Monthly Archives: September 2009
Seeking salvation in a strip mall in Panama City, Florida
Sam Weigle is Crossbridge’s shaggy-haired guitar player. The 29-year-old grew up Methodist, and was attending a Methodist church when he met Lloyd.
“The first time I heard him speak I was kind of hooked,” Weigle said. “It’s not a conventional church message, but it’s really back to the roots of what I believe Jesus intended.”
Lloyd is not surprised at the Pew numbers. He’s seen a bevy of local worship options emerge since his childhood, particularly ones for those who might not be comfortable with the pat answers that traditional churches often offer to moral questions.
“We’ve tried to make religion an exact science, and it’s just not,” Lloyd said. “Good religion is full of truths, truths that are life-changing, but it’s still fuzzy. The only thing I know for sure anymore is that God loves me more than I can imagine, even when I do stupid things, and that my job is to love him back, and to love other people.”
Barbara Ehrenreich and Dedrick Muhammad: The Recession’s Racial Divide
If any cultural factor predisposed blacks to fall for risky loans, it was one widely shared with whites ”” a penchant for “positive thinking” and unwarranted optimism, which takes the theological form of the “prosperity gospel.” Since “God wants to prosper you,” all you have to do to get something is “name it and claim it.” A 2000 DVD from the black evangelist Creflo Dollar featured African-American parishioners shouting, “I want my stuff ”” right now!”
Joel Osteen, the white megachurch pastor who draws 40,000 worshippers each Sunday, about two-thirds of them black and Latino, likes to relate how he himself succumbed to God’s urgings ”” conveyed by his wife ”” to upgrade to a larger house. According to Jonathan Walton, a religion professor at the University of California at Riverside, pastors like Mr. Osteen reassured people about subprime mortgages by getting them to believe that “God caused the bank to ignore my credit score and bless me with my first house.” If African-Americans made any collective mistake in the mid-’00s, it was to embrace white culture too enthusiastically, and substitute the individual wish-fulfillment promoted by Norman Vincent Peale for the collective-action message of Martin Luther King.
But you didn’t need a dodgy mortgage to be wiped out by the subprime crisis and ensuing recession. Black unemployment is now at 15.1 percent, compared with 8.9 percent for whites. In New York City, black unemployment has been rising four times as fast as that of whites. By 2010, according to Lawrence Mishel of the Economic Policy Institute, 40 percent of African-Americans nationwide will have endured patches of unemployment or underemployment.
One result is that blacks are being hit by a second wave of foreclosures caused by unemployment.
Benedict XVI: "The Law, as Word of Love, Is Not a Contradiction to Freedom"
He to whom everything has been revealed belongs to the family; he is no longer a servant, but free because, in fact, he himself forms part of the house. A similar initial introduction in the thought of God himself happened to Israel on Mount Sinai. It happened in a great and definitive way in the Cenacle and, in general, through the work, life, passion and resurrection of Jesus; in him, God has given us everything, he has manifested himself completely. We are no longer servants, but friends. The Law is no longer a prescription for persons who are not free, but is contact with the love of God — being introduced to form part of the family, act that makes us free and “perfect.” It is in this sense that James tells us, in today’s reading, that the Lord has engendered us through his Word, that he has planted his Word in our interior as force of life. Here there is also talk of “pure religion” which consists in love of neighbor — particularly of orphans and widows, of those who are in greatest need of us — and in freedom from the fashions of this world, which contaminate us.
The Law, as word of love, is not a contradiction to freedom, but a renewal from within through friendship with God. Something similar is manifested when Jesus, in his address about the vine, says to his disciples: “You are already made clean by the word which I have spoken to you” (John 15:3). And the same appears again later in the priestly prayer: You are sanctified in the truth (cf. John 17:17-19). Thus we now find the right structure of the process of purification and of purity: We are not the ones who create what is good — this would be a simple moralism — instead, it is Truth that comes to meet us. He himself is the Truth, the Truth in person. Purity is a dialogic event. It begins with the fact that he comes to meet us — he, who is Truth and Love — takes us by the hand, and is fused with our being. In the measure in which we allow ourselves to be touched by him, in which the encounter becomes friendship and love, we are, stemming from his purity, pure persons and then persons who love with his love, persons who introduce others in his purity and his love.
Bible NOT God's Word says Bishop Williams
OK, name the speaker, the date and take a stab at the context for good measure.
The Archbishop of Canterbury to visit Japan
As part the150th anniversary celebrations of the Anglican Church in Japan, the Archbishop of Canterbury will be making a week-long visit to Japan during which he will visit Anglican churches, universities and schools, as well as the city of Nagasaki.
Dr Williams will preach at the service to celebrate the 150th anniversary of the Anglican Church in Japan (known as Nippon Sei Ko Kai) and will be joined by other bishops and Primates from around the Anglican Communion.
Adviser Has Low Expectations for White House Faith-Based Office
Former Southern Baptist Convention President Frank Page said he doesn’t expect much to result from the work of advisers to the White House’s office dealing with faith-based and community groups.
“I believe that the policy recommendations that will come forth will be relatively innocuous, good, helpful,” said Page, a member of the panel, on Thursday (Sept. 10) at the annual meeting of the Religion Newswriters Association. He expects results to be not much more than “low-hanging fruit.”
“There will be good things, but nothing of great substance.”
The International Anglican Liturgical Consultation of 2009
(ACNS) The International Anglican Liturgical Consultation met August 3-8 at the Cathedral of the Holy Trinity, Auckland, in the Anglican Church of Aotearoa New Zealand and Polynesia. We are grateful to the Local Arrangements Committee, the Right Reverend Winston Halapua and the Right Reverend Kito Pikaahu, the Right Reverend George Connor, Mrs. Heather Skilling and the Very Reverend Ross Bay who shaped the conference and tended to our travel and practical needs with care.
The gathering comprised Anglicans from fourteen of the Provinces of the Anglican Communion. Particular welcome was given to the first representatives from the Anglican Church in Korea and the Church of North India. Due to unforeseen difficulties regarding travel and visa matters, several of our members were unable to be with us. We upheld them in our prayers, as we prayed for the Churches of the Communion and for our ecumenical friends.
David Doveton: Faithful?…. Committed?…….. or Deceived?
”˜Acceptance’ in modern parlance has been the favourite mushily sentimental and superficial term which has come to replace the deeply theological term ”˜justification’ In a recent interview3 Bishop FitzSimmons Allison points out how ”˜acceptance’ is used as a watered down secular version of ”˜justification’. He notes that we all have a notion of what is just and right built into us. If we reject the standards our transcendent creator God has set for us to live by, and choose rather to trust our instincts and desires in formulating our behaviour, we are in effect suppressing the truth, and choosing to live by our own standards of righteousness. We have rejected the standard of God’s transcendent righteousness revealed to us in scripture, and thus only have ourselves as reference points with a resulting individualism and subjectivity.
Christian philosopher Prof. Jack Budziszewski points to certain realities about the created order, realities which continue to operate despite our rebellion. For example, knowledge of guilt (even if suppressed) produces certain objective needs, needs which have to be satisfied. These include confession, reconciliation, atonement and justification. Out of our need for justification, the need to be ”˜right’ before God, we develop mechanisms to ”˜be righteous’ ”“ such as thinking well of ourselves, or ”˜self esteem’. “God accepts us as we are ”“ so we should accept ourselves and others”. ”˜Inclusion’ is the term commonly used for this and we are told that ”˜Jesus was inclusive in all his dealings with people ”“he included the outcasts and the sinners’. So basically what the doctrine of ”˜inclusion’ means is that God accepts me as I am. The idea that God accepts us as we are is not a biblical idea. God loves us unconditionally, no matter what state we are in, but that is not the same. God calls us as we are, in the state of rebellion we are in. If we then turn to him in repentance and faith he accepts us in Christ, but if we do not turn to him, we are still lost in sin. Kummel says, “That man must turn around if he wishes to stand before God is one of the basic views of Judaism in Jesus’ time, and thus Jesus also explicitly named conversion as a condition for entrance into, the kingdom of God.”5 So, in Mark 1:15, Jesus’ message of the good news begins with the call to turn around, and from that moment all gospel preaching is based on Jesus’ commission to his disciples to call all men to repentance (Mark 6:12) (Acts 3:19, 8:22)
Saint Dunstan's in Florida Realigns with Anglican Diocese of Quincy
Via email:
Largo, Florida ”“ By a vote of 174 to 13, the membership of St. Dunstan’s Church today voted to sever its ties with The Episcopal Church and affiliate with the Anglican Church in North America (ACNA) as a parish within the Anglican Diocese of Quincy, Ill. The vote took place during a special meeting convened following regularly scheduled church services this past weekend.
The ACNA unites some 100,000 Anglicans in 700 parishes into a single church. Jurisdictions which have joined together to form the 28 dioceses and dioceses-in-formation of the Anglican Church in North America include four former Episcopal dioceses (the dioceses of Fort Worth, Pittsburgh, Quincy and San Joaquin); the Anglican Mission in the Americas; the Convocation of Anglicans in North America; the Anglican Network in Canada; the Anglican Coalition in Canada; the Reformed Episcopal Church; and the missionary initiatives of Kenya, Uganda, and South America’s Southern Cone. Additionally, the American Anglican Council and Forward in Faith North America are founding organizations. The ACNA is headed by the Archbishop Robert Duncan, Archbishop and Primate.
Food For Thought–The 7 Phases of Waiting
1. Intensity – A crisis causes you to focus all of your energy to pray for a divine solution.
2. Distraction – You cannot sustain indefinite intensity: your heart and mind are distracted.
3. Anger – Anger emerges and is directed at God for not taking action, the cause of the problem, or yourself for not being able to do more.
4. Accusation – Satan the accuser says that God hasn’t answered because of your sinfulness.
5. Frustration – You are no longer certain how to pray.
6. Revelation – Provided you stay in the Word, deeper understanding will develop about waiting on God for answered prayer.
7. Determination – Faith at this point is not a feeling, but a willful determination to be faithful in prayer, no matter how or when (if ever) God answers.
–Ron Susek from Pray magazine
Lehman: 'alarm bells should still be ringing'
One year after Lehman Brothers’ dramatic plunge into bankruptcy, one of Britain’s leading policy think-tanks has warned that too little has been learned from the crisis.
The Institute for Public Policy Research (IPPR) said “alarm bells should be ringing” because the return of the bonus culture in the City signalled that real changes have been “very limited”.
Tony Dolphin, senior economist at the IPPR, said there was little evidence that policymakers were taking measures “to ensure the next economic recovery is better balanced than the last one”.
No we can't ”” UK think tank says US power fading
A weakened United States could start retreating from the world stage without help from its allies abroad, an international strategic affairs think tank said Tuesday.
The London-based International Institute for Strategic Studies said President Barack Obama would increasingly turn to others for help dealing with the world’s problems ”” in part because he has no alternative.
“Domestically Obama may have campaigned on the theme ‘yes we can’; internationally he may increasingly have to argue ‘no we can’t’,” the institute said in its annual review of world affairs.
Protectionist Measures Expected to Rise, Report Warns
This weekend’s U.S.-China trade skirmish is just the tip of a coming protectionist iceberg, according to a report released Monday by Global Trade Alert, a team of trade analysts backed by independent think tanks, the World Bank and the U.K. government.
A report by the World Trade Organization, backed by its 153 members and also released Monday, found “slippage” in promises to abstain from protectionism, but drew less dramatic conclusions.
Governments have planned 130 protectionist measures that have yet to be implemented, according to the GTA’s research. These include state aid funds, higher tariffs, immigration restrictions and export subsidies.
Atheists put their faith in Twitter
P.Z. Myers’ Twitter bio reads, “godless liberal biologist.”
The avid atheist is far from alone in the cyber world. He has more than 7,700 followers who subscribe to his atheism- and evolution-themed Internet updates.
When Myers led about 300 like-minded evolutionists to the Creation Museum, thousands more followed along via the Internet, avidly anticipating each 140-character “tweet” about the Kentucky center, which renounces evolution in favor of a Bible-based view of natural history.
“It’s a very peculiar medium,” Myers said of Twitter. “I can also see that it is quite useful.”
USA Today: The secret lives of female alcoholics
The numbers are troubling: An estimated 17.6 million adults in the USA are either alcoholics or have alcohol problems, according to the National Institutes of Health. By some estimates, one-third of alcoholics are women.
Yet if you were to ask a woman’s friends and family if she has a drinking problem, they might very well say no.
Mass appeal: Old-style service drawing young crowd
When introducing a new service these days, most churches seem to go the rock ”˜n’ roll route ”” something new to bring in a younger crowd.
To say that Trinity Episcopal Church went in another direction might be a bit of an understatement.
When the church decided to add a new service in fall 2006, instead of looking forward, it looked back.
Way back. As in the fourth century.
NPR–Guardian Angels Or The 'Third Man Factor'?
Writer John Geiger chronicles the phenomenon of the phantom companion in his new book, The Third Man Factor: Surviving the Impossible. As Geiger explains, the Third Man is an unseen being that intervenes at a critical moment ”” when people are in great stress or in a life-and-death struggle ”” to give comfort, aid or support.
“Clearly there is a spiritual or religious explanation to this phenomenon,” Geiger tells Guy Raz. But he also says there is strong science behind the Third Man: “Many skeptics and non-believers also had this experience and they attribute it to other explanations and there is certainly some very interesting science behind this.”
Geiger spent five years tracking down the stories of people who’ve experienced the Third Man phenomenon. He opens his book with the story of Ron DiFrancesco, a worker at the World Trade Center on 9/11.
I highly recommend the audio where the fascinating story of a 9/11 survivor is described. Listen to it all.
Roger Cohen: Get Real on Health Care
Some of my summer in France was spent listening to indignant outbursts about U.S. health care reform. The tone: “You must be kidding! What’s there to debate if 46.3 million Americans have no health insurance?”
I think the French are right. I don’t think there’s much to debate when France spends 11 percent of its gross domestic product on health care and insures everyone and the United States spends 16.5 percent of G.D.P. and leaves 20 percent of adults under 65 uninsured. The numbers don’t lie: The U.S. system is wasteful and unjust.
It’s not just the numbers. It’s the intangibles. Two of my children were born in Paris ”” a breeze. One of them got very sick on arrival in the United States ”” and my wife fainted in a doctor’s office from the anxiety of finding the appropriate care (when we did, at the eleventh hour, it was excellent). The American health system is an insidious stress-multiplier whose hassles, big and small, permeate already harried lives.
Number of female senior pastors in Protestant churches doubles in past decade
After decades of no growth in the ranks of female senior pastors serving in Protestant churches, a new Barna study that has tracked the ratio of male-to-female pastors indicates that women have made substantial gains in the past ten years.
From the early 1990s through 1999 just 5% of the Senior Pastors of Protestant churches were female. Since that time the proportion has slowly but steadily risen, doubling to 10% in 2009.
Not surprisingly, a large share of the woman in the pastorate ”“ 58% ”“ are affiliated with a “mainline” church ”“ i.e., a congregation that is aligned with denominations such as American Baptist Churches (ABCUSA), United Church of Christ, Episcopal, Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA), United Methodist or Presbyterian Church in the USA (PCUSA). Among male pastors, less than half that percentage (23%) is affiliated with a mainline ministry.
Bishop attacks ”˜little England’ mentality
The Anglican Bishop of Stafford has taken a bold swipe at ”˜little-England’ mentality and the far-right British National Party. In parish magazines, published across the diocese of Lichfield, the Rt Rev Gordon Mursell asked ”˜what does it mean to be British?’ He wrote: “Britain will never be great again if all we have to offer is xenophobia and dreams of a lost empire.”
He went on to say: “But it can indeed be great again if it signs up to the values of Jesus’ kingdom – a place where people are judged by where they’re going, not where they come from; a place where what matters is not borders but compassion and courage and commitment and dedication.”
Communion Partner Rectors Endorse Bishops’ Statement
Seventy-four priests who are affiliated with Communion Partners have pledged to fulfill non-episcopal requests made by bishops who met with the Archbishop of Canterbury on Sept. 1.
The priests, who lead parishes with a collective baptized membership of 60,000, list five commitments regarding their response to the Anglican Communion Covenant. The priests say they will:
Ӣ Continue to study the covenant and to pray and work for its adoption.
Bishop of Portsmouth says farewell to congregation
‘That’s it folks ”“ until the next Bishop.’
Those were the parting words from the retiring Bishop of Portsmouth as he said goodbye to a 300-strong congregation of worshippers.
The Rt Rev Dr Kenneth Stevenson’s final service at Portsmouth Anglican Cathedral was tinged with sadness, yet full of jubilant song and celebration.
The 59-year-old has called time after 14 years in the job following a four-year battle with leukaemia, which has seen him undergo two bone marrow transplants.
Williamsport, Penna. Sun-Gazette: Country’s top Episcopal bishop speaks at church
In an interview after the service, Jefferts Schori said Episcopalians “celebrate a diversity of opinion within the church” and their leaders traditionally have expressed opinions – among them that the death penalty is immoral.
“We believe that health care is a basic human right,” she added. “He (Jesus) heals people.”
The bishop was in the city with and at the invitation of the Right Rev. Nathan Baxter, bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of North Central Pennsylvania, who will return to Trinity on Oct. 25 for a service at the church, which is to be designated the “pro-cathedral” of the northern half of the diocese.
Schori’s visit Sunday drew more than 400 Episcopalian parishioners and clergy from churches throughout much of the diocese, including this city, Lock Haven, Jersey Shore, Mansfield, Wellsboro, Altoona, State College, Coudersport, Bloomsburg, Selinsgrove, Sunbury, Lewisburg, Exchange, Renovo, Muncy, Montoursville and Upper Fairfield Township.
Washington Post–Many women targeted by faith leaders, survey says
One in every 33 women who attend worship services regularly has been the target of sexual advances by a religious leader, a survey released Wednesday says.
The study, by Baylor University researchers, found that the problem is so pervasive that it almost certainly involves a wide range of denominations, religious traditions and leaders.
“It certainly is prevalent, and clearly the problem is more than simply a few charismatic leaders preying on vulnerable followers,” said Diana Garland, dean of Baylor’s School of Social Work, who co-authored the study.
It found that more than two-thirds of the offenders were married to someone else at the time of the advance.
Father John Flynn on the Gambling Boom–Governments Tap a "Tax" Eagerly Paid
John P. Hoffmann, a professor of sociology at Brigham Young University, examined the harm caused by gambling. Gambling has generally been placed in the category of victimless crimes, but he argued this terminology is not correct.
Problems such as gambling have substantial negative effects on marital relations and family functioning. Many people gamble with no apparent problems, Hoffmann admitted, but studies point to about 9% of gamblers having some risks, with another 1.5% classified as problem gamblers, and 0.9% as pathological gamblers.
The percentages might seem low, but they translate into substantial numbers — millions of people, in fact — when you consider the total population of the United States, he commented.
When it comes to family life Hoffmann observed that pathological gambling is associated with mental health problems and divorce. When gambling reaches problem levels, children are also often acutely affected. Not only does it influence the time parents spend at home, but children also suffer from a sense of diminished personal attachment to their parents and a loss of trust in them.
In my mind, one of the colossal failures of the church in the last generation. Read it all