Posted on 08/10/2003 10:34:43 AM PDT by altura
We had discussed posting what happened in our Episcopal churches this Sunday morning.
Im in the diocese let by Bishop Stanton, one of the 11 Bishops who walked out of the General Assembly in protest. He wrote a letter to all the parishioners to be read to each congregation by the Priest.
Our Priest did not want to read the letter and said so. However, she did because she had taken a vow to obey the Bishop. In itself the letter didnt say much other than expressing his deep concern for the direction of the Church and announcing the meeting on October 12th to which all of the Priests and other leaders of the diocese will be expected to attend.
He also mentioned the meeting called in England by the Archbishop of Canterbury.
Prior to her reading this letter, she preached on the lesson from Ephesians, which was read today, quoting the following:
Put away from you all bitterness and wrath and anger and wrangling and slander, together with all malice, and be kind to one another, tenderhearted, forgiving one another, as God in Christ has forgiven you.
She also suggested we e-mail Bishop Stanton with our opinions.
Does anyone else have an experience to share?
No one said there was. There is something inherently sinful about merely being human, you know. No human is sinless.
The qualifications for bishops are pretty clearly spelled out in the Bible, though, and one of them is being male.
I'm a woman and I do have a problem with female priests. Even with the concept, let alone the reality (which is, usually, that they're fuzzy-morality ultra-"caring" sometimes-sexually-ambiguous liberals).
"Therefore God gave them up in the lusts of their hearts to impurity, to the dishonoring of their bodies among themselves, because they exchanged the truth about God for a lie and worshiped and served the creature rather than the Creator, who is blessed for ever! Amen.
"For this reason God gave them up to dishonorable passions. Their women exchanged natural relations for unnatural, and the men likewise gave up natural relations with women and were consumed with passion for one another, men committing shameless acts with men and receiving in their own persons the due penalty for their error.
"And since they did not see fit to acknowledge God, God gave them up to a base mind and to improper conduct. They were filled with all manner of wickedness, evil [lengthy inventory of sins omitted here in the interest of brevity]. Though they know God's decree that those who do such things deserve to die, they not only do them but approve those who practice them."
Paul's Letter to the Romans, chapter 1, lines 22-32
57 A.D.
We had Ephesians today too. I think we all probably did. For some reason it made me so angry I almost didn't want to go up for communion. Then I actually started crying and all my energy went toward keeping it a quiet cry.
Bad timing for that particular lesson, I think. Or maybe I'm wrong. I don't know, someone on another thread said "unity is highly overrated sometimes" and I still think that's right.
There were fewer people than usual at nine o'clock. Probably due to the airconditioning system being out for the rest of the month (and it's a tropical swamp right now in NY).
Anyway, my aunt and uncle keep insisting that I shouldn't worry. They said our church hasn't sent a delegate to this convention since they voted to change the prayer books (we kept the old one), that they have no use for them, that we're big and rich enough as a parish to to just ignore them. I pointed out that our bishop (Mark Sisk) voted to confirm Robinson, and they insisted that didn't matter either because our church pretty much ignores Mark Sisk all the time. My uncle was a master of ceremonies at our church for the past twenty years, several services per week, and he's only seen Sisk there twice. The Bishop Vicar, Don Taylor, is the only one who visits with any frequency. He's a fairly conservative man from Jamaica.
I suppose I should feel better. They both assure me that nothing the convention ever decides will apply to my church, and that especially with our current rector, nothing will be done that isn't traditional. But I am still worried. My aunt and uncle left St. Bart's decades ago when it became too liberal for them to bear. It can happen anywhere.
The fruits of departure from the original order of things in the Episcopal Church since 1976 are bitter indeed.
Yep. Change one thing, and they will never quit working on you to change every other thing.
Since I dont ever want a female priest anyway, I'd say that was one change that definitely wasn't worth it.
I am sure that is the case here as well. Something I'm going to have to keep in mind over the next couple of months.
So in other words Scripture means whatever the Council of Bishops says it means this month, which is to say, it means nothing.
I dunno. I'm sitting here with my Norton edition of The Writings of St. Paul, and he seems to be pretty clear and to the point and not leave much room for ongoing re-interpretation. But then, I guess that depends on what the meaning of the word "is" is, doesn't it?
I was not originally opposed to the idea (when it happened I was a twenty-something woman just out of a very liberal university), but having seen it in practice I am now generally against it. The vast majority of the female priests that have come through our parish are priests for all the wrong reasons. Some have something to prove; some are neurotic and want to share their pain around; some want to remake the church in a politically liberal way; some are frankly short-hair-mean-lesbians who as far as I can see have only the destruction of the church and family in mind. Of all the 15 or so that have come through recently, ONLY ONE was a humble, thoughtful, scholarly, intelligent woman whose purpose was to preach the Gospel and preside at the Lord's Table. I don't like that percentage AT ALL.
That said, I don't think female priests are the issue right now.
And I think we can even leave aside (for the moment) the homosexual issue. What we have here is a man who engaged in an extramarital affair and left his wife and family (even WITH their supposed permission -- and what else can they say that won't stymie his political ambitions?) to live in sin with another. This is absolutely forbidden by Scripture and church teachings -- yet General Convention, in its lust to be "with it" and up to date, ignores this central fact.
The fact that this bishop has compared himself to Christ (twice!) and would rather rend his church asunder so that he can be elevated in his pride, condemns him out of hand.
I attended my parents' parish in another diocese today. A locum was standing in for the rector who is on vacation. He basically preached a "the church will survive this" sermon, recalling all the threatened schisms over the prayer book, ordination of women, the 1928 prayer book (in 1928), slavery, etc.
I pointed out (very courteously because I was a guest), that I hoped he was right (leaving unspoken that I feared he was wrong, but he got the message). But this is the first issue on which there is absolute and unmistakeable Scriptural warrant from multiple sources against it.
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