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Divorce Episcopal Style
Drell's Descants ^ | 4/01/2005 | The Rev. Alice C. Linsley

Posted on 04/01/2005 9:51:03 PM PST by sionnsar

Attempts have been made to save our marriage, but pleading, reasoning, counseling, rebuking, threatening, tantrums, time outs, interventions and fervent prayer have not mended what was once a lovely and meaningful relationship. One partner wants to stay in the orthodox house and the other has moved out.

Having gone through divorce I recognize the painful slugging through another day, wondering when will this finally be over? I know from experience that recovery is long and never fully realized since there are reminders that prick the heart and make you long for what has been lost. We won’t sit in the same pew anymore. We won’t plan activities together. We won’t sing praises under the same vaulted ceiling and admire the same stained glass windows. Passing that sign at the edge of town makes me angry because The Episcopal Church doesn’t welcome me…anymore.

I try to understand how this came to pass. I think back and begin to see the little signs that we were growing apart. I thought that we were speaking the same language. Now I realize that familiar old words in your mouth took on unfamiliar meanings.

I listened while you told me of your dreams and plans and gradually it dawned on me that I wasn’t included. And when I pointed this out to you, your response was to make me doubt myself, as if there were something seriously wrong with me.

The arguments became more frequent and unkind words were spoken. Even with wise counsel we grew farther apart and dreaded meeting. Why rehash it all again? Here I stand, I can do no other than uphold what has been revealed. There you stand, upholding your dream of a new church, your new theology. There is no ability to dialogue now, only sullen silence.

At night I cry on my bed, hoping that the children won’t hear me. They have been hurt enough. I pray that you will not succeed in your attempts to take them from this orthodox house.

You told me that you needed space and time to think, but you spend all your time with your trashy mistress. She loves it when you talk dirty. She thinks I’m a loser. You buy costly gifts for that “Jezebel, who calls herself a prophetess. By her teaching she misleads my servants into sexual immorality.” (Rev. 2:20)

Why weren’t you honest? Why not admit that you were unfaithful and wanted to go with her instead of me? At least then I would have some reason to respect you. You tell me this isn’t about sex but about freedom. You are correct. You have the freedom to choose, but once the divorce papers are signed it will be final.

My attorney tells me that the papers are in the mail.


TOPICS: Mainline Protestant
KEYWORDS: angpost1; ecusa

1 posted on 04/01/2005 9:51:05 PM PST by sionnsar
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To: ahadams2; nanetteclaret; Saint Reagan; Marauder; stan_sipple; SuzyQue; LifeofRiley; TheDean; ...
Traditional Anglican ping, continued in memory of its founder Arlin Adams.

FReepmail sionnsar if you want on or off this moderately high-volume ping list (typically 3-7 pings/day).
This list is pinged by sionnsar and newheart.

Resource for Traditional Anglicans: http://trad-anglican.faithweb.com

Speak the truth in love. Eph 4:15

2 posted on 04/01/2005 9:51:39 PM PST by sionnsar (†trad-anglican.faithweb.com† || Iran Azadi || Where are we going, and why are we in this handbasket?)
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To: sionnsar
It is my belief that I cannot marry someone who is divorced without committing adultery.

Our propensity for this terrible choice is beyond description.

As of the year 2000, Christians had a higher divorce rate than the per capita average.

Today, it's better to be an atheist if marriage is important to you.
3 posted on 04/01/2005 9:58:34 PM PST by ConservativeMind
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To: sionnsar
One partner wants to stay in the orthodox house and the other has moved out...

Passing that sign at the edge of town makes me angry because The Episcopal Church doesn't’t welcome me…anymore.

I find this so poignant, the Episcopal Church does not welcome her orthodox members any more.

I listened while you told me of your dreams and plans and gradually it dawned on me that I wasn’t included. And when I pointed this out to you, your response was to make me doubt myself, as if there were something seriously wrong with me.

This is one of the saddest parts of the entire argument. Orthodox people who stand by the scriptural condemnation of homosexuality are told they do not love. Too many time there is a part of their minds that say something like "Maybe they are right. Maybe I should see this entire thing as a deficit in my love, not an upholding of the Lord's command."

Paraphrasing Screwtape to Wormwood: "Practice looking like an Angle of Light. We do our best tempting on the very steps of the Altar."
4 posted on 04/02/2005 12:30:50 AM PST by Talking_Mouse (Indeed I tremble for my country when I reflect that God is just... Thomas Jefferson)
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To: sionnsar

I deeply appreciate the anguish alice is showing. I am very sorry to see her getting cut off from the Church she loves. I would be a lot more empathetic if I didn't have to countenance her position. It's like listening to complaints from illegal immigrants: sure you're not being fully welcomed, yes it's tough to get a job without getting exposed to the Feds, I can see how the environment is disorienting, but, tell me, Ms. Priestess: exactly what part of unScriptural are you having difficulty understanding?

You took your orders knowing that there was no precedent for female ordination into the sacramental ministry. You were quite willing to breach the unity of the Church in pursuit of what you personally viewed as God's call and in despite of any good advice to the contrary. So it's a little late to complain that those your lawless action empowered now turn on you.

I am deeply saddened by the tone I have used here and I ask your prayers to cope with it, but sometimes it does feel like a bit of rebuke must be aired. Jerome wasn't always wrong, I think.

In Christ,
Deacon Paul+


5 posted on 04/02/2005 3:17:55 AM PST by BelegStrongbow (Having a human friend is no bed of roses-but hobbits? That's very different. :))
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To: BelegStrongbow; sionnsar

"If you wish to correct anyone from his faults, do not think of correcting him solely by your own means: you would only do harm by your own passions, for instance, by pride and by the irritability arising from it; 'but cast thy burden upon the Lord,' (Ps. 55:22) and pray to God 'Who trieth the hearts and reins,' (Ps. 7:9) with all your heart, that He Himself may enlighten the mind and heart of that man." St. Gregory Palamas (On Prayer and Purity of Heart no. 3, The Philokalia


6 posted on 04/02/2005 5:33:12 AM PST by Kolokotronis ("Set a guard over my mouth, O Lord; keep watch over the door of my lips!" (Psalm 141:3))
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To: BelegStrongbow

" I pray that you will not succeed in your attempts to take them (the children) from this orthodox house."

I'm not sure how you equate her desire to have her attempts to keep her family in the orthodox house to illegal aliens being unhappy about not being fully welcomed. How do you take this to a dubious argument about her unScriptural-ness?


7 posted on 04/02/2005 6:18:57 AM PST by SuzyQue (Remember to think.)
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To: SuzyQue; BelegStrongbow
Perhaps some of the answer lies in the comments to the original:

What is doubly sad here is the fate of the women priests caught in between. The Continuum (at least much of it, certainly my corner) won’t accept them. Not all the world-wide Anglican Communion will either, I believe.

It’s heart-breaking, because I knew one of the first women to be ordained (in our area), and I know it was not out of any political or feminist agenda. What I saw is that is where her heart was. I was quite young and knew nothing else; that is just what I saw.

I have since been brought to question womens’ ordination – but at the same time there is this horrible question: What of those women who were ordained, when the church that did it in effect drives them out? By charging ahead alone as it did, ECUSA has done a terrible thing to these people, including the Rev. Alice Linsley.

When ECUSA left me, a long time ago, I was very angry with it. That died in a while as I made my home in a Continuing church, got busy, and quit looking back. But this piece tonight rekindles a bit of that anger.

I have no answers, only another issue on my heart for prayer: The Rev. Linsley and her ilk.

CH

Comment by Continuing Home — 4/2/2005 @ 1:10 am


8 posted on 04/02/2005 9:09:02 AM PST by sionnsar (†trad-anglican.faithweb.com† || Iran Azadi || Where are we going, and why are we in this handbasket?)
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To: SuzyQue

I'm sorry, Koloko, but I don't see where I said what you quote.

But the analogy is: just as simply BEING an illegal immigrant is prima facie evidence of lawbreaking and thus anything which follows as a consequence of lawbreaking cannot really be sympathized with, just so, BEING a female ordinand is prima facie evidence of unScriptural attitude (at least in this regard), and thus anything that follows from such unScriptural-ness is equally hard to sympathize with. If those her wilfull disregard of Scriptural precept in ordination empowered now do not permit her to disagree with them and thus want to evict her, the eviction is caused by her own fault in the first place.

Is that clearer?

In Christ,
Deacon Paul+


9 posted on 04/02/2005 9:11:28 AM PST by BelegStrongbow (Having a human friend is no bed of roses-but hobbits? That's very different. :))
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To: SuzyQue

One further point: perhaps Ms. Alice is in fact worshipping in an Anglican church that has kept to the historic faith (that is not at all clear from her text, which is allusive on the point at clearest). But that would mean that she has in fact stopped employing her orders and does recognize their innate invalidity. She appears to consider them to be valid. Thus whatever else is true about her Scriptural beliefs, this is false and heretical and it led to what heresy always leads to: confusion, discord, mutual distrust and exchanges of clarifying emails between people who don't know each other very well but very much need to.

In Christ,
Deacon Paul+


10 posted on 04/02/2005 9:25:10 AM PST by BelegStrongbow (Having a human friend is no bed of roses-but hobbits? That's very different. :))
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To: sionnsar

Thanks for the further elucidation on Rev. Linsley's situation. A very long time ago there was a young woman who was quite dear to me who went on to become an Episcopal priest, I'm told. For her there was no element of feminism or liberalism or thought that the Holy Spirit was doing a new thing in that act. Her motivation was exactly the same as that of any good male priest, Episcopal, Orthodox or Roman Catholic. She heard a call which she believed to be from God. I think it was, though I think her ordination was and is uncanonical and that it may have been a call to the monastic life or the diaconate. I will never, ever, believe this fine Christian woman I knew is a heretic for that decision, nor would I believe that a woman like Rev. Linsley is. I don't know what has happened to that dear friend of my youth, but I can see what Rev. Linsley has done. It is noble and we should praise God for her faith and example.

I also know a woman who was an Episcopal priest and is now Orthodox and another who is giving it consideration. She gave up her ordination to serve God as an Orthodox lay person; I suspect the other one will too. It is far to facile to speak derisively of "priestesses" and point to the ordination of women into the priesthood as the source of the problems now plaguing the AC and ECUSA in particular. Those ordinations, at the hands of bishops into whose care the church was given, were merely a symptom of a far deeper and older problem with the Anglican Church. If there is any blame here, it rests squarely with the hierarchy in a system such as the AC has.


11 posted on 04/02/2005 11:20:11 AM PST by Kolokotronis ("Set a guard over my mouth, O Lord; keep watch over the door of my lips!" (Psalm 141:3))
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To: BelegStrongbow

"I'm sorry, Koloko, but I don't see where I said what you quote"

Deacon, I don't see where I was quoting you at all. I quoted +Gregory Palamas


12 posted on 04/02/2005 11:21:44 AM PST by Kolokotronis ("Set a guard over my mouth, O Lord; keep watch over the door of my lips!" (Psalm 141:3))
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To: BelegStrongbow

I would like to continue this conversation, but it will have to be later. Grass to mow and roses to smell.


13 posted on 04/02/2005 12:03:38 PM PST by SuzyQue (Remember to think.)
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To: Kolokotronis

Actually, this was, it turns out, a response to Suzy, so it is to you that the apology is owed, and I humbly submit it.

In Christ,
Deacon Paul+


14 posted on 04/02/2005 1:12:35 PM PST by BelegStrongbow (Having a human friend is no bed of roses-but hobbits? That's very different. :))
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