Daily Archives: December 11, 2007

Keith Fournier: Male Episcopal Bishop wants to be a ”˜June Bride’

Bishop Gene Robinson, the Nation’s openly practicing homosexual Episcopal Bishop, spoke to a crowd of over 200 people on November 27, 2007 at Nova Southeastern University’s Shephard Law Center. He told them of his upcoming planned ”˜marriage’ to his paramour saying with pride, “I always wanted to be a June bride.”

The activist Bishop continued:

“It may take many years for religious institutions to add their blessing for same-sex marriages and no church, mosque or synagogue should be forced to do so. But that should not slow down progress for the full civil right to marry,” Robinson said. “Because New Hampshire will have legal unions beginning in January, my partner of 20 years and I will enter into such a legal union next June.”

Dressed in his clerical collar and wearing his pectoral cross, the symbol of his ecclesial office in the Episcopal church, he castigated the “religious right”, a term by which he refers to all orthodox Christians who support the unbroken teaching of Christianity on the sanctity of authentic marriage:

“The greatest single hindrance to achievement of full rights for gays and lesbians can be laid at the doorstep of the three Abrahamic faiths– Judaism, Christianity and Islam. It’s going to take people of faith to end discrimination,” said Robinson, who was invested as the ninth bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of New Hampshire in 2004.

Read it all but note that he gets the Gene Robinson chronology wrong. Saying he was ” a married Episcopal priest, who had broken both his marriage and priestly vows when he divorced his wife and abandoned his children to engage in an active homosexual relationship” is not true (and we have made this point over and over again). The divorce preceded his even meeting his current partner.

Posted in Uncategorized

Baby tax needed to save planet, claims expert

A west Australian medical expert wants families to pay a $5000-plus “baby levy” at birth and an annual carbon tax of up to $800 a child.

Writing in today’s Medical Journal of Australia, Associate Professor Barry Walters said every couple with more than two children should be taxed to pay for enough trees to offset the carbon emissions generated over each child’s lifetime.

Professor Walters, clinical associate professor of obstetric medicine at the University of Western Australia and the King Edward Memorial Hospital in Perth, called for condoms and “greenhouse-friendly” services such as sterilisation procedures to earn carbon credits.

Read it all.

Posted in * Culture-Watch, * Economics, Politics, * International News & Commentary, Australia / NZ, Children, Energy, Natural Resources

Car Prototype Generates Electricity, And Cash

The price of oil nearly reached $100 a barrel recently, but a new University of Delaware prototype vehicle demonstrates how the cost of the black stuff could become a concern of the past.

A team of UD faculty has created a system that enables vehicles to not only run on electricity alone, but also to generate revenue by storing and providing electricity for utilities. The technology–known as V2G, for vehicle-to-grid–lets electricity flow from the car’s battery to power lines and back.

“When I get home, I’ll charge up and then switch into V2G mode,” said Willett Kempton, UD associate professor of marine policy and a V2G pioneer who began developing the technology more than a decade ago and who is now testing the new prototype vehicle. The UD V2G team includes Kempton as well as Ajay Prasad, professor of mechanical engineering; Suresh Advani, George W. Laird Professor of Mechanical Engineering; and Meryl Gardner, associate professor of business administration, along with several students.

Read it all.

Posted in * Culture-Watch, Science & Technology

The Bishop of Lexington Writes Remain Episcopal in San Joaquin

Dear friends in Christ,

I write to you with sadness at the decision of our brothers and sisters to leave The Episcopal Church. I trust you will join me in forgiving their transgressions, putting all recriminations and bitterness aside, and wishing them well as they continue their spiritual journeys in another community of faith.

I write to you as the Chair of the House of Bishops Task Force on Property Disputes in the hope of reassuring you of the justice and rightness of your position. Your faithfulness and steadfastness to your community and your vows inspire all of us. More than inspiring us, your efforts deserve our active support because, in truth, you are acting on behalf of all of us.
It is the job of the Task Force to do all that it can to see that you receive the care and the support that you need and deserve. Indeed, we will be meeting next week to consider a number of matters in our Church and the protection across the Church of our polity, which is intended to protect all of us from abuses of power such as that you are now experiencing. I can assure you that your situation in the Diocese of San Joaquin will be part of our consideration.

For now, know of our awareness of your situation, our deep concern, and our pledge to do all that we can to support your efforts to carry on the mission of our Church in California. The task you have before you, no doubt, will not be easy. You will not walk it alone.

With the assurance of my prayers and the conviction of the coming of the Lord in this holy season, I am

Faithfully yours,

(The Rt. Rev.) Stacy F. Sauls
Bishop of Lexington

More letters may be found here (scroll down a bit).

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, Episcopal Church (TEC), TEC Bishops, TEC Conflicts

Howard Giles: Staying true to the Scripture

St. Vincent of Lerins, in 434 A.D., devised a method for evaluating truth claims in the Christian church.

He believed truth begins and ends with holy Scripture. Even in the fifth century, everyone didn’t agree on what holy writ said or meant.

He wrote about what is taught everywhere, what has always been taught and what everyone teaches.

Read it all.

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, Episcopal Church (TEC), TEC Conflicts

Ruth Gledhill: Is the Anglican experiment Over?

Bishop Duncan gave me an interview during his visit. He said: “It is hard to imagine how the Communion can be kept together. The American church remains committed to its progressive direction.” He compared it to US foreign policy. “The American Episcopal Church, rather like American foreign policy, is determined the world will go precisely the way it wishes. It seems a split is almost unavoidable at this point.”

A great many people observing the situation, he said, are speaking in terms of the “Anglican experiment” being over. “That is a great sadness. The question for the rest of us is whether we can again be both Reformed and Catholic. The jury is out. Will it simply disintegrate or will it break into two parts? It is a long-term historical question. The 21st century will give an answer to it but we are only at the beginning of that century.”

From my personal perspective, I have to say, things look a little different….

Read the whole blog entry.

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, Anglican Identity, Anglican Provinces, Archbishop of Canterbury, CANA, Church of England (CoE), Episcopal Church (TEC), TEC Conflicts

Charities fret over tainted toys

Kimberly Moch reaches into the bottom of a cardboard box of donated toys Thursday as she and others sort through what will be gifts for 5,600 area children.

Volunteers carefully checked the product number against the list of recalled toys and discovered their dolls were fine. But the experience illustrates the concern of parents and organizations such as Toys for Tots and the Salvation Army, which give toys to children in need.

Volunteers who sort toys according to the child’s sex and age are also paying close attention to product recalls. Millions of toys made in China have been recalled this year for lead-based paint and other potential dangers, including parts that can cause choking or sharp edges that can cause cuts.

More than $22 billion worth of toys are sold in the United States each year, with toys made in China making up 70 percent to 80 percent, according to the Toy Industry Association.

It appears vendors and donors are paying attention to recalls because the local Salvation Army and Toys for Tots have not had to pull a large number of suspect toys.

“We haven’t removed any toys yet and hopefully it remains that way,” said 2007 Toys for Tots coordinator Gunnery Sgt. Michael Kirby.

Read it all from the front page of the local paper.

Posted in * Culture-Watch, * Economics, Politics, * South Carolina, Economy, Religion & Culture

Anglican TV Interviews Attorney Eric Sohlgren about the TEC California Lawsuit

Check it out.

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, Episcopal Church (TEC), TEC Conflicts

The Standing Committee Transition in the Rio Grande

Read it all.

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, Episcopal Church (TEC)

Airborne Internet closer to reality

As millions of travelers prepare to fly home for the holidays this year, a few thousand can expect to try out a new generation of onboard e-mail and text-messaging services using their own cellphones and portable devices.

Starting this week and over the next few months, several airlines in the United States and Europe are due to begin testing these new services on some of their planes, with plans to roll out the technology across most of their fleets over the next 12 to 18 months.

Eventually, a few plan to enable voice calls, too.

On Tuesday, the U.S. carrier JetBlue Airways will begin offering a free e-mail and instant messaging service on one aircraft, while American Airlines, Virgin America and Alaska Airlines plan to offer a broader Web experience in the coming months, probably at a cost of around $10 a flight.

Read the whole article.

Posted in * Culture-Watch, Blogging & the Internet

DNA Dating Service Comes To Boston

If body odor is a key to romantic attraction, a Florida company claims to have the first scientific way of finding true love.

A new dating service that says it’s the first to use DNA matching to find that “perfect someone” is scheduled to launch in Boston Tuesday.

ScientificMatch.com promises its technology will use DNA to find a date with “a natural odor you’ll love, with whom you’d have healthier children and a more satisfying sex life.”

How does it work?

Read it all.

Posted in * Culture-Watch, Science & Technology

A Heroine in the Colorado Crisis

Jeanne Assam appeared before the news media for the first time Monday and said she “did not think for a minute to run away” when a gunman entered the New Life Church in Colorado Springs and started shooting.

There was applause as Assam spoke to reporters and TV cameras saying, “God guided me and protected me.”

New Life’s Senior Pastor Brady Boyd called Assam “a real hero” because Murray “had enough ammunition on him to cause a lot of damage.”

When asked by a reporter if she felt like a hero, Assam said, “I wasn’t just going to wait for him to do further damage.”

“I give credit to God,” she said.

Assam described how the gunman, Matthew Murray, entered the east entrance of the church firing his rifle.

“There was chaos,” Assam said, as parishioners ran away, “I will never forget the gunshots. They were so loud.”

“I saw him coming through the doors” and took cover, Assam said. “I came out of cover and identified myself and engaged him and took him down.”

“God was with me,” Assam said. “I didn’t think for a minute to run away.”

Read it all.

Posted in * Culture-Watch, Violence

N.J. Legislature May Revoke the Death Penalty

New Jersey’s legislature may soon be the first in the country to repeal a death penalty law. While courts in other states have struck death penalty statutes, this would be the first time a legislative body eliminated executions since the Supreme Court reinstated them 31 years ago.

New Jersey has the death penalty, but the state hasn’t actually executed anyone since 1963.

Listen to it all from NPR.

Posted in * Culture-Watch, Capital Punishment

The book they used to burn now fires new revolution of faith in China

In China it is known as the “sacred doctrine” and it has become one of the country’s bestselling books. Yet it has nothing to do with the thoughts of Chairman Mao and its teachings have been in conflict with the forces of Communism for generations.

Demand for the Bible is soaring in China, at a time when meteoric economic growth is testing the country’s allegiance to Communist doctrine. Today the 50 millionth Bible will roll off the presses of China’s only authorised publisher, Amity Printing, amid public fanfare and celebration.

In the past, foreign visitors were discouraged from bringing Bibles into the country in case they received some heavy-handed treatment from zealous Customs officials.

Such is the demand in China for Bibles that Amity Printing can scarcely keep pace. Early next year it will move into a new, much larger factory on the edge of the eastern city of Nanjing to become the world’s single-biggest producer of Bibles.

Read it all.

Posted in Theology, Theology: Scripture

Archbishop discards dog collar ”˜until tyrant goes’

You can watch the Youtube here.

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, Anglican Provinces, Church of England (CoE)

Pennsylvania Capitol Prayers Come Under Scrutiny

Twenty-four years after the U.S. Supreme Court gave its blessing to America’s long tradition of opening government meetings with prayer, questions linger about just what kind of prayer is OK.

Those questions now hover over the Pennsylvania Senate, which has opened every session with prayer for years.

Americans United for Separation of Church and State complained last month that prayers in the Senate often use language only a Christian would use. They end, for example, “in Jesus’ name.”

The Washington-based group asked to stop the prayers “in order to make all feel equally welcome at sessions of the Senate.” If prayers continue, they must use no language specific to one religion.

Senate officials countered that their “interfaith opening prayer” has been offered not only by Christian clergy, but by rabbis, a Unitarian pastor and, recently, a Buddhist teacher.

The Senate doesn’t prescribe what belongs in the prayers and what doesn’t, said Drew Crompton, counsel to Senate President Pro Tempore Joseph Scarnati.

“The question becomes a broader interpretation of interfaith,” Crompton said. “You balance one prayer against the others.”

Read the whole thing.

Posted in * Culture-Watch, Law & Legal Issues, Religion & Culture

Archbishop Rowan Williams: Lecture given at the Building Bridges Conference in Singapore

Thus my first point about the role of plural religious communities in society is that they both underpin the notion that there are values which are not negotiable, and that at the same time they prohibit any conclusion that such values can ultimately be defended by violence. They challenge the drift from Enlightenment optimism to the postmodern enthronement of power and interest as the sole elements in political life; that is, they allow societies as well as person to fail with grace and to find space beyond anxiety. That is not at all the same as saying that they require passivity, resignation to the unprincipled power of others. But they allow human beings the dignity of accepting defeat in certain circumstances where the alternative is to abandon the moral essence of a society in order to win: they suggest the subversive but all-important insight that failure might be preferable to victory at the cost of tolerating, say, torture or random military reprisal as normal elements in political life. By being absolute and thus in a sense irreconcilable, they remind society that a unity imposed by force will always undermine the moral substance of social and political life. There is no way of finding a position outside or beyond diverse faith traditions from which to broker a union between them in which their convictions can be reconciled; and this is not bad news but good ”“ good because it does two things at once. It affirms transcendent values; and by insisting that no other values are absolute, it denies to any other system of values any justification for uncontrolled violence. Transcendent values can be defended through violence only by those who do not fully understand their transcendent character; and if no other value is absolute, no other value can claim the right to unconditional defence by any means and at all costs. Thus the rationally irreconcilable systems of religious belief rule out any assumption that coercive power is the last resort or the ultimate authority in our world.

And if that is the case, we can see how religious plurality may serve the cause of social unity, paradoxically but genuinely. If we are prohibited from claiming that social harmony can be established by uncontrolled coercive power ”“ that is, if we are obliged to make a case for the legitimacy of any social order ”“ but are also prohibited from solving the problem by a simple appeal to universal reason, we are left with a model of politics which is always to do with negotiation and the struggle for mutual understanding. Politics is clearly identified as something pragmatic and ”˜secular’, in the sense that it is not about absolutes. As the world now is, diverse religious traditions very frequently inhabit one territory, one nation, one social unit (and that may be a relatively small unit like a school, or a housing co-operative or even a business). And in such a setting, we cannot avoid the pragmatic and secular question of ”˜common security’: what is needed for our convictions to flourish is bound up with what is needed for the convictions of other groups to flourish. We learn that we can best defend ourselves by defending others. In a plural society, Christians secure their religious liberty by advocacy for the liberty of Muslims or Jews to have the same right to be heard in the continuing conversation about the direction and ethos of a society that is characteristic of liberal polity in the broadest sense of the word.

Read it all.

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, * Culture-Watch, Archbishop of Canterbury, Religion & Culture

Mormon faith surges in Southern Florida

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints is one of the fastest-growing faiths in South Florida, its expansion fueled mainly by Hispanic converts who find the religion’s emphasis on family and values appealingly familiar. Local growth is mirrored in the development of the church in Latin America and elsewhere, where worldwide membership topped 13 million earlier this year.

The reach of the Mormon faith was at the fore of the political arena Thursday after Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney gave a 20-minute speech to discuss his Mormon roots and whether his faith would affect decisions he might make in the Oval Office.

South Florida has about 13,000 Mormons in 40 to 50 congregations. These congregations, or units, belong to five stakes, similar to dioceses, three in Miami-Dade and two in Broward and south Palm Beach. One stake in Miami is comprised solely of Spanish-speaking units and the other four have at least one or two Spanish-language units, says Scott Richards, first counselor of the Fort Lauderdale stake.

”Our strongest growth is from converts and from people who know somebody already in the church,” Richards said. “Possibly half are Hispanic. We probably mirror the population.”

Read it all.

Posted in * Religion News & Commentary, Mormons, Other Faiths

One Story from the New York Times Today

By 1995 he was retired from the service and a widower again. His second Mary Alice died of Lou Gehrig’s disease. A year and a half later, Mrs. Conway’s husband died of heart attack. The general swiftly wrote her a condolence letter.

General O’Connor had kept photos of her in a drawer at home, but rarely looked at them. He didn’t need to. He vividly remembered her. “Love never fails,” he said. “I really believe that.”

Months later she and her sister, Helen Maher, invited General O’Connor to a family party in Florida. “It was like we never left off,” Mrs. Conway said. Her sister commented: “They have both weathered many storms and always had fidelity and faith and focus.”

He began flying east to see her.

“We had done what we had to do with our lives,” she said. “Now, we had the chance to concentrate on each other again,” she said. She describes their relationship as much freer now, “a magic slate” upon which they can “write anything they want.

They became inseparable. “If I’m not with Jeanne, I feel like I’m just waiting to be back together with her,” he said. “It’s that kind of relationship.”

On Nov. 24, in chilly-yet-sunny weather, the couple were married at the Roman Catholic Church of St. Vincent Ferrer on the Upper East Side. It was a ceremony much like one they might have had in the 1950s. Guests in flip hairdos and wingtip shoes sang “Amazing Grace.” The bridegroom wore his uniform out of nostalgia because that’s what he always wore when they first dated. When the church doors opened after the ceremony, it was strange to see 2007 Hummers and taxis roaring by.

“My philosophy is, this was always meant to be,” the bridegroom said a few days before. “This was the girl of my dreams, the girl I had on a pedestal when I was a young man.” He added, “It’s as if the greatest dream you ever had finally came true.”

Read it all. So wonderful.

Posted in * Culture-Watch, Marriage & Family

Kathleen Parker: Romney's cult of religious liberty

Mitt Romney’s “Faith In America” speech might have surpassed even his own expectations.

By changing the debate from doctrinal differences of his Mormon belief to a principled discussion of religious liberty, he not only raised the bar for political discourse, but he also effectively made a case for uniting all faiths in defense of Western civilization.

No modest proposal that.

Read it all.

Posted in * Culture-Watch, * Economics, Politics, Religion & Culture, US Presidential Election 2008