BREAKOUT
Episcopaganism goes national as the Washington Times runs the story. Meanwhile, Margaret Rose of ECUSA's Office of Women's Ministries, aware of the lameness of her office's initial statement, played the "hate" card:
But Rose criticized Christianity Today's initial report on the liturgy, characterizing the report as a "hate article." Her office has issued a statement in response, noting, "There is quite a difference in presenting resources for people’s interest and enlightenment and promoting resources as official claims of the Episcopal Church. Only General Convention has this authority."
And the "patriarchy" dodge. We're just looking out for all those poor, oppressed Episcopal girls out there:
The Women's Ministries director contends that in order for women to move from mere representation to true inclusion in the Episcopal Church and beyond, the church must find ways to embrace the experiences of women pastorally, ritually, and liturgically. Toward this objective, her office has been working to develop and offer woman-affirming materials for use by individuals and groups in the church.
Whatever, Maggie. Wake me when ECUSA starts an Office of Men's Ministries and starts "affirming" boys and men. On second thought, don't bother since I'll be in an actual Christian church by then.

Submitted by Ellen
at 11/1/2004 1:52:54 PM| Why must I be affirmed anyway. I thought the purpose of the church was to worship God not me. |

Submitted by Curious
at 11/1/2004 2:11:37 PM| Right-o, Ellen. The only milestones in this woman's life that are appropriate for public religious celebration - baptism, marriage & burial - already have liturgies. |

Submitted by SouthCoast
at 11/1/2004 2:20:39 PM| So, let me see... In order to be "affirmed" and to escape the dire clutches of patriarchy, I have to be a good little girl and follow the precepts of the wanna-be matriarchs at 815? I don't think so, ladies... |

Submitted by Darel
at 11/1/2004 2:23:47 PM| Implicit -- or is it actually explicit? -- in Ms Rose's statements is that for the first 2000 years of Christ's One Holy Catholic and Apostolic Church, she hadn't a thing of worth to offer women. Before the OWM, it seems, the Church was an utter failure.
This is nothing but a radical feminist version of Mormonism. My only consolation is that someday soon Christendom will recognize that the ECUSA is no more Christian than is the LDS. |

Submitted by JJO'S™
at 11/1/2004 2:29:03 PM| Curious,
Don't forget the churching of women, which was in the 1928 BoCP. http://justus.anglican.org/resources/bcp/1928/Marriage.htm#Churching_Women I like the idea of this. After all, thanksgiving for a new life from God and a safe delivery is something to be celebrated in a parish family. But menstruation? Ick. That's something that can be "celebrated" at home. From all I hear from those members of the fairer sex, it is a "rite of passage" in a biological way...but does everyone in the free world need to know? Can you imagine if you're the poor girl whose "liturgy of first menstruation" is just 'round the corner? Ugh. I'd be terrified. Although I'm not a woman, but I'm sure I could come up with a few Icky Rites of Passage for Boys...which need no mention in the parish setting... -j |

Submitted by unpopular
at 11/1/2004 2:29:19 PM| "There is quite a difference in presenting resources for people’s interest and enlightenment and promoting resources as official claims of the Episcopal Church. Only General Convention has this authority."
Yet a casual reading of the WashTi article and a quick look at the web site (saved or printed copies) reveal that (a) this was an offical web site of the Episcopal Church, and (b) the official web site promoted use of the rite. This was MUCH MUCH more than merely presenting resources for interest and enlightenment. If there is anything hateful and mean spirited, it is Margaret Rose's insulting and misleading assertion that there was no "official claim" simply because the rite was not canonical. She cannot turn back time and introduce a protective disclaimer now that she was caught promoting content antithetical to Christianity. Sheeesh. |

Submitted by James P
at 11/1/2004 2:44:06 PM| Darel:
Indeed. I used to be a part of the cult that is called the Mormon church until I got saved. I can see more than one interesting parralel between it and the ECUSA. |

Submitted by Mark
at 11/1/2004 2:46:16 PM| So women aren't really "included" in the Episcopal Church yet? I just can't wait to see what it will look like when they are sufficiently included to make Rev. Rose happy. |

Submitted by Paul
at 11/1/2004 2:55:32 PM| "There is quite a difference in presenting resources for people’s interest and enlightenment and promoting resources as official claims of the Episcopal Church. Only General Convention has this authority."
Right, just like General Convention has the sole authority to ordain women. Oh wait, they went ahead with that before General Convention acted, then the GC got to acknowledge facts on the ground. How about Resolution C051? Ditto. Or double-plus Grizzo's claim that elevating a particular avowed homosexual activist priest to the post of bishop has no bearing on the ECUSA's official views on homosexuality, and settled nothing. No sirree. Given that history and how "prophetic witness" in the ECUSA usually proceeds, I'm having a hard time finding much comfort in the Rev. Rose's legalistic fig leaf that GC has not (yet) given her agenda, and "liturgies" entwined in same, the official okey-dokey. |

Submitted by Mark
at 11/1/2004 3:09:29 PM| I'll make a deal with Rev. Rose - if she can convince Louie Crew that taking money from United Thank Offering doesn't amount to taking money from the Episcopal Church, then I'll agree that posting a liturgy on the Episcopal Church website, describing it as "available for use by all", and announcing its availability through Episcopal News Service, doesn't mean that ECUSA is promoting the liturgy.
|

Submitted by mtk
at 11/1/2004 3:13:22 PM| maybe I missed something . . . but since when have women not been included in the church? I mean, maybe it's just b/c I'm an Anglo-catholic with a devotion to Our Mother (who, regardless of what some pagans might want to believe, IS NOT a Goddess figure)--Mary being, incidentally, a much better model of following Christ than any of the Apostles; or maybe it's because I read that one book that one time that's about the Marriage Feast of the Lamb and the Church being the Bride (feminine) of Christ . . . poor unenlightened me. |

Submitted by dave
at 11/1/2004 3:19:37 PM| If we just pound them with e-mails and phone calls they will think twice before they put something else like that on the website. I bet Ole Maggie has been getting in the sauce when she gets home from work. You know she has got to be stressed from all this negative publicity. |

Submitted by J. Scott
at 11/1/2004 3:31:18 PM| It's becoming more and more obvious that ECUSA is home to both the spirit of Antichrist and the spirit of Jezebel!!!
(Hat tip: Sasha for the emphases.) |

Submitted by Another Paul
at 11/1/2004 3:35:12 PM| She calls it a "hate article"?
Do these people have any idea about PR? They just dig themselves deeper and deeper. CT is a respected publication, so I guess my church has burned another bridge to dialogue. |

Submitted by Mark
at 11/1/2004 3:36:00 PM| Oh boy! They have managed to get some positive press too! Take that, fundies! (Ow!) |

Submitted by Paul
at 11/1/2004 3:44:56 PM| I'm waiting for Women's Ministry agitprop battalion to issue the Episcopal Requiem for the Aborted, half of whom would have grown up to be women..... |

Submitted by Janjan
at 11/1/2004 4:03:16 PM| Oh dear, Mark! The very idea of a "first menstruation" ritual in the context of a Sunday service, just shows you this stuff is written by women who have no children! As if I would have subjected my daughters to that! As I once before pointed out, all this firtility stuff is usually touted by the intentionally childless.
I have been reading the comments on Virtuosity, and John Wilkins' site, and as far as I can gather, we are all being "hateful", "vituperative" (sp,)" unchristian" fill in the blank etc. Good ol' John Wilkins feels that a couple of randy pagans in holy orders presents no threat, but Republicans do..... I really do get the impression that according to that crowd, we've been bad boys and girls because we committed the greater sin of not keeping quiet. |

Submitted by Anon for Now
at 11/1/2004 4:04:45 PM| Mark:
Ragsdale has offered her suggestion for another "women's" liturgy: Handing Over the Car Keys When You're Too Old to Drive. How about one for teenagers who just got their license? I imagine that more prayers have been prayed by parents of these kids than at any other "life passage"! Paul: There already is one on the Women's Ministry site: It's called "Pregancy Loss and Stillbirth". Doesn't define how the pregnancy ended-- |

Submitted by Saint Dumb Ox
at 11/1/2004 4:49:13 PM| Why do we have to have celebrations of a woman's life cycle? There is no such celebration of a man's life cycle in the church. There is no liturgy for arriving at boyhood, manhood or even old age. There is no service for circumcision(sp?) either. Why do women need special liturgies? The ECUSA stance that women must be included is silly at best, because equal inclusion is already at its height. Women may now be priests and bishops, but please let's drop the silly idea that they need special notice just for being a woman. "I am a woman and have been held back, therefore I deserve more than anyone else." Enough of playing the victim. |

Submitted by Matt
at 11/1/2004 5:17:42 PM| So Christians point out pagan worship in the Episcopal Church, and it is an expression of hate? Are we supposed to buy that "true inclusion" means the unfettered right to pray to pagan idols? Give me a break. |

Submitted by David
at 11/1/2004 5:31:21 PM| I really feel left out. There was no litury to celebrate my first nocturnal wet dream. I think I will sue somebody at 815. |

Submitted by Allen Lewis
at 11/1/2004 5:42:30 PM| Women need affirmation? How about this: Jesus Christ died on the Cross for each and every woman so that they might be freed from the bondage of sin and reconciled to God. How's THAT for affirmation?
While it may be true that some have taken out of context and twisted the words of Paul to mean something the Apostle never intended is not the fault of Jesus, God or Paul, but fallen humanity. But each is precious in God's eyes. That should be enough for anyone. I really do not believe that the Church is well served by those whose agenda is identity politics. It occurs to me that such agendas are akin to idol worship. |

Submitted by Allen Lewis
at 11/1/2004 5:46:14 PM| I meant to ask why it is that so often those on national ECUSA staff seem so willing to throw the charge of "homophobia" or "hate speech" at those who point out the inappropriateness of their postings? Is it because there is no defense for what they have done?
It seems every time the Rev. Rose speaks she just digs herself a deeper hole. |

Submitted by Grandmother
at 11/1/2004 6:29:22 PM| Interestingly enough, I (many years ago) did undergo the "churching of women" after childbirth.. It was a lovely rite, but even tho the priest wasn't really excited about doing it, it was in the 1928..So he did, but NOT at a public service.
I was glad to give thanks for a safe journey, and my beautiful and healty daughter.. SO there!!!! ps: Didn't hurt a bit, and who knows, might have helped. |

Submitted by Theodora Elizabeth
at 11/1/2004 6:34:24 PM| Paul: There already is one on the Women's Ministry site: It's called "Pregancy Loss and Stillbirth". Doesn't define how the pregnancy ended--
I think the *new* one was for those poor, poor women who "felt" they had to have an abortion, but feel guilty about doing it. Blah! TE the Orthodox |

Submitted by Jeffersonian
at 11/1/2004 7:29:13 PM| Does anyone else realize what an insult Margaret Rose has laid upon Anglican women? That the best they can do to contribute to Anglican worship is to recycle a pagan rite? If I were a woman, I'd be ticked. |

Submitted by Karen B.
at 11/1/2004 7:54:23 PM| I'm a woman who has been an Episcopalian all my life. These women at ECUSA HQ do NOT speak for me. I have never felt the need for special liturgies. I agree wholeheartedly with what Allen L. wrote above. Jesus' sacrifice and forgiveness is all the affirmation I could ever need. |

Submitted by Uh Clint
at 11/1/2004 8:04:03 PM| Allen Lewis has nailed it. When you have no defense or rational explanation for your actions, start throwing out accusations at your opponents so that they become so busy denying your pointless attacks that the original topic is lost in the noise.
And as to those like John "Salty Vicar" Wilkins who feel that no one should pay any attention to heresy, paganism, or anything contradictory to 2000 years of Christianity (except, horror of horrors, homophobia and orthodoxy) let them have their way. Druid clergy? No problem. Islamic bishops? Great, glad to have you. Parishes using scientologist rituals? Fantastic, super to have the "new expression" of people's religious experience. After all, Jesus said nothing about druids, pagans, scientologists, Mormons, Christian Science, Islam, Buddhism, or Mickey Mouse. Welcome, one and all - to John Wilkin's parish, where he will surely be standing with arms wide open to accept anyone just as they are, with no need to repent or convert or bother with that Bible thingy or Jesus guy. (And I know that for saying that, John will label me a bigoted hate-mongering fundie. Wrong, John - you can do whatever you like in your parish and I won't scream, holler, or protest; just don't inflict your anti-Christian theology and practices on people elsewhere who happen to believe that the church has actually been doing things right for the past 2000 years.) |

Submitted by William
at 11/1/2004 8:16:45 PM| Thank the Lord that most Episcopalians are "liberals" and understand that the church and it's liturgy must evolve with society or go the way of the Catholic church.
When I moved from St. Louis to the rural Ozarks, I find that most Pagans around here belong to conservative, evangelical, Bible-beating fundamental Christian literalists filled with self-righteousness and hate for those that do not believe as they do. I applaud the Melnyks for experimenting with rites and ritual that have meaning to those who would otherwise abandon the church for greener pastures while preaching the remarkable words of Christ. Their ilk does more to bring people to Christ that you nay-sayers. ECUSA may not speak for some of you, but it does for many if not most. Is there any reason we cannot live in peace and harmony. If our Church splits, and perhaps it should, it will be due to the inability of the conservatives to adapt. Bill |

Submitted by Fred Goodwin
at 11/1/2004 8:25:37 PM| Bill, I've got news for you: its the mainline liberal denominations like the ECUSA that are losing members year over year, while the more conservative, Biblically orthodox denominations can barely find room to seat all the Christians who want to be fed with spiritual food, not pagan mumbo-jumbo.
Fred Goodwin Diocese of West Texas |

Submitted by Mark
at 11/1/2004 8:49:14 PM| the church...must evolve with society or go the way of the Catholic church.
Hm, which way is that? According to adherents.com, on a typical Sunday 11.7% of the US population attends a Catholic church, while 0.5% of the population attends an Episcopal or Anglican church. Go the way of the Catholic church? Please don't throw me into that briar patch, William! |

Submitted by Janjan
at 11/1/2004 9:40:41 PM| Which way might that be, William? The way of sound doctrine? The Mass I go to is so packed I can't even find a parking spot. And Fr Hickey preaches a great sermon and always on the mark and close to the text, and filled with love. (and all this in the beleagered Boston Archdiocese).If the Episcopal Church went the way my RCIA parish is going, they'd all be blessed. |

Submitted by EJN
at 11/1/2004 9:44:30 PM| Bill - I have to correct you: You can applaud the Melynks all you want but it is not for anything of purpose. They stand for nothing and confuse the people that are in want of belief. Biblically orthodox Christians have no desire at all to hear this tripe - they want the word of God! You can make anything up you like and try to convience yourself that it is the truth but you have only deluded yourself. You do not sound like a churched person or any type of christian - liberal or conservative! You have listened to some rubbish and made yourself believe it and now are spewing it out with very little insight or thought. You obviously have never attended the Catholic or Episcopal Church, what qualifies you to make these claims and misleading statements? One of the most odd comments is that you state "I find that most Pagans around here belong to conservative, evangelical, Bible-beating fundamental Christian literalists filled with self-righteousness and hate for those that do not believe as they do" they are not Christians if they hate!
We orthodox are not fundamentalist or haters - we believe it the gospel and scriptures as put forth in the bible. It is that straight forward and we do not want to take communion from a priest that is out of communion and/or a non believer (or outwardly and publically living or telling lies). In other words - we live by the gospel and scripture, it is the guide for a good and moral life and want others to do the same and to be surrounded by people whom do likewise. Surround yourself with people that believe in the light and the way - good will come. It will change you - right now you do not say very much good about anyone! Not even yourself - the way you describe things and see them - is with a hate filled heart. |

Submitted by EJN
at 11/1/2004 9:50:54 PM| Jeffersonian - "Does anyone else realize what an insult Margaret Rose has laid upon Anglican women? That the best they can do to contribute to Anglican worship is to recycle a pagan rite? If I were a woman, I'd be ticked."
Yes!!!! I am insulted! I wrote her an email last week about the whole mess - expressed my point of view and feelings very well. I never received a response, did not think she would be polite enough (or woman) enough to do so. Also, on the website they have removed her personal email address and put a general address on the site now. I guess she must have received MANY emails! I did tell her she had set us back by 30 years and that we have reduced to menopausal lunatics at this point. At this point I pray for God to give me strength and patience. |

Submitted by EJN
at 11/1/2004 10:02:33 PM| Bill-
Maybe you should try this on for size - there are some very good people in the Episcopal Church that have their prioities in the right place = God. "David Roseberry is the rector of Christ Church in Plano, Texas, the most highly attended Episcopal church in the United States. He says the "Women's Eucharist: A Celebration of the Divine Feminine," written by Episcopal rector Glyn Ruppe-Melnyk, is essentially liturgizing the Da Vinci Code. And although the pagan rite has been removed from the Episcopal Church's official Internet site, the conservative Anglican minister describes the denomination's apparent promotion of the pagan liturgy, however brief, as "a travesty and a tragedy." Roseberry calls the pagan liturgical service offered up by the church's administrative offices in New York is an "embarrassment" to the denomination. "There are individuals in the Episcopal Church who are way left of center," he asserts, "and indeed, [they are] outside of the boundaries of what you'd call Christian. And, unfortunately, they have positions of influence in our leadership." The Texas clergyman believes recent trends toward blurring or crossing the lines of biblical doctrine and ignoring established church practice have created an atmosphere of increasing lawlessness in the Episcopal Church. As a result, he feels some liberal denominational figures in positions of power tend to exploit the situation. "If the Episcopal Church does not have any boundaries or any discipline," Roseberry warns, "then it really will believe anything, and its leadership at the hierarchical level, the main office in New York, will promote just about anything that they have a personal interest in." I think Father David is spot on!!! |

Submitted by Sasha
at 11/1/2004 10:09:00 PM| Thank you, Mr. J. Scott for crediting me (but no, please DON'T credit me for anything - only God Himself Deserves all thanks and GLORY!!!!) regarding emphases...
Otherwise, it's high time that E"C"USA finds itself in a well-publicised SCANDAL, and I hope the same thing happens all over the 1st World to show who are the true Christians and who aren't!!!! It's my hope that the real weeding-out will begin and that we can learn not to take our worship and faith for granted, EVER, EVER, EVER AGAIN!!!! We have to fight for it like our forefathers did 2 millenia ago and at all times since!!!!! |

Submitted by Andy
at 11/1/2004 11:53:30 PM| Folks,
I am a regular reader here although not much of a writer, but I have a request; could we put aside the other distractions for just tonite and tomorrow and get on our knees petitioning God for the outcome of this election. The stakes could hardly be higher! Come Lord Jesus! |

Submitted by Pam
at 11/2/2004 12:13:03 AM| Oy, Sasha - a hard act to follow...
Nevertheless, there is a bit more to say although David, you got part of it down first. I am feeling so marginalized that my 14-year-old son's first wet dream won't be (wasn't?) liturgically marked - NOT! Indeed, unless he or his dad let me in on things I will never know about it at all. Bet there is a reason these events are not connected directly to liturgical observances - the notion that women's (or men's) physical rites of passage should be marked by liturgy only serves to show how sadly compartmentalized our selves, our souls and bodies have become in parts of American culture. However, may I suggest a bit more pastoral sensitivity w/r/t to the 'Pregnancy Loss and Stillbirth' and the Churching of Women rites? With the extraordinary developments that permit many premature infants to live that in earlier times could not have, it would be foolish to suppose that a 'standard template' of observance would fit all circumstances. So for example when our son was born at 28 weeks and was for many more weeks a touch-and-go neonate in intensive care, the opportunity to exult and thank God for delivering him from the jaws of death had to be postponed, but was that much more significant, for all the dangers we traversed in just his first 12 weeks. I was grateful for the opportunity to mark liturgically this saving act of God in our lives through a Thanksgiving after Childbirth, tailored to the occasion. By the same token, parents whose premature infant doesn't pull through need a way to encounter God in their unique circumstance of suffering. For weeks coming and going from the hospital I asked myself, what if we eventually leave here without a baby? The uniqueness of the circumstance is my real point - no two situations are the same and the range of trials and anguish parents and baby may suffer is enormous. There needs to be a way to call upon God for strength in such times within the worshipping community. |

Submitted by EJN
at 11/2/2004 12:20:12 AM| Pam - your point is very well taken and appropriate! But some of these other "rites" that are performed are embarrassing and have not place in church (in my opinion). And if one is every started in my presence - I will leave and never go back. But having left the Episcopal Church - I am not in fear of that happening any time soon. Thank GOD! I am ever thank full for the church that I now attend - The Anglican Mission in Saint Louis. Come and join us - you will always be happy that you made that choice. |

Submitted by ann r
at 11/2/2004 12:52:10 AM| Unfortunately some of the other Melnyk liturgies Chris has posted more clearly fly in the face of the first commandement: "I am the Lord, thy God. Thou shall have no other gods besides me. Thou shalt not bow down to them nor worship them. " etc. God was not pleased (in Jeremiah) by the worship in the sacred groves to the goddess, and so delivered Israel into the hands of her enemies. These folks just don't take God very seriously. |

Submitted by Hunt-Banning Unitarian for Peace
at 11/2/2004 3:30:16 AM| Chris - re "affirming boys and men", do you have to sit around and wait for someone 'up there' to organise something? This could be a valuable calling - I don't know the U.S. situation, but in the U.K. church is often perceived as a feminine activity, leading to a lot of men not pulling their weight spiritually, and not fully living out their callings in their families, and in the wider society.
You could join Promise Keepers, I guess (we don't really have this in the U.K.; I've only read about it, so can't vouch) or start your own Christian Men's Fellowship more locally. If you're looking for good books to read from a Christian perspective, try 'Healing the Masculine Soul' by Gordon Dalbey, 'Manhood' and 'Raising Boys' by Steve Biddulph (both secular in tone, but nothing offensive to faith), or 'Wild at Heart' by John Eldredge. Good luck and God Bless, HBUP |

Submitted by Hunt-Banning Unitarian for Peace
at 11/2/2004 4:43:30 AM| Andy - you're right. They say the election's "too close to call", but I'm an incurable optimist - I think Nader'll walk it. A Kerry victory would seem like, y'know, second best.
HBUP. |

Submitted by Andy
at 11/2/2004 5:30:12 AM| HBUP
That's certainly the understatement of the day, "incurable optimist"! If your one of our citizens living in the UK, hope you mailed your ballot in. If not, my earlier suggestion is still open for you. My thinking is, pray for God's will to be done in the election, vote your conscience, then accept the results either way. Pray for the winner even if (maybe especially if) you don't like him. BTW I absolutely loved Wild at Heart, even led a small group study with that book as the material. Blessings, Andy |

Submitted by William
at 11/2/2004 8:33:57 AM| I agree the election is more important than this trifling discussion.
All pray that Bush does not get re-elected. I certainly do not want a theocratic president telling me what is orthodox. He would like to pass laws that define what the Bible means. I do not want a politician telling me how to interpret the Bible, nor do I want my Anglican priest or you other Anglicans telling me how to interpret the Bible. God gave me a mind and a desire to find my own meanings in the wisdom of the Bible. Wm |

Submitted by Zach Frey
at 11/2/2004 9:12:19 AM|
There's always The Brotherhood of St. Andrew if you're looking for an Anglican men's movement. peace, |

Submitted by EJN
at 11/2/2004 9:20:05 AM| William -
You write - "I do not want a politician telling me how to interpret the Bible, nor do I want my Anglican priest or you other Anglicans telling me how to interpret the Bible." "God gave me a mind and a desire to find my own meanings in the wisdom of the Bible." I think most of us share ideas, concepts and the word of god from the bible - in this way we each come to our understanding of the meaning of the bible. How do you share ideas (and learn) from God's many meanings! Do you not have a wealthy intellectual and religous community (church, bible study) in which to explore these ideas? If the church and people you are currently involved with do not give you this - then it is time to find a good organization to grow with! And that is what this Blog is about - many of us have found fault with the leadership of our church for many different reasons and we are discussing these ideas and events. We are also helping others to open their eyes and ears in order that we can facilate change within the church or by planting new churchs that will be true to gospel and scripture! We are not here forcing our opinions or ideas on you - you came to the site on your own free will and are finding not everyone shares your liberal views! Intersting isn't it. You expressed your opinion and we have expressed ours. |

Submitted by Bill Sanderson
at 11/2/2004 11:19:29 AM| My wife and I lost our daughter to a cord accident that resulted in stillbirth. Our Rector was gracious enough to allow us and the community to grieve using the funeral service for children in the '62 BCP. Some may question the appropriateness of using a funeral service for an unbaptised member of the family, but it was exactly right for our circumstances.
Early term miscarraige and abortion are not quite the same as a stillbirth, having witnessed the effect on those close to me for both. It would appear from a quick glance at the index for the BCP ('62 Canada) that a healing service that could include these matters may be appropriate, most especially if, in the case of abortion, it immediately followed the Penetential Rite. |

Submitted by anglicanxn
at 11/2/2004 1:35:25 PM| Bill, you say, "When I moved from St. Louis to the rural Ozarks, I find that most Pagans around here belong to conservative, evangelical, Bible-beating fundamental Christian literalists filled with self-righteousness and hate for those that do not believe as they do."
I have lived my whole life in conservative/evangelical circles. While I have met the occasional sad/mean person, my overwhelming experience has been one of loving relationships. I have lived in a dozen different states, in the East and the South mostly -- and my consrvative Christian friends have been unfailingly kind and caring, with few exceptions. I am an Episcopalian now, one of those from an evangelical background who found that the prayerbook liturgy expressed our faith in a wonderful way. In the Episcopal Church I have met quite a few liberals -- and a lot of hatred and anger from them. I have heard things said about Southern Baptists that scorched my ears. Sometimes the speaker did not know that I am an evangelical Anglican, and insulted the conservative members of our denomination. I have met kind and caring liberals, too, quite a good number -- but on the whole, the liberals are the ones I see full of venom and unreasoning disdain. |

Submitted by MJD_NV
at 11/2/2004 3:11:36 PM| You beat me to it, Zach! The Brotherhood is a wonderful organization!
Notice, however, that nothing in the OWM talks about the Daughters of the King? |

Submitted by EMC
at 11/2/2004 4:26:02 PM| "I certainly do not want a theocratic president telling me what is orthodox."
I agree, William, which is why I'm voting for Bush. If we get a president who panders to those who want to destroy us, our children could end up with a theocratic state like Iran...You're wasting your freedom, William. |










