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The end of the Anglican Communion
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Alec  
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 More options 25 Oct, 23:15
Newsgroups: uk.religion.christian
From: Alec <alec.br...@gmail.com>
Date: Sun, 25 Oct 2009 16:15:50 -0700 (PDT)
Local: Sun 25 Oct 2009 23:15
Subject: Re: The end of the Anglican Communion
On 25 Oct, 23:09, Alwyn <al...@dircon.co.uk> wrote:

> But wasn't it Irenaeus rather than Ignatius who, according to Hodges,
> considered bishops to be a source of information and guidance?

Bugger. You're quite right. I didn't spot that.

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Alwyn  
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 More options 25 Oct, 23:38
Newsgroups: uk.religion.christian
From: Alwyn <al...@dircon.co.uk>
Date: Sun, 25 Oct 2009 23:38:07 GMT
Local: Sun 25 Oct 2009 23:38
Subject: Re: The end of the Anglican Communion

Alec wrote:
> On 25 Oct, 23:09, Alwyn <al...@dircon.co.uk> wrote:

>> But wasn't it Irenaeus rather than Ignatius who, according to Hodges,
>> considered bishops to be a source of information and guidance?

> Bugger. You're quite right. I didn't spot that.

Irenaeus was much concerned to fight the Gnostics, who claimed to have
secret knowledge from Jesus himself. He counters that the bishops were
the only safe guide to doctrine and the interpretation of Scripture, and
their lineage went back to the Apostles.

'Since, however, it would be very tedious, in such a volume as this, to
reckon up the successions of all the Churches, we do put to confusion
all those who, in whatever manner, whether by an evil self-pleasing, by
vainglory, or by blindness and perverse opinion, assemble in
unauthorized meetings; [we do this, I say,] by indicating that tradition
derived from the apostles, of the very great, the very ancient, and
universally known Church founded and organized at Rome by the two most
glorious apostles, Peter and Paul; as also [by pointing out] the faith
preached to men, which comes down to our time by means of the
successions of the bishops. For it is a matter of necessity that every
Church should agree with this Church, on account of its pre-eminent
authority, that is, the faithful everywhere, inasmuch as the apostolical
tradition has been preserved continuously by those [faithful men] who
exist everywhere.'
Against Heresies III, 3

Alwyn


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Alec  
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 More options 26 Oct, 09:56
Newsgroups: uk.religion.christian
From: Alec <alec.br...@gmail.com>
Date: Mon, 26 Oct 2009 02:56:49 -0700 (PDT)
Local: Mon 26 Oct 2009 09:56
Subject: Re: The end of the Anglican Communion
On 25 Oct, 23:38, Alwyn <al...@dircon.co.uk> wrote:

> Alec wrote:
> > On 25 Oct, 23:09, Alwyn <al...@dircon.co.uk> wrote:

> >> But wasn't it Irenaeus rather than Ignatius who, according to Hodges,
> >> considered bishops to be a source of information and guidance?

> > Bugger. You're quite right. I didn't spot that.

> Irenaeus was much concerned to fight the Gnostics, who claimed to have
> secret knowledge from Jesus himself. He counters that the bishops were
> the only safe guide to doctrine and the interpretation of Scripture, and
> their lineage went back to the Apostles.

It seems to me that Ignatius and Irenaeus were combatting the same
movement, but had adopted different strategies and arguments. Ignatius
took a synchronic approach and pushed church unity (relying on the
bishop as the core of that unity), while Irenaeus had a more
diachronic style and pushed church tradition (relying on the bishop as
the guarantor of that tradition). Both arguments are valid, and the
fact that different defenders of catholic faith took different paths
shouldn't exercise us unduly.

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Alwyn  
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 More options 26 Oct, 10:13
Newsgroups: uk.religion.christian
From: Alwyn <al...@dircon.co.uk>
Date: Mon, 26 Oct 2009 10:13:25 GMT
Local: Mon 26 Oct 2009 10:13
Subject: Re: The end of the Anglican Communion

Alec wrote:

> It seems to me that Ignatius and Irenaeus were combatting the same
> movement, but had adopted different strategies and arguments. Ignatius
> took a synchronic approach and pushed church unity (relying on the
> bishop as the core of that unity), while Irenaeus had a more
> diachronic style and pushed church tradition (relying on the bishop as
> the guarantor of that tradition). Both arguments are valid, and the
> fact that different defenders of catholic faith took different paths
> shouldn't exercise us unduly.

That is a nice way of summing it up. But I would still like to see more
evidence that Ignatius bears witness to a definite and settled
organisation of the Christian church beyond the indea of the bishop
being the local big boss.

Alwyn


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Alec  
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 More options 26 Oct, 13:21
Newsgroups: uk.religion.christian
From: Alec <alec.br...@gmail.com>
Date: Mon, 26 Oct 2009 06:21:05 -0700 (PDT)
Local: Mon 26 Oct 2009 13:21
Subject: Re: The end of the Anglican Communion
On 26 Oct, 10:13, Alwyn <al...@dircon.co.uk> wrote:

He clearly has the three-part priesthood in place; what we don't see
is anything at the supra-diocesan level, other than the bond of
charity between bishops. OK, if there is a patriarch in the region
it's him (in ch ix of his letter to the Roman church he calls himself
the shepherd of the church in Syria, not just of the congregation in
Antioch), so maybe that's why he doesn't want to make a big deal of
it. But he never mentions the bishop of Rome; indeed, I think I'm
right in saying that his letter to the Roman church is the only one
that doesn't mention the bishop - in all the letters to the other
churches he exhorts them to live the Christian life and obey their
bishop. But the Romans he exhorts to one thing only: not to get in the
way of his martyrdom. Maybe, having moved out of the province of which
he is the chief shepherd, he no longer sees it as his place to teach
this church? Anyway, it's an awkward fact that he doesn't seem to
salute the bishop of Rome, and it gives some (albeit negative) support
to those who think that episcopal order perhaps wasn't universal at
that time.

Is there some other aspect of church organisation you think is missing
from Ignatius?


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Michael J Davis  
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 More options 26 Oct, 14:36
Newsgroups: uk.religion.christian
From: Michael J Davis <mjduse...@trustsof.co.uk>
Date: Mon, 26 Oct 2009 14:36:30 +0000
Local: Mon 26 Oct 2009 14:36
Subject: Re: The end of the Anglican Communion
Alec <alec.br...@gmail.com> was inspired to say

Thanks to both Alwyn and Alec for the various point made above.

Mike
--
Michael J Davis
http://www.trustsof.co.uk
<><
Jesus did not die to save us from punishment
He is called 'Jesus' because he came to save us from our sins.
[GMcD]
<><


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loiner2003  
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 More options 26 Oct, 15:42
Newsgroups: uk.religion.christian
From: loiner2003 <loiner2...@methodistchristian.co.uk>
Date: Mon, 26 Oct 2009 15:42:11 +0000
Local: Mon 26 Oct 2009 15:42
Subject: Re: The end of the Anglican Communion

Adam Funk wrote:
> On 2009-10-25, loiner2003 wrote:
>> For completeness: there was one group that could not be persuaded to
>> join the union, namely that which styles itself the Wesleyan Reform
>> Union. Their theology tends to be conservative evangelical, their
>> spirituality broadly Methodist, and their ecclesiology more or less
>> congregational! They still exist, these days on good terms with the rest
>> of us, but still independent. They are to be found mainly in a few areas
>> such as the area of the old York, Notts and Derby coalfield. They
>> usually have pretty small congregations. In such areas lay preachers are
>> often interchanged.

> I think those are the areas where I've seen "Wesleyan" on the signs.

Quite likely. When I was in Barnsley Circuit, now almost 20 years ago
mind, there were perhaps 10 Wesleyan Reform Churches in the metropolitan
area (about 200,000 people). In the same area there were, then, some 40
mainstream Methodist Churches. I know that our numbers have declined
quite a bit since then, and I'm guessing the same is true for the WRU.

As I say, we got on with each other quite well, often sharing youth and
training events, for example. The WRU had only a handful of paid
ministers, and often used our lay preachers to fill their pulpits. The
two denominations still co-operate nationally, especially in local
preacher matters. However I have seen no suggestion of an actual merger.
Some of us would be rather too liberal, or too catholic, for some WRU
tastes, although I had no problem on a one to one basis - we even worked
together at the time of Mission England with Billy Graham (1984/85).

Later I was in Lowestoft and I noticed a WRU church there; I never had
any contact, but again I know one or two of our preachers were invited
to preach there. One unofficial Methodist preacher, also an official in
a Methodist Church, actually presided at Communion there - which could
have caused a lot of problems if anyone had been inclined to make a fuss
about it. No one was, and I turned a blind eye! (The guy was widely
regarded as a bit of an oddball anyway!)

--

Revd. Eric Potts

"Faith, hope and love abide, these three;
and the greatest of these is love."


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Alwyn  
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 More options 26 Oct, 19:41
Newsgroups: uk.religion.christian
From: Alwyn <al...@dircon.co.uk>
Date: Mon, 26 Oct 2009 19:41:50 GMT
Local: Mon 26 Oct 2009 19:41
Subject: Re: The end of the Anglican Communion

Alec wrote:

> He clearly has the three-part priesthood in place; what we don't see
> is anything at the supra-diocesan level, other than the bond of
> charity between bishops.

<snip>

> Is there some other aspect of church organisation you think is missing
> from Ignatius?

In Ephesians he exhorts obedience to bishop Onesimus, who is to be
revered as the Lord himself. No mention of hierarchy, just the suremacy
of the bishop. Loyalty to the bishop is again emphasised in
Philadelphians and he adds: 'there is one bishop, along with the
presbytery and deacons'. All we can glean from this is that in
Philadelphia there was one bishop and many presbyters and deacons. What
was the presbyter's function, and how did it differ from that of the
deacon? Ignatius does not tell us, and we must be careful, I think, not
to read later ideas into what he wrote.

Alwyn


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celia  
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 More options 26 Oct, 20:06
Newsgroups: uk.religion.christian
From: celia <c_a_b...@hotmail.com>
Date: Mon, 26 Oct 2009 13:06:29 -0700 (PDT)
Local: Mon 26 Oct 2009 20:06
Subject: Re: The end of the Anglican Communion
On 25 Oct, 23:02, Alec <alec.br...@gmail.com> wrote:

> On 25 Oct, 14:19, celia <c_a_b...@hotmail.com> wrote:

> > the man in the pew...was disenfranchised.

> What evidence do you have that the Man on the Corinth Omnibus was
> franchised in the first place?

Acts chapter 6 shows the early church selecting seven men who were
then presented to the apostles to have hands laid on them.
The beginning of Acts 13 has the local church praying until guided by
the Holy Spirit they commission Barnabas and Saul.
 Paul told the man on the Corinth omnibus that he was free and
everything was permissible, his gripe was that they hadn't grasped the
truth that they had to use their freedom fore the benefit of others.

>       Acts 14:23 - "Paul and Barnabas appointed elders for them in
> each church"

>       Acts 16:4 - "As they traveled from town to town, they delivered
> the decisions reached by the apostles and elders in Jerusalem for the
> people to obey."

>       Titus 1:5 - "The reason I left you in Crete was that you might
> straighten out what was left unfinished and appoint elders in every
> town, as I directed you."

> So elders were appointed from above, and the decisions of apostles and
> elders were to be obeyed. Sounds like a hierarchy to me.

Sounds like the gift of administration to me.
Not the only gift to receive the apostles blessing by the laying on of
hands.
We are assuming too readily here that elders were the equivalent of
today's bishops whereas there were several elders per congregation and
their function could be seen as a continuation of that of the Jewish
elder.
 The reason this reply is a little delayed is that I tried to find out
exactly what the words used would have meant in the 1st c.There is an
extract from this book online,
40 Questions about Elders and Deacons By Benjamin L. Merkle
I think it is reasonably fair and it leans slightly to your view but
is far from conclusive.

Celia


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Alec  
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 More options 26 Oct, 21:38
Newsgroups: uk.religion.christian
From: Alec <alec.br...@gmail.com>
Date: Mon, 26 Oct 2009 14:38:23 -0700 (PDT)
Local: Mon 26 Oct 2009 21:38
Subject: Re: The end of the Anglican Communion
On 26 Oct, 20:06, celia <c_a_b...@hotmail.com> wrote:

I don't think we're disagreeing fundamentally.

> We are assuming too readily here that elders were the equivalent of
> today's bishops whereas there were several elders per congregation and
> their function could be seen as a continuation of that of the Jewish
> elder.

No, I'm not assuming that at all. Elders are usually referred to in
the plural, both in Jewish and in Christian usage. I don't think
Christian elders are exactly the same as Jewish elders, but they have
a lot in common. The synagogue doesn't have sacraments, so that's
going to make a difference in the functions of their officers.

I'm happy to accept that the modern episcopal system crystallised out
of an earlier, undifferentiated, state over several decades. But once
it started to appear it was Ice Nine.

>  The reason this reply is a little delayed is that I tried to find out
> exactly what the words used would have meant in the 1st c.There is an
> extract from this book online,
> 40 Questions about Elders and Deacons By Benjamin L. Merkle
> I think it is reasonably fair and it leans slightly to your view but
> is far from conclusive.

Do you have a url for that?

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celia  
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 More options 26 Oct, 22:19
Newsgroups: uk.religion.christian
From: celia <c_a_b...@hotmail.com>
Date: Mon, 26 Oct 2009 15:19:06 -0700 (PDT)
Local: Mon 26 Oct 2009 22:19
Subject: Re: The end of the Anglican Communion
On 26 Oct, 21:38, Alec <alec.br...@gmail.com> wrote:

> >  The reason this reply is a little delayed is that I tried to find out
> > exactly what the words used would have meant in the 1st c.There is an
> > extract from this book online,
> > 40 Questions about Elders and Deacons By Benjamin L. Merkle
> > I think it is reasonably fair and it leans slightly to your view but
> > is far from conclusive.

> Do you have a url for that?

Yes, it's well worth reading but I didn't give the url because I'm
well aware that everyone here is more computer literate than I am and
will groan at the length of it and know cunning ways to make it
shorter. Anyway here it is,
http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=_gwhxUVH3OAC&pg=PT1&lpg=PT1&dq=40+...

 Celia


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Alec  
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 More options 26 Oct, 23:27
Newsgroups: uk.religion.christian
From: Alec <alec.br...@gmail.com>
Date: Mon, 26 Oct 2009 16:27:16 -0700 (PDT)
Local: Mon 26 Oct 2009 23:27
Subject: Re: The end of the Anglican Communion
On 26 Oct, 22:19, celia <c_a_b...@hotmail.com> wrote:

That's nice, thank you. I can't help thinking that "Elders and
Deacons" must be the next Dan Brown novel :-)

Merkle (from my perspective) brings his expectations to the scriptural
and post-scriptural data, possibly even as much as I do. He is on top
of the facts, way more than I am; but there are still ambiguities,
which I naturally resolve in a Catholic sense and he resolves in a
Baptist sense. In the end I don't think there can be a decisive
argument that will show us the right way of doing this - all such
attempts to come to a final conclusion will themselves have
ambiguities, which I will resolve in a...well, you get the point.


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Adam Funk  
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 More options 26 Oct, 23:44
Newsgroups: uk.religion.christian
From: Adam Funk <a24...@ducksburg.com>
Date: Mon, 26 Oct 2009 23:44:31 +0000
Local: Mon 26 Oct 2009 23:44
Subject: Re: The end of the Anglican Communion

On 2009-10-25, Alec wrote:
> Very true. I was raised as a Roman Catholic, and converted to Roman
> Catholicism in my late teens.

As I read that, I think there's an implied phase in the middle?

--
But it's not against any religion
To want to dispose of a pigeon
                     [Tom Lehrer]


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celia  
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 More options 27 Oct, 05:18
Newsgroups: uk.religion.christian
From: celia <c_a_b...@hotmail.com>
Date: Mon, 26 Oct 2009 22:18:25 -0700 (PDT)
Local: Tues 27 Oct 2009 05:18
Subject: Re: The end of the Anglican Communion
On 26 Oct, 23:27, Alec <alec.br...@gmail.com> wrote:

Exactly, a fair summing up.
I've enjoyed watching you discuss with Alwyn, so refreshing to get a
civilised and informed conversation that brings something new to the
table.

Celia


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Alec  
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 More options 28 Oct, 10:27
Newsgroups: uk.religion.christian
From: Alec <alec.br...@gmail.com>
Date: Wed, 28 Oct 2009 03:27:39 -0700 (PDT)
Local: Wed 28 Oct 2009 10:27
Subject: Re: The end of the Anglican Communion
On 26 Oct, 23:44, Adam Funk <a24...@ducksburg.com> wrote:

> On 2009-10-25, Alec wrote:
> > Very true. I was raised as a Roman Catholic, and converted to Roman
> > Catholicism in my late teens.

> As I read that, I think there's an implied phase in the middle?

Unreflective teenage atheism while maintaining the outward forms for
the sake of a quiet life. Then one day I started to think about
something the priest had said in his sermon (about how people who
didn't really believe would be better off not going to Mass) and it
lit a blue touch-paper. In one way I don't think it much mattered what
he'd said, it just upset a couple of my assumptions about
'conventional religion'. It was like a firecracker storm going off in
my brain, and when the smoke cleared it had burned away all the
unexamined prejudices that had clogged my thinking. I was a convinced
RC, and (apart from a brief and disappointing flirtation with Marxism
in my late twenties) have remained so ever since.

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Gareth McCaughan  
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 More options 3 Nov, 01:00
Newsgroups: uk.religion.christian
From: Gareth McCaughan <Gareth.McCaug...@pobox.com>
Date: Tue, 03 Nov 2009 01:00:05 +0000
Local: Tues 3 Nov 2009 01:00
Subject: Re: The end of the Anglican Communion

Alec Brady wrote:
>                         In one way I don't think it much mattered what
> he'd said, it just upset a couple of my assumptions about
> 'conventional religion'. It was like a firecracker storm going off in
> my brain, and when the smoke cleared it had burned away all the
> unexamined prejudices that had clogged my thinking.

All of them? How can you tell?

(I am quite sure that I have unexamined prejudices that have never
been burned away. It must be a blessed state indeed to have none.)

--
Gareth McCaughan
sig under construc


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celia  
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 More options 3 Nov, 08:05
Newsgroups: uk.religion.christian
From: celia <c_a_b...@hotmail.com>
Date: Tue, 3 Nov 2009 00:05:14 -0800 (PST)
Local: Tues 3 Nov 2009 08:05
Subject: Re: The end of the Anglican Communion
On 3 Nov, 01:00, Gareth McCaughan <Gareth.McCaug...@pobox.com> wrote:
> Alec Brady wrote:
> >                         In one way I don't think it much mattered what
> > he'd said, it just upset a couple of my assumptions about
> > 'conventional religion'. It was like a firecracker storm going off in
> > my brain, and when the smoke cleared it had burned away all the
> > unexamined prejudices that had clogged my thinking.

> All of them? How can you tell?

> (I am quite sure that I have unexamined prejudices that have never
> been burned away. It must be a blessed state indeed to have none.)

> --

I've just finished reading two history books, one went out of its way
to show no bias; the other was unashamedly from the author's
viewpoint.
The unbiased book was so bland and boring as to be almost unreadable
whereas although I didn't share the view of the opinionated author his
enthusiasm made it a darn good read.
  Could it be that prejudice combined with respect for others can also
be a blessed state ?

 Celia


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Gareth McCaughan  
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 More options 4 Nov, 10:54
Newsgroups: uk.religion.christian
From: Gareth McCaughan <Gareth.McCaug...@pobox.com>
Date: Wed, 04 Nov 2009 10:54:28 +0000
Local: Wed 4 Nov 2009 10:54
Subject: Re: The end of the Anglican Communion

It's quite possible that known and acknowledged prejudice can be
harmless or even beneficial (because motivating). But Alec was
talking about *unexamined* prejudices. I can't think why anyone
would want any of those, but alas I'm sure we all have plenty.

--
Gareth McCaughan
sig under construc


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Ian  
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 More options 4 Nov, 20:28
Newsgroups: uk.religion.christian
From: Ian <ubergeek...@googlemail.com>
Date: Wed, 4 Nov 2009 12:28:37 -0800 (PST)
Local: Wed 4 Nov 2009 20:28
Subject: Re: The end of the Anglican Communion
On 20 Oct, 18:46, Alwyn <al...@dircon.co.uk> wrote:

> Pope Benedict tells Rowan Williams: so long and thanks for all the priests
> <http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/andrewbrown/2009/oct/20/relig...>

> Smooth operators, those Vatican boys - or at least according to Andrew
> Brown.

He's only offering to take the chauvinists and the homophobes.
Williams will probably be glad and certainly be lucky to see the back
of them.

Ian


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Alwyn  
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 More options 4 Nov, 22:06
Newsgroups: uk.religion.christian
From: Alwyn <al...@dircon.co.uk>
Date: Wed, 04 Nov 2009 22:06:11 GMT
Local: Wed 4 Nov 2009 22:06
Subject: Re: The end of the Anglican Communion

Ian wrote:

> He's only offering to take the chauvinists and the homophobes.

He's offering sanctuary to those who would feel more comfortable in the
Church of Rome. I do not believe they are so many.

> Williams will probably be glad and certainly be lucky to see the back
> of them.

But Akinola and his lot will still be around to cause trouble. There is
little danger of Evangelicals defecting to Rome, though Nazir Ali, who
has something of a Catholic background, has said he'd consider it.

Alwyn


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Alec  
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 More options 5 Nov, 01:09
Newsgroups: uk.religion.christian
From: Alec <alec.br...@gmail.com>
Date: Wed, 4 Nov 2009 17:09:43 -0800 (PST)
Local: Thurs 5 Nov 2009 01:09
Subject: Re: The end of the Anglican Communion
On 3 Nov, 01:00, Gareth McCaughan <Gareth.McCaug...@pobox.com> wrote:

> Alec Brady wrote:
> >                         In one way I don't think it much mattered what
> > he'd said, it just upset a couple of my assumptions about
> > 'conventional religion'. It was like a firecracker storm going off in
> > my brain, and when the smoke cleared it had burned away all the
> > unexamined prejudices that had clogged my thinking.

> All of them? How can you tell?

> (I am quite sure that I have unexamined prejudices that have never
> been burned away. It must be a blessed state indeed to have none.)

OK, clever clogs :-p. Not all, not even most. Just a big tranche. I
plead guilty to the charge of rhetoric ;-)

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Ian  
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 More options 5 Nov, 08:52
Newsgroups: uk.religion.christian
From: Ian <ubergeek...@googlemail.com>
Date: Thu, 5 Nov 2009 00:52:37 -0800 (PST)
Local: Thurs 5 Nov 2009 08:52
Subject: Re: The end of the Anglican Communion
On 4 Nov, 22:06, Alwyn <al...@dircon.co.uk> wrote:

> Ian wrote:

> > He's only offering to take the chauvinists and the homophobes.

> He's offering sanctuary to those who would feel more comfortable in the
> Church of Rome. I do not believe they are so many.

But what seems odd is that the only criterion appears to be "not
liking the idea of women priests or gay people". Do these
considerations really override all th eother doctrinal differences.

I agree with you that there probably won't be many. Those who are
doctrinally closest to Rome, the Anglo-Catholics, are traditionally
very tolerant of gay people - to put it mildly - and the evangelicals
who hold the strongest views about gays and women are doctrinally
miles away.

> > Williams will probably be glad and certainly be lucky to see the back
> > of them.

> But Akinola and his lot will still be around to cause trouble. There is
> little danger of Evangelicals defecting to Rome, though Nazir Ali, who
> has something of a Catholic background, has said he'd consider it.

Although it seems clear that Williams wants to maintain the communion
if at all possible, I think he might be better just  to let the
evangelicals go and form their own little church. I suspect that the
hardliners who have taken over parishes would take few of the
parishioners with them. A bit of grumbling about guitars is one thing:
actually leaving the C of E is quite another.

The evangelicals know this, of course, which is why there tactic is to
create as much trouble as they can without the rest of the communion
turning round and telling them where to go.

Ian


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Phil Saunders  
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 More options 5 Nov, 09:26
Newsgroups: uk.religion.christian
From: "Phil Saunders" <philip.saund...@ntlworld.com>
Date: Thu, 05 Nov 2009 09:26:21 GMT
Local: Thurs 5 Nov 2009 09:26
Subject: Re: The end of the Anglican Communion
"Ian" <ubergeek...@googlemail.com> wrote in message

news:65c24ab8-9bd4-43cf-ba00-f8072f80ecf9@g23g2000yqh.googlegroups.com...

> On 4 Nov, 22:06, Alwyn <al...@dircon.co.uk> wrote:
>> Ian wrote:

>> > He's only offering to take the chauvinists and the homophobes.

>> He's offering sanctuary to those who would feel more comfortable in the
>> Church of Rome. I do not believe they are so many.

> But what seems odd is that the only criterion appears to be "not
> liking the idea of women priests or gay people". Do these
> considerations really override all th eother doctrinal differences.

OK so not wanting the church to condone and support wickedness and sin is
not a good reason?

What the hell do you think would be a good reason?

Phil


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Phil Saunders  
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 More options 5 Nov, 09:27
Newsgroups: uk.religion.christian
From: "Phil Saunders" <philip.saund...@ntlworld.com>
Date: Thu, 05 Nov 2009 09:27:27 GMT
Local: Thurs 5 Nov 2009 09:27
Subject: Re: The end of the Anglican Communion
"Ian" <ubergeek...@googlemail.com> wrote in message

news:65c24ab8-9bd4-43cf-ba00-f8072f80ecf9@g23g2000yqh.googlegroups.com...

Is that hate speech?

Phil


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Matthew Vernon  
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 More options 5 Nov, 10:36
Newsgroups: uk.religion.christian
From: Matthew Vernon <matt...@debian.org>
Date: 05 Nov 2009 10:36:48 +0000
Local: Thurs 5 Nov 2009 10:36
Subject: Re: The end of the Anglican Communion

Ian <ubergeek...@googlemail.com> writes:
> I agree with you that there probably won't be many. Those who are
> doctrinally closest to Rome, the Anglo-Catholics, are traditionally
> very tolerant of gay people - to put it mildly - and the evangelicals
> who hold the strongest views about gays and women are doctrinally
> miles away.

The Church Crimes was reporting on a Forward in Faith meeting that
seemed to be quite keen on heading Rome-wards.

Matthew

--
"My sheep hear my voice. I know them, and they follow me. I give them
eternal life, and they will never perish. No-one will snatch them out
of my hand". John 10 27-28
http://www.pick.ucam.org/


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