as it is popularly known) and three orders of clergy; in the primacy of the sacraments; in particular forms of liturgy (the words of which may vary, but the essential contents of which do not) and in a particular form of Church governance.

I don't like the Jensenistas because they're just a bunch of Calvinist Protestants who lack the moral courage to walk away from the property and the prestige of their positions. "Lay presidency," in particular, goes against everything in the Anglican tradition.

But you knew all that.

I think that you perhaps enjoy stirring the pot and casting aspersions just a little too much for someone who seems to be on the Ship primarily trawling for material to use in your professional work.

Ross
 
Posted by Rossweisse (# 2349) on :
 
I came back to say that my final paragraph in my last post was too personal, and to apologize for that.

Ross

[ 08. July 2008, 17:33: Message edited by: Rossweisse ]
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Rossweisse:
We do offer communion to all baptized persons.

Just like most of the other Protestant churches.

quote:
Originally posted by Rossweisse:
We have never had "confessions" in the way that the Protestant churches did.

"the Protestant churches"? But there is huge variation amongst both Anglicans as well as the other Protestant denominations.

Some other churches require all members to sign up to a declaration of faith. Some use the historic creeds. Some have neither. Many of the Lutheran churches were in the same position the CofE was until very recently - the clergy were required to assent to a declaration, but laity were not. More a side-effect of being established, national churches than anything to do with their doctrinal position. Their lords and masters were unwilling to unchurch vast numbers of lay people because they wanted to continue to be able to claim that the established Church (whether Lutheran or Anglican) was the religious expression of the nation, but on the other hand they wanted to enforce some discipline in its clergy (even more so in most Lutheran countries than in England - in Denmark and many parts of Germany the clergy were in effect paid employees of the state and could be dismissed by the state, right up to the 20th century - in England we gave that up at the begining of the 18th)

The norm in Anglicanism until very recently was to require confirmation - and that does require assent to a statement of faith. In many places knowledge of the cathechism was requred as well.

quote:

Actual Anglicans, in my experience, believe in maintaining the Apostolic Succession (as it is popularly known) and three orders of clergy; in the primacy of the sacraments; in particular forms of liturgy (the words of which may vary, but the essential contents of which do not) and in a particular form of Church governance.

Well, in your experience that might be true. But as you know, surely, the "form of Church governance" varies widely between different provinces. And a great many Anglicans - millions of us, in Britain and Ireland as well as in Africa and Australia - do not hold very strongly to the "primacy of the sacraments". And many others regard three orders of clergy as a valuable tradition rather than the essence of the church (if they ever think about them at all which they probably mostly don't) and assign very little value to the 19th century idea of the Apostolic Succession at all. Many of them might never have even heard of it.

quote:

I don't like the Jensenistas because they're just a bunch of Calvinist Protestants who lack the moral courage to walk away from the property and the prestige of their positions.

"Just?" What's "just" about it? Us "Calvinist Protestants" are perfectly good members of Christ's Church thank you very much,and proud of it too. And the hierarchy of Sydney would be perfectly mainstream amongst conservative evangelical Anglicans in Britain - who are as much a part of the Church of England as the post-Oxford-Movement Anglo Catholics are, and have been around for a lot longer. It would be just as easy to accuse the anti-women Anglo-Catholics of Forward in Faith of being "just a bunch" of closet-Catholic tat queens who "who lack the moral courage to walk away from the property and the prestige of their positions". And just as unfair.

quote:

"Lay presidency," in particular, goes against everything in the Anglican tradition.

Gosh, does it? Maybe that's why they aren't doing it then!

quote:

I think that you perhaps enjoy stirring the pot and casting aspersions just a little too much for someone who seems to be on the Ship primarily trawling for material to use in your professional work.

I'm sure Spawn can defend himself against petty personal attacks without help from me. But I have to say that I agree with nearly everything he has written on this thread. It has not been stirring the pot, it has been pretty much the plain truth.
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
My last post was cross-posted with Rossweisse's last post so I hadn't yet read it.
 
Posted by Spawn (# 4867) on :
 
I crossposted with Rossweisse. I'll now consider what to do with her personal criticism and apology.

[ 08. July 2008, 17:43: Message edited by: Spawn ]
 
Posted by The Bede's American Successor (# 5042) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by ken:
quote:
Originally posted by Rossweisse:
We have never had "confessions" in the way that the Protestant churches did.

"the Protestant churches"? But there is huge variation amongst both Anglicans as well as the other Protestant denominations.

[...]

The norm in Anglicanism until very recently was to require confirmation - and that does require assent to a statement of faith. In many places knowledge of the cathechism was requred as well.



The Episcopal Church requires making or reaffirming the Baptismal Covenant at the time of confirmation.


quote:

quote:

Actual Anglicans, in my experience, believe in maintaining the Apostolic Succession (as it is popularly known) and three orders of clergy; in the primacy of the sacraments; in particular forms of liturgy (the words of which may vary, but the essential contents of which do not) and in a particular form of Church governance.

Well, in your experience that might be true. But as you know, surely, the "form of Church governance" varies widely between different provinces. And a great many Anglicans - millions of us, in Britain and Ireland as well as in Africa and Australia - do not hold very strongly to the "primacy of the sacraments". And many others regard three orders of clergy as a valuable tradition rather than the essence of the church (if they ever think about them at all which they probably mostly don't) and assign very little value to the 19th century idea of the Apostolic Succession at all. Many of them might never have even heard of it.


Ken, Ross was making reference to the Chicago-Lambeth Quadrilateral, found down the linked page a bit.
 
Posted by The Bede's American Successor (# 5042) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Spawn:
Sorry to double-post, but it's just struck me that TEC has its own kind of confessionalism based in the baptismal liturgy. The baptismal covenant, so often cited by Episcopalians, as a statement of identity and belief, is distinctive and innovative within modern-day Anglicanism. Is it not a form of confessionalism?

Distinctive and innovative?

quote:
TO the end that Confirmation may be ministered to the more edifying of such as shall receive it, the Church hath thought good to order, That none hereafter shall be Confirmed, but such as can say the Creed, the Lord's Prayer, and the Ten Commandments; and can also answer to such other Questions, as in the short Catechism are contained: which order is very convenient to be observed; to the end that children being now come to the years of discretion, and having learned what their Godfathers and Godmothers promised for them in Baptism, they may themselves, with their own mouth and consent, openly before the Church, ratify and confirm the same; and also promise, that by the grace of God they will evermore endeavour themselves faithfully to observe such things, as they, by their own confession, have assented unto.

¶ Then shall the Bishop say,

O ye here, in the presence of God, and of this congregation, renew the solemn promise and vow that was made in your name at your Baptism; ratifying and confirming the same in your own persons, and acknowledging yourselves bound to believe and to do all those things, which your Godfathers and Godmothers then undertook for you?

¶ And every one shall audibly answer, I do.

From the 1662 BCP Confirmation service (link opens PDF file).

And, what promises were made at the time of baptism?

quote:
I demand therefore,

DOST thou, in the name of this Child, renounce the devil and all his works, the vain pomp and glory of the world, with all covetous desires of the same, and the carnal desires of the flesh, so that thou wilt not follow nor be led by them?

Answer. I renounce them all.

Minister.
DOST thou believe in God the Father Almighty, Maker of heaven and earth?

And in Jesus Christ his only-begotten Son our Lord? And that he was conceived by the Holy Ghost, born of the Virgin Mary; that he suffered under Pontius Pilate, was crucified, dead, and buried; that he went down into hell, and also did rise again the third day; that he ascended into heaven, and sitteth at the right hand of God the Father Almighty; and from thence shall come again at the end of the world, to judge the quick and the dead?

And dost thou believe in the Holy Ghost; the holy Catholick Church; the Communion of Saints; the Remission of sins; the Resurrection of the flesh; and everlasting Life after death?

Answer. All this I stedfastly believe.

Minister.
WILT thou be baptized in this faith?
Answer. That is my desire.

Minister.
WILT thou then obediently keep God’s holy will and commandments, and walk in the same all the days of thy life?

Answer. I will.

From the 1662 BCP Confirmation service (link opens PDF file).

So, how much does the above differ in intent this from the current BCP of TEC?

quote:
Question Do you renounce Satan and all the spiritual forces of wickedness that rebel against God?

Answer I renounce them.

Question Do you renounce the evil powers of this world which corrupt and destroy the creatures of God?

Answer I renounce them.

Question Do you renounce all sinful desires that draw you from the love of God?

Answer I renounce them.

Question Do you turn to Jesus Christ and accept him as your Savior?

Answer I do.

Question Do you put your whole trust in his grace and love?

Answer I do.

Question Do you promise to follow and obey him as your Lord?

Answer I do.

After all have been presented, the Celebrant addresses the congregation, saying

Will you who witness these vows do all in your power to support these persons in their life in Christ?

People We will.

The Celebrant then says these or similar words

Let us join with those who are committing themselves to Christ and renew our own baptismal covenant.

The Baptismal Covenant

Celebrant Do you believe in God the Father?

People I believe in God, the Father almighty, creator of heaven and earth.

Celebrant Do you believe in Jesus Christ, the Son of God?

People I believe in Jesus Christ, his only Son, our Lord.

He was conceived by the power of the Holy Spirit and born of the Virgin Mary.

He suffered under Pontius Pilate, was crucified, died, and was buried.

He descended to the dead.

On the third day he rose again.

He ascended into heaven, and is seated at the right hand of the Father.

He will come again to judge the living and the dead.

Celebrant Do you believe in God the Holy Spirit?

People I believe in the Holy Spirit,
the holy catholic Church,

the communion of saints,

the forgiveness of sins,

the resurrection of the body,

and the life everlasting.

Celebrant Will you continue in the apostles’ teaching and fellowship, in the breaking of bread, and in the prayers?

People I will, with God’s help.

Celebrant Will you persevere in resisting evil, and, whenever you fall into sin, repent and return to the Lord?

People I will, with God’s help.

Celebrant Will you proclaim by word and example the Good News of God in Christ?

People I will, with God’s help.

Celebrant Will you seek and serve Christ in all persons, loving your neighbor as yourself?

People I will, with God’s help.

Celebrant Will you strive for justice and peace among all people, and respect the dignity of every human being?

People I will, with God’s help.

What it seems to me is that the Baptismal Covenant only echoes the promises made, summarizes the Catechism, and has everyone participating.

Why is reminding everyone present of their Christian duty as contained in the Catechism such a bad or innovative thing? Faith without works is dead.
 
Posted by Louise (# 30) on :
 
Many thanks for the apology, Rossweisse, but you know better than to post this outside Hell

quote:
Originally posted by Rossweisse:
I think that you perhaps enjoy stirring the pot and casting aspersions just a little too much for someone who seems to be on the Ship primarily trawling for material to use in your professional work.

Ross

So in future, don't.

Louise

Dead Horses Host
 
Posted by Golden Key (# 1468) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Emma Louise:
The C of E churches around here that I am familiar with admit anyone to communion who wants to come pretty much.

I've been in the C of E 4 years now and have no desire to be confirmed. I had an adult baptism and am happy with that, my faith has already been confirmed. None of the churches I have been in have ever asked me if I've been confirmed but accepted me as a full part of the church as a confessing christian.

Some Episcopal churches welcome to communion pretty much anyone who wants to come.

I've taken communion in a variety of churches/denominations over the years, and none of them ever questioned me to see if I had the proper beliefs, etc. The only time there was an issue was when I raised it once on an RC retreat; after talking with me, the priest left it up to my conscience. (He was filling in for the regular priest, who viewed it as a sacrament of unity and wouldn't have had a problem with it.)
 
Posted by Adrian1 (# 3994) on :
 
When it comes to admission to communion, there's always been a bit of a mismatch between 'what the book says' and actual practice. Officially the CofE admits to Communion those of its members who have been confirmed 'or are rady and desirous to be confirmed' and in recent years this latter category has specifically included children who have been specially admitted to communion ahead of confirmation. Since 1972 baptised members of other Trinitarian churches who are in 'good standing' with their own church (see Canon B15A) have also been admitted to communion. In practice, however, it's all but impossible (and certainly impossible in a cathedral where the congregation may be mostly tourist in nature) to police who presents themselves at the rail for communion or not as the case may be. Few clergy would actually want to either. It causes far fewer problems to give people the benefit of the doubt and give them communion if they present for it, than to question their eligibilty.
 
Posted by CJS (# 3503) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Spawn:


quote:
The Jensenistas should have the courage of their convictions, walk away from the precious property, and just join the Presbyterians. They'd be happier there, and the actual Anglicans in Sydney would be happier with them there, too.

Ross

I don't think this particular paragraph distinguishes you from the 'illiberal and exclusionary' you referred to above. In fact, your sense of irony is badly askew. Why single out Sydney and the Jensens in this context? Is that because it's too politically incorrect to tell the Nigerians, Ugandans and other Africans to get knotted? Why this obsession with Sydney? I don't think you've ever been there.

She's obsessed with us. I personally think it's because we're so good looking.
 
Posted by Matt Black (# 2210) on :
 
I wouldn't know; do you have blow-dried hair and nice teeth and are they all your own or something?
 
Posted by Rossweisse (# 2349) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by CJS:
She's obsessed with us.

If you're going to steal Spawn's lines from other threads, you really should credit him. And it's rude to speak of other people on the thread as if they weren't here.
quote:
I personally think it's because we're so good looking.
No, I just can't turn away -- it's like a particularly gruesome traffic accident.

And with so many people, on the Ship and elsewhere, focusing on ++Akinola, I don't want the other headline junkies -- like ++Jensen -- feeling left out! It's really kindness on my part. [Two face]

Ross
 
Posted by John Donne (# 220) on :
 
Methinks you are too hard on +Peter, Ross. There are ppl in Sydney (Sydney Anglicans) who are a scandal to the Gospel imo, but +Peter is not one of them. Again, imo, he is a good thing; in the Goodhew mold.

+Peter Jensen is a voice of moderation in the GAFCON business, imo. He has demonstrated that he is concerned for social justice and the civil rights of gay ppl. (Also he spoke out strongly on the rights of Australian workers) He very firmly stands against Akinola-style verbal abuse of gay ppl and has similarly clearly spoken out against violence against gay ppl - it's a no-brainer, and it's sad that I even mention it as something special.

Conservatives should take note of that. It is sad that someone says: 'Look, thankyou: because when you were told that Akinola said that gays were lower that farmyard animals you were appalled and spoke out against that. Thankyou, too, for condemning violence against gay people' - sad, because it is so rare as to be remarkable.

GAFCON and some of the fruitloops therein, are lucky, again imo, that they can shelter behind +Peter Jensen's personal credibility.
 


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