Friday, November 30, 2007

Off to Diocesan Convention


Off to Riverside for the 112th Annual Meeting of the Diocese of Los Angeles. As I was printing out "stuff" yesterday for our pre-convention meeting this morning with our parish delegates I realized this will be my 20th Annual Meeting of the Diocese of Los Angeles -- my first was back in 1987 and my, my, my ... what a difference a couple of decades make!
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Back then I was a lay delegate from my parish in Ventura CA (St. Paul's) and my credential read "Mrs. Anthony Russell" ... never mind that MR Anthony Russell's involvement in the work of the Diocese of Los Angeles was to show up on Christmas Eve and Easter Sunday.
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It was back in the day when we didn't dare run more than one woman in any of the elections. I remember a literal coin toss between two women clergy one year about which ONE would run for General Convention Deputy because the diocese would never send TWO women! I remember when I was in the ordination process being told it wasn't a good idea to wear my red blazer (and I LOVED my red blazer!) because red was a "power color" and if I'd better lose it until I got ordained.
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And I remember if we sang a hymn that wasn't in the hymnal or -- God forbid -- used a liturgy with expansive language -- there would be a queue at the microphone afterwards with dour clergymen asking for a "point of personal privilege" to express their outrage.
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So yep, the church has changed in the 20 years I've been a delegate to the Annual Meeting of the Diocese of Los Angeles -- and my response to that versicle is "Thanks be to God!" There may be those who yearn for those halcyon days of yesteryear when women delegates were named "Mrs. Husband" and we knew better than to run more than one of us in any given election. But the rest of us are celebrating the steps foward this church has taken to overcome its sexism and are going to "keep on keepin' on" until we are fully the inclusive Body of Christ we are called to be.
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And some of us are going to get on the road now for Riverside. Prayers invited from ya'll for my diocese as we gather in convention ... and now I've just gotta get my red blazer and I'm off!
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More later ...
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Thursday, November 29, 2007

Poll finds more Americans believe in devil than Darwin


Poll finds more Americans believe in devil than Darwin
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DALLAS (Reuters) - More Americans believe in a literal hell and the devil than Darwin's theory of evolution, according to a new Harris poll released on Thursday.

It is the latest survey to highlight America's deep level of religiosity, a cultural trait that sets it apart from much of the developed world.

It also helps explain many of its political battles which Europeans find bewildering, such as efforts to have "Intelligent Design" theory -- which holds life is too complex to have evolved by chance -- taught in schools alongside evolution.
My, my, my!
Read the rest here ...

Wednesday, November 28, 2007

Alternative Christmas Market

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OK ... I know it's not even ADVENT yet but I want to brag on the amazingly, extraordinarily fabulous Alternative Christmas Market being offered here at All Saints Church on Sunday. It's our annual invitation for giving hope rather than "stuff" for Christmas and this year's catalogue is the BEST EVER.

Whether it's across the border through our Agua Verde ministry, across town with the Foster Care Project or around the globe through ERD, opportunities abound to reach out in the name of the One who calls us to love one another as He has loved us.

Check it out here ...and give thanks for those whose creativity and generosity inspires both amazing grace and abundant giving!

(PS - If you have trouble with this link -- which worked fine for me -- try going through the All Saints Church Website.)
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Christ the King of Forgiveness


Advent looms. We're already praying together the Collect for the Day for Advent I at our daily celebration of Holy Eucharist at All Saints:



Almighty God, give us grace to cast away the works of darkness, and put on the armor of light, now in the time of this mortal life in which your Son Jesus Christ came to visit us in great humility; that in the last day, when he shall come again in his glorious majesty to judge both the living and the dead, we may rise to the life immortal; through him who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and for ever. Amen.


Give us grace to cast away the works of darkness. Easier said than done, methinks -- when darkness and division dominate the discourse within the church, violence and oppression dominate the world news and the peace on earth, goodwill to all incarnate in the One whose birth we prepare to celebrate seems further away than ever.

Which is precisely why I am so grateful for this Collect which begins our church New Year by asking God to give us the grace to cast them away in order to choose life and hope and joy instead. Because the truth is we can't possibly do it on our own. And that brings me back to last Sunday -- Christ the King Sunday (or "The Reign of Christ Sunday," if you prefer!)

Here are a couple of snaps from Sunday ... me and my kids having the rare opportunity to all sit together in a pew on a Sunday morning: the three of us out front of church ....















... and Brian with one of the great saints of All Saints -- Lydia Wilkins, who is planning her January birthday party to celebrate turning ... (wait for it) ... 104.
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It was a great Sunday and what I'm thinking about this morning is Ed's sermon -- which I believe points us to exactly what we need to take on that hard work of Advent -- of casting away the works of darkness.

It points us to Jesus and it points us to forgiveness. Check it out here and let's give thanks, in these waning days of the old church year, for the gift of the One who loved us enough to become one of us in order to show us how to love -- and forgive -- each other!

Tuesday, November 27, 2007

Archbishop Tutu on BBC Radio Today


From Calvary to Lambeth

Tuesday 27 November 2007 20:00-20:40 (Radio 4 FM)
Repeated: Sunday 2 December 2007 17:00-17:40 (Radio 4 FM)
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Michael Buerk reports on the divide over homosexuality in the worldwide Anglican Church. He talks to Archbishop Desmond Tutu, who gives vent to his feelings of shame over homophobia.
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Click here to listen ... I haven't "done the math" to figure out what time it is in which time zone but check it out ... back to my staff meetings!

Monday, November 26, 2007

2 YEARS OLD TODAY


Luna Brooks Russell
on her second birthday!

GLOBAL ANGLICANS SHARE CALL TO AN INCLUSIVE GOSPEL VISION AND MISSION


Wading back into the post-Thanksgiving blog/web/email world I was so very pleased to have the following report from the UK's Inclusive Church in my inbox.

It gives a great summation of a just-completed conference entitled "Drenched in Grace" and commmitted to the proclamation of God's inclusive love. Speakers included Sharon Moughtin-Mumby, Jenny Te Paa and Louis Weil and the link at the bottom of this post will take you to transcripts or recordings of their talks.

I had the privilege of meeting with the Inclusive Church folks when in London last month. I look forward with great enthusiasm to partnering with them to offer a global witness to the power of the Living God working in and through us to transcend our divisions and differences and call us to the only true unity: the unity of being many members of the one Body of Christ.

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[26NOVEMBER] Last week, 180 people gathered in Derbyshire, England for “Drenched in Grace,” Inclusive Church’s first residential conference.

We met as Anglicans, committed to our church. We met as evangelicals and charismatics, as catholics, liberals and conservatives. We met at the Lord’s table - the unifying core of the conference. We reclaimed with confidence the orthodoxy of the inclusive Gospel we celebrate in the Anglican Communion.

We offered a model of engagement to the Communion at large. In our disagreements we acknowledged the primacy of God’s love in which we are all held together, but we did not keep silent about our differences.

Dr Jenny Te Paa (St John’s College, Auckland NZ) opened the conference. In a strong speech, Te Paa reminded us “how pervasive the reach of enmity has become amongst us.” She urged us “not so much to focus too intently and singularly on the bad behaviour of the few, but rather to focus anew on the very good behaviour of the many.”

Revd Dr Sharon Moughtin-Mumby in her talk “Out of the Silence” said “I believe it is vital for us to .... refuse to skip over the difficult and challenging or awkward passages of the Bible, just as in Inclusive Church we are committed to refusing to skip over those who can be made to feel like the difficult, challenging or awkward members of the people of God.”

Revd Dr Louis Weil (Berkeley, California) spoke about the central place baptism holds in our ecclesial understanding. Speaking of the sacraments of baptism and communion, he said “our obsession with validity has weakened the boldness of the sacramental signs. This creates a low level of expectation and weakens our understanding of mission.” We are in communion with one another by God’s grace, not by any human action. “I am in communion with Peter Akinola (the Archbishop of Nigeria)” he said. “I will remain in communion with Peter Akinola until we are both on the other side.”

Canon Lucy Winkett (St Paul’s Cathedral) spoke of the need to “forge relationships on the anvil of profound disagreement.” “The worry that we have as Anglicans is that our faith can be so driven by fear that our liturgy is tedious and our public pronouncements shrill and irrelevant.” In a powerful and wide ranging address she called for engagement with others across the theological spectrum.

Mark Russell, the Chief Executive of Church Army, sent us out into the world, calling passionately for the church to unite. “Unity is not saying that we will always agree with each other, unity is a deeper spiritual concept. Unity allows me to love my brothers and sisters even when I don’t always agree with them. Love allows me to hold difference and diversity.” He challenged us to “go from here, with a renewed vision to pursue a costly unity, and a vision to bring a gospel of hope to all.”

Many present are increasingly alienated and distanced from the church which they see as home. They are being rendered spiritually homeless. A common question was – why are our episcopal friends, who value and support classical Anglican comprehensiveness, so silent? Why do they, with few exceptions, leave the field clear to those who continually seek to undermine the Communion and deny its profound unity?

We have a Gospel to proclaim in a world disenchanted by the actions of those who proclaim a message which excludes. We invite them to meet with us, so that we can together move into the world with a vision of costly unity and hope for all in Jesus Christ.

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Inclusive Church is "an network of groups and individuals committed to celebrating and maintaining the Anglican tradition of diversity and welcome." Read or listen to talks from the conference on the Inclusive Church website ...

Sunday, November 25, 2007

Wisdom from New Westminster




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Bishop Michael Ingham has urged members of his diocese to take the long view and the persistence of faith through the failures of human discipleship.
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“Above all, let’s get on with the normal work of being the church,” he stated on Nov. 23 in a memorandum sent to his 125 active clergy.
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His letter followed the announcement by a breakaway group, the Anglican Network, announcing in Burlington, Ontario, that it was setting up a parallel Church structure in Canada, but attempting to maintain Anglican ties through a South American Province of the Anglican Communion.

Bishop Ingham said the announcement was not surprising, for there have been signs of today’s developments for years.

At least ten years ago some groups have been laying the groundwork for separation from their national Anglican Churches, stating their intention to be in communion only with those who held their view of human sexuality, the bishop said.

For the groups to attempt now to lay blame for their departure on the Diocese of New Westminster’s actions in 2002 or the US Episcopal Church’s decisions in 2003 is “a denial of history and an avoidance of responsibility.”

“The seeds of this breakaway movement were laid long before same sex blessings were authorized in [the Diocese of] New Westminster or a partnered gay bishop was elected in New Hampshire.”

“Every effort has been made, both in New Westminister [diocese] and across the Anglican Church of Canada, to provide space for genuine differences of conviction on non-essential matters of faith,” said Bishop Ingham.

“We have recognized the difficult place in which many of those of minority opinion find themselves--and there are many minorities, not just one—and have sought to foster mutual respect and mutual support,” he said.

“The vast majority of conservative and traditional Anglicans in Canada understand and accept this, and will stay with their church. This is not a ‘conservative breakaway.’ It is a decision to leave by those who feel uncomfortable with reasonable accommodation within the body of Christ.”

“No Canadian Anglican is being compelled to act against their conscience in matters of doctrine or ethics, and so there is no need for ‘safety’ from ecclesiastical oppression,” he insisted. He advised his clergy to emphasize in their preaching and leadership the church’s mission of outreach to the community and care of parishioners—and not church “politics.”

“Challenge the false stereotypes that foster polarization,” he said, “the “heartless conservative” or the “unbiblical liberal.’ “

“Give thanks that our church, for all its messiness, is honestly and openly facing issues some other bodies cannot,” he advised.

“Take the ‘long view’ – i.e., remember the consistent triumph of the Gospel over the historic fragmentation of the church, and the persistence of faith through the failures of human discipleship.”
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Lisa Fox has Bishop Ingham's letter on her blog -- My Manner of Life -- and here was my favorite bit ... (fill in "Diocese of Los Angeles" for New Westminster and "Episcopal Church" for Anglican Church of Canada and there you have it):
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It has been the cry of every breakaway group that “we haven’t left them – they’ve left us.” Apart from the tiredness of the cliché, it is an attempt to avoid responsibility for personal choices. Every effort has been made, both in New Westminster and across the Anglican Church of Canada, to provide space for genuine differences of conviction on non-essential matters of faith. We have recognized the difficult place in which those of minority opinion find themselves (and there are several minorities, not just one) and have sought to foster mutual respect and mutual support.

The vast majority of conservative and traditional Anglicans in Canada understand and accept this, and will stay with their church. This is not, therefore, a conservative breakaway. It is a decision to leave by those who feel uncomfortable with reasonable accommodation within the Body of Christ.
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Bravo, Bishop Ingham!
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Christ the King


"Christ the King" Sunday again already! Where did the year go? I know the signs of the "end times" are all around us ... from the Christmas blend at Starbuck's to the "Reserve Your Rose Parade Parking NOW!" signs along Colorado Boulevard but still, the end of the church year has kind of snuck up on me.

It'll be an unusual Sunday for me. It's a "weekend away" and the last few days have been knee deep in family in general and sons home for Thanksgiving in particular -- which has given a much needed break from "As the Anglican World Turns." And this morning I'll be in the pew with my kids at 11:15 rather than a typical "working" Sunday of all-church-all day ... and it's still hard to believe it's "Christ the King" already!
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Awhile back, someone asked me what we "did" about Christ the King at All Saints Church since we weren't "allowed" to use male images or pronouns. (Just for the record, we are -- and we baptize in the name of the Trinity, too!) Anyway, it cause me to reflect a little on the nature of Christ's kingship and this sermon was the result. Here's a snippet:

The rule of God—the kingship of Christ—is not about earthly power or political authority, revenge or judgment; it’s about wholeness, it’s about restoring creation to the fullness of peace and justice, truth and love that God intended. It’s about all lands—ALL people—not just a chosen few. It’s about the primary moral value of prizing the interconnectedness of all humanity—of loving our neighbors as ourselves.

The kingship of Jesus is AND ALWAYS HAS BEEN vastly different from a worldly kingship. When we celebrate Christ the King, we’re holding up a king who is, first and foremost, a reconciler, a redeemer, a servant. This is a king who comes to show us how to live as a people of God in the kingdom of God—a shepherd willing to lay down his life for his sheep.



Read the rest here if you're so inclined -- and as we give thanks for kids home for holidays and the blessings of family, time off and leftover turkey -- let's give thanks for the Kingship of Christ as well as the Motherhood of God!

Friday, November 23, 2007

Our friend Giles Fraser posts from Pittsburgh

Couldn't resist this illustration for Giles Fraser's latest Church Times piece on Anglicans in America: an 1892 lithograph subtitled "In Puritan Massachusetts, religious nonconformists suffered this fate -- and much worse."


Happy to read Giles' conclusions that their 21st century ideological descendants will ultimately fail in their efforts to impose their narrow dogmatism in Pittsburgh -- but let's not discount the collateral damage inflicted by the schsimatics in the meantime.

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"I believe the new puritans will fail"
by Giles Fraser, Vicar of Putney

This week’s stop (my final one) on my American adventure is Pittsburgh, the belly of the beast. The good people of Calvary Church have been looking after me and sharing their fears.

These are not radicals or revolutionaries, just puzzled suit-and-tie churchgoers doing their best to follow God’s call. What are they to do when their Bishop, the Rt Revd Robert Duncan, wants to lead their whole diocese out of the Episcopal Church because he does not like its theology?

How did Pittsburgh diocese get so bad? The answer has something to do with the establishment of the reactionary Trinity Episcopal School for Ministry in the diocese back in 1976. This school saw itself as a bridgehead for ridding the Church of progressive theology. It has been feeding clergy into churches all over south-west Pennsylvania, dramatically changing the complexion of the diocese.
In the world of business, it would be called a hostile takeover. For those who worry about the intentions of Wycliffe Hall, now that it has been claimed in an anti-liberal putsch, there is a lesson here for all those who have ears.

Will Bishop Duncan really lead his diocese out of the Church, taking its property into the bargain? I doubt it. I reckon he might not be around as an Episcopalian bishop too much longer. The Presiding Bishop, Dr Katharine Jefferts Schori — whom Bishop Duncan has ordered his clergy not to pray for — has warned him of impending disciplinary action.

“Abandonment of communion” is an offence against the canons of the Episcopal Church. And if a disciplinary process gets him up before the House of Bishops on a charge, they will surely kick him out. They are sick and tired of his behaviour.

Archbishop Desmond Tutu preached about inclusion here at Calvary Church recently. Bishop Duncan squirmed through the sermon with a face like a bulldog chewing a wasp.

All the world’s religions have dangerous and arrogant people who think they are the only ones with the truth. Anglicanism has generally had a more modest and generous view, allowing various viewpoints to co-exist. But these new puritans have taken advantage of Anglican theological hospitality to mount a raid on the soul of the Church. They want to close down the very openness that allowed them space to flourish in the beginning.

They will fail. The only thing that keeps this conspiracy of conservatives together is what they are against. And it will be people from churches such as Calvary that will have to pick up the pieces and put things back together again.

Focus on the Family

My family, that would be.

Or at least most of it. Here we are ... post Turkey Feast for the "official" Thanksgiving photo: Mother, Brother, Boys & Niece ... (Louise gets the photo credit!) ... wishing you and YOUR familes the gift of gratitude for God's many blessings and much Joy in the coming season of preparation for the birth of the Prince of Peace!
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Wednesday, November 21, 2007

Over the river and through the hills ...

... (and the city and the freeways and the traffic!) we go to have Thanksgiving with family, including both sons flying in from points far away and my mother, here from Minnesota. (Ya, sure, you betcha!)

Happy Thanksgiving Eve, everybody! And may the God of love fill you and your families with love enough to share with those who do not yet know that God's love includes them and gratitude enough to reach out to those in need of hope or help this holiday and always!

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P.S. And please remember to pray for those still in harm's way in Iraq and Afghanistan and for those families not yet able to give thanks for the safe return of their sons and daughters, as we are giving thanks for Jamie's presence with us this Thanksgiving!

Tuesday, November 20, 2007

Episcopal Life focus on church blogosphere

Sean O'Connell offers "Church blogosphere: fresh air or rhetorical smog?" in Episcopal Life Online. I don't know if I buy the "monks of old" thing but it's an honor to be mentioned with the august blogging likes of Fr. Jake, Canon Harmon and other luminaries! Thanks, Sean!
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[Episcopal Life] They're like monks of old, scribing texts on Scripture and theology, prayer and meditation, church governance and liturgics -- topics that resonate with them and their experiences of faith in the current day.

They're bloggers -- writers of Internet weblogs ("blogs," for short) -- whose readers respond with comments for posting online.

Together they populate the "blogosphere," a communication environment that, spiritually speaking, includes content that comes as fresh air to some and rhetorical smog to others.
But an informal sampling of blogs shows that Episcopalians, for the most part, blog to build Christian community. Mainly, these blogs are virtual locations for gathering groups of people who love their church and express that love in diverse ways. A few writers may sow discord, yet most work to widen connections and collegiality that might otherwise remain untapped.

Read the rest here ...

Read, Mark, Learn & Inwardly Digest


Just a quick blurb in the middle of a VERY busy day to point to the lessons we've been mulling all week at Noonday Eucharist as worth "inwardly digesting" as sources of sustenance in these days of challenge and turmoil.
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A Reading from Jeremiah (23:1–6)
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“Woe to the shepherds who destroy and scatter the sheep of my pasture!” says the Lord. Therefore this is what the Lord, the God of Israel, says to the shepherds who tend my people: “Because you have scattered my flock and driven them away and have not bestowed care on them, I will bestow punishment on you for the evil you have done. So I will attend to you for your evil doings. Then I myself will gather the remnant of my flock out of all the lands where I have driven them, and I will bring them back to their fold, and they shall be fruitful and multiply.
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I will raise up shepherds over them who will shepherd them, and they shall not fear any longer, or be dismayed, nor shall any be missing,” says the Lord. “The days are surely coming when I will raise up for David a righteous Branch, who shall reign as king and deal wisely, and shall execute justice and righteousness in the land. In his days Judah will be saved and Israel will live in safety. And this is the name by which he will be called: ‘The Lord our righteousness.’”
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A Reading from Colossians (1:11–20)

By the might of God’s glory you will be endowed with the strength needed to stand fast and endure joyfully whatever may happen. Thanks be to God for having made you worthy to share in the inheritance of the holy ones in light! God rescued us from the authority of darkness and brought us into the reign of Jesus, God’s Only Begotten. It is through Jesus that we have redemption, the forgiveness of sins. Christ is the image of the unseen God and the firstborn of all creation, for in Christ all things were created in heaven and on earth: everything visible and invisible, Thrones, Dominations, Sovereignties, Powers – all things were created through Christ and for Christ.
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Before anything was created, Christ existed, and all things hold together in Christ. The church is the body; Christ is its head. Christ is the Beginning, the firstborn from the dead, and so Christ is first in every way. God wanted all perfection to be found in Christ, and all things to be reconciled to God through Christ – everything in heaven and everything on earth – when Christ made peace by dying on the cross.

Monday, November 19, 2007

Episcopal leader seeks to mend church rift

Feature article in today's Los Angeles Times:


In the face of defection threats, the bishop urges members to look beyond divisive issues and focus on helping people in need
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By Rebecca Trounson,
Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
November 19, 2007
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SAN JOSE -- Anxiety crept into the priest's voice as he addressed the leader of his unsettled church. Was she finding a way to bridge the widening rifts in the Episcopal Church and its parent Anglican Communion? he asked. Or was it an impasse?
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Standing recently in the airy sanctuary of a small San Jose church, the Most Rev. Katharine Jefferts Schori was direct, her low voice calm, as she offered her own, more nuanced view to the priests and lay leaders before her.
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"I'm not sure it is a stalemate," she said. "I think this church and others may just be becoming clearer about who they are."
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And she reminded her audience that small groups of believers had previously left both the Episcopal Church and the global Anglican fellowship, and both entities survived.
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Read the rest here ... and give thanks for the ministry of new Bishop of El Camino Real, Mary Gray-Reeves, pictured above at her November 10th consecration. (Photo credit: Tony Avelar/Associated Press)

TUTU: Time for Williams to take on homophobia


Ekklesia reports: Nobel Peace Laureate and South African Archbishop Emeritus Desmond Tutu says that Archbishop of Canterbury Dr Rowan Williams should be tackling homophobia in the church and making it a welcoming place for lesbian and gay people.

In a BBC radio interview to be broadcast next Tuesday, 27 November 2007, Archbishop Tutu says that he is depressed by the Church's "obsession" with the issue of gay priests, and believes that its Gospel message is being undermined by "extreme homophobia".

Tutu says Christians should instead be focusing on global problems such as combatting prejudice, poverty, AIDS/HIV and the environment.
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"Our world is facing problems - poverty, HIV and Aids - a devastating pandemic, and conflict," said the archbishop, who is now aged 76 and has survived ill health to continue his work for a more just world.

"God must be weeping looking at some of the atrocities that we commit against one another. In the face of all of that, our Church, especially the Anglican Church, at this time is almost obsessed with questions of human sexuality."

Read the rest here.
And here is the link to the BBC News article and here is the link to the BBC4 site where you should be able to listen to the interview on Nov 27th.

Sunday, November 18, 2007

Giles Fraser: California: where the giving is cheerful

"For Christians, stinginess is not understandable prudence taken a little too far. It is a lack of faith."

MOST DAYS, the Revd J. Edwin Bacon Jr rises at 4 a.m. for his prayers. He is in the gym at 5 a.m. Church meetings begin at 7 a.m. All Saints’, Pasadena, is Anglicanism on steroids: more than 2000 people in church on Sundays, an impressive and committed staff team of dozens, and an annual budget of several million dollars. They praise the Lord, feed the poor, include everyone, and speak the truth to power. This is what confident, progressive Anglicanism looks like, California-style.

The first day I arrived here, a film crew was on All Saints’ Campus — yes, campus — making the latest Hollywood blockbuster. (As it happens, the church has its own film crew to capture Sunday worship for those who cannot make it.) Clint Eastwood’s trailer was parked behind Mr Bacon’s office. And was that Angelina Jolie who just walked past me in church? Of course, it was.

I tried hard to look nonchalant and unimpressed. But there is a huge amount to be impressed about around here. It is not just the super-size-me facilities. People take their faith very seriously in these parts. It makes a difference to their lives. Not least, it makes a difference to what they do with their money.
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We Brits are often terribly stingy — at least, the richer among us commonly are. Though there are many people who practise sacrificial giving — and most of those are probably from the Evangelical tradition — many more of us make do with offering back to God the money that has fallen down behind the sofa. We don’t even like discussing money. '

In the United States, generosity is preached about, expected, and received. Parishioners are challenged to tithe. I was slack-jawed as Mr Bacon came back from lunch after what he described as a “$15-million ask”.

It is not the number of zeros on the end of the cheque that impresses me, it is the confidence of the whole thing: the confidence of asking for it, and the confidence of giving it. I now see that, for Christians, stinginess is not understandable prudence taken a little too far. It is a lack of faith.

We tell ourselves self-justifying stories about the greed of US tele-evangelists or the administration costs of charities. It helps us keep our wealth to ourselves and within our families. What sort of way is that to respond to the love of God that freely overflows into creation for the benefit of all?

Our mistake might be to speak too much of “sacrificial giving”. That makes it sound like something one would rather not do. In contrast, the people here think of giving as a joy.

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From the 16 November CHURCH TIMES
The Revd Dr Giles Fraser is Team Rector of Putney.
Photo credit: Anthony Parker

In case you missed the News from Niagara ...

From the Anglican Journal:


Niagara diocese approves blessings for gay couples
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The southern Ontario diocese of Niagara, meeting at its annual synod, on Nov. 17 voted to allow civilly-married gay couples, “where at least one party is baptized,” to receive a church blessing.

Bishop Ralph Spence, who had refused to implement a similar vote three years ago, this time gave his assent, making Niagara the third diocese since the June General Synod convention to accept same-sex blessings.

Read the rest here.

We do SO have fall in California!

It has come to my attention that there are those who think we don't do "seasons" in Southern California. Au contraire!! It's a little like those who think liberals don't do theology or progressives don't do Jesus. The difference is, this misapprehension is easier to refute.

Exhibit A:
The house across the street from me.
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Exhibit B:
My front yard.
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Exhibit C:
Pot Roast & a nice bottle of Barbera for supper
(Yes, that's a dog with his eye on the pot roast in the background.)
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Here endeth "Fall: Southern California Style." Maybe we'll do theology and Jesus next week!
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Taking Out the Trash


If you've missed Mark Harris' reflecting on "Taking Out the Trash" it's highly recommended reading.
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Here are some candidates for trash to be taken out at the end of the day in Anglican-land. (see my previous blog "The limits of Provisionality.")

Bishop Schofield's remarks (please note, not the Bishop. He is not trash, he is a child of God):

He said this,
"This enables us:
1) to receive the protection contemplated by the Primates in Dar Es Salaam that was originally agreed to by the Presiding bishop, but later rejected by the House of Bishops of The Episcopal Church;
2) to remain a diocese with full membership within the Anglican communion where the orders of our clergy are recognized; and,
3) to assure that we remain within the Anglican Communion through a Province in full communion with the See of Canterbury.
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According to well-informed sources, the Archbishop of Canterbury has been fully informed of the invitation of the Province of the Southern Cone and described it as a "sensible way forward." Indeed, it is the sensible way forward and a decision by the Diocese to move in this direction is by no means irrevocable as was seen during the 1860's when the Dioceses of the Southern States left the Episcopal Church and at the conclusion of the Civil War returned to the Episcopal Church without punitive action.
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As the Southern Cone invitation makes clear, the Diocese may return to full communion with the Episcopal Church when circumstances change and the Episcopal Church repents and adheres to the theological, moral and pastoral norms of the Anglican Communion, and when effective and acceptable alternative primatial oversight becomes available."
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This is trash on several counts:
section 2…the diocese is already a 'full member within the Anglican Communion' and even if the Episcopal Church were bounced that would not mean orders would not be recognized;
section 3…moving on to the Southern Cone does not assure that they remain within the Anglican Communion.
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The deposed bishop of Recife went to the Southern Cone with his followers and is not invited to Lambeth. The riff about the dioceses in the Southern States is bogus and an unhelpful example. What makes the bishop think that "dioceses may return to full communion with the Episcopal Church" on the clarity of something said by the Province of the Southern Cone? And, as icing on the cake, the notion that repentance by the Episcopal Church and effective and acceptable alternative primatial oversight becomes available are linked as both being needed, is absurd.
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"...Our plan is not only to disassociate, then, from the Episcopal Church, but to officially, constitutionally re-affiliate with an existing orthodox province of the communion that does not ordain women to the priesthood. These conversations are very far along but cannot be announced until the province that is considering our appeal has made their final decision public."
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The deal is, the Diocese of Fort Worth did not affiliate with the Episcopal Church, as if it were shopping around for a convenient place to land, it was created by act of General Convention on the recommendation of the Diocese of Dallas. So it can't "re-affiliate." No matter that conversations with the Southern Cone are in progress, no matter that the bishop and many if not most people are prepared to move on. The Diocese of Fort Worth is a diocese in the Episcopal Church and is not up for bid, re-affiliation or unilateral whatever.
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Religious Earthquakes

This article by my rector, Ed Bacon, is from the cover of this week's "Saints Alive" -- the weekly newsletter of All Saints Church, Pasadena. I hope it's helpful in expanding on my push-back on language of violence in some of the recent comments on this blog.


Religious Earthquakes
by the Reverend J. Edwin Bacon
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September 11, 2001 was a wake up call for religion.

On that day, religiously motivated people highjacked both a religion and four passenger airplanes, using them as missiles against the United States in the name of Allah.

The President responded to those crimes against humanity not by leveraging the phenomenal international sympathy for us to employ the rule of law, but by declaring a War on Terrorism. Using religious imagery, he called it a “crusade” and divided the world into us versus the “evildoers.” He employed the rule of war, not the rule of law. Across the world, religious people engaged in escalated levels of violence calling it holy even when it was clear to so many that to do so was suicidal.

Suddenly it was clear that to be religious in the 21st century was to be interreligious. As Karl Rahner had earlier put it, “Today everyone is the next-door neighbor and spiritual neighbor of everyone else in the world.”

The 20th century assumption that religion had become irrelevant to everyday life was proved false. At the beginning of this new century, to quote James Carroll, “The centrality of religion to life on earth, for better and for worse, had made itself very clear in a very short time.”

We felt we were in the midst of religious earthquakes. We saw the tectonic plates shifting daily underneath our feet--not only in Christianity, but in Judaism, Islam and other religions as well. Many of us began to see that no longer could we practice religion as usual, as though nothing had happened. Because of our sense of this new interreligious era we had to begin asking very important questions.

What is the impact of certain beliefs on those who do not share them? Hasn’t the time passed for religion to cease and desist from teaching in any way that violence is sacred? The writings of James Carroll became a seminar for many across this country and beyond, myself included, who want the church to be much more about inspiration than institutional preservation, and who want religion to be rational and compassionate rather than the fuel for wildfires of religious extremism, violence, discrimination, and injustice.

Several months ago at All Saints we began critiquing those Christian theologies which claim that God cannot forgive persons without a sacrificial penalty being paid by Jesus on the cross. That became our first tectonic shift. There have been others.
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Now James Carroll returns to All Saints as a continuing resource of this project of calling Christianity back to its essence. He is writing a book on the new church that is emerging and will be with us Sunday in the Rector’s Forum for a conversation about this liberating venture. Come to learn; come with questions; come to be both shaken and empowered.
=====
More about James Carroll to come. Here's one of his earlier presentations at All Saints -- Iraq, Faith & Self-Criticism
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Saturday, November 17, 2007

And another thing ...

Lots of comments on +Katharine "standing firm" in response to those trying to abandon the faith and discipline of the Episcopal Church for points more theologically congruent with their own perspective while insisting they get to take the assets belonging to the Episcopal parish or diocese they're abandoning with them. Here's a great analogy, shared with permission, from HoB/D colleague Tom Woodward:

Isn't it the same as someone in a United Way office who leaves to work in the Salvation Army?

The United Way member/employee, in leaving, cannot take furniture or bank accounts or office building on his or her way to the Salvation Army -- no matter what the reason for leaving. Nor can that employee kick and scream that the United Way officials are mean spirited because they won't negotiate over the building, bank accounts and furniture!

If people want to leave the Episcopal Church for any reason whatsoever, let them leave -- but it is unseemly and irresponsible for them to demand a "negotiation" over assets they are abandoning in their leaving.

It is also irresponsible to toss around charges of "threatening" and "intimidation" when our Presiding Bishop explains the consequences of the actions being threatened by bishops like Duncan, Iker, Schofield and others.

In the real world, when an executive informs others about the likely consequences of the actions they are contemplating against the organization, that is called "common courtesy."


Precisely. Couldn't have said it better myself! So please consider this my response to those commenting on the "Say What?" post from yesterday.

And while the plot of "The Anglican World Turns" continues to thicken this weekend, we're taking a break from things-Anglican and heading off to a Presidential Forum on Global Warming being held here in L.A. this afternoon.

I understand it's "full up" but if you're interested you can watch it online here beginning at 2pm Pacific.

All for now. Later, alligators!

Friday, November 16, 2007

Say WHAT??????????

OK ... even given that The Washington Times has the same reputation for "fair and balanced" that Fox News has and even though reporter Julia Duin has a well deserved reputation for twisting the facts on the ground to fit the story in her head, today's article on the Virginia property disputes hit a new low for everyone involved.


Bishop says she made diocese
.
sue 11 churches
...
screamed the headline.

"Wow!" I thought. "How'd she "make" them do that????"

And then I read the actual quote from the deposition our Presiding Bishop gave in regard to the matter under dispute:

"I told Bishop Lee I could not support negotiations for sale if the congregations intended to set up as other parts of the Anglican Communion," Bishop Jefferts Schori said, referring to the 77 million-member worldwide body of which the Episcopal Church is a part.

So I've got the same question EpiScope is asking: Can someone explain how you get from "I told Bishop Lee I could not support" to "says she forced"?

While we're waiting for the answer, let's focus on what +Katharine actually DID say:

Bishop Jefferts Schori defended her actions "as a means to preserve assets of the Episcopal Church for ministry and the mission of the Episcopal Church." Efforts by overseas archbishops to set up competing churches for disenfranchised conservatives "violates our integrity as a church," she said.

And let's give thanks for a Presiding Bishop hanging tough when she needs to.

Thursday, November 15, 2007

Update on SW Florida

The conversation continues about the sad news that the Bishop of Southwest Florida has "uninvited" the Bishop of New Hampshire to speak at Saint Boniface Episcopal, Sarasota in January.

Fr Jake offers this new button to add to your collection ...


... along with contact information for the Bishop of Southwest Florida:
The Rt. Rev. Dabney T. Smith can be contacted at:
7313 Merchant Court
Sarasota, FL 34240
(941) 556-0315
Toll-free: (800) 992-7699
Fax: (941) 556-0321
... and Fr. Jake also offers this this reminder: Remember to show respect for the office by being courteous.
And may I just say: AMEN!

Wednesday, November 14, 2007

So Much for "Listening!"

Not sure where you even GET a t-shirt like this but I'm thinking we need to all chip in a buy a crate or two and send them to the Diocese of Southwest Florida.
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"Why?" you ask. Because they're not. Listening, that is. Not only NOT listening but not even going to be "allowed" to have the OPPORTUNITY to listen.

Here's what's being reported on Louie Crew's blog:

===============

For weeks this announcement has circulated in a flier:

Bishop Robinson to be
2008 Boniface Speaker


Saint Boniface Episcopal Church, Sarasota, is pleased to announce that the Rt. Rev. V. Gene Robinson, Bishop of New Hampshire has accepted the invitation to be our guest and speaker January 16-20, 2008. We are especially grateful to
Assistant Rector Wes Wasdyke for helping invite Bishop Robinson. Wes is canonically resident in the Diocese of New Hampshire where he served the church and medical communities for many years.

Bishop Robinson is an astute speaker and spiritual leader with a passion for shared ministry and well known for his pastoral support of clergy and congregations in New Hampshire. While he is the focus of much attention in the Anglican Communion, his visit to us is a personal one where he will be able to share his own journey of faith and encourage each of us in ours.

As is always the case in the visit of a bishop from another jurisdiction, The Rt. Rev. Dabney Smith, Bishop of Southwest Florida, was consulted, and has given permission for Bishop Robinson to be our speaker in residence. Bishop Smith has encouraged us by describing this visit as an important part of the listening process which is key to the Windsor and Lambeth recommendations for the Anglican Communion.

The Boniface Speaker series was created to bring the brightest and best in religion to this parish and community. Bishop Robinson will speak at a community wide forum Thursday evening January 17, a clergy study morning Friday January 18, and at the parish services and forum Sunday January 20. Saint Boniface Church is at 5615 Midnight Pass Road on Siesta Key in Sarasota.
The Rev. Canon Edward M. Copland, Rector http://www.boniface/.
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----------------
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The flier was replaced today after Bishop Dabney Smith asked Bishop Robinson to decline the parish's invitation, with this new memo:
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Wednesday, November 14, 2007
To: Boniface Parish Leaders, and other interested friends
Re: Cancellation of planned visit of Bishop Robinson
From: Ted Copland


Bishop Dabney Smith just called to tell me that he has contacted Bishop Gene Robinson again and asked him to decline the invitation to speak here in January. Bishop Smith said he took this action because of all the heat he is getting. Previously Bishop Smith had given his permission for the visit and said it was not a problem for him although he anticipated a reaction. He told me that it has been more of a reaction than he anticipated. Bishop Robinson is on sabbatical and is out of the country (he was in New Zealand when they talked). I anticipate that we will hear from his office in New Hampshire to confirm this.

Many people will be disappointed about this but we can choose to see this as an opportunity to continue the conversation about what it means to be the Episcopal Church in the 21st century. I believe it may be important for Bishop Smith to hear from people who thought that Bishop Robinson's visit would have furthered the conversation called for throughout the Anglican Communion.
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Ted Copland

================

Here are Louie's comments:

You know opposition is losing when opposition resorts to the tyranny of ideas, afraid to allow anyone even to listen to a point of view not approved by the one in power.

This country was built on strong advocacy for the right -- even the obligation -- of persons to expose themselves to all points of view before holding a point of view themselves.

Probably Bishop Smith is thoroughly within his rights as a bishop to cancel any presentation if doing so helps him save his skin. I hope that he can sleep in that skin.

When you want to know why most young people don't give the church the time of day, you need look no farther. Bishop Smith's cowardice gives me the creeps and makes me embarrassed to be an Episcopalian.

=============
Here are my comments:
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What Louie said.
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On the Saddling Up of One's Horse


Don't miss Ain't Done Crashin' Yet -- a reflection by Marvin Long from the Diocese of Fort Worth posted yesterday to Katie Sherrod's blog Desert's Child.
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And after you've checked it out, wander over to Fr. Jake and check out his reflections and the comments thereupon.
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And give thanks for the courageous witness of those who are virtual icons of speaking truth to power and -- in spite of the spiritual & emotional cost -- finding hope rather than succumbing to despair. As Marvin says so poignantly in his concluding words:
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The bright side is that there is support for ECUSA here. Although I am saddened by the current state of affairs, I hopefully look for the national church to reassert itself. Come soon. I'm still on my horse.
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WE are "the national church" folks. The ones who elected the deputies who elected the President of the House of Deputies, elected the bishops who elected the Presiding Bishop, selected our Executive Council members and who have a voice in this messy, democratic, representative system we call Episcopal Polity.
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What can WE do to reach out to those who are "voices in the wilderness?" What can WE do to give voice to the voiceless?
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Well, we can post their voices to our blogs ... like Katie and Jake and Elizabeth and now me. (Forgiveness begged if there are others I've missed ... I'm writing this on my lunch break and only have time to check so many blogs!)
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We can express our support by contacting the Presiding Bishop and the President of the House of Deputies and offering our strongest support for their strongest suppost of the Marvin Longs and Katie Sherrods in Fort Worth and elsewhere.
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We can express our outrage by communicating with the Bishop of Fort Worth.
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We can express our solidarity by inviting the wider Anglican Communion into this conversation and making sure those working on Lambeth Conference and others with influence at Lambeth Palace hear the voices of those who are the collateral damage in this "rush toward schism."
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We may not have horses to saddle up but we do have the power of our collective witnesses to offer. And I'm thinking it's time to head 'em up and move 'em out!
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Tuesday, November 13, 2007

We're loving Giles Fraser at All Saints Church!

So we've had our own little "British Invasion" here at All Saints this last week or so as we've been blessed with the presence of the Reverend Dr. Giles Fraser (Vicar of Putney) here in Pasadena whilst on sabbatical leave. (Warning: If you hang around with an Englishman long enough, you find that you start using words like "whilst!")

Anyway, he preached for us on Sunday ... "Salvation and Democracy" (now up online on video) and then we had quite the lovely post-Evensong reception ...

Here's us looking very Anglican in our cassocks, don'tcha think?

Ed Bacon & Giles Fraser: The Dynamic Duo

And a good time was had by all ...

... including Giles ...

... who here surveys our efforts to "British-up the place" in his honor.
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Happily, we'll be at the same conference next month at Seabury-Western, working with allies to continue to move the church forward on in the inclusion of all the baptized into the Body of Christ. And I know there are moves afoot to get him back for another bit to All Saints Church.
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So stay tuned ... and bon voyage, Vicar! Safe travels back and blessings on you and your global witness to God's inclusive love!

Speaking of Pittsburgh ...

Here's a voice of sanity speaking FROM Pittsburgh ...

The Sunday Post-Gazette ,to be specific, where this op-ed ran on 11/11/07:

Conservative activist JERRY BOWYER takes issue with the conservatives' split from the Episcopal Church, finding no support for it in biblical or Christian tradition

My wife is a reader at St. Stephen's Episcopal Church in McKeesport. This means that she sometimes leads the people in prayer, including a prayer "for Katharine, our presiding bishop; Robert and Henry, our bishops; and Jay, our priest." These are our leaders. Katharine Jefferts Schori is the elected head of the U.S. branch of the church. Robert Duncan along with his assistant, Henry Scriven, leads the diocese, and Jay Geisler is the priest at St. Stephen's in McKeesport.

This past summer, Bishop Duncan instructed my wife and hundreds of other readers in the diocese to omit the prayer for Katharine. Katharine Jefferts Schori has been a frequent target for conservatives in the U.S. church ever since she was elected presiding bishop in 2006. Coming on the heels of the installation of an active and outspoken homosexual bishop, the elevation of a woman of liberal sympathies seemed a bridge too far for many conservatives.
It appeared at the time that omitting the prayer for Katharine was a steppingstone to where the bishop was really trying to take us -- outside of the Episcopal Church. You see, to include Katharine in the prayers was to acknowledge her office, and to acknowledge her office was to acknowledge our obligation to her.

Our suspicions were confirmed on Nov. 2, when the Diocese of Pittsburgh voted overwhelmingly to change its constitution to permit separation from the Episcopal Church USA.

When my wife, Susan, asked me for advice about the prayer directive, I told her that Katharine was elected lawfully under the standards of the Episcopal Church. Robert was using his authority to tell her to disregard Katharine's authority. When there is a disruption in the chain of authority, I said, "look to the highest authority." He said, "Love your enemies, pray for those who despitefully use you." If you should pray for your enemies, should you not pray even more for friends with whom you disagree?


I am not a liberal. I think the Episcopal Church made a terrible mistake when it installed Gene Robinson as bishop of New Hampshire in 2004. It did the church no favors when it trod the historic standards of Anglicanism under foot in a rush to make some sort of political point. It did Father Robinson no good to turn this deeply wounded man into a cause celebre with no thought to the pressure it would impose (driving him eventually into rehab). It did the world no favor to turn the church into an echo of the sexual revolution rather than a beacon out of it. Many commandments were broken, most notably that "they should be one, Father, even as You and I are one."

But the solution does not lie in breaking more commandments. The priests who voted overwhelmingly for secession this month had taken an oath of loyalty to the Episcopal Church at the time of their ordination. That oath holds whether our guys win every battle or not.

I know Republicans who simply refused to acknowledge Bill Clinton as president in the 1990s. I know Democrats who did the same regarding George W. Bush. But both presidents were elected under the rules laid out in our national Constitution.

The same thing has happened in our church. My side lost on the Gene Robinson issue. It was bitter, but it was fair.


Secession is not the biblical pattern of resistance to flawed authority. Young David served under a tyrannical and apostate King named Saul. David submitted to Saul's authority and he resisted the urge to revolt or secede. He remained faithful to Israel and Saul until the end, and then, because of his patience, became king himself.

David's great (28 times) grandson, Jesus, was a reader in the synagogue despite its shortcomings. He worshipped in the temple despite its corruption and oppression. King Herod was a murderous crook and the temple priesthood were his hired cronies and yet Mary and Joseph and Jesus were there year after year, making offerings, saying prayers, talking with rabbis.

When St. Paul was beaten by the high priest he showed him deference, not contempt. "You salute the rank," as they say in the military, "not the man."
That's because the authority of a priest or bishop doesn't come from him; it comes from God. The failings of the man, or woman, don't erase that authority. Saul would regularly try to murder David. He disregarded God and took on the responsibility to offer sacrifices himself. He murdered faithful priests. Through all of this, David saluted the office long after the man had outlived his merit.


On Oct. 31., the presiding bishop of the Episcopal Church USA sent a letter to the bishop of Pittsburgh, directing him not to split the diocese from the denomination. Bishop Duncan replied by quoting Martin Luther, "Here I stand. I can do no other."

It's a powerful quote, but a misuse of history. Martin Luther didn't leave the Roman Catholic Church; he was kicked out. He decided to "stand" and fight. It's ironic that Bishop Duncan quoted Luther's pledge to "stand" in order to justify his intention to "walk."

Are my fellow conservatives fully aware of the biblical and patristic teachings on schism? How do they justify a break with the Episcopal Church to which they have literally sworn loyalty? How do they justify taking Episcopal property with them? Given Paul's command to the first-century Corinthian Church not to address church issues in secular courts, how do they justify the inevitable legal battles that accompany a schism? How much will the litigation cost? Will the money come from our offerings?

There are moral questions, too. If we break with the Episcopal Church in America over gay priests, how can we then align ourselves with African bishops who tolerate polygamist priests? Paul says that a church leader is to be "the husband of one wife." Do we think that the word "husband" is inerrant but the word "one" is not?

If the Episcopal Church really has become apostate and its current leaders really are enemies of God, then how can we justify leaving the church, its resources and its sheep in their care? If not, how can we justify this separation?
Yes, there are times when it's necessary to leave one authority for another. When the New Testament writers were forced to deal with this issue, they concluded that they were compelled to obey higher authority at all times, except when it commanded them to disobey God. Roman Emperors were monstrous beasts. The church preached against them and prayed for them to repent, but Christians still obeyed the law. It wasn't until Rome ordered them to stop preaching the gospel and to offer sacrifices to Caesar that the early church was forced to disobey.

By analogy, New Hampshire can install a whole pride of gay bishops, but we don't break our oath of loyalty to the Episcopal Church until they order us to start installing them here.

Until then, the pattern of David and Jesus holds: Be faithful. Be patient. Be active in good works. And be in prayer for all in authority ... "for Katharine, our presiding bishop; Robert and Henry, our bishops; and Jay, our priest, I pray. Lord, hear our prayer."
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Jerry Bowyer is an Episcopal vestryman, a financial journalist and the chairman of Bowyer Media (www.jerrybowyer.com).

Monday, November 12, 2007

Belated Blog on Veteran's Day

Yesterday was not a day that lent itself to blogging so here I am today.



Yesterday we prayed, at our morning services: "On this Veterans Day, bless all those men and women who, for devotion to their country and to the common good have offered themselves in service to our nation."

And last night we heard, at Evensong, a moving meditation from Giles Fraser on what the Brits call "Remembrance Day" about "The Lies of War & The Lies of Peace." (Wish there was a text to post but there is not. You'll have to take my word for it that it was great.)

And then, this morning, I finally got to yesterday's papers and saw Frank Rich's Op-ed -- The Coup at Home -- which is a must-read for anybody concerned about the soul of this nation and for anybody committed to preserving what is best about this nation conceived in liberty and dedicated to the proposition that all are created equal.

On Veteran's Day, the day we remember and honor those who risked their lives to preserve freedom and democracy, Rich calls us ALL to account for our complicity in the undermining of the foundational American values our veterans have served. An excerpt:

In the six years of compromising our principles since 9/11, our democracy has so steadily been defined down that it now can resemble the supposedly aspiring democracies we've propped up in places like Islamabad. Time has taken its toll. We've become inured to democracy-lite.

To believe that this corruption will simply evaporate when the Bush presidency is done is to underestimate the permanent erosion inflicted over the past six years. What was once shocking and unacceptable in America has now been internalized as the new normal.

We are a people in clinical depression. Americans know that the ideals that once set our nation apart from the world have been vandalized, and no matter which party they belong to, they do not see a restoration anytime soon.


Veteran's Day IS a time to honor and a time to remember ... AND a time to strengthen our resolve to nurture peace and hope in our hearts.

May it also be a time for us to speak truth to the powers that vandalize our values, to refuse to allow torture to be committed in our name and to refuse to allow the sacrifices our veterans have made to be squandered by those by subverting the rule of law and selling out the Constitution they pledged their lives to defend against all enemies, foreign AND domestic.

Saturday, November 10, 2007

Bits & Pieces


Bits & Pieces that struck me as I wandered about the web this evening procrastinating getting my notes together for my 7:30 a.m. sermon for tomorrow. (Giles Fraser is preaching at 9 & 11:15 but as he's on sabbatical I'm taking the early shift.)

=============

The Bishop-elect of Chicago as quoted in the Chicago Tribune: When asked about his stance on gays in the church, Lee said he supported full inclusion."I believe God is calling us to full inclusion of gays and lesbians in ministry of this church. . . . There is a place for everyone in the church, and the church has to catch up with God's vision," he said.

==========

Irene Monroe in the Concord Monitor: While many would like to believe that the financial crisis in the Episcopal Church is brought on by secessionist congregations battling with liberal bishops endorsing sodomy, the church's coffers were bare prior to Robinson's consecration. The reason? Decline in its membership over four decades; the rise of its Third World bishops from countries in Africa, South America, and Asia; and its egregious act of inhospitality and exclusion of its lesbian and gay population.


==========

Tobias Haller writes: We gather at the table because of what each of us brings to the table, and what we derive from that gathering: no one comes empty-handed, but all are given more than they can ask or imagine when they are open to the multiplication of gifts. It is not for any of us to tell any others to leave the table because we might not like their gift.

=============

Finally, my own reflections on "Soundbites and Sadducees."
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Reflecing on Sunday's gospel -- Luke 20:27-38 -- here's what's striking me most about Jesus' response to "some Sadducees ... who say there is no resurrection [when they] came to Jesus and asked him a question:"

Maybe it's because some of our work this week was about media and messaging but I am finding myself struck by how media savvy Jesus was. Long before "Crossfire" & "Point Counterpoint," media trainers and soundbite queens, Jesus had mastered the art of reframing the question.

In Sunday's gospel he turns his "Meet the Sadducees" appearance into an opportunity to once again "stay on message" -- eluding their "gotcha" line of questioning about whose wife the hapless seven-times-widow would be in heaven. Insead, Jesus reframes the question and offers a testimony to the greatness of God -- the God of the living, not the dead -- so compelling that it ends up in all three synpotic gospels.

That was his core message: The Good News of a God who loved us enough to become one of us and then called us to walk in love with each other.

Maybe if we think of Jesus as not only our Lord and Savior but our "media trainer" we can go and do likewise. Following his example we can reframe the debates that threaten to sideline the mission and ministry of the church back TO the mission and ministry of the church: to proclaim the year of the Lord's favor -- bring good news to the poor, proclaim release to the captives and recovery of sight to the blind and to let the oppressed go free.

Jesus stayed on message and so can we.

Here endeth the "bits & pieces."

Also in Chicago ...

Along with electing a new bishop today, the 2007 Convention of the Diocese of Chicago also passed the following resolution:

WHEREAS our Lord “is not one to show partiality” (Acts 10:34-35) and calls us to “go and make disciples of all nations” (Matt 28:19);

WHEREAS our baptismal covenant call us to “respect the dignity of every human being;”

WHEREAS undue discrimination limits the ability of the faithful to elect qualified persons to leadership, including the position of bishop;

WHEREAS Title III, Canon 1, Section 2 of the Canons of The Episcopal Church clearly states that “No person shall be denied access to the discernment process for any ministry, lay or ordained, in this church because of race, color, ethnic origin, national origin, sex, marital status, sexual orientation, disabilities or age;”

WHEREAS Resolution B033, if interpreted to mean that a person living in a same-sex partnership should be excluded from consecration, stands in conflict with Title III, Canon 1, Section 2 of the Canons of the Episcopal Church;

NOW THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED THAT

The Diocese of Chicago calls upon the 76th General Convention to abide by the canons of The Episcopal Church;

to respect the responsibility of each diocese to prayerfully discern the will of God in calling leaders;

to refrain from restricting the potential field of candidates on the basis of sex and sexual orientation;

and thus to repeal Resolution B033.

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More from Giles Fraser


In this week's Church Times:


Why equality belongs with freedom

The radicals who met in my church in 1647 demanding the franchise for all men, irrespective of birth or wealth, were soon thwarted by the machinations of the fearful Oliver Cromwell (Comment, 26 October). The leaders of the first stirrings of English democracy were rounded up and shot in Burford Church. Others were cowed into silence.

Yet the dream was kept alive. Ships that sailed west to find a new land took with them the dream of democracy. What was first whispered in Putney came to fruition in that great experiment in democracy that is the United States.
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Looking around Los Angeles, as I have just done, it is easy to miss the moral seriousness of the US. This is the spiritual home of cocaine-snorting movie producers, drive-by shootings, plastic breasts, and gas-guzzling Hummers. As I sit with my feet in the Pacific Ocean on the Malibu seafront, enjoying a great Chardonnay, the Puritans of Putney seem a million miles away.

Yet this is the land they created, a land greatly shaped by the Christian convictions of the Levellers: that all human beings are equal in the sight of God (hence levelled); and that the fight against tyranny (Pharaoh, Caesar, the Pope, the British monarch) is a religious imperative.

Of course, the Levellers would have been horrified to discover what many people have chosen to do with their freedom. But the decision to restrict freedom, even the freedom to be wastefully rich and superficial, can be a dangerous game. The more freedom is restricted, even in the name of some obviously higher good, the more chance there is for oppressive tyranny to assert itself. This is why, odd as it may seem, the LA party-set are sentinels on the outer flanks of human liberty.

But — and here is the great and painful contradiction of the United States — freedom is often defended at the expense of that other pillar of Leveller conviction: equality. Just behind the glitz of the Kodak Theater, where the Oscars are dished out, a huddle of black vagrants, dressed in little more than rags, hang out on the steps of the United Methodist Church. What freedom is there for such as these?

“The poorest he that is in England hath a life to live as the greatest he,” said Thomas Rainsborough in Putney. His brother-in-law, John Winthrop, the first governor of Massachusetts, made an even more famous speech: “For we must consider that we shall be as a city upon a hill. The eyes of all people are upon us. So that if we shall deal falsely with our God in this work we have undertaken . . . we shall be made a story and a byword throughout the world.”

That is uncomfortably near the knuckle.

A New Bishop for Chicago

The Diocese of Chicago has elected the Reverend Jeffrey Lee as its 10th bishop. Lee was elected on the 2nd ballot. To learn a little more about Bishop-elect Lee I commend his welcome letter -- "Practicing the Hospitality of God" -- on the "About Us" page of his parish website.

Episcopal Life Online has this report and Integrity has issued the following statement:




Integrity congratulates Jeffrey Lee on his election as the next Bishop of Chicago. "We look forward to working with Bishop-elect Lee in continuing Chicago's long history of working for the full-inclusion of the LGBT faithful in the life and witness of the diocese," said the Rev. Susan Russell, President of Integrity.

"Integrity also commends the Search Committee of the Diocese of Chicago for including the Very Rev. Lind as a candidate despite the chilling effects of Resolution B033-and Dean Lind herself for standing for election in spite of the House of Bishops' recent statement in New Orleans," continued Russell.

"We may never know how significant a factor Resolution B033 was in the outcome of the Chicago election. However, we do know that Resolution B033 is noncanonical and discriminatory. Two dioceses -- California and Rochester --have already passed resolutions to General Convention 2009 that will nullify B033. We strongly urge all bishops and deputies to support such resolutions and their intent to end B033's inequity when we get to General Convention 2009 in Anaheim."

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Giles in The Guardian this morning














A House Divided

As noted on this blog, the Reverend Dr. Giles Fraser, Vicar of Putney, is spending a bit of his sabbatical with us here at All Saints Church in Pasadena. Here's his piece on the Anglican Civil Wars posted in today's Guardian:

=====

The American civil war began with the secession of South Carolina from the United States. They left so as to defend their "right" not to have a liberal agenda imposed on them by campaigning progressives from the north. Interfering do-gooders weren't going to force proudly independent southerners to accept that slavery was wicked.

Parallels with the escalating crisis within American Anglicanism are now being made. The diocese of Pittsburgh, led by Bishop Bob Duncan, has just voted to quit the Episcopal church, and other conservative dioceses in the south might follow suit. They are sick to death of liberals telling them that gay is the new black. They want independence to protect their homophobia. And so they have reinvented the idea of the confederacy.

Whatever else can be said about this analysis - and conservatives do their nut about it - this is the script through which liberal US Christians understand the theological culture wars over homosexuality. To them the argument over gay bishops is manifestly a civil-rights issue that requires strong leadership and moral determination: General Grant and Abraham Lincoln. That is why US progressives are so frustrated with Rowan Williams, for the only thing he has in common with Lincoln is the beard.

In 1858 Lincoln famously quoted from Matthew 12:25 to insist that "a house divided against itself cannot stand". For Lincoln, all talk of compromise was useless: the idea that each state determines its own attitude to slavery was morally indefensible and politically unsustainable.

The nightmare for Williams is that if Lincoln's basic philosophy is correct then Anglicanism is in deep trouble - and so too is the Church of England, which is, almost by design, a house divided against itself. The fact that 46 members of the church's general synod, its parliament, have this week written to Bishop Duncan expressing their support for his secessionism, bodes very ill.

Effectively, the C of E is a peace treaty between Puritans and Catholics forged in response to the religious culture wars of the 16th and 17th centuries that drenched Europe in blood. As a reaction, compromise and a deep dislike of ideology became the defining genius of the English church - and, through that, the English national character.

The C of E was a peculiar settlement that kept most Christians, despite their huge theological differences, around the same communion table. The moral of the American civil war - at least for progressives - is that what is right requires strength of purpose to force through the cause of justice. In contrast, the moral of the English civil war is that unqualified belief in one's own rightness can lead to violent and destructive chaos.

Thus far the Archbishop of Canterbury has maintained the traditional Anglican via media with impeccable impartiality, trying to hold things together with a generous policy of being kinder to his enemies than his friends. But the truth is, the only people who now believe that Anglicanism can survive the current crisis in one piece are those holed up in Lambeth Palace.

Both conservatives and liberals agree that a house divided cannot stand. The battle lines are drawn. Conservative theologians once defended slavery by refusing to accept the Bible as radically inclusive. Similarly, today's conservative theologians are twisting the Bible into bad news for homosexuals rather than good news for all. It's the very opposite of the gospel message of God's generous and inclusive love.

The head of the US church, Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori, has threatened the neo-confederate leadership with disciplinary action. Some US liberals hope she is leading the church to a new Gettysburg, a decisive victory over prejudice. Yet they may also recall that Gettysburg was one of the bloodiest days in US history. The fight for right is seldom cost-free. And this fight will be no exception. Glory, glory. Alleluia.

The Rev Dr Giles Fraser, the vicar of Putney, is currently on placement at All Saints in Pasadena, California

Thursday, November 08, 2007

Brief Blogging Hiatus


The Claiming the Blessing Steering Committee is meeting here in Pasadena so I'm actually too busy doing what we do to write about what we do for the next few days. Stay tuned. "Film at Eleven" as they say!!

Wednesday, November 07, 2007

News from Nigeria

Don't miss Fr. Jake's latest:

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Nigeria Rejects
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The Windsor Report
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and
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The Council of Nicea
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Monday, November 05, 2007

Speaking of Monogamy


So the other morning I was having breakfast with a clergy colleague and the subject of monogamy came up. It came up in the in context of a conversation about his concern (my clergy colleague's, that is) that we (the LGBT lobby, that is) had been "ambiguous" about what it was we were asking for in terms of the blessing of same-gender unions.

"Really?" I said. "What have 'we' been 'ambiguous' about?"

"Well, monogamy," he said.

"Monogamy?" I echoed -- thinking of all the things we could be accused of being ambiguous about that isn't one I'd have come up with on my list.

"Because monogamy means something different in the gay community," he said. (I think it fair to note here for clarification that my breakfast colleague was a straight, white, male, rector of a neighboring congregation.) "And if you're going to be clear about what you want from the church you have to be clear about what you mean."

I'm going to spare you the rest of the conversation, except to say that I did tell him I must have missed a meeting at Gay Central because I never got the memo that we'd adopted a new definition for monogamy and he said we needed to be "clear about that" and I made a joke about fundraising to take out a full page ad in the New York Times to "clarify" and he laughed and we moved on.

And now, a week later, I decided since I have neither the time nor the inclination to fund raise for a NYTimes ad I'll just blog about it instead.

So here is as non-ambiguous a definition of monogamy as I could find:
Monogamy is the custom or condition of having only one mate in a relationship, thus forming a couple. The word monogamy comes from the Greek word monos, which means one or alone, and the Greek word gamos, which means marriage or union.

One mate. A couple. Two people. Clear? Non-ambiguous? Sounds that way to me. But then so did C051 -- the resolution passed in 2003 at the Episcopal Church General Convention outlining the standards for holiness in relationships that rose to the level of being blessed by the church:

That we reaffirm Resolution D039 of the 73rd General Convention (2000), that "We expect such relationships will be characterized by fidelity, monogamy, mutual affection and respect, careful, honest communication, and the holy love which enables those in such relationships to see in each other the image of God," and that such relationships exist throughout the church ... [and] we recognize that local faith communities are operating within the bounds of our common life as they explore and experience liturgies celebrating and blessing same-sex unions.

Hardly the "anything goes" we keep hearing about, is it? Actually, the ONLY thing that "goes" is heterosexist privilege -- and it's about time!

Now, are there those in the LGBT community who are not attracted to these standards: to monogamy, fidelity and all the rest? Of course there are. And here's a news flash: there are straight people who aren't either! And those aren't the relationships we're talking about blessing! How's that for clarity?

One more thing: it's funny what you find when you start digging back into the archives. Who remembers this part of Resolution C051:

That we commit ourselves, and call our church, in the spirit of Resolution A104 of the 70th General Convention (1991), to continued prayer, study, and discernment on the pastoral care for gay and lesbian persons, to include the compilation and development by a special commission organized and appointed by the Presiding Bishop, of resources to facilitate as wide a conversation of discernment as possible throughout the church.



I wonder what ever happened to that commission? I wonder if it had been convened -- if resources had been prepared to facililate as wide a conversation of discernment as possible throughout the church -- if my clergy colleague would have been asking me the same questions at breakfast last week?

Maybe so. He DID also tell me he didn't think we'd "done the theology" -- and so he has a nice thick packet of the theology we've done on the way to him in the mail as we speak so that NEXT time we have breakfast he can tell me about the theology he doesn't agree with ... not the theology we "haven't done" ... which is a WHOLE different conversation!

But since it's entirely possible that no matter how clear we'd been about monogamy he wouldn't have thought we'd "done" that either just for the record, here it is again:

Monogamy is the custom or condition of having only one mate in a relationship, thus forming a couple. The word monogamy comes from the Greek word monos, which means one or alone, and the Greek word gamos, which means marriage or union.

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=======

UPDATE: Per the request of a commenter on this thread, here's what I sent off in the post (a tip of the iceberg, but at least it's a start):

To Set Our Hope on Christ -- published by the Episcopal Church
Study Guide for To Set Our Hope on Christ -- published by Integrity
Claiming the Blessing Theology Statement
"Voices of Witness" -- video produced by Claiming the Blessing
Study Guide for Voices of Witness -- written by Gary Hall
.... and a link to this blog.

They want pictures ...

Our friends over at Stand Firm have put out a call for pictures.

The initial call for photos of Bishop Marc Andrus speaking at the October 27th anti-war rally in San Francisco has been broadened to "Episcopal clergy pictures .... identified and then verified in reports that they attended -- and naturally, we would appreciate pictures of Episcopal bishops and clergy who participate in other such displays of their values -- not limited to gay pride parades -- as well, again identified and verified in textual reports."

Here's a start from my own photo album as I am HAPPY to share these outward and visible signs of core biblical values of peacemaking, inclusion and respecting the dignity of every human being.

I'll dig around and see if I can find some more: I know there's one somewhere of the rector getting arrested at the Federal Building, but in the meantime here's a start ...



May 2006 Immigration Rally


The Reverend Zelda Kennedy

The Reverend Anthony Guillen &
The Reverend J. Edwin Bacon


The Reverend Susan Russell
w/Presbyterian colleagues
The Revd's Susan Craig and Bear Ride

============

October 2005
.
Stop the War Rally


Me again


The Reverend George Regas

====================


June 2004 L.A. Gay Pride


The Reverend Pat Hendrickson
The Reverend Kate Lewis


The Reverend Malcolm Boyd
The Fabulous Mary Bruno
The Right Reverened J. Jon Bruno
The Reverend Susan Russell
The Reverend J. Edwin Bacon
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UPDATE: Others have "gone and done likewise:"

Sunday, November 04, 2007

Let the race begin ...

It's "Amazing Race" premiere night ... wherein our friends Kate & Pat take off on a round-the-world adventure, reality-TV-style.


The Long Beach Press Telegram had a nice profile which included this quote:

"We're happy to offer ourselves up to show people that Christians come in many different stripes," said Lewis, a minister at St. Cross Episcopal Church in Hermosa Beach. "Some of us are progressive and inclusive. We are very serious about our relationship with God, and we are very serious about winning this race," Hendrickson said. "We're not afraid to have a good time, either. There's nothing wrong with having a little fun."

Check out their blog -- Kate & Pat's Amazing Race Through Life -- and even if you're not a reality TV fan (and I am most definitely not!) tune in and cheer 'em on!

YOU GO, GIRLS!
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P.S. -- Kendall Harmon is not amused -- and evidently worried enough about his commenters behaving themselves to close comments on the thread except via email to him.

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Blessed are you ...

It's been another Amazing All Saints Sunday at All Saints Church. We had a packed church for both principal services, the Durufle Requiem with orchestra and choir and the annual reading of the necrology ... this year 497 names long ... all of which makes All Saints Sunday at All Saints Church not a day for church sissies. Rite I, sung service, the chanting went fine -- thanks for asking -- and the thurifer swung a mean thurible!

And when I heard the gospel at 11:15 (Giles Fraser was the gospeller) and I heard the familiar words:

"Blessed are you when people revile you and persecute you and utter all kinds of evil against you falsely on my ccount."

I immediately pictured:





If you don't know why the words "utter all kinds of evil falsely against you" would conjure up The Right Reverend Barbara Harris then you must have missed the latest episode of "how low will they sink" in Anglican blogland ... wherein Greg Griffith over at Stand Firm erroneously identified a photo of a war protester as +Barbara and, well, the rest, as they say, is history. I will not revisit ALL the ugliness here but direct you to:

Bullies and Thugs for Jesus -- by Elizabeth Kaeton
When they are bad they are horrid -- by Mark Harris
A new low for Stand Firm and
When is an apology not an apology -- by Fr. Jake
A lie can get half way around the world before the truth can get its boots on -- by Katie Sherrod

The original offending post has been removed by Stand Firm and an apology offered by perpetrator, Greg Griffith, but a cached version lives here -- in case you're of a mind to see just what kind of evil was falsely leveled at Bishop Barbara.

But lest you think we're just "piling on" here's just a taste of what Brother Greg had to say:

"Barbara Harris, you have reached a new disgusting low. Presentment and defrocking would be too good for you. I'll restrain myself from describing what I think an appropriate punishment would be, but it would start with shipping you to Gaza or the West Bank and seeing how things go for a woman who tries to preach the Christian faith. I'd be very interested to hear from the rest of the Episcopal left about what they think of this."

Here's what I think:

"Blessed are you when people revile you and persecute you and utter all kinds of evil against you falsely on my account."

I also did a little forensic blog digging and found this photo on the website where the original photo Greg mistook for +Barbara was posted -- a photo gallery of an October 2007 anti-war rally in San Francisco:


It seems that Jews against the occupation of Palestine wear the keffiyeh as a sign of their solidarity with Palestine and the Palestinian people -- not just mis-identified Episcopal Bishops accused of being terrorist fellow travelers deserving presentment and defrocking.

As for Greg Griffith, I'm glad he's on record as saying he's very interested in hearing from the rest of the Episcopal left what they think of this because I don't think we've even BEGUN to give him what he asked for.

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Saturday, November 03, 2007

Hooray for HOLLYWOOD!

While the bloggers carried on keeping each other up to date on the lastest warps and wiggles in and about the Anglican Communion, we took a day off from all of that and took our colleague The Reverend Dr. Giles Fraser, Vicar of All Putney, off sightseeing in Hollywood!
. Here he is dodging traffic to get his photo under The Hollywood Sign ...

Here he is, checking out the "lights, camera, not-so-much-action" along Hollywood Boulevard ...

And here WE are in a highlight moment for both of us ... a photo op with a central casting Jesus (note the blonde highlights!) right in front of the Kodak Theatre with the "Nightmare Before Christmas" marquee in the background!
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Only in L.A.!!!
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And now, as I said in a comment a few minutes ago, I'm going back to practicing my "solemn chant" for tomorrow. We only sing Rite I once a year (on All Saints Day) so tho 'tis rather like riding a bike one doesn't like to wobble too much in front of a church full of people on one's patronal festival, does one?
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More on Dumbledore

Thanks to Episcopal Cafe for pointing us to this EW commentary by reporter Mark Harris:

Dumbledore: A Lovely Outing

It's often said that if every gay person in the world were to turn purple overnight, homophobia would disappear. In other words, fewer people would be inclined to vilify other human beings if they woke up one day and discovered that they'd been aiming stones at their college roommate, their aunt, their grocer, or their grandson.

Statistics bear this out: People who have a gay family member or friend have more enlightened attitudes about homosexuality than those who don't. What Rowling has done, brilliantly, is to turn Dumbledore purple. She didn't reveal his sexuality in order to unlock a new way of reading the books, or as a provocation. She simply told the world that a main character in the best-loved books of the last 10 years is homosexual, and asked her audience to contend with it — and with the fact that it shouldn't matter. And her choice to make a beloved professor-mentor gay in a world where gay teachers are still routinely slandered as malign influences was, I am certain, no accident.

In addition to the braying of hatemongers, there's already been some umbrage taken at the appropriateness of Rowling's decision to uncork this news in front of children, a brand of sanctimony for which I have no patience. At least one out of 25 of those children will eventually self-identify as homosexual. The other 24, having made their way through an epic series that includes multiple murders, demonic possession, and the psychic toll of having mentally ill parents, will, I imagine, be able to handle the bulletin that some people are gay, and will likely benefit from the richer understanding of the world that such knowledge provides.
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"Report from the Front" from Progessive Episcopalians of Pittsburgh

Pittsburgh Chooses Path to Separation
Johnstown, Pennsylvania
Progressive Episcopalians of Pittsburgh
- November 2, 2007 -

Declaring "As a diocese we have come to a fork in the road," Pittsburgh's Bishop Robert Duncan set the tone for the 142nd annual convention of the Episcopal Diocese of Pittsburgh. The bishop continued, "This is not a place we would wish to stay, even if we could." The convention majority agreed with the bishop, voting in favor of amendments to eliminate the diocese's accession to the constitution and canons of TEC and allowing it to designate by canon the Anglican province to which it will belong. The resolution also eliminated the requirement that parishes have similar accession clauses in their bylaws or articles of incorporation.

The vote, by secret ballot, favored passage by 118 to 59 lay votes, with one abstention, and 109 to 24 clergy votes. On the way to the final vote, the convention defeated an attempt to substitute an amendment that would have restored the accession clause to its pre-2004 condition.

Quoting Martin Luther in a brief reply to her recent letter, Bishop Duncan defiantly rejected Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori's request that he urge the convention to reject the resolution he has hitherto strongly supported. Rather that heed the presiding bishop's advice, Duncan denied a request from a deputy to declare the resolution out of order by virtue of its being beyond the power of the diocese to enact. The bishop's actions and his continuing advocacy of "realignment" will likely make him subject to church disciplinary action.Bishop Duncan continued to assert his unique theory of diocesan independence, reversing the generally accepted understanding of Episcopal Church polity.

Once again, he asserted that those wishing to remain in The Episcopal Church would have to leave the diocese to do so, seemingly denying to that it is he and his supporters who want out of The Episcopal Church. The bishop then suggested that property currently held in common, including Trinity Cathedral and Calvary Camp, should, after a split, be administered for the benefit of all.

It became clear, in other words, that he expects both to leave TEC and remain in control of its assets, which he would then generously offer to share with those he had dispossessed.

During both the convention and a set of morning workshops preceding the formal opening of the business meeting of the convention, proponents of the anti-accession resolution described an Episcopal Church that had strayed from Christian "orthodoxy," citing, among other complaints, the failure of the church to discipline Bishops Pike and Spong. Episcopal Church supporters talked about the impropriety of the resolution, the fact that TEC has not changed its core beliefs, and the pain that necessarily will accompany any separation. The outcome, however, was never in doubt.

"The vote today was "tragic," said Joan Gundersen, president of Progressive Episcopalians of Pittsburgh and a deputy to the convention. The step taken today by the Diocese of Pittsburgh will only lead to pain for all the people of the diocese, to increased litigation, and to charges being filed against Bishop Duncan under the disciplinary canons of the church. That pain was often evident in the voices of those speaking on both sides of the measure. The next year will be one of constant turmoil as the diocesan leadership furthers its separation plans in anticipation of a final ratification of constitutional changes next year.

=====

P.S. One "do the math" blogger noted: The convention actually needed to pass Resolution 1 by a 2/3 majority, not a simple majority. So, in fact, the whole process passed by only one (lay) vote!

Quittsburgh Round-up

Not sure who coined the phrase "Diocese of Quittsburgh" -- email me if it was you and I'll give you credit -- but it seems an apt description indeed this "morning after" Bishop Bob Duncan [pictured at left] finally got the votes he needed to OFFICIALLY abandon the Constitution and Canons he vowed to obey as a bishop.

In spite of the clear warning from the Presiding Bishop that we -- the Episcopal Church -- have really had quite enough of this foolishness -- the Diocese of Quittsburgh ... sorry "Pittsburgh" ... opted for schism over reconciliation and on it goes.

Here's a round-up of commentary:
Pittsburgh Chooses Anglican Limbo -- Father Jake
Pittsburgh Convention Approves ... -- Episcopal Life
Bishop Duncan takes his stand -- PRELUDIUM (Mark Harris)
The Episcopal Church is not divisible -- Episcopal Cafe
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And yes, I know there are neo-con blogs commenting as well. Go ahead and link them to YOUR blogs if you want to.


The New York Times is reporting:
Pittsburgh Episcopal Diocese Votes to Leave the Church
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And GOOGLE elicited these local press stories:
Pittsburgh Post Gazette
Pittsburgh Tribune Review
Johnstown Tribune Democrat

And now, let's everybody sing together our Hymn of the Day:

Come, Thou long expected Schism
Born to set Thy people free
From our fears of queers release us
As we quest for Purity.

CANA’s strength and consolation
Hope of homophobes thou art
Dear Desire of “Network” nations
Joy of every “Windsor” heart.

Reasserters you’ll deliver
As you split the church apart.
Come thou long expected schism
Let the glorious rupture start!

Friday, November 02, 2007

Happy Anniversary!


November 2, 2003
A New Bishop for New Hampshire
A New Day for the Episcopal Church
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=========
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Remembering that today is the 4th anniversary of the consecration of +Gene Robinson drove me to my blog archives where I found this piece I wrote from New Hampshire "the morning of" four years ago this very day. Ironic, isn't it, that on THIS very day +Bob Duncan took one giant step forward in bringing about the "long expected schism" they have been working, praying and plotting for so long. Vaya con Dios, +Bob. And Happy Anniversary, +Gene!
..
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This Is The Day That The Lord Has Made
Date Sunday, November 02, 2003

So here I am in New Hampshire – “the morning of” the much anticipated consecration of V. Gene Robinson as Bishop Coadjutor of the diocese he has served for nearly 20 years as a priest and pastor.

At a reception last night for friends and family Gene posed for innumerable photo ops, hugged and kissed all comers and generally basked in the well deserved admiration and appreciation of those who elected him, supported him and look forward to his ministry as the Bishop of New Hampshire. The security was extraordinary – at least it seemed that way tome: a police escort waiting outside the parish hall and burly security guards stationed throughout the room, watching Gene’s every move.

I spoke to one briefly – saying I knew he wasn’t there to chat with me but that I wanted to take a second to thank him for his work in protecting Gene. “You’re welcome,” he said without taking his eyes of the bishop-elect. A minute later he leaned over and said, “It’s my job but I’m also an Episcopalian so this is important to me, too.” So there you go.

The service begins at 4:00 p.m. eastern time and I’ll be heading over to the arena shortly. (A hockey rink is being turned into a cathedral for the estimated 5000 who will attend.) The press is there in force – we’ve seen several live CNN reports from the site already this morning – and the CBS folks working a piece for 60 Minutes were with us for breakfast this morning. I’ll post reflections on the events of the day as soon as I can, for it promises to be a grand and glorious celebration.

But this morning I’m already looking past the liturgy we are about to celebrate this 2nd of November to the work we – the mainstream of the Episcopal Church – have ahead of us beginning November 3rd. And that work BEGINS with taking back the word “mainstream” from those who have hijacked it to use as one of the weapons in their arsenal of schism.

And let me be perfectly clear: I am not talking about faithful Episcopalians who disagree with the decisions of General Convention 2003, those who have different theological perspectives than I do or the people in the pews who are yearning to get on with the business of being the church and leave these debates about sexuality behind. I believe that there is more than enough room for all of us in this roomy Anglican tradition we inherit.

I am challenging instead a small segment of the leadership of the American Anglican Council who – in partnership with the Ahmanson funded Institute for Religion and Democracy – have made a decision for schism and are determined to succeed in their quest to split this church apart regardless of the cost.
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I was quoted in a post-Plano/Dallas interview as saying “The AAC ‘is not a mainstream organization. This is the radical militant fringe of the church.’" What I actually SAID was "what we are hearing here in Dallas are not the words of a mainstream organization but the rhetoric of an increasingly radical militant fringe.” It is a fine but important linguistic distinction.

For there was a time when I did indeed considered the AAC “mainstream” -- "the loyal opposition" which offered a conservative perspective here in the Diocese of Los Angeles. I spent an entire YEAR having lunch once a month with David Anderson, Ron Jackson, and Bill Thompson -- reading the catechism with other clergy together as part of a reconciliation conversation initiated by Bishop Jon Bruno.
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There were years when we managed to craft substitute resolutions at our Diocesan Convention with David and others which ended (for a season) the annual ritual of the same old voices at opposing microphones saying the same old things. And I attended expanded Reconciliation Conversations around the diocese modeled after the work of the New Commandment Task Force and led by AAC founding member Brian Cox.

I learned from those conversations. I grew in my understanding of those who approach Holy Scripture differently than I do. I heard the stories of those who felt that the church they loved was being taken away from them: for whom a church with a "new prayer book" and women priests was not a place of spiritual nurture. But time and again when our work together had ended -- when we stood in those "closing circles" and prayed for each other -- we also prayed together for this church we all loved as we committed to work together through the hard ground of our differences.
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Was our communion “impaired” for those standing in that circle who could not accept as valid the orders of the women clergy who stood with them? Or for those who stood knowing that the relationships that they experience as holy gifts from God were not celebrated by all who stood with them? I suppose so – but we weren’t thinking in those terms at that point. Rather than dwelling on the issues that might have divided us we were focused instead on the Gospel that united us. Because our unity in Christ did not require uniformity in our opinions we were able to “go in peace to love and serve the Lord” in communion – if not in agreement – with each other.
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Fast forward to Dallas 2003. In order to participate in “A Place to Stand” one had to sign a “Statement of Faith” which excluded anyone who supported the actions of General Convention 2003. During the conference words like “apostate”and “heretic” were used to refer to the majority of the Episcopal Church as it had spoken through its elected representatives in General Convention.
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Respected Episcopal media representatives were denied credentials to cover the event for their publications. In an explanation given to a FOX News reporter as to why the Presiding Bishop’s offer to send representatives bearing greetings was rebuffed, AAC leader David Anderson made the comparison of “asking a rape victim to sit down at the table with her rapist.” The conference concluded with nothing less than a demand to the Primates to – in effect – vote ECUSA off the Anglican Island. And in an interview soon after the conference, Anderson used the word “contamination” to refer to those who will be laying hands on Gene Robinson when he becomes a Bishop in the Church of God on November 2nd.
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These are not the words of a mainstream organization: it is the rhetoric of an increasingly radical militant fringe. These are not words that respect the dignity of every human being: they are words that create a climate where the Matthew Shepards of our world live in fear for their lives. The time has come for us to cease to allow them to set the context for this debate. The day has arrived when the church is ready to get past being reactive to conservative threats and become proactive in telling the Good News of a church where everyone is welcome at the table – where the true mainstream includes a gay bishop AND faithful Episcopalians who voted against his election.

Today is a great day for the Episcopal Church. Let us rejoiceand be glad in it – and then let’s get to work!

Just Another Day in Paradise

It was just another Friday in Paradise, Southern California style, so we packed up and headed off to Malibu for a lunch by the shore with our VERY special guest-from-across-the-pond ...

The Reverend Dr. Giles Fraser -- Vicar of Putney!
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After a few moments of multi-tasking
(checking the menu AND his voice mail!) ...

... Giles and I got busy putting our heads together about "things Anglican" and talking about what-nexts for this Big Fat Anglican Family of ours.

And a VERY good time was had by all, as you can see!
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Before heading back to Pasadena, where Giles will be with us at All Saints Church for the next two weeks, we paused for the Vicar of Putney to conclude his little seaside sojourn with his first-ever toe dip in the Pacific Ocean.

Here's the historic moment!

And for those "in the neighborhood" enough to stop by, here's the scoop on what Giles will be doing with us at All Saints for the next two weeks. Do drop by and join in the fun!
============

All Saints Church is delighted to welcome the Reverend Dr. Giles Fraser to the pulpit on Sunday, November 11th.

Vicar of Putney and lecturer in philosophy at Wadham College Oxford, Dr. Fraser also writes for the UK Guardian, where he regularly challenges the established church to live up to its high calling to be the Body of Christ. As President of the UK’s "Inclusive Church" organization, he is an influential voice on behalf of the inclusive gospel in the Anglican Communion as it moves toward the 2008 Lambeth Conference.

As a preacher, speaker, teacher and writer he offers a prophetic voice of challenge to both orthodoxy and empire. We are grateful that Dr. Fraser will be spending part of his sabbatical time with us here in Pasadena. Mark your calendars now for these two opportunities to hear from one of the most in-demand Anglicans on either side of the Atlantic:

Sunday, November 11, 2007
• At 9:00 a.m. & 11:15 a.m. Dr. Fraser will preach on "Salvation and Democracy"
• At 5:00 p.m. Dr. Fraser will offer the meditation at Evensong (Canterbury Choir with the music of Friedell & Mozart) followed by a wine & cheese reception in the All Saints Forum.

For more information contact Christine Mackey-Mason at All Saints Church

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Thursday, November 01, 2007

"We are NOT Amused"

The Presiding Bishop writes to the Bishop of Pittsburgh:

The Rt. Rev. Robert Duncan
Episcopal Diocese of Pittsburgh
Pittsburgh, PA

Dear Bob,

There have been numerous public references in recent weeks regarding resolutions to be introduced at your forthcoming diocesan convention. Those resolutions, if adopted, would amend several of your diocesan canons and begin the process of amending one or more provisions of your diocesan Constitution.

I have reviewed a number of these proposed resolutions, and it is evident to me that they would violate the Constitutional requirement that the Diocese conform to the Constitution and Canons of The Episcopal Church. It is apparent from your pre-convention report that you endorse these proposed changes.

I am also aware of other of your statements and actions in recent months that demonstrate an intention to lead your diocese into a position that would purportedly permit it to depart from The Episcopal Church. All these efforts, in my view, display a fundamental misunderstanding of the relationship between The Episcopal Church and its dioceses. Our Constitution explicitly provides that a diocese must accede to the Constitution and Canons of the Church.

I call upon you to recede from this direction and to lead your diocese on a new course that recognizes the interdependent and hierarchical relationship between the national Church and its dioceses and parishes. That relationship is at the heart of our mission, as expressed in our polity. Specifically, I sincerely hope that you will change your position and urge your diocese at its forthcoming convention not to adopt the resolutions that you have until now supported.

If your course does not change, I shall regrettably be compelled to see that appropriate canonical steps are promptly taken to consider whether you have abandoned the Communion of this Church -- by actions and substantive statements, however they may be phrased -- and whether you have committed canonical offences that warrant disciplinary action.

It grieves me that any bishop of this Church would seek to lead any of its members out of it. I would remind you of my open offer of an Episcopal Visitor if you wish to receive pastoral care from another bishop. I continue to pray for reconciliation of this situation, and I remain

Your servant in Christ,
Katharine Jefferts Schori

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My two cents??? BRAVA!

The PB's letter, made public in Jan Nunley's ELO article yesterday, is receiving the usual response from the usual suspects:

"If your course does not change, the Lord has revealed that judgment will promptly follow. Millstones await those who lead his little ones astray" from Mat Kennedy of Stand Firm fame ...

...and the titusonenine intelligentsia are offering comments like: "...you are not a creedal Christian. And, quite frankly, if Jesus is only what you say he is, then who cares what he said. In any event Susan Russel is not “inclusive” accept on her and Integraty’s terms. So spare the crocadile tears as we leave."
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Meanwhile, Mark Harris offers a highly recommended concise and thorough overview at PRELUDIUM: everything you ever wanted to know about Title IV and didn't know enough to ask about!
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[Photo credit: NYTimes]

All Saints Day

For All the Saints
by Kathy Thaden
Mixed Media Mosaic, 2007
8" x 8"

www.thadenmosaics.com
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LET US NOW PRAISE UNSUNG WOMEN
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Let us now praise unsung women,
our mothers in their generations.
The Lord apportioned them for great glory,
but their light became hidden,
as though it never was.
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There were those who ruled in their kingdoms,
and distinguished themselves by their valor,
Those who gave counsel because they were intelligent,
and who spoke in prophetic oracles.
Those who led the people by their counsels
and by their knowledge of the people's lore.
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Some composed musical tunes,
or fashioned words into verses,
But they have perished as though they never existed,
they have become as though they were never born.
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They considered fields and bought them;
They were gifted weavers and cooks.
They opened their hands to the poor,
and reached out their arms to the needy.
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Their love and their strength,
are an inheritance to children's children.
Let unsung women be unsung no longer,
they and their daughters after them.
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Let the assembly declare their wisdom,
and the congregation proclaim their praise.
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-Will Sol
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(thanks to Tom Woodward!)