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Commentary: Male Episcopal Bishop wants to be a ‘June Bride’
Catholic Online ^ | December 11, 2007 | Deacon Keith Fournier

Posted on 12/11/2007 6:06:20 AM PST by NYer

The Bishop is on the forefront of the ongoing schism within the Anglican Communion. He is also a part of a cultural revolution being led by activist, practicing homosexuals who not only want to live their lifestyle but force the State and the Church to give them equal status to marriage. LOS ANGELES (Catholic Online) - Bishop Gene Robinson, the Nation’s openly practicing homosexual Episcopal Bishop, spoke to a crowd of over 200 people on November 27, 2007 at Nova Southeastern University’s Shephard Law Center. He told them of his upcoming planned ‘marriage’ to his paramour saying with pride, "I always wanted to be a June bride."

The activist Bishop continued:

"It may take many years for religious institutions to add their blessing for same-sex marriages and no church, mosque or synagogue should be forced to do so. But that should not slow down progress for the full civil right to marry," Robinson said. "Because New Hampshire will have legal unions beginning in January, my partner of 20 years and I will enter into such a legal union next June."

Dressed in his clerical collar and wearing his pectoral cross, the symbol of his ecclesial office in the Episcopal church, he castigated the “religious right”, a term by which he refers to all orthodox Christians who support the unbroken teaching of Christianity on the sanctity of authentic marriage:

"The greatest single hindrance to achievement of full rights for gays and lesbians can be laid at the doorstep of the three Abrahamic faiths-- Judaism, Christianity and Islam. It’s going to take people of faith to end discrimination," said Robinson, who was invested as the ninth bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of New Hampshire in 2004.... [emphasis added]

The Bishop is on the forefront of the ongoing schism within the Anglican Communion. He is also a part of a cultural revolution being led by activist, practicing homosexuals who not only want to live their lifestyle but force the State and the Church to give them equal status to marriage.

I remember the day that Gene Robinson was consecrated as a bishop in the Episcopal Church in Durham, New Hampshire. With the eyes of the whole world watching, a married Episcopal priest, who had broken both his marriage and priestly vows when he divorced his wife and abandoned his children to engage in an active homosexual relationship, was consecrated as a Bishop of the Episcopal Church. So many Christians grieved, for him, his wife and children and, for the Church.

It was clear then, and it is even clearer now, that this man thinks he is a revolutionary, somehow bringing about a new day when Christianity will be re-fashioned in his perceived new version. He claimed that his “consecration” was a sign that, in his own words, “God is doing something new.” In short, he claims that God has changed his mind. He is wrong. Robinson simply rejects the unbroken teaching of the Christian Church for two thousand years. He seeks to substitute a new interpretation of the plan of God in “creating them male and female” and calling human persons, created for love as the gift of self to another for life, to the communion of marriage.

It was the ancient Prophet Isaiah who warned: “Woe to those who call evil good and good evil, who change darkness into light and light into darkness, who change bitter into sweet, and sweet into bitter! Woe to those who are wise in their own sight, and prudent in their own esteem” (Isaiah 5: 20 and 21). Robinsons’ message does just that. He calls “evil good, and good evil”. However, the facts and the unbroken witness of revelation, tradition and history still remain. Christianity has always proclaimed that marriage is a special state, reserved only for a man and a woman, ordered toward both the communion of persons and the gift of new life in children.

Robinson proclaims to the world not only that God has changed His mind, but further, that so should the Christian Church. By his open and active homosexual lifestyle he rejects the clear Christian teaching concerning human sexuality and its purposes. For two thousand years the Christian Church has taught with uniformity that conjugal love is to be sexually expressed only within a monogamous marriage between a man and a woman, open to new life.

Robinson wants to substitute his “new thing” for the classical, orthodox Christian claim that sexual expression is a gift reserved only for spouses within authentic marriage. He wants to do so by redefining words in some kind of misguided new effort at alchemy. He will not succeed. There is an ‘ontology’ to marriage, it simply is what it is. He rejects the unbroken teaching of two millennia, confirmed by all social science, human reason and experience, that the two parent heterosexual family is the safest place for children to be raised and where they can best flourish as human persons. He wants to replace it all now with a new revolutionary ideology.

He presents his claims in pseudo-theological sounding language, contexts them in errant appeals to revisionist history and frames them in pop psychology. He then projects them with a countenance that is apparently kind and even endearing. That is what makes it all even more disturbing and dangerous. However, let’s be clear, Robinson broke his marriage vows and rejected a substantial foundation upon which the whole Christian faith is built. Worse yet, he is attempting to persuade other Christians to do the same as he participates in a cultural revolution.

This sadly deluded Christian, who in another age would have been called to repentance for apostasy, immorality and heresy, is now being held out as some new champion to the public. In this new Cultural Revolution, non-conjugal sexual acts between men are now to be viewed as equal to the marriage bed if they occur for a protracted period of time. Quite simply, this is not Christianity. It is not a “new thing”, it is actually quite old. Yet, faithful Christians who opposed his “consecration”, and who will now oppose his purported ‘marriage’ are presented as the ones who are narrow and not liberated.

The fact is that the Christian way concerning faithful, monogamous marriage as the only proper place for sexual intimacy, within the communion of authentic married love and for the begetting and rearing of healthy, happy children was and still IS the authentically “new” way.

The new revolutionaries who claim that “God is doing a new thing”, like Robinson, maintain that the witness of the early Christians and the clear biblical texts cannot now be used to oppose homosexual practice as sin. They also argue that living an actively homosexual lifestyle should not disqualify anyone from elevation to the Office of Bishop. They maintain that insistence on fidelity and chastity within ones’ state in life is antiquated. So, how do they deal with the clear witness of Christian history? The same way so many deluded revolutionaries do, they insist that Christians in the past did not know what we know now and that they were somehow unenlightened.

This claim is utter nonsense.

Much of the world into which the early Church was sent was engaged in sexual licentiousness and was often homo-sexualized. All early Christian sources are uniform in the rejection of homosexual practices. All Church Councils are as well.

Many of the early missionary journeys of the nascent Christian Church brought the gospel to what were called “pagan” cultures. In the process, many of the sexual practices of these cultures were strongly opposed by the Christian Church. However, these practices sometimes seduced even Christian priests and leaders. When that did happen, these priests and leaders were considered to be apostate and called to serious repentance.

When they actually taught that their errors were “new ways” and held them out for others to emulate, they were called heretics and they were put outside of communion with the Church. This was done to both bring these leaders to repentance and to protect the members of the Church from the dangers they practiced and proclaimed.

The word “pagan” was not used as a disparaging term in referring to these pre-Christian practices. It actually referred to a pseudo-“religious” world view which often accompanied the practices. I use it the same way in referring to our contemporary age as increasingly “pagan”. Many of the “gods” and goddesses” of this old world view promoted these lives of selfish excess, including homosexual practice and hedonism masquerading as freedom. In fact, the myths concerning them had them acting in much the same way. These “pagan” practices have been reintroduced today, only the myths and statues are different.

Robinson is not proclaiming something new. Rather, he is proclaiming something old. He has given himself over to the “old way” and wants to call it new.

The early Christians did not simply point the finger and rail against the “pagans” of their age. They did not present a “negative” message. They proclaimed the freedom found in Jesus Christ to all who would listen and demonstrated it in their compelling witness of life. They lived in monogamous marriages, raised their children to be faithful Christians and good citizens, and went into the world of their age, offering a new way to live.

This new “way” (which is what they first called the early Church) presented a very different world view than the one that the pagans embraced. Their clergy (deacons, priests and Bishops) lived and proclaimed the truth regarding human sexuality and God’s plan for monogamous, chaste marriage and family. Those who broke from that clear witness, or preached anything different, were not allowed to exercise their office of leadership.

With joy and integrity, these early Christians spoke and lived this new way in the midst of the pagan culture. As a result, they sometimes stirred up hostility. Some of them were martyred in the red martyrdom of shed blood. Countless more joined the train of what use to be called “white martyrdom”, by living lives of sacrificial witness and service in the culture, working hard and staying faithful to the end of a long life spent in missionary toil.

Slowly, not only were small numbers of “pagans” converted and baptized, but eventually their leaders and entire Nations followed suit. Resultantly, the Christian worldview began to influence the social order. The “clash of freedoms” continued, but the climate changed significantly. It was the Christian faith and the sexual practices of the Christians that began to win the hearts of men and women. The cultures once enshrined to pagan practices, such as plural marriage, homosexuality, exposure and abortion, began to change dramatically and this continued for centuries.

In the face of pagan societies of the past, it was Christianity that taught such novel concepts as the dignity of every person and their equality before the One God. The Christians proclaimed the dignity of women and the goodness of chaste marriage between a man and a woman and the sanctity of the family. It was Christianity that introduced the understanding of freedom not simply as a freedom from, but as a freedom for living responsibly and with moral integrity; a freedom to choose to live chastely both in Marriage and in the consecrated celibate life.

The Christians insisted that freedom must be exercised with reference to a moral code, a law higher than the emperor, or the sifting sands of public opinion or wandering sexual appetites. It was the Christians who understood that choice, rightly exercised, meant always choosing what was right and that the freedom to exercise that choice brought with it an obligation and a concern for the other. It was the Christians who proclaimed the virtue of self control, asceticism as a tool to curb wayward sexual appetites and fidelity to marriage and clerical vows.

Their faith presented a coherent and compelling answer to the existential questions that plagued the ancient pagans; such as why we existed and how we got here? What was the purpose of life? What is God’s design for our sexual identity and for procreation? How evil entered into the world and why we could not easily always make right choices? What force seemed to move us toward evil and how we could be set free from its power?

Christian philosophy and the arts began to flourish this new way and under the Christian worldview. Philosophies of government and economic theory began to be influenced by these principles derived from a Christian worldview. The institutions of the civil order protected such institutions as monogamous marriage between one man and one woman because they promoted the common good.

Throughout the history of the Christian Church, when deacons, priests, Bishops or other leaders succumbed to sin (wrong choices) and fell, they were rightly corrected and removed from leadership by Church authorities. When they insisted and taught that their error was “a new way”, they were put outside of the communion of the Church in order to secure their return to fidelity and to protect the faithful from their error.

What happened in Durham, New Hampshire years ago was not “new” at all. It was quite old. A member of the Clergy of a Christian Church broke his vows, divorced his wife, abandoned his family, took up with a male paramour and, then rejected the historic, clear teaching of Christianity. He also propelled a growing schism in the Episcopal Church forward.

Sadly, rather than being called to repentance, he was presented for consecration as a Bishop. That is what was new. Now Gene Robinson wants to be a “June Bride.”

How will what is left of the Episcopal Church in America deal with this turn of events?

Stay tuned.


TOPICS: Mainline Protestant; Moral Issues; Religion & Culture; Theology
KEYWORDS: anglican; ecusa; episcopal; homosexualagenda; homosexualbishop; sin
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To: Sons of Union Vets

: )


41 posted on 12/11/2007 11:27:53 AM PST by Greg F (Duncan Hunter is a good man.)
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To: blue-duncan
With the Dennis Canon, it just makes it easy for a court to say that a parish has acquiesced in the express trust since it did not protest or withdraw back in 1979 when it went into effect.

The effect of the Dennis Canon, in 'neutral principles' states, will be determined by looking at the real estate, and to a lesser extent, the trust laws of the state. In many places, the Dennis Canon isn't going to be enough to have created a binding trust. In other states, even if a trust was created, it can be revoked by the settlor of the trust.

This is really a very interesting area of the law.

In the PCUSA, an interesting situation was created in the Eastern Oklahoma presbytery. Attempting to create a paper trail to support the PCUSA equivalent of the Dennis Canon, the presbytery filed affidavits in the real estate records of each county to cloud the title of the individual churches by claiming that a trust existed. (This apparently because they recognized that the real estate records would control.) The affidavit was filed almost 2 years ago; litigation is ongoing.

42 posted on 12/11/2007 11:36:07 AM PST by PAR35
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To: blue-duncan
The principal Bishop has said there will be no parish leaving the ECUSA for another Anglican province with its buildings or assets.

This sounds a lot like the kind of thinking that led to Fort Sumter being fired on.

43 posted on 12/11/2007 11:39:49 AM PST by murdoog
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To: xzins

I’ve been trying to figure out how that would work too. I wonder what a typical operating budget (utilities, staff, ministries’ budgets, etc) vs the cost of the building and vs parishoners’ donations is. I think the trick would be to use the equity in the building to fund those normal costs while putting the normal donations into an account the diocese does not technically own. After all, that mostly comes in as cash, so is that legally the property of the diocese?


44 posted on 12/11/2007 4:06:25 PM PST by j_hig
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To: NYer
Is it okay for me to say, "I told them so ..."

We're talking about an ecclesial assembly that put up with theological outrage after theological outrage from at least the time of Bishop Pike in the 50's through the attempted consecration of Vicky Gene. (It's my pet theory that what greased the slides into destruction was the Lambeth conference on the '30's which approved artificial birth control.)

But by the '70's political cynicism was pretty much in control of the Episcopal Church. It is NOT, I think, absurd on its face, to believe that God could make His will known to people who truly sought it in humility and sincerity, and that a representative polity might be the means of expression of that will.

But soon after I came to Virginia in 1982, it was clear that diocesan councils were run with contempt for discourse and with an arrogant conviction that God's will was known by the liberals who were called to do whatever was required to inflict that will on the Diocese and the church at large.

As ONE example of the depths to which discourse and discernment had sunk, the following argument was seriously advanced at one council:

The Episcopal church should make divorce and remarriage matters of little importance. After all, during the time when the old thinking was adopted (you know, that pesky life-long union stuff) people didn't live as long as they do know and women, especially were liable to die in child birth. So because of the shorter life expectancy, it was less of a hardship to stay married to one and only one person. But medical advances have made life-long marriages last unbearably long, so we should lighten up a little.
I'm serious. This argument was seriously advanced -- and nobody laughed! Because we now live with the dreadful possibility that our wives may survive child-birth or our husbands will not die in agony after an injury sustained in farming or labor or warfare, we have a burden which previous ages could not imagine - namely, our spouses refuse to die when we're tired of them! -- how SELFish!

Consequently, the merciful thing to do is to make it easier for us, all of us, clergy and lay (no pun intended) alike, to shed those inconveniently vital people we married when they were young and attractive and find ourselves new squeezes. THAT is the the way to live the Christ-like life!

The hands are the hands of a church, but the voice is the voice of the devil.

45 posted on 12/11/2007 4:35:10 PM PST by Mad Dawg (Oh Mary, conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee.)
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To: j_hig; blue-duncan

All of the accounts of the church fall under the trust clause and belong to the denomination if it goes to court.

It is not possible to hide funds. A building fund will be taken from you.

It’s best to be very above board and acquire new facilities and new debt while selling old facilities/property.


46 posted on 12/11/2007 5:15:18 PM PST by xzins (Retired Army Chaplain! True Supporters of Our Troops Support the Necessity of their Sacrifice!)
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To: NYer; ahadams2; MBWilliams; showme_the_Glory; blue-duncan; brothers4thID; sionnsar; ...
Thanks to NYer for the ping.

Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting Traditional Anglican ping, continued in memory of its founder Arlin Adams.

FReepmail Huber or sionnsar if you want on or off this moderately high-volume ping list (sometimes 3-9 pings/day).
This list is pinged by Huber and sionnsar.

Resource for Traditional Anglicans: http://trad-anglican.faithweb.com
Humor: The Anglican Blue

Speak the truth in love. Eph 4:15

47 posted on 12/11/2007 5:24:09 PM PST by Huber (And the light shineth in darkness; and the darkness comprehended it not. - John 1:5)
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To: NYer
In a very strange irony, on the day that this "June bride" article appears the Episcopal Church/Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (Lutheran Book of Worship) Daily Lectionary has this passage from Amos as the First Reading:

www.missionstclare.com/lesson_matrix/advent_yr2/tue_a2a.html

Amos 7:10-17 (NRSV)

10 Then Amaziah, the priest of Bethel, sent to King Jeroboam of Israel, saying, "Amos has conspired against you in the very center of the house of Israel; the land is not able to bear all his words. 11For thus Amos has said, 'Jeroboam shall die by the sword, and Israel must go into exile away from his land.'" 12And Amaziah said to Amos, "O seer, go, flee away to the land of Judah, earn your bread there, and prophesy there; 13but never again prophesy at Bethel, for it is the king's sanctuary, and it is a temple of the kingdom." 14Then Amos answered Amaziah, "I am no prophet, nor a prophet's son; but I am a herdsman, and a dresser of sycamore trees, 15and the LORD took me from following the flock, and the LORD said to me, 'Go, prophesy to my people Israel.' 16"Now therefore hear the word of the LORD. You say, 'Do not prophesy against Israel, and do not preach against the house of Isaac." 17Therefore thus says the LORD: 'Your wife shall become a prostitute in the city, and your sons and your daughters shall fall by the sword, and your land shall be parceled out by line; you yourself shall die in an unclean land, and Israel shall surely go into exile away from its land.'"

The Word of the Lord.

Thanks be to God.

48 posted on 12/11/2007 5:44:25 PM PST by lightman (The Office of the Keys should be exercised as some ministry needs to be Exorcised.)
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To: NYer

Looks like Vicky Gene needs to go back into another alcohol rehab tank.


49 posted on 12/11/2007 5:48:30 PM PST by xJones
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To: xzins

Yes, and for the priests and bishops who have served for years to be able to retain their pensions.

I understand the building and the salaries for the staff of the TEC and the presiding bishop are endowed.

Endowment is an awful thing. It’s like giving a ball player a guaranteed contract.


50 posted on 12/11/2007 5:50:03 PM PST by altura (Go, Fred!)
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To: NYer
Who is going to excommunicate him? The archbishopress Schori loves Vicki Gene and all he stands for.

I have been following the happenings in ECUSA with interest because I was raised in the Episcopal church, my parents were very active in the church. Spong was rector of our parish at one time. By that time I had started attending Mass at the Catholic Church and there was no looking back.

51 posted on 12/11/2007 6:44:16 PM PST by k omalley (Caro Enim Mea, Vere est Cibus, et Sanguis Meus, Vere est Potus)
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To: blue-duncan
The principal Bishop has said there will be no parish leaving the ECUSA for another Anglican province with its buildings or assets. She would rather see them turned into strip joints than continuing as Anglican ministries outside of the authority of the apostate ECUSA.

We left and kept the property (St. Clement's El Paso), thanks to our Bishop, Jeffery Steenson who promptly left for the Catholic Church.

52 posted on 12/11/2007 9:39:38 PM PST by neodad (Did you see me lay down the law? I'm the law giver!)
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To: NYer
Robinson proclaims to the world not only that God has changed His mind, but further, that so should the Christian Church.

The activist Robinson, a false messenger must know full well that God is constant, One whose 'mind' never changes.

53 posted on 12/12/2007 7:08:39 AM PST by yoe ( NO THIRD TERM FOR THE CLINTON'S!!!)
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To: neodad

Sooo, you people are responsible for the awakening of the wicked witch of TEC to the escaping of the “prisoners of hope”. Well, now that the forces of darkness are on the move, the rest of the “prisoners” must fight tooth and nail for their freedom.


54 posted on 12/12/2007 8:05:01 AM PST by blue-duncan
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To: NYer

I think this is less about homosexuality and more about obtaining access to assets. Those who leave an organization leave control of the assets to those who remain.


55 posted on 12/12/2007 5:28:38 PM PST by RKBA Democrat (Lord Jesus Christ, Son of God, have mercy on me, a sinner!)
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To: blue-duncan

“The principal Bishop has said there will be no parish leaving the ECUSA for another Anglican province with its buildings or assets.”

Now we get to the nut of the matter.


56 posted on 12/12/2007 5:31:48 PM PST by RKBA Democrat (Lord Jesus Christ, Son of God, have mercy on me, a sinner!)
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To: RKBA Democrat

“Now we get to the nut of the matter.”

I’m not sure where you are going with this. It is TEC who has left the Anglican Communion, not the orthodox churches. When churches are consecrated under the protocol of the Book of Common Prayer, they are consecrated to TEC, but to the ministry of the gospel. The Preamble to the constitution affirms that TEC will uphold and propagate the historic faith and polity of the Anglican Communion. Congregations of the churches that were established prior to 1977 built churches and established endowments, not for TEC, but for the ministry of the gospel. When a church leaves because TEC has broken trust with the churches it should be disqualified from making any claim to any assets given by people who have relied on the consecration and the affirmation in the Preamble.

The churches who are fighting for the assets are keeping faith with those who gave for the ministry of the gospel. Many of them would give up any rights to buildings since buildings are no the ministry; but they are obliged to fight to keep faith.


57 posted on 12/12/2007 5:46:59 PM PST by blue-duncan
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To: NYer

Excellent article! I appreciate too, that though this man is a Roman Catholic, he used the word “Christian” throughout, and avoided any kind of Protestant bashing.

Gene Robinson, and his kindred, are a great and terrible shame to all Christians everywhere.


58 posted on 12/12/2007 9:39:36 PM PST by AnalogReigns
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To: xzins

The presiding bishoprix, Katherine Schori, has actually commanded bishops that they cannot sell any property to any departing ex-Episcopal (now Anglican) groups. And her $540/hr. attorney is suing every single congregation who leaves.

I’d like to see a civil rights lawsuit go forward in this, as one is not allowed to discriminate on the basis of religion when it comes to selling real estate...


59 posted on 12/12/2007 9:44:52 PM PST by AnalogReigns
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