Sunday, June 20, 2010

STORY OF THE DAY

A lot of people think he's kind of
formless, but it's only because they keep
hoping he'll look like something they
recognize before they get too anxious



From StoryPeople.

Saturday, June 19, 2010

A GOOD WORD FROM IRELAND

From the Irish Times

THE CATHOLIC Bishops have come out strongly against the civil partnership legislation currently before the Dáil.

In a statement at the conclusion of their summer meeting in Maynooth last night, they appealed to members of the Oireachtas to read their Why Marriage Matters document, published last March.

They asked “in particular’’ that politicians “consider in conscience” a quoted excerpt from that document before voting on the Bill.”

The relevant excerpt reads: “Oireachtas Éireann is about to pass legislation that seeks to give same-sex relationships a standing which will be as similar as possible to marriage.
....

“This is not compatible with seeing the family based on marriage as the necessary basis of the social order and as indispensable to the welfare of the Nation and State. Nor does it ‘guard with special care the institution of Marriage, on which the Family is founded.’ (Art 41.3.1, Bunreacht na hÉireann)”

The Roman Catholic bishops are once again attempting to influence legislation granting rights to same-sex partners, this time in the the Irish Dáil, in the name of protecting the institution of marriage.

Stephen Neill, a priest in the Church of Ireland, who blogs at Paddy Anglican says:

As a married man and a father I really don’t understand this argument. I don’t see the prospect of same sex couples being afforded the right to register their partnerships and seek legal protection for their rights therein as any threat to my marriage! Without getting into the minutiae of biblical interpretation it does seem to paint God into a very narrow corner with little room left for the generosity of Grace. On the contrary the Bill does not provide legal recognition for same-sex couples who are co-parenting children. Children in these families are seriously disadvantaged by being ignored in the proposed legislation.

I recall the same argument regarding the threat of same sex unions to Christian marriage being used when my good friend Bishop Gene Robinson (an openly gay man in a long term monogamous relationship) was consecrated Bishop of New Hampshire, and he quite validly pointed out that Brittney Spears heterosexual behaviour was far more undermining of the institution of marriage than his own exclusive and committed same sex relationship with his partner of many years.

Speaking from the vantage point of of 49 years in an opposite-sex marriage, in no way do I see my marriage threatened by same-sex partnerships or by same-sex marriage. It seems to me that all of society benefits when two people of whatever sex wish to pledge to a loving, faithful relationship. Would that those in heterosexual relationships set a better example in fidelity.

Backtracking a bit, the bishops say:

“The Civil Partnership Bill will not permit adoption by same-sex couples. In most other respects, including tax and social welfare purposes, same-sex civil partnerships will be regarded as being equal to marriage.

To which Stephen responds:

The bishops and others will argue ‘but what about same sex parents’?
Nobody answers this question better than Spencer Burke, a contemporary American theologian who in his ‘A heretics guide to eternity’ comments: ‘If you’re a child, is it better to live in a home with a single dad-or even two dads-who really love you than with a mum and a dad who abuse you? Really, what’s more important: that your family “fits” or that it functions?’

Spencer Burke and Stephen are right, of course.

A PRACTICAL LESSON FROM THE BIBLE

A teenage boy had just passed his driving test and inquired of his father as to when they could discuss his use of the car.

His father said he'd make a deal with his son: 'You bring your grades up from a C to a B average, study your Bible a little, and get your hair cut. Then we'll talk about the car.'

The boy thought about that for a moment, decided he'd settle for the offer, and they agreed on it.

After about six weeks his father said, 'Son, you've brought your grades up and I've observed that you have been studying your Bible, but I'm disappointed you haven't had your hair cut.

The boy said, 'You know, Dad, I've been thinking about that, and I've noticed in my studies of the Bible that Samson had long hair, John the Baptist had long hair, Moses had long hair...and there's even strong evidence that Jesus had long hair.'

To this his father replied, 'Did you also notice they walked everywhere they went?'

Doug is at it again. Don't blame me.

Friday, June 18, 2010

CANON KEARON MEETS THE EPISCOPAL CHURCH EXECUTIVE COUNCIL

Mary Frances Schjonberg reports at Episcopal Life Online on Canon Kenneth Kearon's statement and responses to questions submitted by members of the Episcopal Church Executive Council at their meeting in Maryland.

Kearon claimed that the communion's ecumenical dialogues "are at the point of collapse" and said that the last meeting of the Standing Committee of the Anglican Communion, of which Jefferts Schori is an elected member, "was probably the worst meeting I have experienced."

"The viability of our meetings are at stake," he added.

Is it the fault of the Episcopal Church? Will the meetings spring back to life if Bishop Katharine removes herself from the Standing Committee, which I fervantly pray she will not, if she has been requested to do so?

At the beginning of the session with Kearon, Jefferts Schori asked the council to vote on his request that the session be closed to all but council members. His request was decisively rejected by a show of hands.

Excellent. A victory for transparency.

He [Kearon] then began by saying that the "problem of increased and growing diversity in the Anglican Communion has been an issue for many years" and added that by the 1990s leaders in the communion began to name "the diversity of opinions in the communion and diversity in general as a problem and sought some mechanisms to address it."

To embrace the "growing diversity" would be unthinkable, then?

Kearon said during his statement that Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams has limited authority beyond the ability to call meetings of certain communion bodies, make some appointments and "occasionally articulate the mind of the communion."

"Everywhere I go, everyone wants him to act as a sort of an Anglican pope as long as he does what [they] want him to do," Kearon added.

I imagine that the ABC as Anglican pope is the last thing many of us in TEC want to see, although there are exceptions.

During his remarks, Kearon also said that he has asked whether it "constitutes an intervention and is therefore a breach of the third moratoria" if a communion province has among its bishops one who is exercising ministry in another province without that province's permission.

"That question has not been addressed by any of the instruments of communion so I and the archbishop don't have guidance on that particular question," he said.

Later in the discussion, Hollingsworth said that he was puzzled about how the communion could declare a moratorium on interventions and then say it cannot determine what constitutes an intervention.

"I can pretty easily define what an intervention is," said Hollingsworth, in terms of a Southern Cone bishop who has established congregations in the Diocese of Ohio and exercise his episcopal ministry without Hollingsworth's permission.
(My emphasis)

If a bishop from the Southern Cone or any other province set up shop in a diocese of the Church of England without permission of the local bishop, would the Archbishop of Canterbury recognize the action as an intervention and a breach of the third moratorium?

Backing up a bit:

The secretary general's visit was initiated by member Bruce Garner of Atlanta, Georgia, who suggested to Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori that she invite Kearon, who was vacationing in North America, to the meeting.

Garner told ENS afterwards that he had "never witnessed so much obfuscation in such a short period of time" in his entire life.

"We were polite," he said, "but we asked him questions he could not or would not provide answers to."

The description brings to mind Tony Hayward, the CEO of BP, in his recent testimony during a Congressional hearing.

Nicholas Knisely at The Lead posted the entire report from the Executive Council meeting.

FROM BISHOP ANN TOTTENHAM

Mark Harris at Preludium quotes Bishop Ann Tottenham, retired Suffragan Bishop of Toronto who presently serves part-time as Assistant Bishop in the Diocese of Niagara:

For the record, I celebrated and preached at Southwark Cathedral on November 9, 2009 [sic - correct year is 2002] with the permission of the Powers-That-Be in the C.of E. in the presence of the Diocesan Bishop and fully vested including mitre. It was a public service to celebrate the 10th anniversary of the ordination of women to the priesthood in the C. of E. The only restriction place on me was that I was not to "perform an episcopal function". As I was not planning either a confirmation or an ordination this was not a big deal, though the whole process was aggravating. To my mind this makes the insult offered to the Presiding Bishop even more gratuitous. +Ann

So. Have the rules for women bishops wearing their symbols of office when preaching and presiding in the Church of England changed since 2009 2002? Otherwise, as Bishop Ann says in her comment, our Presiding Bishop was gratuitously (and quite rudely, in my opinion) singled out.

Thursday, June 17, 2010

"DAHLING...."


"Dahling, I love your gown but your purse is on fire."


Words supposedly spoken by Talluhah Bankhead, which are quoted in several different versions. Please don't quote the really naughty versions in the comments. You know who you are. Thanks. :-)


Stolen outright and without shame from John Chilton at The Lead, with the thought that if I'm going to steal, I will steal something valuable.

JUST A THOUGHT

Lambeth Palace are investigating the way the leader of The Episcopal Church was treated in Britain this week after Anglicans in the US have complained that she was forced to carry, rather than wear her mitre, at Southwark Cathedral.

From Ruth Gledhill in The Times.

So. Is Lambeth Palace investigating Lambeth Palace? Is Lambeth Palace investigating Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams?

I don't know how the chain of authority at Lambeth Palace works, but is it possible that the directives to Bishop Katharine denying her the use of the symbols of her office as Presiding Bishop of the Episcopal Church and demanding verification of her orders went out without the knowledge of the Archbishop of Canterbury? Just a thought from a former colonial (by heritage).

UPDATE: Or as Lisa at My Manner of Life puts it:

+Rowan (or someone higher than him at Lambeth Palace*) forbade +KJS to function or vest as a bishop, and that he (or someone higher than him at Lambeth Palace*) forbade her to wear the mitre that a bishop would generally wear.

EPISCOPAL DIOCESE OF ALBANY CONVENTION

Openly Episcopal in Albany reports on the diocesan convention in the diocese.

The Diocese of Albany, meeting over the weekend at Camp of the Woods in Speculator, endorsed the current draft of the proposed Anglican Covenant. The resolution was approved by a vote of 314 yeas to 76 nays.

Read the rest at the website, especially the comments.

MUDCRUTCH - "LOVER OF THE BAYOU"

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MUDCRUTCH - LOVER OF THE BAYOU LYRICS

The lyrics are rough, but what's happening down here and all along the Gulf Coast is rough, too.

Wednesday, June 16, 2010

WHAT ALL THE FUSS WAS ABOUT

 

Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori carrys her mitre as she processes in Southwark Cathedral

From Episcopal Life:

She did so in order to comply with a "statement" from Lambeth Palace, the London home of Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams, that said "that I was not to wear a mitre at Southwark Cathedral," Jefferts Schori told the Executive Council June 16 on the first day of its three-day meeting here.
....

In the week before her visit, the presiding bishop said, Lambeth pressured her office to provide evidence of her ordination to each order of ministry.

"This is apparently a requirement of one of their canons about the ministry of clergy from overseas," she said.

The presiding bishop said both the ordination and mitre issues put the Very Rev. Colin Slee, Southwark's dean, "in a very awkward position."

She called the requirements "nonsense" and said, "It is bizarre; it is beyond bizarre."

Yes indeedy.

Thanks to Ann for the photo.