Smoky Mountains Sunrise

Monday, July 7, 2008

Day of Reckoning for Anglicans Amid Split Over Women Bishops


From The Times (UK)
By Ruth Gledhill

The Church of England will today be plunged into one of the fiercest debates in its 400-year history as traditionalists go head-to-head with liberals over women bishops. Church leaders will attempt to avert new splits with a compromise plan for “super bishops” to minister to traditionalists who oppose women bishops.


Liberals will fiercely resist the plan, which is being seen as an
attempt to appease traditionalists in order to get women bishops consecrated.

Campaigners for women's ordination will respond with an all-or-nothing proposal to consecrate women that includes no safeguards or concessions at all for opponents.

More than 1,300 clergy have threatened to walk out if the Church goes ahead with approving the consecration of women bishops without statutory provision to safeguard the traditionalists' place in the Church.

Women and liberals insist that they would rather not have women bishops at all than have a new, extra-geographical diocese legally established as a safe haven for Anglo-Catholics.

The Archbishops of Canterbury and York, Dr Rowan Williams and Dr John Sentamu, are understood to favour a compromise that would avoid an exodus of the Church's Catholic wing, but they do not want the consecration of women jettisoned altogether because of the difficulties in appeasing both sides.

Dr Williams yesterday described the “agonies and complexities” facing the Church as it struggles with the issues of homosexual priests and women bishops. Preaching to members of the General Synod at York Minster, he said that, were Jesus present in the debate, he would be with every faction of the Church, including traditionalists.

“He will be with those in very different parts of the landscape who feel that things are closing in, that their position is under threat and their liberties are being taken away by those anxious and eager to enforce new ideologies in the name of Christ,” he said.

“He will be with those who feel that their liberty of questioning is under threat, he will be with gay clergy who wonder what their future is in a Church so anxious and tormented about this issue.”

His sermon, which left some worshippers close to tears, restored some faith in its mission as a Christian Church to a Synod meeting where the misery has been almost palpable, as different factions struggle to remain in communion with each other while staying true to their beliefs.

In a last-minute rescue attempt, a senior bishop will urge the Church's governing body to placate traditionalists by considering the appointment of three senior clerics to lead a “Church within a Church”. The Bishop of Ripon and Leeds, the Right Rev John Packer, will propose an amendment that would allow the creation of complementary or “super bishops”. Traditionalist parishes would be allowed to opt into the care of the super bishops - as they can do now with flying bishops, who were set up when women were first ordained.

He is seeking a delay of eight months before the Church makes up its mind. His amendment will also allow the Church to fall back on straightforward legislation, with a code of practice, if the concept of super bishops cannot be made to work.

Dr Miranda Thelfall-Holmes, chaplain at Durham and representing the universities on the General Synod, will put down a rival amendment designed to remove altogether any protection for traditionalists and to have women consecrated by a simple measure or law allowing them to become bishops.

Christina Rees, of the lobby group Watch, which has campaigned for women bishops and who will speak in support of Dr Threlfall-Holmes's amendment, criticised Bishop Packer's proposal as unnecessary. She said: “We do not need further time. Synod is ready to make up its mind about how it wants to proceed. I am in favour of simple statutory arrangements to allow women to be bishops. Anything that muddles this and makes it more complex or changes the nature of what it means to be a bishop in the Church should be resisted.”

Under the compromise tabled by Bishop Packer, the new super bishops would have powers similar to flying bishops but with more authority. He said the proposal meant that the Church would not be divided. “The parishes that put themselves under the care of a complementary bishop would still be part of the local deanery and diocese and would continue to be funded through the diocese and to be in a structure of fellowship with their neighbours.”

The super bishops would care for traditionalist bishops and congregations in the same way flying bishops have done to date, but would also perform consecrations as well as ordinations and other pastoral duties for Anglo-Catholic parishes. This means that, in the eyes of Anglo-Catholics, the “apostolic” ministry would not be “tainted” by the hands of a woman. Traditionalists believe that the actions of Jesus in appointing 12 men as His disciples - as well as centuries of Church tradition - mean that women bishops go against Church order.

The move for a compromise came as a senior Roman Catholic priest cast doubt over claims of high-level consultations that are said to have taken place between Church of England bishops and Vatican officials in Rome. Monsignor Andrew Faley, ecumenical officer to the 22 Catholic bishops of England and Wales and the Catholic observer at the General Synod, said that no information had reached him or his bishops about such a meeting, although informal meetings took place regularly between bishops and lay members of both churches.

Bishops from both the Church of England's evangelical and Catholic wings are said to have held a secret meeting in Rome to discuss the Church's difficulties over women and gays. Up to six bishops, who have not been named, bypassed leaders of the Roman Catholic Church in Britain to hold the consultation with officials from the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith at the Vatican.


Sunday, July 6, 2008

King's College Choir - "In Paradisum" (Faure)

In paradisum deducant te angeli,
in tuo adventu
suscipiant te martyres,
et perducant te
in civitatem sanctam Jerusalem.
Chorus angelorum te suscipiat,
et cum Lazaro quondam paupere
aeternam habeas requiem.

May the angels lead you into paradise,
May the martyrs receive you
In your coming,
And may they guide you
Into the holy city, Jerusalem.
May the chorus of angels receive you
And with Lazarus once poor
May you have eternal rest.

Saturday, July 5, 2008

Jesse Helms: A Man of Courage and Principle


Jesse Helms played a decisive role in the great social, political and foreign policy struggles during his thirty year career in the United States Senate.

A man of courage, conviction and integrity, he was the greatest champion of the conservative movement in Congress. When President Ford and Secretary Kissinger feared offending the Soviet Union by meeting with Alexander Solzhenitsyn, Jesse Helms rolled out the red carpet for him in the United States Senate. When others would compromise and avoid contentious battles, Jesse Helms stood on principle -- whether it was foreign aid, UN dues, third world tyrants, reforming the State Department, or opposing a bad ambassadorial nomination.
He paved the way for Ronald Reagan, and as Chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, was a critical ally in applying the pressure that ultimately broke asunder the evil empire.

I had the privilege of working with Senator Helms many times during his thirty years in the United States Senate, but I first met him when he was first elected to the Senate and I was a student working in a U.S. Senate patronage job, running an elevator in the Senate wing of the Capitol. He treated the Senate elevator operators with the same gentlemanly kindness, respect and courtesy that he showed his Senate colleagues and foreign heads of state.

One always recognized his deep sense of mission and service to a cause far greater than himself.
The conservative movement and the nation have lost a great champion of liberty and constitutional principles. I extend my deepest sympathy to his family and all the dedicated people on his Senate staff that served him so well over the years.

Eternal rest grant unto him, O Lord. And may perpetual light shine upon him. May he rest in peace.



Thursday, July 3, 2008

More Of Those Satan-Worshipping Democrats


Joshua Gross has an item on his great blog, Columbia Conservative, that my readers will find interesting. It's about two Satan-worshipping Democrat Party officials in North Carolina "charged with rape, kidnapping and assault."

Wouldn't you like to see who's in their Rolodex? And who did they support in the primaries?

No, this isn't my usual hyperbole. Check it out!

Wednesday, July 2, 2008

Transalpine Redemptorists United With Rome


Last September I posted a beautiful video about the Transalpine Redemptorist monks and the remote, new monastery they are building on the island of Papa Stronsay, in the Orkneys off the northern coast of Scotland.

They are a zealous, fast growing community, drawing vocations from all over the world. However, at the time the video was made, they were part of the breakaway, traditionalist Society of St. Pius X (SSPX), founded by Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre.

Pope Benedict XVI has made enormous strides in healing the thousand year old divisions between Orthodoxy and Roman Catholicism. With his Motu Proprio Summorum Pontificum, facilitating widespread use of the traditional Latin Mass, he is also healing the modern fissures resulting from the Second Vatican Council. This "new springtime" in the life of the Church was wonderfully evident when the Transalpine Redemptorists recently petitioned Rome to be reunited with the Church, and when they were received back into full communion with the Successor of St. Peter.

We are richly blessed to have these good monks in communion with us. Deo Gratias and welcome home!


Yesterday, they posted the wonderful news on their community's blog:

1 July, 2008
Feast of the Precious Blood

My dear friends,

I am happy to inform you that last June 18th, before Cardinal Castrillon and the members of the Pontifical Commission Ecclesia Dei in Rome, I humbly petitioned the Holy See on my own behalf and on behalf of the monastery council for our priestly suspensions to be lifted.

On June 26th I received word that the Holy See had granted our petition. All canonical censures have been lifted.

Our community now truly rejoices in undisputed and peaceful posession of Communion with the Holy See because our priests are now in canonical good standing.

We are very grateful to our Holy Father Pope Benedict XVI for issuing, last July, the Motu Proprio Summorum Pontificum which called us to come into undisputed and peaceful Communion with him.

Now we have that undisputed communion! It is a pearl of great price; a treasure hidden in the field; a sweetness that cannot be imagined by those who have not tasted it or who have not known it, now for many years. Its value cannot be fully expressed in earthly language and therefore we hope that all traditional priests who have not yet done so, will answer Pope Benedict's call to enjoy the grace of peaceful and undisputed communion with him. Believe us, the price to pay is nothing; even all the angry voices that have shouted against us and calumniated us are as nothing when weighed in the scales against undisputed communion with the Vicar of Christ; others have died for it; what are raucous voices?

We publicly thank all those souls who have prayed for us over the last months; some of you have truly stormed heaven for us. You have kept us afloat. We are deeply grateful. Especially we thank that priest who was unknown to us, until June 16th when he wrote in fraternal support. Where did he come from? Why us? But he told us of the number of Masses, Offices, prayers and sacrifices he had personally said for us; he had also enlisted the prayers of contemplatives and Third Order societies and had a great number of people fervently praying for us with an abundance of prayers. We were amazed! Thank you Father! Thank you also to that brave person who, so kindly wrote to us to say that if he said any more prayers for us he would be floating! What wonderful people! Thank you!

Looking to the future, the next stage will be to have our community canonically erected. So please, dear friends, keep praying for us, there will be many crosses to bear; but they will be yokes sweetened by the grace of these last days.

We assure you all of our very best wishes.
Your devoted servant,

Fr. Michael Mary, C.SS.R.
Vicar General




An Independence Day Reflection


A Sunlit Uplands reader, who wishes to remain anonymous, has submitted the following Fourth of July reflection:


As we approach the anniversary of our Nation's Declaration of Independence and remember our founding fathers' struggle for freedom, I had a thought-provoking incident during the morning train commute.

A young woman wearing a head scarf and chic casual business attire boarded the train. She appeared to be of Middle Eastern descent. This theory was validated when I saw that she wore a large button on the strap of her leather bag with the words "Arab American and I vote" emblazoned on it.

My first thought, as we near the July 4th holiday was: "what a great country we live in where anyone, including members of a population group where large segments would have America blown up into oblivion, can exercise suffrage and influence the political future of our local and national governments."

My second thought was: "I wonder how freely women can vote in Arab/Islamic majority countries?"

This led to an internet search that yielded the following excerpt from a 2002 World Bank Forum:
GENDER AND CITIZENSHIP IN THE ARAB REGION:

The diverse forms of governance that characterize the Arab world, from monarchic or dynastic rule, to centralized one party systems, to fledgling multiparty democracies play a critical role in shaping the opportunities and mechanisms for political and civic participation for both men and women. Nonetheless, as recent empirical evidence shows, women everywhere suffer from what (has been referred) to as a 'double jeopardy'. This is fundamentally because in all Arab countries, the relationship between the State and women is not a direct one, rather it is mediated by a male kinsman (father, brother, husband). For the average Arab women in many countries, basic citizenship rights such as the right to vote, to issue an identity card or a passport, to access social protection schemes and entitlements, to send their children to school, to marry, to travel, to pass on citizenship to their children, are either lacking, or are granted through the mediation of a male family member. Given the accepted definition of citizenship as a direct relationship to the State, (what) does that say about the applicability of the concept to women in the Arab world?
Which led to a third thought....What if my non-Muslim daughters lived in an Arab/Islamic-dominated state? What rights and freedoms would they enjoy? Could they wear a button proclaiming their heritage and walk in peace?

For all its faults, the influence of Greco-Roman civilization (e.g., the notion of democracy) and Judeo-Christian values (e.g., the sanctity of life, the basic dignity of all human beings created in the image and likeness of God, and the potential for eternal salvation secured at a "Great Price") in our European heritage still make America...a "light on the hill" to ALL People, of goodwill, on Earth.

God Bless America and a Happy Fourth!