THE MCJ

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

ECUMENISM

Mr. Erik Nelson of the Institute on Religion and Democracy sends along one more reason for orthodox Christians to run away from ECUSA as fast as they can make their legs move.  On the Episcopal Church's Women's Ministries web site is something they call A Women's Eucharist: A Celebration of the Divine Feminine.  These selections should give you some idea of what it's about:

Blessed are you, Mother God, for the fertility of this world. We thank you for the sight and scent of flowers, for the way their shape evokes in us the unfolding of our own sexuality, and for their power to remind us of the glory and the impermanence of physical beauty. May our days of blossoming and of fading be days spent in your presence.

Blessed are you, Mother God, for you have given us the fruit of the earth. Red as blood, warm as life itself, sweet and intoxicating as love. We thank you for wine. We bless you for the power of this drink to remind us of our own power. We praise you for the strength and beauty of our bodies, and for the menstrual blood of womanhood. We embrace the mystery of life which you have entrusted to us, and we pray for the day when human blood is no longer shed and when woman’s blood is honored as holy and in your image.

Thank you, Mother, for the abundance of life. Thank you for the rich, full, pleasing, and life giving milk of our bodies. Thank you for the children who drink from our breasts for they bring sweetness to our lives. We drink this cup as your daughters, fed from your own bosom. May we be proud of our nurturing and sustaining selves. May we honor our breasts as symbols of your abundance. Thank you for the milk and honey of your presence with us.

This Women's Ministries page is attributed to The Rev. Glyn Lorraine Ruppe Melnyk of St. Francis in the Fields Episcopal Church of Malvern, Pennsylvania.  But where did this service come from?   It seems to have come, almost word-for-word, from a service called A Celebration of the Divine Feminine in a Eucharist to our Mother Goddess, written by someone who calls herself Glispa and found on the web site of something called Tuatha de Brighid.  What's Tuatha de Brighid?  This:

Tuatha de Brighid is a Clan of modern Druids who seek to find common ground amidst all non-harmful spiritual loyalties, and who believe in the interconnectedness of all faiths.   Brighid, who is both Goddess of the Gaels and Saint of the Christians, is a fitting Matron for this endeavor, and so we are Her Folk.

We offer a place of fellowship and support to those who would not be limited by labels and dogma.  We seek as well to build a worshipping community, where those who would walk the path of kinship with the infinite beauty and diversity of the Divine, can come together in peace and reverence.

We honor all life, all love and all wisdom.

Impressive.  The web site of an allegedly Christian denomination contains a pagan religious rite.  I'm beginning to understand ECUSA's increasing hostility to the Christian religion. 

Posted on 10/25/2004 5:23:57 PM , 140 comments

Submitted by Jim the Fireman at 10/25/2004 5:44:56 PM

>>We embrace the mystery of life which you have entrusted to us...<<
Excuse me, but nothing in the Bible says this. In fact, we were kicked out of the Garden because we took a shining to the idea that we could know this. This whole liturgy reminds me of the old Reimagining seminars favored by the United Church of Christ. Those things got so bawdy and heretical that even the UCC distanced themselves from them.
Submitted by Branford at 10/25/2004 6:07:59 PM

And this is the same ECUSA that marched in the pro-abortion rally in DC this spring.

"Thank you, Mother, for the abundance of life. Thank you for the rich, full, pleasing, and life giving milk of our bodies. Thank you for the children who drink from our breasts for they bring sweetness to our lives. We drink this cup as your daughters, fed from your own bosom. May we be proud of our nurturing and sustaining selves."
. . .and Thank you, Mother, for the ability to end an inconvenient pregnancy, as we parade with our Choice signs.

Is there a word that is a stronger version of "hypocrisy" that I can use here to describe these people?
Submitted by Randy Muller at 10/25/2004 6:08:31 PM

"We thank you for the sight and scent of flowers, for the way their shape evokes in us the unfolding of our own sexuality, and for their power to remind us of the glory and the impermanence of physical beauty."

I think I'm going to hurl now. Is that beautiful?

(Was this crap written by a deranged sex-addict?)
Submitted by Erik Nelson at 10/25/2004 6:23:08 PM

The most offensive thing to me about this so-called "Women's Eucharist" is that it is all about women's bodies. The Eucharist is supposed to be about the body of Christ, not my body or your body. As such, it reflects the essential narcissism at the heart of both gnosticism and paganism, which seem to be two of the driving forces behind postmodernist religion in the West.
Submitted by Mark at 10/25/2004 6:29:15 PM

If you think this is new, check out this story on neo-paganism in the Diocese of El Camino Real from May 2000. The article was from the official diocesan newsletter, and written by the diocesan communications director. (The link on it to the ECR website no longer works but I saw it when it first came out.)

Submitted by Erik Nelson at 10/25/2004 6:42:09 PM

What *is* new is that this is coming from an official national church office, and not from some renegade parish or individual somewhere. This is being offered as a resource directly from the Office of Women's Ministries. I wonder what the African Primates would say if they saw this. This is not the Christianity that they are suffering and dying for.
Submitted by William at 10/25/2004 7:02:14 PM

"May we honor our breasts as symbols of your abundance."

This isn't a church...It's a Hooter's. Can I get some hot wings to go with those communion wafers?
Submitted by Mark at 10/25/2004 7:51:34 PM

Erik, as I mentioned, the article I cited was from an official diocesan newletter. So what's new is that official, public support for paganism has moved from the diocesan to the national level.

I wonder what the African Primates would say if they saw this. I expect they will see it, the internet being what it is. I would love to be a fly on the wall.
Submitted by Sasha at 10/25/2004 8:29:51 PM

DISGUSTING in the extreme!!!!!

I was getting, most unfortunately, to see these things starting in the summer of 1991 with one United Church of Canada "ministrix" who can as well remain nameless, much as her identity deserves to be blasted all over the world as one example of those rabid man-hating gender-feminists who all {as far as I'm concerned, especially when they're supposedly ministrices of Christ!!!!) deserve nothing other than to be burned alive at the stake!!!!! Ah well, they and that particular specimen I've in mind (as well as those cohorts of her I've met) will all be fodder for Hell and the Lake of Fire - UNLESS THEY REPENT!!!!!
Submitted by anglicanxn at 10/25/2004 8:48:11 PM

God's people have been here before. I have been reading 1 Kings in my daily Bible readings (Scripture Union's "Encounter with God"). Time and again, the Israelites built shrines on the high places, erected Asherah poles, and worshipped fertility gods and goddesses. And they were judged - Israel (the ten northern tribes) were invaded and scattered by the Assyrians, and Judah was taken into exile by the Babylonians. God will NOT be mocked.

That is the sadness and the horror of all that is wrong with ECUSA and other "Mainline" denominations -- they have removed the true Gospel that allows to enter the presence of the Father through the blood of Jesus in the resurrection power of the Spirit -- and so the liturgy becomes mere rote. Then, instead of seeking the Lord in repentance, novelty and then other deities are sought to make worship a satisfying experience....

God will preserve and correct his people -- but it looks as though some institutions with great but sqaundered heritages will fall by the wayside.
Submitted by Erik Nelson at 10/25/2004 8:50:27 PM

It is, of course, one thing to be done by a revisionist diocese like El Camino Real, for which at least the national church offices can offer some deniability. but coming straight from their own offices, it has a different sort of imprimature, does it not? Not only was this posted by the Office of Women's Ministries, but a news article from Episcopal News Service was sent out drawing attention to it.

What is new is that the national office feels it can put this kind of thing up on the internet, in full view of the world, without shame, and then proudly proclaim this pagan rite as a "resource."

It's not just that support for this has moved to the national level (where I suspect support for it is not new). What is new is that the national offices are doing it in broad view with no shame whatsoever. In the past the national church might try to ignore what individual dioceses were doing, but now they have begun to advocate it themselves. Does this not signal some new aggressiveness by those who would import neo-paganism into our churches? And is there any question that this new aggressiveness is driven by the current crisis in the church?
Submitted by Allen Lewis at 10/25/2004 9:16:51 PM

"Whom the Gods would destroy, they first make mad."

I do believe we are seeing this come to pass right before our very eyes. It is a frightening thing to see swolloen pride in action.

The ECUSA is in a tail-spin from which it cannot recover, no matter how much energy is spent trying to reform it. It is time to hit the life boats as fast as people can possibly leave. It is no longer safe to even associate oneself with this hotbed of paganism.

Perhaps the Primates can devise a way to preserve a viable form of the Anglican way in the United States, but they will have to do it outside of the ECUSA. It has fallen too deeply into folly and evil to ever recover.


Submitted by Ken at 10/25/2004 9:24:21 PM

If memory serves, there was some real paganism at the 2000 General Convention. But isn't narcissism at the heart of the Fall? So gnostic and pagan narcissism are hardly a surprise. We chose ourselves over God in the first parents, and our flesh daily makes the choice of Self or God. Baptism gave us the cleansing we needed to make the choice, but clearly even the baptised can choose the Self.

Which is why when Bp. Griswold blathers on about the unity we have in the one baptism, he is telling only 1/3 of the truth. We still need the same Faith and the same Lord.
Submitted by Jeffersonian at 10/25/2004 9:37:01 PM

How can it be that there are 13 comments above mine, all from informed and thoughtful persons, and no one has mentioned the Anglican Church's Arch-Druid yet? As the twig is bent...
Submitted by Christopher Hathaway at 10/25/2004 9:51:39 PM

We should not be surprised at such sexual narcicism in lieu of true worship once we allowed the ordination of women.

The justification for that act was that their (women's) ministry must be affirmed in order to affrim them. It was more about them than about Jesus. Ordained women represented not the Incarnate Lord but women everywhere as images of God. The priestly icons became autofocussed. As sexuality is inherant in our being, and a crucial ingredient for understanding God's relationship to us (Bride and Bridegroom thing) it is natural that such self-focussed ministries would lead to self-focussed worship with a sexual bent. It is spiritual masturbation. And it is bound to get kinkier the longer it goes on unchecked by a real relationship with the true recipient of our worship.
Submitted by Janjan at 10/25/2004 9:53:14 PM

At least those Druids are honest pagans.
Submitted by SouthCoast at 10/25/2004 9:56:17 PM

Why does it remind me of the section of either "Tales of the City" or a sequel, where one of the characters spends her weekend at a feminist retreat making model vulvas out of paper plates and brown yarn? Why, for that matter, does it remind me of why I shy away from Women's Retreats in the first place?
Submitted by Richard Aubrey at 10/25/2004 10:00:56 PM

The Presbyterian Church (USA) had a similar thing going on some years ago called ReImagining.
I was on a Presbytery committee at the time and threatened to down a bottle of cheap hooch and write an analogous prayer from the masculine side.
But courage failed.
As did imagination.
Submitted by Mark at 10/25/2004 10:02:08 PM

Would you believe this liturgy might not be the worst thing on the site? Browse around a bit more and find:

Liturgy for Divorce": Dearly beloved: We have come together in the presence of God to witness and bless the separation of this man and this woman who have been bonded in the covenant of marriage.... Love dies, and when that happens we recognize that the bonds of marriage, based on love, also may be ended. God calls us to right relationships based on love, compassion, mutuality, and justice. Whenever any of these elements is absent from a marital relationship, then that partnership no longer reflects the intentionality of God.

And would you believe the version of the Lord's Prayer calls God "Father and Mother," and that there is no mention of the Trinity? I thought you would.

Submitted by Stephen M. at 10/25/2004 10:08:20 PM

Mark, I'm shocked. I'm beginning to suspect the Episcopal Church might not have a perfectly orthodox understanding of marriage.
Submitted by Tom at 10/25/2004 10:09:34 PM

eeewwwwwwwwwwww
Submitted by Ken at 10/25/2004 10:20:53 PM

"Love dies"

Check that against I Corinthians 13.
Submitted by Fuego at 10/25/2004 10:57:10 PM

All you can do is with-hold funds.

I know it has to be hurting our once beautiful church to have this nonsense babbled about in the shadow of the cross of Christ.

How sad is this going to get? There are more empty pews every Sunday.

The only religious institutions preaching orthodoxy by the writ of the holy book are the Moslems.
Submitted by jude + at 10/25/2004 11:10:23 PM

this reminds me of the infamous 're-imagining' conference in Minneapolis, '93. Seems like the devil is getting more bold...as his time is getting shorter.
Submitted by Anon for Now at 10/25/2004 11:42:54 PM

I looked with trepidation at some of the resources on the Women's Ministries--and breathed a sigh of relief that I didn't find a post-abortion ritual, only one for "Pregnancy Loss and Stillbirth", right under the Litany of Women's Power. (I wonder what Mother Teresa would say if told that she has been included among powerful females.)

Now that I think about it, there is a post-abortion ritual already; it is called "Reconciliation of a Penitent".
Submitted by Edward at 10/25/2004 11:56:30 PM

Anyone who thinks they can stay in communion with the unchurch that did this:-

Get. Out. Now.

For your soul's sake.
Submitted by J. Scott at 10/26/2004 12:18:34 AM

Yes, Edward - and for your children's sake!
Submitted by JM at 10/26/2004 12:33:17 AM

Jeffersonian beat me to it, but I wondered immediately if they had cleared this rite with "Archie" the Archdruid.

It seems like such a rite ought to be performed at midnight under a full moon at Stonehenge, with sacramental Bloody Mary's.

(Not that I have anything against breasts, mind you.)
Submitted by Hunt-Banning Unitarians for Peace at 10/26/2004 2:50:19 AM

Have you thought to contact the diocese in question, in order to allow them to respond via your blog, Chris?

It would make for a more interesting, less one-sided comments section.
Submitted by The Real Patrick at 10/26/2004 4:33:42 AM

HBUP, you DO have a point about "more interesting, less one-sided comments section." However, this "women's eucharist thing is nothing more than Wicca in a church setting and has NO place in a "Christian" church. You cannot blend the two.


Submitted by JJO'S™ at 10/26/2004 6:32:32 AM

I'm sickened.

This *really* disgusted me.

I don't know what to say or to add to this...but all I can say is "+Ratzinger...GET MOVING ON AN ANGLICAN RITE...NOW!"

-j
Submitted by Doug at 10/26/2004 7:04:46 AM

Step 1. All Episcopalians should read this.
Step 2. All Episcopalians should put on their walking or running shoes.
Step 3. Take as many steps as necessary to find the nearest Christian church as fast as you can.
Submitted by unpopular at 10/26/2004 7:24:58 AM

Matt. 24

28 Wherever there is a carcass, there the vultures will gather.
Submitted by Robert at 10/26/2004 7:27:26 AM

As far as the "Liturgy for Divorce" goes, you'd think they could come up with something original. Of course the "Eucharist" is plagarized also, so why should I suspect different. It seems they lifted this right off the Larry James web site. BTW, I wonder if this is the same ceremony +VGR used when he "unmarried" his wife.

http://www.celebrateintimateweddings.com/ceremonyletgo.html
Submitted by Robert at 10/26/2004 7:37:20 AM

I wonder if they would use their "Rite for Pregnancy Loss or Stillbirth" for an abortion? http://www.episcopalchurch.org/41685_38366_ENG_HTM.htm?menupage=42048
Somehow I seriously doubt it. In this rite they acknowledge that an unborn child is, in fact, a child and not some unviable mass of cells. If this were from some other group, it would not be such a bad liturgy. Since it's from this group, I am naturally suspect.
Submitted by Elkanah at 10/26/2004 8:22:23 AM

anglicanxn,

I too thought it ironic that yesterday's Encounter With God reading included the passages regarding worship of the Queen of Heaven (complete with raisin cakes!). And what does YHWH have to say about this specific type of worship by the women? Behold:

Jeremiah 44:22 "So that the LORD could no longer bear, because of the evil of your doings, and because of the abominations which ye have committed; therefore is your land a desolation, and an astonishment, and a curse, without an inhabitant, as at this day."
Submitted by Mark at 10/26/2004 8:32:41 AM

Liberal christianity is another faith. The embrace of individualism and plurality have lead to the creation of a separate faith. They are accursed.

"I am astonished that you are so quickly deserting him who called you in the grace of Christ and are turning to a different gospel— not that there is another one, but there are some who trouble you and want to distort the gospel of Christ. But even if we or an angel from heaven should preach to you a gospel contrary to the one we preached to you, let him be accursed. As we have said before, so now I say again: If anyone is preaching to you a gospel contrary to the one you received, let him be accursed."
Submitted by Hunt-Banning Unitarians for Peace at 10/26/2004 8:58:03 AM

Mark - are you judging "liberal christianity", a great tradition, by one or a few examples from the wilder shores?

Conservatism also swerves into idolatry, on occasion. We are frail. We are alwys falling short, and in need of God's saving hand.
Submitted by Gayle at 10/26/2004 9:10:44 AM

omigod....it justs keeps getting worse and worse.

As I reading the first part of the article, I couldn't help but think about the cult of Astarte and wondering if the next step would be to bring back fertility worship and the cult prostitutes, er....priests and priestesses. Abortion is just a tidier form of Moloch worship.

When I started studying the Canaanite "theology" I begin to understand and then believe that when the Bible says that God told the Israelites to destroy the Canaanites He meant it. He knew how seductive that type of religion can be; it wasn't that God didn't love the Canaanites as human being it was that He was setting about to make His people of the covenant, so that He could have His Son become one of those people, in the fullness of time, in order that all of the world might be saved through His Son.

Syncretism has lost none of its charms. What I have found remarkable is that most neo-pagans that try to co-op Druidism or Wicca really understand so very little about that Celtic pysche. There is a reason that St. Patrick was successful in Ireland and that the Irish were able to re-convert Scotland and much of Europe (Read How the Irish Saved Civilization) that an honest reading of the mythos of the Celtic people will reveal. There was a longing for the answers that the person of Jesus gave the Celts that was lacking in their particular form of nature worship.
Submitted by Brother Quotidian at 10/26/2004 9:10:47 AM

In a similar situation, here's how God handled worship of the Queen of Heaven:

Jeremiah 44:

15Then all the men who knew that their wives had burned incense to other gods, with all the women who stood by, a great multitude, and all the people who dwelt in the land of Egypt, in Pathros, answered Jeremiah, saying: 16"As for the word that you have spoken to us in the name of the LORD, we will not listen to you! 17But we will certainly do whatever has gone out of our own mouth, to burn incense to the queen of heaven and pour out drink offerings to her, as we have done, we and our fathers, our kings and our princes, in the cities of Judah and in the streets of Jerusalem. For then we had plenty of food, were well-off, and saw no trouble. 18But since we stopped burning incense to the queen of heaven and pouring out drink offerings to her, we have lacked everything and have been consumed by the sword and by famine."

19The women also said, "And when we burned incense to the queen of heaven and poured out drink offerings to her, did we make cakes for her, to worship her, and pour out drink offerings to her without our husbands' permission?"

20Then Jeremiah spoke to all the people--the men, the women, and all the people who had given him that answer--saying: 21"The incense that you burned in the cities of Judah and in the streets of Jerusalem, you and your fathers, your kings and your princes, and the people of the land, did not the LORD remember them, and did it not come into His mind? 22So the LORD could no longer bear it, because of the evil of your doings and because of the abominations which you committed. Therefore your land is a desolation, an astonishment, a curse, and without an inhabitant, as it is this day. 23Because you have burned incense and because you have sinned against the LORD, and have not obeyed the voice of the LORD or walked in His law, in His statutes or in His testimonies, therefore this calamity has happened to you, as at this day."

24Moreover Jeremiah said to all the people and to all the women, "Hear the word of the LORD, all Judah who are in the land of Egypt! 25Thus says the LORD of hosts, the God of Israel, saying: "You and your wives have spoken with your mouths and fulfilled with your hands, saying, "We will surely keep our vows that we have made, to burn incense to the queen of heaven and pour out drink offerings to her." You will surely keep your vows and perform your vows!' 26Therefore hear the word of the LORD, all Judah who dwell in the land of Egypt: "Behold, I have sworn by My great name,' says the LORD, "that My name shall no more be named in the mouth of any man of Judah in all the land of Egypt, saying, "The Lord GOD lives."

27Behold, I will watch over them for adversity and not for good. And all the men of Judah who are in the land of Egypt shall be consumed by the sword and by famine, until there is an end to them.
Submitted by Michael Ware at 10/26/2004 9:12:16 AM

Anyone out there know a good way to clean vomit off a keyboard? SHEESH!!! Every time I read a post like that, I feel like I need to send my computer out to be disinfected.
Submitted by G.S. Bissett at 10/26/2004 9:24:55 AM

I feared God's judgement upon the church in the West but now I'm beginning to think judgement has already been passed and we are witnessing the church being given over.
It wouldn't be the first time that God has allowed some really nasty people to overrun His chosen so as to bring them back in line with His teachings.
I pray He will have mercy upon us who have sat too long and have not done anything to curb what is now bearing furious fruit. I won't deny my part in all that.
Submitted by Practical Syncretist at 10/26/2004 9:27:50 AM

Are the monotheistic faiths "a nightmare borne of a duststorm" as Jonathan Miller has it? Might it become necessary for that jealous, local God Jahweh to destroy the world in order to save it?

The Creation of the World was an act of love. Father God (masculine principle) impregnated the void (feminine principle). A God who remembers and loves his Wife prospers; a God who sees himself as All-Sufficient grows sick and vengeful and self-destructive - hence much of the Old Testament.
Submitted by Elkanah at 10/26/2004 9:32:58 AM

Brother Quotidian,

As you know, here's Jeremiah's other reference, in Jeremiah Chapter 7, to YHWH's opinion of worship of the Queen of Heaven:

18 The children gather wood, and the fathers kindle the fire, and the women knead their dough, to make cakes to the queen of heaven, and to pour out drink offerings unto other gods, that they may provoke me to anger.

19 Do they provoke me to anger? saith the LORD: do they not provoke themselves to the confusion of their own faces?

20 Therefore thus saith the Lord GOD; Behold, mine anger and my fury shall be poured out upon this place, upon man, and upon beast, and upon the trees of the field, and upon the fruit of the ground; and it shall burn, and shall not be quenched.

Basically, God seems to frown on this sort of thing.
Submitted by Practical Syncretist at 10/26/2004 9:56:30 AM

"God" sounds like a jealous, pissy kind of guy.

Was that your point, Elkanah, or is there something else?
Submitted by Brother Quotidian at 10/26/2004 10:20:23 AM

You know, Practical Syncretist, the God of the Bible is indeed a jealous, pissy kind of guy (to use your terms). You could even make a case that He's a combative, jealous kind of guy.

Consider His original pronouncement on sin the in Garden: "I will put enmity between you and the woman, between her seed and your seed. He shall bruise your head, and you shall bruise his heel."

Or the opening scenes in the Book of Job. What more could God have done to pick a quarrel with Satan than to point to Job and say ... and you know the rest.

Or Pharoah! Sheesh. Here's what He said to him: "Let my people go, so that they may worship me, or this time I will send the full force of my plagues against you and against your officials and your people, so you may know that there is no one like me in all the earth. For by now I could have stretched out my hand and struck you and your people with a plague that would have wiped you off the earth. But I have raised you up for this very purpose, that I might show you my power and that my name might be proclaimed in all the earth."

Jealous? Sure looks like it to me!

Even sneaky! Take a gander at 1 Kings 22:

Then Micaiah said, "Therefore hear the word of the LORD: I saw the LORD sitting on His throne, and all the host of heaven standing by, on His right hand and on His left. 20And the LORD said, "Who will persuade Ahab to go up, that he may fall at Ramoth Gilead?' So one spoke in this manner, and another spoke in that manner. 21Then a spirit came forward and stood before the LORD, and said, "I will persuade him.' 22The LORD said to him, "In what way?' So he said, "I will go out and be a lying spirit in the mouth of all his prophets.' And the LORD said, "You shall persuade him, and also prevail. Go out and do so.'

I wonder what this God is thinking about you, Syncretist? Any ideas?
Submitted by Mark at 10/26/2004 10:27:59 AM

Let's be clear about one thing: the authors of this liturgy clearly and consciously identify themselves with precisely the paganism that is repdudiated in the OT, including the passages from Jeremiah and 1Kings above. One line CJ didn't quote was: Mother God, our ancient sisters called you Queen of Heaven and baked these cakes in your honor in defiance of their brothers and husbands who would not see your feminine face. He who has ears, let him hear.
Submitted by Dale Price at 10/26/2004 10:58:07 AM

Any bets on how long it will take for the EC's Women's Ministries [sic] to reinstitute the office of cultic prostitute?
Submitted by Practical Syncretist at 10/26/2004 11:12:35 AM

I'm sure that he has very mixed feelings, Brother Quotidian.

It's in part that it's difficult to reconcile this "God", who wills and desires and acts, and whose moods often seem fragmentary or murderous, with God as the ground of all being, the God guaranteed by the Ontological Proof. The Old Testament is still a necessary stumbling block to me.

Submitted by EJN at 10/26/2004 11:24:11 AM

Good Lord - help me, I think I am going to be sick! What else can you say about such rubbish.
Submitted by Paul at 10/26/2004 11:36:16 AM

HBUFP Have you thought to contact the diocese in question, in order to allow them to respond via your blog, Chris?

It would make for a more interesting, less one-sided comments section.


No doubt Chris can also contact the PLO and Hamas to get their "take" on threads involving Israel, in the interest of balance and make the comments section less one-sided. I think the "Women's Eucharist" speaks for itself. We're all reasonably intelligent and can read.
Submitted by Brother Quotidian at 10/26/2004 11:36:37 AM

Syncretist,

I think you will forever stumble if you cannot accept the God who revealed himself through the Prophets of Israel. The God "guaranteed" by the Ontological Proof is, most likely one who does not will, desire, or act, one without any moods (fragmentary or murderous or anything else).

It is this jealous pissy God whom Jesus owns as Father from all eternity and whom Jesus shows to us in the incarnation of that Father's Son.

Submitted by Elkanah at 10/26/2004 11:47:00 AM

Syncretist,

It is indeed hard for us hosed-up humans to reconcile all those imperfect understandings of God. It is all the more mind-blowing to think that a loving God chose to work out true reconciliation in wood and iron and flesh and bone and blood on a cross.

Pax.
Submitted by Daniel Stoddart at 10/26/2004 11:54:32 AM

"Fuego" wrote:

All you can do is with-hold funds.

No, Fuego, no. That is not all you can do.

What you can do is vote with your feet and your wallet, and lead your family out of Egypt and into the Promised Land of mission for the Anglican Way. The field is white unto harvest, my friend.

Join your fellow Anglicans and gather to read Morning or Evening Prayer, pray without ceasing, create Bible studies and meet in someone's living room until you build momentum. Witness to your neighbours and co-workers.

We cannot reform the unreformable. So we must begin anew.
Submitted by Christopher Johnson at 10/26/2004 12:15:37 PM

HBUP,

As Erik Nelson and others have pointed out, it isn't the fact that a particular church or even a particular diocese has gone off the religious deep end. It's the fact that the national church considers this idiocy a "resource" and hosts it on its web site.
Submitted by Atlantic at 10/26/2004 1:02:55 PM

Jeffersonian, JanJan, not to distract too much from the main issue here, but the Druid group that the Archbishop of Canterbury belongs to is most definitely *not* a Pagan group (in fact, there was a point in the 19th century when probably a majority of its members were Christian clergy). It is a Welsh-language group for poets, writers, musicians and others who have contributed to Welsh culture - alth