Monthly Archives: December 2008

Archbishop John Sentamu: Hell is an eternal maxed-out credit card. In heaven there are no debts

One of the lessons of the present turmoil is the recognition of our interdependence upon each other. It is a lesson that is at odds with the mindset of speculative profiteering, but it is a lesson that bears repeating in times of crisis.

Am I my brother’s keeper? Yes I am. The impact of what happens with a sub-prime mortgage in America has an impact upon my brother employed in Newcastle working for Northern Rock.

Am I my brother’s keeper? Yes I am when speculation leads to mergers, with redundancies for thousands of my brothers and sisters.

Am I my brother’s keeper? Yes I am, because the systemic risk of allowing a bank to fail makes sense only when it is translated into the thousands of individual stories of hardship that flow from its collapse.

Read it all.

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, * Economics, Politics, Archbishop of York John Sentamu, Economy, Ethics / Moral Theology, The Credit Freeze Crisis of Fall 2008/The Recession of 2007--, Theology

Mike Elgan: 10 things that won't survive the recession

9. Half of all retail stores
Many retail stores are obsolete and will be replaced by online competitors. Entire malls will become ghost towns. By this time next year, most video game stores, book stores and toy stores — as well as many other categories — will simply vanish. Amazon.com will grow and grow.

10. Satellite radio
I’m sorry, Howard Stern. It’s over. The newly merged Sirius XM Radio simply cannot sustain its losses. The company is already deeply in debt and would need to dramatically increase subscribers over the next six months in order to meet its debt obligations. Unfortunately, new car sales, where a huge percentage of satellite radios are sold, are in the gutter and stand-alone subscriptions are way down.

Read it all.

Posted in * Economics, Politics, Economy

Robert David Jaffee: When mental illness and civil rights collide

Too many people don’t get the proper treatment. Every day, as I drive in Los Angeles, I see people who need help and aren’t getting it.

Partly this is because of the costs and limitations of healthcare. I once gave a talk to a self-help group in Pasadena, and was approached afterward by a recent high school graduate who had been kicked out of his house by his parents. He was living with his grandmother, who told me that he had exhausted the number of therapy sessions his insurance allowed. She didn’t know how he could get affordable help in the future.

Other people are too sick to know they need help. It’s hard to know how much of the region’s homelessness problem is because of mental illness. But a 2007 count of the homeless by the Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority found that of the county’s 68,608 residents identified as homeless in the study, 52% suffered from depression and 31% reported experiencing more serious mental illnesses.

Many mentally ill people living on the streets have refused treatment. I understand this. When I was on my trek, if a doctor had come up to me, I would have been terrified that he was going to harm or even kill me.

It is much better to encourage, rather than force, the mentally ill to get treatment. But what if they don’t respond?

A long time ago in a land far away I served a chaplaincy internship at the second largest VA hosptial in the country. A number of the patients on the floors I worked on were like this man. These are troubling questions, but they have to be faced. Read it all–KSH.

Posted in * Culture-Watch, Health & Medicine, Psychology

As if Things Weren't Bad Enough, Russian Professor Predicts End of U.S.

For a decade, Russian academic Igor Panarin has been predicting the U.S. will fall apart in 2010. For most of that time, he admits, few took his argument — that an economic and moral collapse will trigger a civil war and the eventual breakup of the U.S. — very seriously. Now he’s found an eager audience: Russian state media.

In recent weeks, he’s been interviewed as much as twice a day about his predictions. “It’s a record,” says Prof. Panarin. “But I think the attention is going to grow even stronger.”

Prof. Panarin, 50 years old, is not a fringe figure. A former KGB analyst, he is dean of the Russian Foreign Ministry’s academy for future diplomats. He is invited to Kremlin receptions, lectures students, publishes books, and appears in the media as an expert on U.S.-Russia relations.

But it’s his bleak forecast for the U.S. that is music to the ears of the Kremlin, which in recent years has blamed Washington for everything from instability in the Middle East to the global financial crisis.

Read it all from the front page of this morning’s Wall Street Journal.

Posted in * Culture-Watch, * International News & Commentary, America/U.S.A., Europe, Globalization, Russia

Rod Dreher: Is heresy better than schism?

If you believe that Scripture, or Scripture and the institutional Church, is the Authority for deciding questions of meaning and morality, then you are far more likely to fall on the traditionalist side of these questions. If you believe that individual conscience is the Authority, then you are likely to be a progressive.

I don’t see how the two can be reconciled, unless it is agreed by a majority that the church in question doesn’t really stand for anything beyond itself. If you really do believe that Scripture and Tradition are wrong about same-sex relationships, and that it is a matter of basic justice that the teaching be changed, then you aren’t going to stop fighting for that change within the church. If you believe that we are not free to throw off the authority of Scripture (and Tradition) in such matters, then to have your church declare these matters open to negotiation would be to hollow out the meaning of what the church is supposed to stand for, all for the sake of a superficial unity.

Read it all.

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, * Religion News & Commentary, - Anglican: Analysis, --Proposed Formation of a new North American Province, Common Cause Partnership, Episcopal Church (TEC), Other Churches, Roman Catholic, TEC Conflicts

Paul Handley: The Anglican Communion will finally split in 2009

…the game now is going to change from now on. The object has shifted from trying to reform the old Communion (by supplanting the liberals in the US) to forming a new one. Rowan’s task in the year ahead will thus change, too, from trying to hold together two disputatious groups in the same Church to trying to hold together two Churches. It can’t be done, especially now that he has lost the respect of the conservatives.

So, schism in 2009? It certainly looks like it, and then the numbers belonging to each side start to matter. The conservatives in the US are in a clear minority, but when allied to the millions of Anglicans in, say, Nigeria or Uganda, they become a force to reckon with, however much the liberals would like us to ignore them.

There are many things to like in this piece, but it is significantly marred by the fact that he gets wrong what happened in 2006 at the General Convention. There was no agreement on the bishops matter in the terms requested, and on blessings what was requested was clearly not agreed to. Since the Convention, there has been an increase in same sex blessings against the teaching and practice of the Anglican Communion. So it is simply nonsense to talk of a moratorium being lifted which doesn’t exist in practice throughout various parts of TEC. In any event, read it all–KSH.

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, - Anglican: Analysis, --Proposed Formation of a new North American Province, Archbishop of Canterbury, Common Cause Partnership, Episcopal Church (TEC), GAFCON I 2008, Global South Churches & Primates, Same-sex blessings, Sexuality Debate (in Anglican Communion), TEC Conflicts

Northern Florida Episcopal church for sale after split

An Episcopal church vacated by its congregation in a theological dispute has been put on sale by the Jacksonville-based Diocese of Florida.

Bishop Samuel Johnson Howard said he hopes the 5.3-acre All Souls Episcopal campus in Mandarin will become the eventual home of a ministry or school instead of being sold for the current $2.8 million asking price.

Read it all.

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

Christian leaders speak out on Gaza

Read it all.

Update: The ENS release on the Presiding Bishop’s remarks is now out and is here.

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, * Culture-Watch, * International News & Commentary, * Religion News & Commentary, Episcopal Church (TEC), Israel, Middle East, Other Churches, Presiding Bishop, Roman Catholic, Violence

Stephen Prothero: A look back, a step forward

In the Akan language of West Africa there is a concept called Sankofa. San means return; ko mean go; and fa means take. So Sankofa refers to returning to fetch something you once discarded so you can take it back home. A popular symbol used to represent this concept depicts a mythical bird that flies forward with its head turned back. And those who practice Sankofa in this tradition, by taking the best from the past into the future, are understood to be wise. There isn’t much of this ideal in America. New stands at the center of our national mythology: New World, New York, New Deal, New Frontier. When we leave something behind, we are not inclined to go back and fetch it.

There is of course much of 2008 to leave behind, not the least being our greatest economic catastrophe since the Great Depression. But there is much to go back and fetch, too, including the collective determination of our voters to open the White House to a man who could not even have voted when Abraham Lincoln was alive.

Read the whole piece.

Posted in * Culture-Watch, * International News & Commentary, America/U.S.A., Religion & Culture

Israel bombs Gaza in 'all-out war' on Hamas

Israel bombed Gaza for a third day Monday in an “all-out war” on Hamas, as tanks massed on the border and the Islamists fired deadly rockets in retaliation for the blitz that has killed at least 318 people.

Anger over the mammoth bombing campaign spiralled in the Muslim world , UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon again deplored the violence, and efforts to hold talks between Syria and Israel were suspended as a result of the bombardment.

With Israeli tanks idling along the border of the battered Palestinian enclave , the army declared the area a closed military zone — a move that in the past has often been followed by ground operations.

Defence Minister Ehud Barak, who has warned of a possible ground offensive, declared that the Jewish state was in “an all-out war with Hamas and its proxies”.

“We will avoid as much as possible hitting civilians while the people of Hamas and other terrorists deliberately hide and operate within the civilian population,” he told a parliamentary session.

Read it all.

Posted in * Culture-Watch, * International News & Commentary, Israel, Middle East, Violence

Mass Appeal: Northern Ireland Priests an Unlikely Musical Hit

Watch it all. Makes the heart glad.

Posted in * Christian Life / Church Life, * Culture-Watch, * International News & Commentary, * Religion News & Commentary, England / UK, Music, Other Churches, Parish Ministry, Roman Catholic

Charities Brace Themselves Amid Big Three Woes

The struggles of the Big Three automakers are sending shock waves through the philanthropic community: The three companies gave a combined $116 million in charitable donations last year.

Listen to it all from NPR.

Posted in * Culture-Watch, * Economics, Politics, Charities/Non-Profit Organizations, Economy, The Credit Freeze Crisis of Fall 2008/The Recession of 2007--, The Possibility of a Bailout for the U.S. Auto Industry

Embracing Yo-Yo Ma's 'venture culturalism'

The man is a marvel. I especially enjoyed the footage of him playing before President Kennedy at age 7 which I had not seen before. Watch it all.

Posted in * Culture-Watch, Globalization, Music

A Local Editorial: Toward a safer energy future

As a conservation measure, Dr. Chu has recommended that Americans drive smaller cars or pay higher taxes for driving big ones. It would be reassuring to know that he also supports, as a short-term measure for reducing dependence on foreign oil, responsible efforts to increase domestic oil and gas production. These may be stopgap supplies, but having them is better for us than not.

When he was introduced to the press by Mr. Obama, Dr. Chu said, “We must repair the economy and put us on a path forward toward sustainable energy.”

That is fine, as long as he keeps his eye on the economy’s near-term energy requirements, as well.

Read it all.

Posted in * Economics, Politics, Energy, Natural Resources

John Parker: Christmas Day just the beginning of celebration

‘Today” in the ancient Christian tradition is a long time.

“Today” almost always lasts more than 24 hours. In fact, “today” often is eight days long in the church. On Christmas Eve, we sang, “Today He who holds the whole creation in His hand is born of a virgin.” On Christmas Day we sang, “Today the Virgin gives birth to the Transcendent One, and the Earth offers a cave to the Unapproachable One.” On Friday, we sang, “Today Bethlehem receives Him who reigns forever with the Father; today angels glorify the newborn babe in hymns worthy of God.” And today (Sunday) we sing, “Today the ancient bond of the condemnation of Adam is loosed: Paradise is opened to us.” And “Today in Bethlehem I hear the holy angels: Glory to God in the Highest!”

Why is “today” so long?

Read it all.

Posted in * Christian Life / Church Life, * Religion News & Commentary, * South Carolina, Christmas, Church Year / Liturgical Seasons, Orthodox Church, Other Churches

Gallup: Americans see religious influence waning

Two-thirds of Americans think religion is losing its influence on U.S. life, a sharp jump from just three years ago when Americans were nearly evenly split on the question, according to a new Gallup Poll.

Sixty-seven percent of Americans think religious influence is waning while just 27% say it is increasing. That perspective demonstrates a continuing downward trend, Gallup said.

But the 27% figure is still higher than the record low, set in a 1970 poll, when just 14% of Americans thought religion was increasing in influence.

Read it all.

Posted in * Culture-Watch, * International News & Commentary, America/U.S.A., Religion & Culture

BBC: Government Minister rejects Anglican bishops' attack

The government has rejected criticism by five Anglican bishops who questioned the morality of its policies.

The Bishops of Durham, Winchester, Hulme, Manchester and Carlisle accused ministers of failing to tackle poverty and pressuring people to get into debt.

But Cabinet Office Minister Liam Byrne said Labour had fought hard to narrow the gap between rich and poor.

And Labour MP Sir Stuart Bell, who represents the Church in the Commons, called the bishops’ claims “nonsense”.

Read it all.

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, * Culture-Watch, * Economics, Politics, * International News & Commentary, Anglican Provinces, Church of England (CoE), CoE Bishops, Economy, England / UK, Politics in General, Religion & Culture

Sunday Telegraph: 5 Anglican Bishops deliver damning verdict on Britain under Labour rule

The Rt Rev Graham Dow, the Bishop of Carlisle, and the Rt Rev Michael Scott-Joynt, the Bishop of Winchester, said Labour deserved credit for some past achievements but it was struggling to balance its conscience with the pressure to win the next election.

“I agree with the Conservatives that the breakdown of the family is a crucial element in the difficulties of our present society,” said Bishop Dow.

“The Government hasn’t given sufficient support to that because it is scared of losing votes.” He argued that Labour’s failure to back marriage and its “insistence on supporting every choice of lifestyle” had had a negative effect on society. “I think Labour has got tired,” he said. Bishop Scott-Joynt said: “The Government hasn’t done anything like enough to help those less well off, particularly in terms of tax redistribution. There also has been the disaster of the 10p tax.

“It is imperative that this Government help the poorer people and hold the hard-hit communities in its sights, but it seems to have its eye on re-election instead.”

Read the whole article.

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, * Culture-Watch, * Economics, Politics, * International News & Commentary, Anglican Provinces, Church of England (CoE), CoE Bishops, Economy, England / UK, Politics in General, Poverty

Bishop Tom Wright: Homelessness is an apt metaphor for our troubled world

The regular suggestion that baling out countries will lead them to misbehave again won’t work, either. That might be true of some banks and businesses. It isn’t true of countries like Tanzania, who, after debt remission, have experienced the joy of developing education, medicine and other essentials ”“ in fact, of building a new home.

We don’t just need, in other words, to ”˜turn the economy round’, and get it back to where it was before. We need to turn it inside out. The Christmas message suggests that it’s time for a major, global rethink about the multiple, interlocking problems we can no longer ignore. And about the many-sided, but essentially coherent, proposals that flow directly from the Baby at Bethlehem, demanding to be worked out at street level.

The God who became homeless at Christmas longs to transform this muddled old world into a place where all can be at home at last. That’s what Jesus taught us to pray for.

Read it all.

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, * Christian Life / Church Life, * Culture-Watch, * Economics, Politics, Anglican Provinces, Christmas, Church of England (CoE), Church Year / Liturgical Seasons, CoE Bishops, Economy, Globalization

IPS News: Will a Fierce Battle Over Same Sex Unions Split the Anglican Church?

[Archbishop Greg] Venables attended both conferences, at Canterbury and Jerusalem. “The African bishops did not go to Lambeth because they feel frustrated,” he said. “The Anglican Church in Africa has always been very traditionalist, and when the United States suddenly took a direction that many did not agree with, they found there was no room for dissenters.”

This is the dilemma today in the Anglican Church, he said. There is a “serious crisis,” according to Venables, but the decision to break apart or to settle the differences has been postponed. The next Anglican Communion Primates’ Meeting, convened by the Archbishop of Canterbury, will be held in Alexandria, Egypt in February 2009.

The bishop of Argentina said he had persuaded the African primates to attend, but he admitted that they are skeptical about the results that can be expected.

“They say that it will just be more of the same. Their patience is running out. They feel that ‘again, white people want to run everything their own way,'” he said.

Read it all.

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, Anglican Provinces, Cono Sur [formerly Southern Cone], Episcopal Church (TEC), Instruments of Unity, Same-sex blessings, Sexuality Debate (in Anglican Communion), TEC Conflicts, Windsor Report / Process

Telegraph Letters: Disestablishing the Church would disunite England

Read them all.

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, * Culture-Watch, * International News & Commentary, Archbishop of Canterbury, England / UK, Law & Legal Issues, Religion & Culture

Disestablishment of Church of England would be welcome, say leading bishops

The Rt Rev John Packer, the Bishop of Ripon and Leeds, and the Rt Rev Jonathan Gledhill, the Bishop of Lichfield, accused Parliament of becoming increasingly liberal and unchristian, and said that breaking the relationship would bring greater independence.

The bishops are the most senior ecclesiastical figures to support Dr Rowan Williams, the Archbishop of Canterbury, who said earlier this month that a separation of church and state would not be “the end of the world”.

There is already growing pressure among Labour MPs for the Government to press ahead with disestablishment. Three former cabinet members said they backed the idea and it is clear that many senior figures within the Church would not oppose such a move.

Read it all.

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, * Culture-Watch, * International News & Commentary, Anglican Provinces, Archbishop of Canterbury, Church of England (CoE), CoE Bishops, England / UK, Law & Legal Issues, Religion & Culture

Telegraph–Carefully does it, Dr Rowan Williams: we're listening

Dr Williams last week spoke out against government policy on public spending, likening it to “an addict returning to a drug”. This Christmas week, he wrote in these pages on the dangers of sticking to political principles at all costs, a road that at its most extreme end leads to the kind of abomination that was Nazi Germany, a mindset in which people’s lives are disposable and sacrificed on the altar of those principles.

When it comes to observations such as these, Dr Williams will still have his critics and detractors, in spades. It seems to be a characteristic of his that he doesn’t much care that he has them; it clearly doesn’t seem to discourage him from saying the unsayable. In that, he follows an honourable episcopal tradition of speaking truth to power. But his interventions in these straitened times feel peculiarly more appropriate. It may well be that what prelates have to say fits times of recession and depression rather more directly than in times of boom and plenty. That’s perhaps as it should be; yesterday’s great Christian festival celebrates the birth of the son of God in the hardship of a stable. It also means that Dr Williams and his fellow bishops should brace themselves for a demanding and wearing 2009, because rather more people might be listening more carefully.

Read it all.

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, Archbishop of Canterbury

Episcopal priest makes a name for himself in New York City nightclubs

He shows up at the hottest clubs in the wee hours and spends thousands on top-shelf liquors, doling out five-figure tips like silver dollars.

He’ll send bottles of Dom Perignon to tables around him on a whim, or take a waitress out on the town for a shopping spree.

His name isn’t Diddy. He doesn’t show up in the gossip columns or the Fortune 500. He’s not even a celebrity at all.

The mystery man whose bottomless pockets have made him a legend in clubland is a young Episcopal priest from northeastern Pennsylvania.

Read it all.

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

Pressing on after a split in the local church in Fort Worth

Meanwhile, the Episcopal Diocese of Fort Worth continues its ministry as an integral part of the Episcopal Church.

Many Episcopalians in the diocese never supported Iker’s aims. Months before Nov. 15, they began planning to reorganize and refocus the diocese ”” not to organize a new one, as Iker’s office has recently claimed ”” to carry on the work of the church. They formed the mostly lay-led Steering Committee North Texas Episcopalians, made up of representatives from the remaining Episcopal congregations.

Since Nov. 15, 15 intact and reorganizing parishes and somewhere between 5,000 and 6,000 Episcopalians in North Texas, some meeting in their parish property and some in temporary space, have continued to worship and explore new and effective ways to carry out the church’s mission of reconciling the world to God and all humankind to each other through Jesus Christ.

Read it all.

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

Nicholas Kristof: A new chance for Darfur

If Barack Obama wants to help end the genocide in Darfur, he doesn’t have to look far for ideas of how to accomplish that.

President Bush and his top aides have been given, and ignored, a menu of options for tough steps to squeeze Sudan – even destroy its air force – and those will soon be on the new president’s desk.

The State Department’s policy planning staff prepared the first set of possible responses back in 2004 (never pursued), and this year Ambassador Richard Williamson has privately pushed the White House to squeeze Sudan until it stops the killing.

Read it all.

Posted in * Culture-Watch, * International News & Commentary, Africa, Violence

Serving U.S. Parishes, Fathers Without Borders

Sixteen of the Rev. Darrell Venters’s fellow priests are running themselves ragged here, each serving three parishes simultaneously. One priest admits he stood at an altar once and forgot exactly which church he was in.

So Father Venters, lean and leathery as the Marlboro man ”” a cigarette in one hand and a cellphone with a ring tone like a church bell in the other ”” spends most of his days recruiting priests from overseas to serve in the small towns, rolling hills and farmland that make up the Roman Catholic Diocese of Owensboro.

He sorts through e-mail and letters from foreign priests soliciting jobs in America, many written in formal, stilted English. He is looking, he said, for something that shouts: “This priest is just meant for Kentucky!”

Read it all from the front page of the New York Times.

Posted in * Christian Life / Church Life, * Religion News & Commentary, Other Churches, Parish Ministry, Roman Catholic

A Discouraging Episcopal Church website (in the same town)

From here:

While Randy believes that Jesus is “the Way” for him and most Westerners, he affirms the truths enshrined in the great religions and philosophies of the human race.

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, * Christian Life / Church Life, Episcopal Church (TEC), Parish Ministry

An Encouraging Church Website

From here:

We commit ourselves to exemplify and promote the following values as a church:

* The reliability and power of the Bible, God’s Holy Word.

* The good news of redemption and restoration in Jesus Christ, our Savior and Lord.

* The necessity of the fresh life of the Holy Spirit in ministry and worship.

* The importance of the local church in the work and advancement of the kingdom of God.

* The strengthening of marriage and family relationships.

* Possessing the spirit of grace and demonstrating attitudes of graciousness in our church family and to our community.

* Generosity and biblical stewardship with our resources.

* Harmony and stability in church and family life.

* Servant-heartedness in spirit and action.

* The pursuit of personal holiness, integrity and Christ-like character.

* Excellence in all that is done in service for Christ and His church.

* Practicality in the presentation of God’s Word.

* The expression of love, friendliness and warmth in the work and worship of the church.

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, * Christian Life / Church Life, Episcopal Church (TEC), Parish Ministry

Keeping the faith, leaving the fold

A theological rift between a local Episcopal Church and the Episcopal Diocese of Western New York led a congregation to re-establish its faith with a new denomination.

On Dec. 14, a majority of St. Bartholomew’s Episcopal Church congregation in Tonawanda left in a split with the diocese over theological differences between the increasingly liberal Episcopal Church and more conservative congregation members, establishing St. Bartholomew’s Anglican Church less than a mile away. Now, the small congregation of St. Peter’s Episcopal Church in Forestville is following suit with a similar break from the diocese, likely establishing itself as a local mission extension of the new-found St. Bartholomew’s Anglican Church.

Read it all.

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