In this corner is Ruth Gledhill in the London Times:
A conservative province in the Anglican church faces “punishment” this week for offering a safe haven to conservatives.
Senior bishops and laity meeting in London are to consider suspending the Anglican church in South America for taking rebel US dioceses under its wing.
The move will bring the Anglican Communion closer to a formal split. Early next month, rebel conservatives are expected to finalise plans for a new Anglican province in the US, to sit as a parallel jurisdiction alongside the existing Episcopal Church.
Unless this new province is recognised as part of the Anglican family by the Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr Rowan Williams and the other 38 primates, it will in effect become a new Anglican church.
In a further indication that the liberals are winning the Anglican wars, The Episcopal Church of the US, which was suspended at a previous meeting, is expected to be welcomed back into the fold after sticking by its pledge not to consecrate any more gay bishops
And in this corner is Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefforts-Schori at Episcopal Life:
Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori was among those attending the JSC meeting, which was held behind closed doors at the Anglican Communion Office and Lambeth Palace in London. She noted that a November 26 report in The Times of London newspaper, that suggested the JSC had discussed plans to discipline the Anglican Province of the Southern Cone for its recent incursions into other provinces, was untrue. "The subject has not come up," she told Episcopal News Service.
And the good news:
Anglican Communion provinces have until the end of March 2009 to respond to the St. Andrew's Draft. The Covenant Design Group will next meet in London in April 2009 and is expected to issue another draft which will be reviewed by the ACC during its May meeting. The ACC could decide to release that version to the provinces for their adoption.
Jefferts Schori told a recent meeting of the Episcopal Church's Executive Council that if the ACC decides to do so, she will "strongly discourage" any effort to bring that request to the 76th General Convention in July.
"My sense is that the time is far too short before our General Convention for us to have a thorough discussion of it as a church," Jefferts Schori told the Executive Council on October 21.
I said that I'd believe it when it happened that the senior bishops would discipline "the Anglican church in South America for taking rebel US dioceses under its wing". Is it possible that it will not happen? Was Ruth wrong? Someone needs to explain to Ruth the difference between a province and a church.
Wednesday, November 26, 2008
"Seeking Sanctuary"
Several New Orleans Catholic churches celebrate their last mass before being closed by the Archdiocese on Sunday. Dina Zelden weeps as she holds her son William during the final Mass at St. Henry's Church.
From Bruce Nolan Times-Picayune:
I have a great love for old churches, perhaps too much love for them, for they are just buildings, and I like to see them used for their original purpose. However, I realize that's not always possible.
The Times-Picayune is fortunate to have Bruce Nolan, an excellent religion reporter, who is diligent in his background research and, unlike many in the media, still does nuance, which has mostly gone out of favor.
From Bruce Nolan Times-Picayune:
A month after parishioners in two Uptown Catholic parishes seized their churches to forestall their closure, their occupations have settled into steady, volunteer-organized rhythms of care and vigilance that appear to have kept both buildings occupied without a break.Those numbers would certainly make for a viable parish in the Episcopal Church, but with their priest shortage, I presume that the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of New Orleans has trouble staffing the churches, so they decided to combine three parishes into one.
After four weeks, parishioners and sympathizers still sit quietly in around-the-clock shifts at St. Henry Catholic Church, and less than a mile away, at Our Lady of Good Counsel.
It is a stalemate of sorts: Parishioners have vowed to occupy both churches until they can appeal their fate to whomever succeeds Archbishop Alfred Hughes. He closed both parishes Oct. 26 as part of a major reorganization of Catholic worship after Hurricane Katrina.
....
At both churches, up to 100 parishioners still gather each Sunday to say the rosary together without benefit of a priest. At St. Henry's last week most, but not all, said they attended Mass somewhere else in addition to coming to church there.
Together again, parishioners gather around the Sunday comforts of coffee and doughnuts. They greet and encourage each other. Their lay leaders brief them on organizational details.
....
At St. Henry, a 152-year-old parish of about 325 families, a core group of church-sitters numbers 80 or more, including some who volunteer several times a week to sit overnight, or through four-hour daytime shifts, said Ann Farmer, one of two volunteer coordinators.
At Good Counsel, parishioner Mary Alice Sirkis, whose grandparents were parishioners, and whose grandfather helped build either the church or the accompanying school, said that parish, with about 400 families, has 70 volunteers so far.
I have a great love for old churches, perhaps too much love for them, for they are just buildings, and I like to see them used for their original purpose. However, I realize that's not always possible.
In the solitude, some say history, legacy and memory bear down on them. "I find when I'm in church, I don't feel I'm alone," Sirkis said. "I'm with my grandmother again."I offer my prayers and support that the parishioners and the archdiocese may come to a peaceful agreement on the future of the two parishes.
....
At St. Henry, Cynthia Robidoux lays her air mattress in front of a side altar honoring the mother of Christ.
"The Mary Suite, she calls it," said Hagardorn, her husband.
....
The archdiocese's position is that the parishes are closed; priests of the archdiocese are not permitted to minister in those churches. Instead, parishioners of both communities are encouraged to join and help establish a new Catholic community called Good Shepherd Parish at nearby St. Stephen's Church.
The Times-Picayune is fortunate to have Bruce Nolan, an excellent religion reporter, who is diligent in his background research and, unlike many in the media, still does nuance, which has mostly gone out of favor.
Tuesday, November 25, 2008
Other Names Meme
1. WITNESS PROTECTION NAME: (mother’s & father’s middle names): Anne Joseph
2. NASCAR NAME: (first name of your mother’s dad, father’s dad): Lawrence René
3. STAR WARS NAME: (the first 2 letters of your last name, first 4 letters of your first name): Bujune
4. DETECTIVE NAME: (favorite color, favorite animal): Blue Cat
5. SOAP OPERA NAME: (middle name, city where you live): Florence Thibodaux
6. SUPERHERO NAME: (2nd favorite color, favorite alcoholic drink, optionally add “THE” to the beginning): The Green Wine (Yuk!)
7. FLY NAME: (first 2 letters of 1st name, last 2 letters of your last name): Juer
8. GANGSTA NAME: (favorite ice cream flavor, favorite cookie): Pecan Praline Snackwell
9. ROCK STAR NAME: (current pet’s name, current street name): Diana Rienzi
10. PORN NAME: (1st pet, street you grew up on): Ginger Laharpe
The Gansta name is really lame. The porn name is the best. I like the rock star name, too.
H/T to Fran.
2. NASCAR NAME: (first name of your mother’s dad, father’s dad): Lawrence René
3. STAR WARS NAME: (the first 2 letters of your last name, first 4 letters of your first name): Bujune
4. DETECTIVE NAME: (favorite color, favorite animal): Blue Cat
5. SOAP OPERA NAME: (middle name, city where you live): Florence Thibodaux
6. SUPERHERO NAME: (2nd favorite color, favorite alcoholic drink, optionally add “THE” to the beginning): The Green Wine (Yuk!)
7. FLY NAME: (first 2 letters of 1st name, last 2 letters of your last name): Juer
8. GANGSTA NAME: (favorite ice cream flavor, favorite cookie): Pecan Praline Snackwell
9. ROCK STAR NAME: (current pet’s name, current street name): Diana Rienzi
10. PORN NAME: (1st pet, street you grew up on): Ginger Laharpe
The Gansta name is really lame. The porn name is the best. I like the rock star name, too.
H/T to Fran.
Lieberman Sees The Light
From Yahoo News:
HARTFORD, Conn. – Connecticut Sen. Joe Lieberman took another step Tuesday toward mending his relationship with Democrats, saying that Barack Obama's actions since winning the presidency have been "just about perfect."
"Everything that President-elect Obama has done since election night has been just about perfect, both in terms of a tone and also in terms of the strength of the names that have either been announced or are being discussed to fill his administration," Lieberman said during a visit to Hartford.
Whoops! Obama actions are "just about perfect" now, and yet Joe spent much of the campaign trashing him. Well then, Joe made a grave miscalculation. You might even call it a huge mistake. Or was he in a fog? Whatever. He's seen the light now.
Lieberman said he believes the rift between himself and the party stemmed mainly from his support of President Bush's policy in Iraq and will close as that becomes less of an issue.
Sure, Joe. That's all it is. Your ugly words about Obama have nothing to do with the ill will that you experience now. You may be right about the majority of your Democratic colleagues in the Senate, but not for many of us outside of the Senate. We think what you did was shameful. And now we're to believe you when you say that Obama's actions since the election which, by the way, he won, despite your claims that he was not up to the job, are "just about perfect". No, Joe. I don't think so.
H/T to Jane R.
HARTFORD, Conn. – Connecticut Sen. Joe Lieberman took another step Tuesday toward mending his relationship with Democrats, saying that Barack Obama's actions since winning the presidency have been "just about perfect."
"Everything that President-elect Obama has done since election night has been just about perfect, both in terms of a tone and also in terms of the strength of the names that have either been announced or are being discussed to fill his administration," Lieberman said during a visit to Hartford.
Whoops! Obama actions are "just about perfect" now, and yet Joe spent much of the campaign trashing him. Well then, Joe made a grave miscalculation. You might even call it a huge mistake. Or was he in a fog? Whatever. He's seen the light now.
Lieberman said he believes the rift between himself and the party stemmed mainly from his support of President Bush's policy in Iraq and will close as that becomes less of an issue.
Sure, Joe. That's all it is. Your ugly words about Obama have nothing to do with the ill will that you experience now. You may be right about the majority of your Democratic colleagues in the Senate, but not for many of us outside of the Senate. We think what you did was shameful. And now we're to believe you when you say that Obama's actions since the election which, by the way, he won, despite your claims that he was not up to the job, are "just about perfect". No, Joe. I don't think so.
H/T to Jane R.
Into The Belly Of The Walmart Beast
For the sake of a $2.00 curtain rod for my granddaughter's bedroom window, I went to Walmart. Grandpère, the Walmart shopper in the family, bought the wrong size rod, so I went to change it and get the right size. I went to Customer Service where I felt great satisfaction in getting $3.70 back from Walmart.
I found the right size rod, picked up a bottle of cheap make-up, which seems to be the only brand to which I am not allergic, and headed to checkout. I tried the garden section, where, if the gods smile on me, the line is not too long. Today, the gods were angry, and it was long. I went to the regular checkout, stood in one line for a few minutes, went to another line, saw that it was self-checkout, which never works for me, and that one woman had a full to overflowing buggy, returned to the garden section and waited with my two items. The gentleman in front of me, with a full buggy, offered to let me go ahead of him - an angel in disguise, surely. I check out, and I'm outta there.
All the while I'm waiting, I'm in a state of near panic, debating with myself whether I will put the two items on a shelf and get the hell out of there or wait it out. What a terrible place.
UPDATE: Thanks to David G. for the picture. David, this is a keeper, because I write a post nearly every time I go to Walmart, and I'm sure that I will use it again.
Miami Judge Rules Ban On Gay Adoption Unconstitutional
From U. S. News:
A 1977 Florida state law that bans gay individuals from adopting has received its biggest challenge thus far: Foster father Frank Martin Gill won his suit to adopt two brothers he has been fostering since 2004.
In her decision this morning, Miami Dade Circuit Judge Cindy Lederman ruled that there was no "rational basis" to prevent the children from being adopted. The case, which marks the first time that a gay adoption case has been taken before a trial court in Florida, seems likely to go before the Florida Supreme Court, which could overturn the ban.
Although several states have de facto bans against gay couples adopting and an unknown number of conservative-leaning courts make it virtually impossible, Florida is the only state that prohibits gay individuals from adopting. But it allows them to be foster parents. That means that when Gill wanted to adopt the two boys he'd fostered for four years, ages 4 and 8, he couldn't, leaving the brothers as official wards of the state.
This is excellent news. Of course, there will be appeals, and we don't know what the result will be in the end, but for now we can rejoice with Frank Gill and the boys.
Here's the article on the clash of the experts during the trial from the Miami Herald.
A 1977 Florida state law that bans gay individuals from adopting has received its biggest challenge thus far: Foster father Frank Martin Gill won his suit to adopt two brothers he has been fostering since 2004.
In her decision this morning, Miami Dade Circuit Judge Cindy Lederman ruled that there was no "rational basis" to prevent the children from being adopted. The case, which marks the first time that a gay adoption case has been taken before a trial court in Florida, seems likely to go before the Florida Supreme Court, which could overturn the ban.
Although several states have de facto bans against gay couples adopting and an unknown number of conservative-leaning courts make it virtually impossible, Florida is the only state that prohibits gay individuals from adopting. But it allows them to be foster parents. That means that when Gill wanted to adopt the two boys he'd fostered for four years, ages 4 and 8, he couldn't, leaving the brothers as official wards of the state.
This is excellent news. Of course, there will be appeals, and we don't know what the result will be in the end, but for now we can rejoice with Frank Gill and the boys.
Here's the article on the clash of the experts during the trial from the Miami Herald.
When Mary Clara Gets Fired Up
In the comments to this post:
Mary Clara said...
I'm with JohnieB: I'm waiting for the war crimes trials and the treason trials and the chance to see the Bushies led away in orange jumpsuits and leg irons. Of course, I also think people who voted for Bush and Cheney (esp. in 2004, when the evidence was in)should have to pay a penalty too. Maybe they could be required to subsidize the care and support of one injured US veteran of the war for the rest of his life, or pay reparations and support to an Iraqi family displaced, traumatized and impoverished by the bloody war, or spend six months in NOLA rebuilding ruined houses.
I think Grandpere may be right. Obama didn't win by a landslide, and in fact didn't even get a majority of white votes (even here in heavily Democratic Maryland, which really shocked me). Yet Andrew Kohut reported a week or so ago that according to his polling, about two-thirds of the population are now optimistic that Obama will be able to handle the problems ahead and think that things will get better! I think that's amazing.
I think he is going to govern from the center and pull in everybody who can help come up with solutions. The situation is so drastic that it provides an opportunity to get out of fixed patterns of thinking and ideologies that have been blinding people to what is really going on. The people he appointed today as his economic advisers don't seem to be ideologues; they are just very smart and very seasoned people, with a remarkable range of experience to bring to their task. It will be difficult to adjust to having people of that sort running the government, just as it is a shock to have a President (-elect) who can speak in complete, grammatical sentences and complete a thought, even when responding to questions at a press conference.
People are going to get behind the new President (even before he is sworn in) because they know their own livelihoods and future financial security may depend upon his being able to lead us out of this mess. Even the officials of the outgoing maladministration know that their own asses are on the line. Forget about a 'legacy' (it's way too late for that), it's about whether their own stock holdings and other assets are going to become worthless. The good thing about this is that the right-wing operatives who dogged the Clintons, and who would surely like to bring Obama down with their slime machine, are not likely to succeed. People are going to have other things on their minds besides whatever crap the neocons can invent or insinuate about him.
And we all said, "Amen".
Mary Clara said...
I'm with JohnieB: I'm waiting for the war crimes trials and the treason trials and the chance to see the Bushies led away in orange jumpsuits and leg irons. Of course, I also think people who voted for Bush and Cheney (esp. in 2004, when the evidence was in)should have to pay a penalty too. Maybe they could be required to subsidize the care and support of one injured US veteran of the war for the rest of his life, or pay reparations and support to an Iraqi family displaced, traumatized and impoverished by the bloody war, or spend six months in NOLA rebuilding ruined houses.
I think Grandpere may be right. Obama didn't win by a landslide, and in fact didn't even get a majority of white votes (even here in heavily Democratic Maryland, which really shocked me). Yet Andrew Kohut reported a week or so ago that according to his polling, about two-thirds of the population are now optimistic that Obama will be able to handle the problems ahead and think that things will get better! I think that's amazing.
I think he is going to govern from the center and pull in everybody who can help come up with solutions. The situation is so drastic that it provides an opportunity to get out of fixed patterns of thinking and ideologies that have been blinding people to what is really going on. The people he appointed today as his economic advisers don't seem to be ideologues; they are just very smart and very seasoned people, with a remarkable range of experience to bring to their task. It will be difficult to adjust to having people of that sort running the government, just as it is a shock to have a President (-elect) who can speak in complete, grammatical sentences and complete a thought, even when responding to questions at a press conference.
People are going to get behind the new President (even before he is sworn in) because they know their own livelihoods and future financial security may depend upon his being able to lead us out of this mess. Even the officials of the outgoing maladministration know that their own asses are on the line. Forget about a 'legacy' (it's way too late for that), it's about whether their own stock holdings and other assets are going to become worthless. The good thing about this is that the right-wing operatives who dogged the Clintons, and who would surely like to bring Obama down with their slime machine, are not likely to succeed. People are going to have other things on their minds besides whatever crap the neocons can invent or insinuate about him.
And we all said, "Amen".
Monday, November 24, 2008
Our Fall Colors Arrive!
I know. I know. We're way behind everyone else. Some years, we don't have fall colors at all. These are crepe myrtle trees, and Grandpère and I agree that we have never seen our crepe myrtles this colorful, except when they were in bloom, in the 26 years we have lived in our house. This is an event, an alignment of the moon and the stars or, whatever. We don't know what caused this to happen.
That's Tara across the street, or, if you prefer, Barbie's House of Dreams, as the young girls called the place. It's the grandest house on the block. You don't get the full effect with the trees in the way.
The leaves of the tree in the back yard turned yellow, and it is as nothing compared to the brilliance of the colors in the front yard.
For your viewing pleasure.
A Conversation - Sort Of
Grandpère to me: "I think some of the people who were most vocal against Obama are beginning to reconsider."
Me to Grandpère in a rather loud voice: "Yes! The assholes who were calling Obama a Muslim and a socialist, and saying that Al Sharpton would be in the Cabinet are beginning to reconsider!"
Doesn't matter that we told them so. Their eyes are opened! They see the light! All is now right with the world.
That's what I said, uncensored, without asterisks, so that's how I wrote it. Sorry if I offend anyone.
Me to Grandpère in a rather loud voice: "Yes! The assholes who were calling Obama a Muslim and a socialist, and saying that Al Sharpton would be in the Cabinet are beginning to reconsider!"
Doesn't matter that we told them so. Their eyes are opened! They see the light! All is now right with the world.
That's what I said, uncensored, without asterisks, so that's how I wrote it. Sorry if I offend anyone.
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