Monthly Archives: November 2012

Dr Ephraim Radner: The Book of Common Prayer

You can listen to this talk given at St James Cathedral, Toronto on this link and read the sermon notes below
In 2006, I returned to Burundi, Africa, where I had worked for the church 20 years earlier. They had just come out of 13 years of their own civil war, far bloodier than anything in England in the 17th century, with hundreds of thousands of persons killed. At one point, I had a conversation with a group of Christians: “what was the safest church to be a member of during the civil war?”, I asked them. “The Anglican Church”, they replied. That’s where you had the greatest chance of survival. And why was that? Their answers were complicated. Still, one of the central reasons, they all agreed, was the BCP: their literally translated Kirundi version of the 1662 English prayerbook. “We all prayed together”, they said. Across the country, across regions and ethnic groups and hillsides and political affiliations: we all heard the same things, received the same things, prayed the same things. Killing each other didn’t fit the way we prayed…….
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The Book of Common Prayer: St. James Cathedral, October 14th 2012

A sermon on the BCP is almost a self-contradiction; and most likely thin gruel in any case. It’s like going to lecture on the exciting joys of model-boat construction. Sermons are in any case usually about things we can think of ”“ ideas, propositions, doctrines, inspiring stories. Oddly enough, Anglicanism has very few of these at the center of its life ”“ as we well know: no big Confessions; no magisterial theologians to pore over; no dogmatics to argue about and to preach on point by point. And while we have our heroines and heroes, they have not started mass movements, or overturned tyrannical regimes or single-handedly brought hope to the hopeless.

Instead, we have a BCP. And it is its 350th anniversary ”“ that is, from its 1662 classic edition ”“ that we celebrate today. Originally composed, edited and rendered into English in the mid 16th century by the Archbishop of Canterbury, Thomas Cranmer, the BCP became the single most identifying and formative tool of the English Reformation and subsequent Anglicanism. The 1662 edition , which was not much different from its earlier16th-century form, embodied a renewal of the established Church of England after a period of bloody civil wars and religious turmoil. It was a sign of rediscovered civic stability. Although it was revised here and there, the 1662 edition has furthermore been or formed the primary basis of every Anglican prayerbook around the world, to the recent present.

Is all this “inspiring”? I don’t know. But it is important. In 2006, I returned to Burundi, Africa, where I had worked for the church 20 years earlier. They had just come out of 13 years of their own civil war, far bloodier than anything in England in the 17th century, with hundreds of thousands of persons killed. At one point, I had a conversation with a group of Christians: “what was the safest church to be a member of during the civil war?”, I asked them. “The Anglican Church”, they replied. That’s where you had the greatest chance of survival. And why was that? Their answers were complicated. Still, one of the central reasons, they all agreed, was the BCP: their literally translated Kirundi version of the 1662 English prayerbook. “We all prayed together”, they said. Across the country, across regions and ethnic groups and hillsides and political affiliations: we all heard the same things, received the same things, prayed the same things. Killing each other didn’t fit the way we prayed, as it did in other churches.

And we too have the BCP: which means we pray. And in this, we are doing something, as it were, not simply thinking something or thinking about something.

Now I can try to explain a little what we are doing. But, it’s like talking about singing. It’s fairly pointless unless you sing or take in the singing of someone else, participate in it. The good part of it is that we are singing here, as it were; that is, we are praying. So whatever it is I have to say, it will speak to a fact we already engage, not to someone’s idea about something none of us knows.

So let us start right there: what are we doing, now?

We are gathered here to celebrate the divine life shared ”“ the life, death, and resurrection ”“ of Jesus Christ. We are also celebrating the Book of Common Prayer; but the only reason we would do this, here in this cathedral, is because the BCP itself is somehow a gracious servant of the life of Christ Jesus . For which we give thanks; and whose service of Christ’s life we are called ourselves to cherish, to uphold, to further. Of course! But how?

Let me divide it all too neatly into three actions: exposure, reception, and conformance.

First of all, as we worship according to the BCP, we are exposed. “Exposure”, is the first action.

You could also call this “offering”, as in self-offering. But I want to make clear that the praying we are doing in the BCP is not the offering of a gift to God: it is the baring of our souls to God’s own self-giving to us. The offering of “ourselves, our souls and bodies” that the BCP mentions as being so central to our worship, is one of exposed proximity ”“ of coming to stand before something in all of our nakedness.

Standing before what? or who? God, of course. As the Letter to the Hebrews today says: here draw we ourselves near “to the throne of grace”, in the most awesome and majestic language possible.

And drawing near, we are being laid bare, you see; “before him” ”“ the living and active Word ”“ “no creature is hidden”, Hebrews says; our hearts are uncovered, the deepest ligatures of our beings are unraveled, and the hidden is brought into the light. We are laid bare, just so that the Word might do its work on us.

And what the BCP gives us, first and foremost of all, are the words Scripture before which we stand, exposed. The words of the Word, you could say ”“ psalms, the law, the prophets, the Gospels. These are just the things that Jesus referred to with the disicples having met some of them on the road to Emmaus after his resurrection: “these are my words which I spoke to you”, he say, “while I was still with you, that everything written about me in the law of Moses, and the prophets, and the psalms must be fulfilled” ”“ and so he taught them (Lk. 24:27, 44f.). So he did them, and us.

Abp. Cranmer’s systematic lectionary for the people, around which the BCP was structured and through which daily and weekly the entire Bible was read in public, was truly a “reforming” enterprise that changed the way Christians related to the Scriptures. There it was: the words of the Word spoken to each of us, every day, every week, from Genesis to Revelation; and we standing before them, opened! And not only the lectionary; the entire BCP, in its prayers and canticles, is suffused with Scriptural quotation, reference, and allusion. “You are turning the Bible into your own prayers!”, the Puritans complained, worried that the distinction between God’s words and our own was somehow getting lost in this steady tide of Scripture pounding against our spirits, through which the BCP fundamentally does its work.

But that was the point: the words of the Word must become our words too. Exposure.

So we come to our second action in the BCP: Receiving. The Scriptures of God ”“ the Word spoken to us ”“ is not only spoken but somehow made a part of us, somehow penetrates within us. That is at the center of the BCP’s action. We sit and listen; we kneel and repeat; we stand and utter forth ”“ these words, over and over. That is the effect of the formal ordering of BCP’s worship in its “iterated” force: bit by bit, over time, the words crack open the conscience and the mind and heart; weekly, yearly, over a lifetime ”“ for the BCP is a life-time’s work, not a moment’s — the ordering of time finally drills itself into a focus on the one act of self-giving that is Jesus Christ: and this is given in the Holy Communion. Here, not simply is the Last Supper remembered, and a few words from the Gospels repeated, but the entire Scriptures are summarized from creation to fall to promise to incarnation and sacrifice to resurrection and Spirit, to Church and eternity.

And we should be clear: one does communion; one does it for the sake of receiving the Word’s own self-offering to us. One exposes oneself to the Word; one lets it make its way within us, and then, only then, does one receive it, like the ground that is prepared for the sowing of God’s seed (Mark 4). It’s a wonderful reality: the Word in its words prepares us for its own reception.

And so to the third action of the BCP’s worship that serves the life of Christ in our midst: conforming.

This one is perhaps the greatest challenge to our age’s expectations and wills, but also the greatest gift. “Conformance” or “conformity”: the word means to take on the form of another, or (and “and”), to take this shape on together with another person. It’s a word with a very specific set of connotations for Anglicans in the late 16th and later 17th centuries: conforming to the laws, to the usage of the Church in worship, yes; but more deeply, conforming to the words of the Word, and doing so together ”“ being “conformist” in a modern sense, “like everyone else”, but actually with everyone else: living in the Word with others. That is the BCP’s version of “conformism”.

The BCP doesn’t itself actually use the word “conform” in this regard (although writers like Coverdale and then Hooker do). But it does speak very frequently of two things that it links: “gathering together” and using the “forms” of the Prayerbook itself. We are always “formed together”; and that forming is ultimately given in forms of “unity” and “concord” and “peace” and finally, of course, the “form of God”, the servant who is Christ. If everyone is exposed together to the two-edged sword of the Word; if everyone endures it sufficiently together to let it pierce and penetrate, listening to its repeated approaches; if everyone is thus one, then together the form of Christ is discerned within the forms of the words of the Word. So that the Lord speaks to the Rich Young Man today, not to me or to you, not just this day or this moment, but to us He speaks these words, together, yesterday and today and tomorrow ”“ no one rises up and leaves, or if they do, there is another day, another prayer, another time for the words of the Word — for together then and now and again and again, we listen ”“ “,,, if you would be perfect, sell it all and follow me!…” we respond, we pray these words, for we are still here for those who could not hear but now return ”“ then, yes, conformation, conformance, becomes a gift of the Lord. We need each other in this hearing and doing!

Exposure, reception, conformance. That’s the gift the Barundi Anglicans were able to identify to some extent as central to life. Concretely, and also deeply, eternally. And we should celebrate that as we do today; and also care about it.

Everything I’ve just said may lead you, as it does me, to resist multiple revisions of the Prayer Book, or multiple options within it ”“ Form I or Form II, Eucharistic Prayer 4 or 6, A, B, D, and so on. No, conformance implies a basic conformity. But I actually think that ”“ and history bears this out ”“ there is enormous roominess within the conforming body of Christ: BCP culture over the centuries, as we know, offered extraordinary scope in intellectual engagement. From Cranmer to John Donne to Isaac Newton to Hannah More and William Wilberforce, to Evelyn Underhill and Dorothy Sayers to Desmond Tutu. Not merely because of the permissiveness of formalism, has this been the case, but because of the fact that the Word is itself , in the words of Gregory the Great, “like a river, broad and deep, shallow enough here for the lamb to go wading, but deep enough there for the elephant to swim” (Moralia, dedicatory epistle). But we must go to the river together, and delve into its current over the course of our lives one with another. And that is the BCP’s great virtue: it guides and guards us into the river of God’s Word with a steady hand.

And to it, the BCP, let me apply the words of Psalm 90 today: “prosper” or establish thou the work of our hands, establish thou it ”“ that is, our coming to your Word, our receiving of it, our conformance to its grace and truth.

The Reverend Dr Ephraim Radner is Professor of Historical Theology at Wycliffe College, Toronto

Posted in Uncategorized

Reminder–The Church of England's Official Position on the Question of Same Sex Relationships

The 1987 Synod motion and Issues in Human Sexuality are the two authoritative Church of England statements on the issue of homosexuality.

As a member of the Anglican Communion, the Church of England also respects the teaching of Resolution 1.10 on Human Sexuality of the 1998 Lambeth Conference (the ten-yearly meeting of all bishops of the Communion) which expresses the declared mind of the Anglican Communion as a whole.

Read it all.

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, Anglican Provinces, Anthropology, Church of England (CoE), Ethics / Moral Theology, Pastoral Theology, Same-sex blessings, Sexuality Debate (in Anglican Communion), Theology, Theology: Scripture

(Reuters) Czech Parliament votes to return church property confiscated by Communists

The Czech parliament on Thursday approved an ambitious plan to return billions of dollars worth of church property that was confiscated by the communists in a vote that represented a victory for Prime Minister Petr Necas.

The law envisages handing churches land, property, and financial compensation worth about $7 billion over a period of 30 years. Under the plan, the churches would become independent from the state and gradually stop getting government financing.

The agreement should unlock about 6 percent of the country’s forests and fields that once belonged to mostly Christian churches but which have been tied up pending a resolution of the restitution question.

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Posted in * Culture-Watch, * Economics, Politics, * International News & Commentary, * Religion News & Commentary, Czech Republic, Europe, History, Other Churches, Politics in General, Religion & Culture, Roman Catholic

(Telegraph) African leaders warn Justin Welby: Anglican Church is ”˜fractured’

A group of Bishops and senior clerics from Nigeria and Kenya issued a call for the Archbishop of Canterbury effectively to be replaced as leader of the worldwide Anglican Communion by an elected chairman.

Meanwhile the Anglican church in Uganda offered Bishop Welby its support but warned the Church is “fractured” over questions such as homosexuality and the interpretation of the Bible.

The remarks come following a meeting of Anglican leaders from around the world in Auckland, New Zealand, which ended this week, attended by he current Archbishop of Canterbury Dr Rowan Williams.

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Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, Anglican Church of Kenya, Anglican Provinces, Archbishop of Canterbury, Church of England (CoE), Church of Nigeria, Church of Uganda, CoE Bishops, Global South Churches & Primates

(Dean of Durham) Michael Sadgrove–An Open Letter to the next Archbishop of Canterbury

…I can’t resist saying just this. I hope you will take with you the memory of our northern saints as you learn what it means to inhabit this office. In Durham, you are the direct successor of Aidan, founder of our diocese, and of Cuthbert in whose shrine in the Cathedral you have often prayed. In a blog earlier this year I compared Rowan Williams with Cuthbert as ”˜off-beat’ bishops. I wanted to say that a Christian leader needs to be a bit elusive, not always saying or doing the expected thing, not afraid of being surprising and keeping people guessing.

Already the public wants to pigeon-hole you: evangelical rather than catholic, pro this and against that. You are bigger than that, as anyone who knows you will confirm. You know that it needs great self-awareness to resist these easy either-ors. It also takes resilience and courage to be your own man in leadership. It depends on keeping the spiritual garden watered by long and regular spells of solitariness, meditation and prayer. I know how important this is to you, to go to the heart of faith and keep it alive and fresh. I hope the pressures of high office drive you more and more in the contemplative direction which is the source of wisdom. I believe they will because your personal authenticity is so important to you. And I believe that you will surprise, inspire and delight us too.

When Donald Coggan was installed as archbishop, his secretary mis-typed ”˜enthronement as ”˜enthornment’….

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Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, * Christian Life / Church Life, * Culture-Watch, Anglican Provinces, Archbishop of Canterbury, Blogging & the Internet, Church of England (CoE), CoE Bishops, Ministry of the Ordained, Parish Ministry

Press Conference Q&A with Bishop Justin Welby

Following the Press Statement posted here

From here h/t Anglican Mainstream

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, Archbishop of Canterbury

(BBC) Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby: World reaction

Nigeria – By Will Ross in Lagos

If Bishop Welby wants a frank report card on the state of the Anglican Church he can get it from Bishop Nicholas Okoh, the Primate of the Church of Nigeria.

He described it as “grievously disunited” and said attending church meetings was like “working in a police state with agents all over the place trying to catch people with their words”.

The Anglican Church says it has some 18 million followers in Nigeria and the new Archbishop of Canterbury will have to tread very carefully on the controversial issues of homosexual priests and same-sex marriage if he wants to ensure rifts do not deepen further.

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Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, * Culture-Watch, Anglican Provinces, Archbishop of Canterbury, Church of Nigeria, Episcopal Church (TEC), Global South Churches & Primates, Global South to South Encounter 4 in Singapore April 2010, Globalization

(Telegraph) Charles Moore–Justin Welby is the Alpha male to save the Church of England

The new Archbishop of Canterbury is the epitome of what I am talking about. Dr Welby was a lay pastor at Holy Trinity, Brompton, and trained as a priest at the same time that Alpha was going global. He was what the satirists call “HTB-positive”. But neither his worldly, ecclesiastical or intellectual career has been narrow. Oilman, Francophile (he was France’s honorary consul in Liverpool when he was Dean there), peacemaker in Nigeria, admirer of the Benedictine order, he has never worn the straitjacket of a sect. When he was at Liverpool, his slogan was that the cathedral was “a safe place to do risky things in Christ’s service”. Faith as risk, rather than as bogus certainty, would seem the right idiom for the modern Church of England.

Just now, hopes are high. I have talked to Church people who actively dislike evangelicals, but even they express complete trust in Dr Welby’s openness. No one expects a war between High and Low, Anglo-Catholics and Bible-bashers. They expect an archbishop who will speak bravely to England, and the wider world, in clear English, about the claims that Jesus makes on the life of society and on each human being.

Obviously some of these hopes will be dashed. Churches are probably the most disputatious organisations in the world. The Anglican Communion, at whose head Dr Welby will find himself, is ungovernable. If he does not recognise this at once, and find a way of stepping aside from executive responsibility over it, he will be dragged down by its squabbles, just like poor Dr Rowan Williams.

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

(Living Church) John Martin–Justin Welby’s Self-effacing Debut

He will bring a positive commitment to church growth. Welby said he is committed to the Fresh Expressions movement championed by Archbishop Williams. As Dean of Liverpool Cathedral he had kept traditional worship but alongside started a café church. “We soon found we were struggling to find space for people, having previously struggled to get them to come along.”

He is firmly committed to women joining the episcopate. “I will be voting in favour,” he declared. He recognises the church faces “deep differences” over sexuality. “It is absolutely right for the state to define the rights and status of people cohabiting in different forms of relationships, including civil partnerships. We must have no truck with any form of homophobia, in any part of the church.”

He stated his support for the recent bishops’ statement opposing same-sex marriage but added that “I know I need to listen to the LGBT communities, and examine my own thinking prayerfully and carefully.” London newspapers such as the Telegraph took this and a rejection of “the language of exclusion” as an “olive branch” in what is a very fraught debate. He pointed out, however, that what the Church of England does “deeply affects the already greatly suffering churches in places like northern Nigeria.”

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

(Washington Post) The storied career of David H. Petraeus

His resignation Friday as CIA director because of an acknowledged extramarital affair aborts an almost four-decade-long career in public service defined by boundless ambition, political savvy and strategic acumen. And it almost certainly tarnishes the legacy of a man seen by many as the nation’s preeminent military leader in the post-Sept. 11 world, a commander who turned around the failing Iraq war and dealt the Taliban a bloody punch in Afghanistan.

He falls from a self-built pedestal that was based on more than battlefield heroics. As a general, his principal message to the troops under his command was not just about military tactics and high-concept strategy. He preached individual leadership above all else, often telling his charges that character meant doing the right thing when nobody was watching.

Read it all (my emphasis).

Posted in * Culture-Watch, * Economics, Politics, Defense, National Security, Military, Ethics / Moral Theology, Marriage & Family, Military / Armed Forces, Politics in General, Theology

(Politico) No pass for Petraeus

If anyone in Washington could have weathered a sex scandal, Gen. David Petraeus would seem like that person.

Yet the retired general who inspired admiration bordering on reverence from so many in the capital was abruptly out Friday as Central Intelligence Agency director, just one day after President Barack Obama learned of Petraeus’s extramarital relationship.

Intelligence community insiders say Petraeus was felled by an increasing sensitivity in the Obama administration to extramarital dalliances, stemming from recent cases in which officials at various levels have seen their careers scuttled for similar personal misconduct.

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Posted in * Culture-Watch, * Economics, Politics, Defense, National Security, Military, Economy, Ethics / Moral Theology, Marriage & Family, Politics in General, The U.S. Government, Theology

(NY Times) Petraeus Quits; Evidence of Affair Was Found by F.B.I.

Mr. Petraeus issued a statement acknowledging the affair after President Obama accepted his resignation and it was announced by the C.I.A. The disclosure ended a triumphant re-election week for the president with an unfolding scandal.

Government officials said that the F.B.I. began an investigation into a “potential criminal matter” several months ago that was not focused on Mr. Petraeus. In the course of their inquiry into whether a computer used by Mr. Petraeus had been compromised, agents discovered evidence of the relationship as well as other security concerns. About two weeks ago, F.B.I. agents met with Mr. Petraeus to discuss the investigation.

Administration and Congressional officials identified the woman as Paula Broadwell, the co-author of a biography of Mr. Petraeus. Her book, “All In: The Education of General David Petraeus,” was published this year. Ms. Broadwell could not be reached for comment.

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Posted in * Culture-Watch, * Economics, Politics, Defense, National Security, Military, Economy, Ethics / Moral Theology, Marriage & Family, Politics in General, The U.S. Government, Theology

(Washington Post) David Petraeus resigns as CIA director

CIA Director David H. Petraeus resigned Friday and admitted to having an extramarital affair, bringing a shocking end to his brief tenure at the spy agency and highly decorated national security career.

The affair came to light as part of an FBI investigation into a potential security breach involving Petraeus’s e-mails, according to federal law enforcement officials and a former senior intelligence official. The investigation uncovered e-mails describing an affair between Petraeus and Paula Broadwell, a former military officer and co-author of a glowing biography of Petraeus, according to two law enforcement officials who were briefed on the investigation.

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Posted in * Culture-Watch, * Economics, Politics, Defense, National Security, Military, Economy, Ethics / Moral Theology, Marriage & Family, The U.S. Government, Theology

A Prayer for the Feast Day of Leo the Great

O Lord our God, grant that thy Church, following the teaching of thy servant Leo of Rome, may hold fast the great mystery of our redemption, and adore the one Christ, true God and true Man, neither divided from our human nature nor separate from thy divine Being; through the same Jesus Christ our Lord, who liveth and reigneth with thee and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and for ever.

Posted in * Christian Life / Church Life, Church History, Spirituality/Prayer

A Prayer to Begin the Day

O Lord God, in whom we live and move and have our being, open our eyes that we may behold thy fatherly presence ever about us. Draw our hearts to thee by the power of thy love. Teach us to be anxious for nothing, and when we have done what thou hast given us to do, help us, O God our Saviour, to leave the issue to thy wisdom. Take from us all doubt and mistrust. Lift our thoughts up to thee in heaven; and make us to know that all things are possible to us through thy Son, our Redeemer Jesus Christ.

–B. F. Westcott (1825-1901)

Posted in * Christian Life / Church Life, Spirituality/Prayer

From the Morning Bible Readings

Now he told a parable to those who were invited, when he marked how they chose the places of honor, saying to them, “When you are invited by any one to a marriage feast, do not sit down in a place of honor, lest a more eminent man than you be invited by him; and he who invited you both will come and say to you, ‘Give place to this man,’ and then you will begin with shame to take the lowest place. But when you are invited, go and sit in the lowest place, so that when your host comes he may say to you, ‘Friend, go up higher’; then you will be honored in the presence of all who sit at table with you. For every one who exalts himself will be humbled, and he who humbles himself will be exalted.”

–Luke 14:7-11

Posted in Theology, Theology: Scripture

(Der Spiegel) Budget Disarray–US Set to Restage Greek Tragedy

Should lawmakers not reach agreement prior to the end of the year, the US budget deficit for 2013 would be cut almost in half, to $560 billion.

Which doesn’t sound like a bad thing. After all, the US is staggering under a monumental pile of debt and could potentially begin to face the kinds of difficulties that have plunged several euro-zone countries into crisis. It is a viewpoint shared by the ratings agencies — a year ago, Standard & Poor’s withdrew America’s top rating, justifying the measure by pointing to the unending battle over the debt ceiling. The agency noted that “the political brinksmanship of recent months highlights what we see as America’s governance and policymaking becoming less stable, less effective, and less predictable than what we previously believed.”

From afar, it is difficult to argue; the ongoing battle between Democrats and Republicans in the face of a horrendously imbalanced budget looks catastrophically absurd. As their country heads toward the edge of the abyss, lawmakers preferred to debate whether or not French fries and pizza should be considered vegetables.

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Posted in * Economics, Politics, Budget, Economy, House of Representatives, Medicare, Office of the President, Politics in General, President Barack Obama, Senate, Social Security, Taxes, The National Deficit, The U.S. Government, US Presidential Election 2012

(RNS) Mark Silk–How Obama won the battleground states, despite losing Christians

President Obama vote totals shrank in all 12 of our battleground states, as they did throughout the country. What’s particularly striking, however, is that in none of the battlegrounds did he win a majority of either mainline Protestants or Catholics, with the exception of Nevada, where the heavily Latino Catholic electorate supported him by five percentage points. So in winning ten out of the dozen, the president had to depend on non-Christians.

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Posted in * Culture-Watch, * Economics, Politics, Religion & Culture, US Presidential Election 2012

Church of Uganda Welcomes Justin Welby, says "Communion remains fractured"

From here:

“The Church of Uganda welcomes the news of the appointment of the Rt. Rev. Justin Welby as the new Archbishop of Canterbury. We are pleased to hear that he is an evangelical and will pray for him to lift up Jesus as “the way, the truth, and the life,” and to set the Word of God written as the authority for our common faith and morality. It is a challenging season not only in the Church of England, but also in the global Anglican Communion. The Anglican Communion remains fractured due to the inability of the Instruments of Communion to restore the Communion to Biblical faith and morality. We pledge our cooperation and prayers for him as he takes on the mantle of leadership.”

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, Anglican Provinces, Archbishop of Canterbury, Church of Uganda, Theology, Theology: Scripture

Jon Levenson: Enlisting the Biblical Abraham as Peace Broker

The idea of Abrahamic religion is usually tied up with the notion of Abraham as the first monotheist. To the best-selling author Bruce Feiler, Abraham was “the first person to understand that there is only one God,” and this insight is “the shared endowment of the Abrahamic faiths.”

But the familiar image of Abraham as the discoverer of the true God and the uncompromising opponent of idolatry isn’t found in Genesis or anywhere else in the Hebrew Bible. It is an idea that originated in Judaism after most of the Hebrew Bible had been composed, and from there it spread into the literature of the Talmudic rabbis and later into the Quran, forming an important commonality between Judaism and Islam.

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Posted in * Religion News & Commentary, Inter-Faith Relations, Islam, Judaism, Other Churches, Other Faiths, Theology, Theology: Scripture

A Look Back–A 2012 Living Church Justin Welby interview by Bishop Dan Martins of Springfield

The first is the need for the Church to grow in numbers, and in spiritual depth. I am in the middle of planning, with my colleagues, a long-term program of evangelization which will involve three or four missions a year across the diocese, covering the entire diocese every five years. In each of those, both bishops will live in the area of work and two years will have been spent in preparation. We are trying to avoid an “up with the rocket down with the stick” approach, and going rather for a steady-state push that does not exhaust people but leads to a cultural change that says it is normal for us to share our faith. So that would be one thing.

Secondly, for that to happen in this area it has got to be clear that the Church is working effectively with those on the edge. The biggest issues we face at the moment are around loan sharking and its consequent evils, and very high youth unemployment. It would be really wonderful to see headlines about the churches’ contribution to facing these social issues. In terms of the local economy we are quite a major employer, and because of our huge number of extremely old buildings (one of our churches has been in continual use since A.D. 640 and many since the 10th or 11th century) we are able to generate significant employment when we can find the funds to do work on our churches.

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

Archbishop Ranks as England’s Top Non-Royal, in One of the World’s Least Religious Countries

Anglicanism nevertheless survives as the state religion in what is now a multicultural, multi-faith, but mostly faithless society. So, is it any longer relevant to the mass of its citizens?

Bishop Welby acknowledged on Friday he was taking over at “a time of spiritual hunger.”

Summing up the challenge that had confronted Rowan Williams, the departing Archbishop, Fraser Nelson wrote in the Daily Telegraph that, “Dr. Williams has had to keep the Church alive in one of the least religious countries on earth.”

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

No 10: Justin Welby appointed 105th Archbishop of Canterbury

The Official Announcement posted at 11 am in London
The Queen has nominated the Right Reverend Justin Welby, MA, Hon FCT, the Lord Bishop of Durham, for election by the Dean and Chapter of Canterbury in the place of the Most Reverend and Right Honourable Rowan Douglas Williams, MA DPhil DD FBA, Lord Archbishop of Canterbury, Primate of All England and Metropolitan.

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Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, Archbishop of Canterbury

An ENS Article on the New Archbishop of Canterbury

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Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, Archbishop of Canterbury, Episcopal Church (TEC)

(ITV) Justin Welby confirmed as Archbishop of Canterbury

Among the Titles of the material here–Dr Rowan Williams ‘delighted’ by successor

[The] Rt Rev Justin Welby on ‘hard issues’ facing the Church

New Archbishop pays tribute to Rowan Williams

New Archbishop: My school does not define me

[Archbishop John] Sentamu: ‘Tipsters can now return to silence’

New Archbishop begins with a prayer – and a joke

An interesting collection of videos–watch them all.

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, Archbishop of Canterbury

TEC's Presiding Bishop on the appointment of the new Archbishop of Canterbury

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Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, Archbishop of Canterbury, Episcopal Church (TEC), Presiding Bishop

FCA Chairman Eliud Wabukala–A Message of welcome to Archbishop of Canterbury Designate

Bishop Justin will bring to the Anglican Communion a special combination of gifts and experience. I know him as a deeply committed servant of Jesus Christ who honours the Scriptures as the Word of God and as a courageous peacemaker. I am confident that these qualities, together with his sustained involvement in business and finance, will enable him to articulate the Lordship of Christ to a watching world as well as to a Communion in continuing disorder….

As the Primate of Kenya and Chairman of the Global Fellowship of Confessing Anglicans, I eagerly look forward to working with the new Archbishop of Canterbury as a partner in the gospel to restore much needed conviction, confidence and unity to the deeply fractured Anglican family.

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Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, Archbishop of Canterbury

Archbishop of Canterbury: first address by Justin Welby


video and text and biography

To be nominated to this post is both astonishing and exciting. It is something I never expected, and the last few weeks have been a very strange experience. It is exciting because we are at one of those rare points where the tide of events is turning, and the church nationally, including the Church of England has great opportunities to match its very great but often hidden strengths. I feel a massive sense of privilege at being one of those responsible for the leadership of the church in a time of spiritual hunger, when our network of parishes and churches and schools and above all people means that we are facing the toughest issues in the toughest place.

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Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, Archbishop of Canterbury

(Telegraph) Justin Welby : The worldly capitalist looking to spread the Word of the Lord

Among the politicians who have come to know him over the past few months, there was celebration yesterday, and from all benches. He was invited to join the banking commission with cross-party support, as he was a capitalist who was tough on the City. “In a dark sea of thick and wholly unworldly bishops, he sparks a little,” says one MP. “Talking to the bishops in Parliament seldom leaves you with the impression that they believe in God. I think this one actually might.” The only concern was that he might be too religious for the job.

No one would question the strength of Rowan Williams’s faith. But when he joined fights, they tended to be secular ones: criticising the Government over its cuts, or giving his blessing to environmentalist campaigns. The logic of this is undeniable: that to keep its relevance in the modern world, the Church needs to insert itself into popular debates. But decline continued, each Sunday brings a new closure and the British Social Attitudes survey found that 64 per cent of people never set foot in any place of worship. Dr Williams has had to keep the Church alive in one of the least religious countries on earth.

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Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, * Economics, Politics, Archbishop of Canterbury, Corporations/Corporate Life, Economy, Energy, Natural Resources

(NY Times) Former Oil Executive Appointed as Archbishop of Canterbury

Bishop Welby, 56, the 105th archbishop of Canterbury, is said to have been chosen over three other leading contenders: the archbishop of York, John Sentamu; the bishop of Norwich, Graham Jones; and the bishop of London, Richard Chartres. Bishop Welby is regarded as an evangelical conservative in opposing same-sex marriage, but he is also said to take a more liberal position on the ordination of female bishops, favoring the elevation of women to senior church positions.

He told reporters that, at a forthcoming ballot, he would vote in favor of the ordination of women bishops. On the issue of same-sex marriage, he said: “We must have no truck with any form of homophobia.”

“I am always averse to the language of exclusion,” he said, suggesting some readiness to listen to the arguments of those who disagree with him. But he made clear that he supported a statement earlier this by Anglican bishops opposing government plans to legalize same-sex marriage.

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Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, * Economics, Politics, Anglican Provinces, Archbishop of Canterbury, Church of England (CoE), CoE Bishops, Corporations/Corporate Life, Economy, Energy, Natural Resources