THE MCJ

Christian scholarship is the Church’s prodigious invention to defend itself against the Bible. - Søren Kierkegaard

ROBBIE DOES WASHINGTON

I avoid paying excessive attention here to the pseudo-Christian publicity whores who infest the Episcopal Church like flies at a church picnic.  It's bad enough that the regular media considers them genuine "Christian" voices and it's useless to argue with such people.  And I can only take charlatans like John Shelby Spong in very small doses.  But Gene Robinson's recent visit to Washington, DC illustrates why the Lambeth Commission report, due out in a week, is probably dead on arrival:

New Hampshire Bishop V. Gene Robinson, the Episcopal Church's first openly homosexual prelate, predicted yesterday that an upcoming report judging the effect that his consecration has had on the world's 70 million Anglicans would not lead to a split.

Our little brown brothers will realize what contemptible homophobic bigots they were, we'll forgive them and we'll all have a good laugh. 

"I think the communion will be a stronger place for having had this conversation," Bishop Robinson said during a visit to the downtown Episcopal Church of the Epiphany, which attracted 315 persons, three times the normal Sunday-morning attendance. "I think it will stay together."

And besides, my holy book says that you can't take back my pointy hat just because you don't like who I have sex with:

Two British newspapers, quoting anonymous sources, say a report to be released Oct. 18 in London will levy sanctions against the Episcopal Church for its actions.

But Bishop Robinson shrugged off the possibility, saying it is canonically impossible to undo his consecration and that the debate over his sexuality is a mere difference of opinion.

"I don't think this is all about the authority of Scripture," he said. "It's all on our interpretation of Scripture."

Actually, this dispute is between people who believe that words mean what they say and people who don't want to feel guilty about last Saturday night.  And Robbie knows what those words mean just as well as I do which is why he has to get people to stop reading their Bibles so damned much:

"We believe God didn't stop revealing God's self when the canon of Scripture was closed," he said. "We worship a living God, not one who checked out 2,000 years ago."  

Note to Chris's self.  If you ever hear the phrase "God's self" spoken in any church you happen to attend in the future and that utterance is not immediately followed by waves of hysterical laughter lasting several minutes, leave that church and never return to it. 

As for those of you who were counting on Christ's death on the Cross to get you into heaven and who had great peace in your lives because of it, Gene's got some bad news for you.  You'd best not count on eternal bliss because God can and does change His mind.  And Robbie should know, being one of the chosen people and all:

"Gay and lesbian people know what it's like to be slaves in Egypt," he said. "We know what it's like to hear of the promise of freedom in the Promised Land; we know how scary it is to step out and leave Egypt [by] leaving the closet; and we know what it's like to wander in the wilderness for 40 years and wonder why it's taking so long."

After all, it was Moses who recorded God's celebrated statement that "A man shall leave his father and his mother and cleave unto his wife and they shall be one flesh for a few years until the man decides he's a homosexual, "amicably" divorces his wife, with whom he's fathered two children, and moves in with another man."  And if you think Gene's deity hasn't got even more "revealing" to do once the sleeping together and adultery lobbies get their rhetorical acts together, you're sadly mistaken:

The 57-year-old bishop, who is divorced with two daughters and living with his male lover, said he does not teach celibacy to unmarried heterosexual or homosexual couples but rather "responsibility in relationships."

Acknowledging that his daughter, Jamie, had been living with her fiance before they were married, he said, "I can't remember the last couple I married who weren't living together."

We've been told that the Lambeth Commission isn't going to determine Anglican teaching on human sexuality(since the 1998 Lambeth Conference, which ECUSA has consistently ignored, should have taken care of that question) but how Anglican provinces that respect the Word of God and the teachings of the Anglican Communion can remain in communion with provinces that respect neither of those things.  And I can answer that question in two words. 

They can't.

Gene Robinson and I worship different gods.  My God is the God of the Bible, the Creator of the Universe and the Father of my Lord and Savior Jesus Christ, Whose death on the Cross is the only hope I have.  Robbie's deity is a weak and indecisive little thing who requires nothing from him, a sort of heavenly concierge at Gene's beck and call 24/7/365 and who will do or say whatever Robbie wants him to.

So I can have no association whatsoever, even on an entirely theoretical level, with Gene Robinson or anyone who agrees with him.  If the Lambeth Commission proposes anything which allows Robbie to keep his pointy hat, then Anglicanism will shatter beyond any possibility of repair.    

Posted on 10/11/2004 5:28:24 PM , 64 comments

Submitted by Jeffersonian at 10/11/2004 7:14:51 PM

Go interpret someone else's Scripture, Gene. Jack Derrida's dead.
Submitted by Jason Steffens at 10/11/2004 11:41:16 PM

Excellently stated. Keep standing on God's Word, as written and not how you would have it written. God bless.
Submitted by Ian at 10/12/2004 12:05:35 AM

Just curious Chris. Does "your God" accept remarriage at all?
Submitted by Sasha at 10/12/2004 12:34:11 AM

When one speaks of God-self and things where His Gender is obscured and/or denied - and that comes from a clergyman (or woman) - that's for me enough excuse from now on to have nothing to do with such a wretch!!! That's what I was introducted to 13 years ago (and that as green as grass facing one such lesbian man-hating, God-forsaking, God-forsaken "ministrix" who became my worst enemy ever when I dared query her about needing to change even the Lord's Prayer!!!!), and one sees what such "New-Age" thinking leads to!!!! Time not only to leave such "churches" but to excommunicate and anathematise such people (complete with the smashing of tapers)!!!!!

Next, to Ian's question (although I'm not Chris): I believe that God accepts remarriage after one's widowed. As to divorce, things don't look good given what Jesus said about "what God has joined, let no man rent asunder!"
Submitted by J. Scott at 10/12/2004 6:07:22 AM

he does not teach celibacy to unmarried heterosexual or homosexual couples but rather "responsibility in relationships"

Which, of course, the Queen Vic exemplifies perfectly and which has nothing whatsoever to do with sexual abstinence or activity.

What a colossal fraud!
Submitted by Another Paul at 10/12/2004 6:57:45 AM

Is VGR worth the Anglican Communion?
You would think that in order to make a drastic change in church doctrine the church would provide a stellar example, perhaps even a saint or near saint (to change 2000 years of doctrine). Come on, is this all it is? A august orator? No. A selfless, humble soul? No. Someone with penatrating insight on God's love? No. Does he touch the sick and heal them? No Is he a humble hermit, giving all he has to the poor and wears sack cloth? No. Why him? This is the cause for change? I am not convinced.

By the way, what is he doing down in Washington, DC...isnt he responsible for a flock up in New Hampshire?
Submitted by Jim the Fireman at 10/12/2004 8:27:38 AM

Reading the nit-witness of Robbie makes me wonder what exactly made folks think that he is qualified to hold bishop status. I'm now convinced more than ever that it was simply that he was the most convenient homosexual priest that was available. It certainly couldn't be his theological/biblical scholarship or people skills.
Submitted by Paul at 10/12/2004 8:36:49 AM

By the way, what is he doing down in Washington, DC...isnt he responsible for a flock up in New Hampshire?

Collecting an award from the Human Rights Campaign, a homosexual "rights" lobbying outfit. Curious behavior for someone who doesn't want to be the "gay bishop."
Submitted by Janjan at 10/12/2004 8:54:39 AM

I have a good friend, an Anglo-Catholic priest who tutored "mean Gene the bishop machine" in seminary and he told me,off the record, that he is such a lightweight, down right dumb, that he can't understand how he is qualified to be a bishop!
Submitted by Brother Quotidian at 10/12/2004 9:11:32 AM

Christopher,

I ask the following question(s) seeking information and explanation, not to challenge or argue. I really want to understand something I haven’t been able to decipher just yet.

You concluded, “So I can have no association whatsoever, even on an entirely theoretical level, with Gene Robinson or anyone who agrees with him. If the Lambeth Commission proposes anything which allows Robbie to keep his pointy hat, then Anglicanism will shatter beyond any possibility of repair.”

I, along with a great many Episcopalians, Anglicans, or whatever we’re supposed to be called, agree. What prompts my question is the next sentence, particularly the reference to Anglicanism. Perhaps you were just in the midst of a spasm of hyperbole; but, if so, others have expressed a similar notion with no thought of exaggeration, viz., that Anglicanism is a kind of thing that has as its necessary and sufficient ground the Archbishop of Canterbury in a fundamental allegiance to Christian orthodoxy.

I know the obvious historical reasons for this kind of idea. “Anglicanism” doesn’t hang out there in empty space, an abstraction floating free of historical particulars. One of the attractions of Anglican Christianity, when I was a far more disconnected-from-any-historical-expression of the Christian faith, was its tangible links with catholic (note the small “c”) Christianity. But, if institutional Anglicanism, in the person of the Archbishop of Canterbury and/or the Anglican Communion (a fairly recent institution, by the way) should fall into heterodoxy or heresy, would that mean the end of Anglicanism? Asked another way, do you think that orthodox Anglicanism requires an orthodox occupant of Lambeth Palace?

If so, your last sentence makes complete sense. And, certainly, an orthodox occupant of Lambeth Palace, and an orthodox local bishop are much, much to be preferred to the mess that orthodox Episcopalians are facing today. Admitted – the Continuum has had and still has its own spiritual aberrations, but it is an alternative that some cradle Episcopalians (you included?) seem to dismiss out of hand. I would like to understand better why this is so.
Submitted by John wilkins at 10/12/2004 9:40:04 AM

"Gene Robinson and I worship different gods." Actually, there is only one God.

"this dispute is between people who believe that words mean what they say and people who don't want to feel guilty about last Saturday night."

Actually, the issue is who gets to select what verses they choose to obey. Conservatives are concerned about being sex police. Liberals care about how the gospel can adequately respond to the gospel.
Submitted by Hunt-Banning Unitarian Liberals For Peace at 10/12/2004 9:43:50 AM

Hmm.. you surely can't really be suggesting that "Gene Robinson's God" is only ever a concierge - that Gene's never challenged by his discernment of what God wants. Likewise, you can't be suggesting that your own readings of Scripture are infallible and not even conceivably influenced by your own leanings, biases and sin.

But I know that you're not suggesting either of the above -I know that you're a conservative (fair enough: God needs you and loves you for it), and definitely not a dichotomising mote-plucking hypocrite.
Submitted by Janjan at 10/12/2004 11:34:13 AM

Oh I am SOoooOO Chastened by these two righteous Lefties! "how the gospel can adequetely respond to the gospel"....What exactly does that mean? Aren't *we* the ones who respond to the gospel? Or is this another form of mirror worship.

And as far as HBULfP is concerned,dichotomising mote-plucking hypocrite ....sarcastic name calling. That's really impressive. Having grown up in a very very left leaning household, I am very familiar with the kind of ad hominem name calling that passes for political and/or religious discussions in those circles.

Submitted by Janjan at 10/12/2004 11:36:09 AM

Actually, there is only one God.

Oh, and Wilkins? Thanks for sharing. How kind of you to enlighten us troglodites.
Submitted by anglicanxn at 10/12/2004 11:39:38 AM

JW -- Of course there is only one God. But that does not stop people from inventing false gods and worshipping them. Otherwise, why would the Lord have given two out of the Ten Commandments to restricting worship to him and him alone?

You close by saying, "Actually, the issue is who gets to select what verses they choose to obey. Conservatives are concerned about being sex police. Liberals care about how the gospel can adequately respond to the gospel." The issue is not about choosing what verses to obey; it is about being faithful to what Scripture actually says. Conservatives do not want to be "sex police," but they do know that sex can be used improperly and produce huge amounts of pain and dispair -- so conservatives want to uphold the Lord's teaching.

I have no idea of what you are trying to say in your last sentence.
Submitted by J. Scott at 10/12/2004 11:53:25 AM

Don't waste too much time responding to trolls liberals like John Wilkins. He rarely actually sets forth coherent arguments. He mostly takes ad hominem swipes at conservatives and generally misrepresents us with what he thinks we think.

He's usually wrong about how we think, but you can't tell him that.
Submitted by Hunt-Banning Unitarian Liberals for Peace at 10/12/2004 1:22:49 PM

Did you read the first paragraph of my comment as well as the second, Chris?

As for growing up in a left-wing household - what do you want, dude? A medal? We've all got backgrounds, for crying out loud.

Interesting that your reply to me shows the same sort of dichotomous thinking that your original post did. Gene and you are poles apart, naturellement... and because you grew up in a left-leaning household, you know what all left-leaning households are like.

I rejoice with you that you never argue ad hominem. I'm glad to be able to read Midwest Conservative Journal, a beacon of highminded, disinterested and yet wonderfully pastoral Christian thought. Allahu akbar, Chris-dude.
Submitted by bwk at 10/12/2004 1:30:34 PM

Excellent article Christopher !

Sasha wrote:
Time not only to leave such "churches" but to excommunicate and anathematise such people

How true, for if the church is silent and tolerates such false teaching, then their blood is also on the church. But if the church makes it clear their false teaching is not acceptable, then they may repent or not, but their guilt is only on themselves.
Submitted by Christopher Johnson at 10/12/2004 2:01:04 PM

Brother Quotidian,

I am, in fact, a cradle Episcopalian. Baptized in Billings Montana in 1955 and a member of the same Webster Groves, Missouri Episcopal parish from 1956 until August of last year. I cannot emphasize too strongly that I'm speaking entirely for myself here but I have no particular affection for Anglicanism qua Anglicanism. The connections of that church, however tenuous, to historic Christianity were never an attraction to me.

I don't think it's necessary for Anglicanism's future that a perfectly-orthodox-in-every-respect Christian occupy the See of Canterbury. Indeed, the witness of men like Peter Akinola, Henry Orombi, Bob Duncan and others testify to the vibrancy of Anglicanism worldwide. The liberals are navel-gazing; the conservatives are winning souls for the Lord. If Rowan Williams presided over a group of primates that consisted entirely or even mostly of men like these, Anglicanism's future would be incredibly bright.

The problem comes in when churches like ECUSA and New Westminster are allowed to treat Lambeth Conference resolutions like so much toilet paper. If churches like these are allowed to remain, even in the most limited, suspended or theoretical way, part of the Anglican world, then Anglican claims about orthodoxy, wherever they come from, will ring just a tiny bit hollow.

I will admit that part of this comes from the fact that I stayed in this church 20 years too long and did a whole lot of rationalizing to do it. But my pendulum has probably swung in the other direction. If the "official" Anglican world as a whole figures out a rhetorical way to stay in some sort of communion with ECUSA and/or New Westminster, even if that communion is entirely theoretical, then I am through with the Anglican tradition.

I don't expect that to happen. I don't think men like Henry Orombi and Peter Akinola will accept any kind of association with ECUSA and I would quite happily associate myself with one of Archbishop Akinola's Nigerian parishes here in America. But if it does and I can't find an Anglican church with no connection of any kind with ECUSA, then I will find another Christian tradition to throw in with.

The Gospel matters to me. Compared to that, Anglicanism is less than irrelevant. Hope this helps. If it doesn't, e-mail me.
Submitted by Christopher Johnson at 10/12/2004 2:11:34 PM

HBULFP,

Would be nice if you'd read the names of the commenters you were responding to since it wasn't me who actually made that comment. But as for your points, you're quite right. Dude. I admit to being a sinner and I admit to the possibility that my interpretations of language might very well be wrong. Unlike Gene Robinson, who doesn't seem to have done anything he needs to repent of and who seems to have everything figured out. Being one of the chosen people and all. I'd take him a lot more seriously if he'd actually show us the stone tablets his deity gave him up on Sinai but a prophet has his reasons, I guess.
Submitted by Hunt-Banning Unitarians For Peace at 10/12/2004 2:37:27 PM

Sorry about the misreading, dude. Had you conflated with some other guy for a minute there.
Submitted by Christopher Johnson at 10/12/2004 2:42:49 PM

HBUFP,

No problem. Come back any time.
Submitted by Brian at 10/12/2004 3:31:15 PM

HBUFP said that God "needs" Christopher Johnson. No offense intended to HBUFP or Chris, but I do not believe that God needs Chris (or me, for that matter).

I believe that the triune God is completely self-sufficient in all respects. He created us for His pleasure and loves us more than we can possibly comprehend. In His sovereign grace, He allows each of us a "piece of the action" if we want in, but He is fully able to accomplish His purposes, in His time, with or without our help.

I can readily concede that we are called to serve Him in this world, but I cannot agree that God is lonely for companionship or incapable of accomplishing his purposes without our help.

God's peace.
Submitted by The Real Patrick at 10/12/2004 4:32:43 PM

Hey Wilkins-Dude, you are like SOOOO out of it Dude...You are like TOTALLY hopeless, Dude...You are, like, mondo-beyond help, Dude...

Wait a minute...am I mixing up JW with HBUFP?

Hmmm...


Geeze, I dunno...maybe my brain is fried by Amber-Bock and Godless, Liberal Bovine Scatology...
Submitted by The Real Patrick at 10/12/2004 4:36:49 PM

"Gene Robinson and I worship different gods." Actually, there is only one God.

You know, John.....YOU'RE RIGHT!!! There IS only One God...that means That VGR is worshiping a FALSE god, or, rather, that he is an idolater.

You YOU place yourself in the same boat as him?
Submitted by The Real Patrick at 10/12/2004 4:38:29 PM

'scuse me...I mean to type "Do YOU place...etc..."
Submitted by Edward at 10/12/2004 7:28:28 PM

"Actually, this dispute is between people who believe that words mean what they say and people who don't want to feel guilty about last Saturday night."

Personally, I don't think there's been a better one-sentence summing-up of the whole problem *anywhere.* And, John wilkins, you're still missing the point, because, "actually, the issue is" between people (liberals) who think they "get to select what verses they choose to obey," and people (conservatives) who aren't subject to that particular form of arrogance. As a liberal, you're assuming that everyone shares your assumptions - a common liberal failing, as far as my experience goes. You think you understand conservative thinking; but you really have a long, long way to go before you begin to do so, and, unless you abandon these simplistic assumptions of yours, you will never be able to get there.
Submitted by Sven Svenson at 10/12/2004 9:29:48 PM

Ta Daaaaaa........heeeeeee's back! And it feels good!

"...and who will do or say whatever Robbie wants hime to."

Keen observation. Sounds like the Desert Pirate's (Mohammed) relationship to his "allah."
Submitted by John Wilkins at 10/13/2004 12:09:56 AM

I submit I might not understand the conservative viewpoint. I admit I simply think they lack credibility.

I do not think conservatives understand the liberal perspective. The idea that this is about "last Saturday night" demonstrates this.

Edward, the issue is not that I think anyone shares my assumptions at all. The issue is that I think people have assumptions before even reading the text, liberals and conservatives. Conservatives seem to think they are free of assumptions to begin with.

The Real Patrick... Bless you, again. I pray you will deliver an intelligent retort.
Submitted by JM at 10/13/2004 12:23:26 AM

The issue of homosexuality really is not the important issue here. It is merely the presenting symptom.

The problem consists of (1) rejecting the plain meaning of the Words of Scripture, without a compelling contrary explanation; (2) jettisoning nearly 2,000 years of Christian tradition and many more thousand years of Jewish tradition; (3) accepting the most strained and sophistical reasoning in order to reach a desired result; and (4) finally resorting to private revelation as the trump card to avoid having to confront issues one through three.

Chris clearly identified the logical consequence. If I may paraphrase: If we cannot trust what the Bible apparently says about homosexual sex, how can we trust what the Bible apparently says about salvation, or forgiveness of sin?

To elaborate on what has passed for argument from the revisionist forces: Since those who transcribed the inspired Word of God had no understanding of Episcopalians, why should Episcopalians think that they are included in the apparent promise of salvation through Jesus Christ?

What sins in the Bible are proscribed more clearly than homosexual sexual activity? Can anything meet that test?

Could God, Himself, prohibit an activity in language sufficiently clear, precise and unambiguous that an Episcopalian would be convinced not to do something he really felt like doing?

If the Jews at the time of Jesus misunderstood everything about homosexuality -- like the conservatives do today -- why did Jesus neglect to correct them? Was he too shy and reticent to make a scene? Or did he say that homosexual sex was just dandy, but nobody remembered it or thought it important enough to record in the Gospels? Maybe it just slipped God's mind?

Just a few questions I never expect to see addressed, let alone answered, by the Episcopalian leadership.

If the church cannot make Scripture rational to me, my faith would falter. JW would probably urge me to pray for more faith. I don't rule out a dramatic revelation that would prove I have been wrong. But I trust that God would be merciful if He asks, "Why did you believe that?" and I can honestly respond, "Because that's what the Bible says." I am more concerned about those instances where God might ask, "Why didn't you believe that?" and I have to say, "Because I didn't think you really meant it."
Submitted by Terrence, in Vancouver, BC at 10/13/2004 1:13:28 AM

John Wilkins:
You are rapidly becoming a laughing stock.
Do you read anything before you "respond" to it?
Do you read what you have "responded" with? It seems you just react, knee jerk react.

You are a real hoot, JW.
But it is like someone said about you in another post: you are a "drive-by" troll, with nothing much to say. And you keep saying it, and saying it, and saying...
And, you repetitively include some very "Christian" insults and cheap shots.

However, since you have no credibility, your insults and cheap shots can be quite funny. As it is, you come across as just another self-important, self congratulating, left-wing-wacko who calling out names as you describe your wack-ado fantasy about “rightwing conservatives
Submitted by Terrence, in Vancouver, BC at 10/13/2004 1:15:32 AM

"who calling out names as you describe your wack-ado fantasy about “rightwing conservatives"
Typo, the above should be

"who calls out names as you describe your wack-ado fantasy about “rightwing conservatives"."
Submitted by Hunt-Banning Unitarian Liberals for Peace at 10/13/2004 3:23:34 AM

This is probably a complete red herring, Chris-dude, but if conservatives obey the whole Bible without picking and choosing, what about, like, the Jewish food laws and stuff? Why do we worship on Sunday rather than Saturday - we seem to be disobeying a specific injunction there. Uh-oh.

What about Christ saying he comes not to abolish the law but to fulfil it, but then plucking wheat to eat on the Sabbath? I'm tending to read the Bible as (inter alia) poetry and as the Chosen One of God living, breathing and speaking into particular situations. I'm guided, challenged and supported by it, but I'm just not treating it like it's a self-consistent legal manual, dude.
Submitted by The Real Patrick at 10/13/2004 4:49:47 AM

HBULP, do you know anyone that belongs to Church of Christ?
Whereas, I will admit with all self-honesty that they are "literalists" in the very strictest sense of the word, they can also be quite insightful.
My very closest friend at my employment is an Elder in Church of Christ and we have had and will continue to have many frank discussions concerning dietary laws, ritual laws, why we Christians meet on the first day of the week, etc. My friend is VERY strong in his faith and not at all shrill or hysterical about it. When it comes to sacraments (communion, baptism, marriage...) he absolutely will not budge in what he believes and can and will back it up with Scripture.

I have learned a great deal from this person, and hopefully, will continue to do so.

Libs would call him a "fundamentalist", but I'll tell you what...he's walking a closer walk with God that Robbie, Frank, or any of the revisionist/liberals are.

He walks the talk, and has my respect.
Submitted by Janjan at 10/13/2004 8:24:30 AM

HBULP, What makes you think Jesus broke the Sabbath? Picking a few grains and "rubbing them between their hands" so they could have a snack was not breaking the Sabbath, it was a false accusation.

But be that as it may, Jesus didn't remove the original Laws without leaving something it its place, so in effect an evolution.
Submitted by Gayle at 10/13/2004 8:38:59 AM

This past Sunday I had the pleasure of listening to a layman who is a member of AAC and who testified before the Eames commission. What he said to us is the only thing I could add to what JM posted.

His suggestion is that we need to drop using the terms "liberal" and "conservative" for several reasons. First, the terms suggest that this is a political issue when it is really a salvation issue. It is far more accurate to use the terms "orthodox" and either "heretical" or "heterodox" or "revisionist".
Submitted by Hunt-Banning Unitarian Liberals for Peace at 10/13/2004 8:44:14 AM

Janjan, Matthew chapter 12 doesn't seem to say that it was a false accusation. The Scripture states that Jesus did indeed pluck and eat, and that he answered his Pharaisic accusers not by saying that he didn't do it, but with reference to a similar act committed by David, also in defiance of the letter of the Jewish law. (David ate what was reserved for the priesthood). What was David's reason and Christ's implied reason? Well, why does anyone need to eat? It was hunger - a necessary and good appetite, and more eloquent than the letter of the law.

Is there a leading here in terms of how we are to 'place' or balance instinct and law?


Submitted by Perry at 10/13/2004 10:22:19 AM

David and his men took and ate the showbread because they were starving; it was the only food within miles. Jesus does not eat of the grain, only his disciples, and that because they were hungry, not because it looked particular appealing. They must have been very hungry, or broke, or both. Raw grain is not an inviting snack. So are there people out there that are in danger of dieing if they don't have sex?
Submitted by Janjan at 10/13/2004 10:30:18 AM

They did ideed "pluck and eat" so there was no need to deny it, but it wasn't breaking the law. Pikuah Nefesh, the Hebrew principle, saving a life trumps the Sabbath. They were starving, but also they weren't "harvesting" which really would have been breaking the law. arvestng means collecting more than just for yourself at that moment. So it was a false accusaton, as I said before.
Submitted by SouthCoast at 10/13/2004 12:04:39 PM

"Actually, this dispute is between people who believe that words mean what they say and people who don't want to feel guilty about last Saturday night.

Just a minor aside, but I would like to point out that the reason some of us "believe that words mean what they say" is because we, ourselves, (including I, myself) have had Saturday nights we once refused to feel guilty about. It "felt good", so we did it. It was "expressing our true selves", so we did it. It was OK, because our motives, if not our bodies, were pure, so we did it. (Whatever "it" happened to be...) Bitter, soul-eating experience, and an eventual encounter with the redeeming love of God, have led many of us to recognize the truth of the "words". We're not sanctimonious saints, we're sinners who've received the spiritual equivalent of a hot shower, clean clothes, and good meal as we have dragged ourselves out of the muck of our personal moral wildernesses.

(Not that anyone's going to listen to any of this...)
Submitted by Perry at 10/13/2004 12:20:17 PM

Oh, we're listening, SouthCoast. The sad news? It be the choir you're preaching to.
Submitted by Hunt-Banning Unitarian Liberals for Peace at 10/13/2004 1:06:56 PM

It isn't only conservatives who read this blog, dude. No-one does dialogue like us liberals, as Chris tirelessly points out.
Submitted by John Wilkins at 10/13/2004 1:23:24 PM

Terrence,

You say, "It seems you just react, knee jerk react." I'm glad you clarified the "react" part. Right now, I'm "knee-jerk" reacting to your post. I'll admit that I am.

Youtell me that, "you are a "drive-by" troll, with nothing much to say. And you keep saying it, and saying it, and saying..." but you don't back up your claim. Perhaps its because you aren't really listening.

Then you say, "And, you repetitively include some very "Christian" insults and cheap shots." You say this after calling me a "troll." Um, I offered The real Patrick a Blessing before praying that he offered an argument. He had offered, basically, a sarcastic insult.

After saying accusing me of offering "cheap shots" you assert, I have "no credibility" and then claim that I think of myself as "self-important, self congratulating, left-wing-wacko." Please clarify what a "cheap shot is" and perhaps how the words you've used demonstrate Christian rhetoric.

After which you then say I have a fantasy about “rightwing conservatives." Terrence, I don't know where I said "rightwing," although I forgive your inaccuracy and confusion. I know that these arguments get heated and sometimes we hear things that weren't said.

And although I will admit my sin in offering cheap shots, your post was an excellent teacher. To repeat, "troll", "knee jerk" and the use of the word "self" as an adjective alongside "left-wing wacko" demonstrates we might share these things in common, save, perhaps, the "left" wing, even though I made no such accusations about you. Still, I offer my other cheek.

As far as God and the Bible goes, I don't think the Bible is the ONLY reliable witness to moral behavior. After all, what do we do about the Kings of Israel, or even Queen Esther?

Bless you, Terrence
John
Submitted by MJD_NV at 10/13/2004 2:33:54 PM

Beautifully put, SouthCoast. Thank-you for saying something near and dear to many of our hearts.

I would like to point out, though, that picking apart the Bible verse by verse never helps. The orthodox are not literalists. The orthodox, or "reasserters" to quote Dr. kendall Harmon, say that Biblical interpretation looking at the wholistic witness of Scripture that has been agreed upon over the centuries holds sway. Back to St. vincent of Leins and my favorite deffinition of Catholic Christianity - Quod umbique, quod sermpre, quod ad obnibus creditum est. (What has been believed everywhere, always and by all.) Point blank, when it comes to sex, the one correct way to use it has always come back to one man, one woman, lifelong union reflecting the reunion of God/creation and Christ/church/ ANYTHING else is less than God has planned for us and is therefore sin. Not sin "Ooohhh, look at those bad guys" but sin, "My child, you're moving away from Me instead of toward me - change course, I love you too much!"

Having my own demons to wrestle with in this arena, as SouthCoast so eloquently put it above, makes me understand this a whole lot better. I know the incredible healing power of God even in combating very "natural" orientations that are in contrast to His way. I cannot do other than speaking the truth in love to others who struggle, nor will I just because nasty epithets are thrown my way by reassessors.

When someone can point out to me the wholistic witness of Scripture that shows that something other than the one man/one woman/lifelong relationship was shown by God as the proper context for His gift of sexuallity, I'll reconsider my position. So far, no one has despite numerous invitations.

"If the Jews at the time of Jesus misunderstood everything about homosexuality -- like the conservatives do today -- why did Jesus neglect to correct them? Was he too shy and reticent to make a scene? Or did he say that homosexual sex was just dandy, but nobody remembered it or thought it important enough to record in the Gospels? Maybe it just slipped God's mind?"

Well put, JM! Another good question that I've put to reasserters that has yet to be answered!

Pax Dei ~ MJD


Submitted by The Real Patrick at 10/13/2004 4:59:56 PM

John Wilkins, Thank you for the blessing. I, in turn, pray for God's blessings on you as well.

That said, I can only offer this to you:

I think that you are in error to the extent that your soul is in danger of eternal damnation. This comes from your re-interpretation of God's Holy Word. This in turn saddens me just as any soul lost to the Enemy saddens me.

I do think that you do come here and Kendall's blog only for the sake of argument and not to "dialog" with those of us who consider ourselves orthodox.
I'm sorry you are so put-off by those of us that are so "intellectually challenged" as to believe that the Bible actually means what it says, without trying to minimalize certain proscriptions in Mosaic Law.

I don't think that homosexuals should be persecuted, but rather loved and prayed for in hopes of either sexual or spiritual healing.

I think the behaviour is wrong and very unhealthy, by God's standards and by nature's. Some things just weren't meant to be.