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Oh, that apology

Jerry’s Official Apology can be found, for the moment, here. In part, it reads: I made a statement that I should not have made and which I sincerely regret. I…

Jerry’s Official Apology can be found, for the moment, here. In part, it reads:

I made a statement that I should not have made and which I sincerely regret. I apologize that, during a week when everyone appropriately dropped all labels and no one was seen as liberal or conservative, Democrat or Republican, religious or secular, I singled out for blame certain groups of Americans.
This was insensitive, uncalled for at the time, and unnecessary as part of the commentary on this destruction. The only label any of us needs in such a terrible time of crisis is that of ‘American.’
I obviously did not state my theological convictions very well and I stated them at a bad time. During the difficult weeks ahead there will be much discussion about the judgment of God. It is a worthy discussion for all of us at a time when we are reminded of the fleeting nature of life itself, but it is a complicated discussion.
I do not know if the horrific events of September 11 are the judgment of God, but if they are, that judgment is on all of America–including me and all fellow sinners–and not on any particular group.
My statements were understandably called divisive by some, including those whom I mentioned by name in the interview. This grieves me, as I had no intention of being divisive.
In conclusion, I blame no one but the hijackers and terrorists for the barbaric happenings of September 11.
We know, as Abraham Lincoln anguished in his second inaugural address, that “The Almighty has his own purposes,” but as he said, “The judgments of the Lord are true and righteous altogether.”

Take that as you will.

Huh

Doyce passes on today, via Xkot, et al., that Rush Limbaugh, of all people, has lambasted Falwell & Robertson for their finger-pointing comments last week. The originals of Rush’ comments…

Doyce passes on today, via Xkot, et al., that Rush Limbaugh, of all people, has lambasted Falwell & Robertson for their finger-pointing comments last week. The originals of Rush’ comments can be found here.

To quote the Rushster:

For the most part this terrible event has brought out the best in Americans… But there are some, unfortunately, in which this disaster has brought out the worst. Religious broadcaster Pat Robertson and the Reverend Jerry Falwell are two such individuals. …
Suggestions of this kind are one of the reasons why all conservatives get tarred and feathered with this extremist, bigoted, racist, sexist, homophobic label or image that isn’t true. The words of Robertson and Falwell are not the words of all conservatives – they are the words of Robertson and Falwell. … All I can say is I was profoundly embarrassed and disappointed by their comments. They can try to take them back all they want, but the bottom line is that their words are indefensible.

Double-dittos, Rush. And, based on the site photo, congrats on shedding a few pounds.

I’m not a Rush fan. I think he is plain wrong on a number of things, and I find I can listen to about five minutes of him before I start popping blood vessels and have to change the station before I drive myself into the center divider.

Still, kudos to him for this. And I don’t think it’s just conservative ass-covering or trying to ride the wave of folks who are also torqued by F&R’s vitriol. I think he really feels this way.

Doyce made the comment that “these two are moral equals to the creatures that killed thousands last week” I have to disagree:

  1. Falwell and Robertson might like to see the folks and ideas they dislike be outlawed or, at most, thrown in jail, but I’ve seen no indication that they’d blow up thousands of innocent people to do it.
  2. At least the “creatures” in question held their vile opinions with such strength that they were willing to die for them. Falwell and Robertson are both furiously backpedalling from their comments. (Though, to be fair, given that the responsible parties for the attacks have not actually announced their identity and their purpose, they, too, can be considered gutless. C’mon guys, step forward to the mike — we’ll still respect you even when you’re just a smouldering puddle of grease.)

I had a third point, but it vanished into the Pool of Snot which is my Head while I was typing the first two.

Words

I choose my words carefully. We’ve been over that before. In recent articles on the upcoming television season, one place where network shows are looking to push the envelope is…

I choose my words carefully. We’ve been over that before.

In recent articles on the upcoming television season, one place where network shows are looking to push the envelope is with language, i.e., adding more “swear words,” “cuss words,” etc. This is meant to add a more adult tone, and, of course, to win back folks who have fled to cable (where such language is more common).

One threshold proposed is to allow characters to use the term “God damn!”

Now, frankly, such language doesn’t bother me. I figure God has more important things to worry about than such gaffes. However, it does upset others. So I try to watch the occasions when I do it, but it does, on occasion, slip out. And it bothers some people very much when I do let it slip, which makes me feel bad, since I don’t go about intending to bother people, usually (and if I did it would not be that way).

So why put it onto night time television? Well, arguably, it’s real life. Some people (like me) do talk that way, on occasion or regularly. So to never have anyone talk that way is unrealistic.

Fine. I can buy that. Artistic integrity. That’s important.

So what about other sorts of invective? We’ll hear people saying “shit,” but when will we hear people called “fags” on Prime Time? Heck, when will we hear characters of color referred to as “niggers”? Sure, it bothers some people to hear those words. But there are people out there who use those terms, and other terms of racial and ethnic hatred. To pretend they don’t exist is unrealistic. Doesn’t artistic integrity demand it, when necessary?

I mean, imagine it. A Law & Order episode focusing on racial hatred. You’d expect to hear someone using various perjoritive terms for African-Americans, right? I mean, using such words is part of the story, part of showing that hatred. It’s real. Artistic integrity demands it.

I don’t expect to see it happen any time soon. Which points out to me an unfortunate double standard — that offending some people with words is more acceptible than offending some others with words.

Which doesn’t strike me as being any sort of integrity.

I don’t like to see people offended. But if we’re going to offend some people in pursuit of realism, of art, of the message we want to convey, we should be willing to offend anyone. And if not — then let’s not wrap ourselves in the cloaks of realism and art.

[It occurs to me that some people might not be able to load this page because of some of the words I’ve used above. You can guess which ones. You can also probably guess which ones would not be grounds for blocking. Interesting, isn’t it?]

Falwell blames gays, liberal groups for terrorist attacks

Falwell blames gays, liberal groups for terrorist attacks Mr. Falwell, don’t make me angry. You wouldn’t like me when I’m angry. Assuming this bit is true, it’s probably the most…

Falwell blames gays, liberal groups for terrorist attacks

Mr. Falwell, don’t make me angry. You wouldn’t like me when I’m angry.

Assuming this bit is true, it’s probably the most despicable bit of news to come from this so far. Who is the greater sinner — the one who commits such foul crimes, or the one who uses them to play politics and attack those he hates? Is there a difference?

Via saranwarp.

Some q&a at the 700 Club site doesn’t quite confirm it, but certainly makes it plausible.

Update: Consider it confirmed via the Washington Post.

Perspective?

Why am I more affected by 200-odd firefighters and 70-odd police losing their lives than by the almost inconceivable concept of 10,000-plus civilian deaths? I mean, those sorts of 10K…

Why am I more affected by 200-odd firefighters and 70-odd police losing their lives than by the almost inconceivable concept of 10,000-plus civilian deaths?

I mean, those sorts of 10K numbers are the sorts of things that hit Third World countries after earthquakes or floods or monsoons.

The numbers are boggling.

I found myself, unexpectedly, looking forward to a speech by Dubya. This could have been a Presidency-maker or -breaker of a speech. For what it’s worth, I think he did a fine job — not enough to bring me to my feet cheering, or to my knees praying … but enough to be willing to accept him as the President. He gave a speech that a Clinton, or an Elder Bush, or a Carter or Ford would have given.

The future will tell.

That having been said, I disagree that this was all an “attack on freedom,” or because the US is the “brightest beacon of freedom in the world.” This was not an attack on freedom. It was a pursuit of an ideological goal to the exclusion of value of human life. It was an attack on life itself, on civilization. But “freedom” (or lack thereof) doesn’t seem to have had much to do with it.

The other question that came up was that of Evil (with a capital E). Is there Evil in the world? Is there a personification of Evil, driving these sorts of tragic events? Were these Evil people? Or were they misguided people? Was it a matter of fanaticism? Is it just a drive of testosterone, of speech-possessing primates squabbling over their selfish, trivial concerns?

I dunno. I think it was an Evil things. I am more inclined to attribute Evil to actions than to people (that way demonization of ones opponents lies). But I think there was something more meaningful to this than simple territorialism or primate squabbling or a random collection of organic compounds interacting in a destructive fashion.

Believing in a personification of Evil is out of fashion these days, and sometimes I think it’s an easy way to scapegoat one’s actions — “The Devil Made Me Do It.” But I do think there is Evil.

I think today’s efforts stand as proof of that.

‘Satanic’ Bush is on anti-abortion website’s hit list

‘Satanic’ Bush is on anti-abortion website’s hit list For those who have always maintained that Dubya is in league with the Devil, you now have some strange bedfellows….

‘Satanic’ Bush is on anti-abortion website’s hit list

For those who have always maintained that Dubya is in league with the Devil, you now have some strange bedfellows.

Why it’s not cool to be Christian

I am, to my own mind, Christian. There are those who would disagree with me, for reasons I note below, but that’s how I consider myself, and perception is reality,…

I am, to my own mind, Christian. There are those who would disagree with me, for reasons I note below, but that’s how I consider myself, and perception is reality, and so there.

This is not something I advertise a lot. I try not to hide it — because that would imply it’s something I should hide, and it’s not — but I don’t advertise it. “Hey, what about those Deutero-canonicals, eh? Pretty wild stuff!” Let alone, “Hey, thanks for coming over, let me give you one of these pamphlet!”

But it’s not cool to be Christian. Folks who “flaunt” their Christianity are criticized, looked down upon, or resented in may quarters. Which is ironic, given that it’s the majority faith in the US. But maybe that’s the problem.

Christianity has, in many ways, suffered terribly from its triumph under the Emperor Constantine, who’s basically the fellow who made Christianity the official state religion of the Roman Empire, hence (to further greatly oversimplify history) the West. The problem is, once you’re on top, once you’re the dominant social paradigm, then you are part and parcel of everything that is wrong with society. Anything about society that needs fixing must, therefore, require what is perceived by some as an attack on the faith. And any attack on the faith must in turn be considered (by those in charge of things) an attack on society’s structures, thus its rulers (thus them).

In other words, the search for Truth stops being about the spirit’s desire to come closer to the Deity, to figure out the meaning of life and our purpose here, and becomes part of everyone bouncing the ball in perfect synchronization (a particularly chilling image I carry to this day from Madeleine L’Engle’s masterpiece, A Wrinkle in Time). It stops being about personal salvation/achievement/discovery/transcendence, and becomes about keeping society harmonious (and keeping the folks in charge in charge).

Not a good thing. There are a lot of advantages to being the underdog.

Part of the problem here stems from what is known as the Great Mission, the part where Jesus told his followers to go and spread the Good News. Picking a number out of the air, there seem to be three ways that this gets implemented.

The first (and the mode I prefer, though I don’t think I explicitly do it as part of any Mission), is to Live a Good Life and pass on the Good News by example. I.e., “Think I have a happy, satisfied life? Ask me how.” That does mean letting folks know about one’s Christianity, and being open to discussing it, but that’s all. “They’ll know we are Christians,” as the song goes, “by our love.” It’s a quiet, passive approach, and has the great advantage of focusing on keeping one’s own house is in order before one starts moving around the furniture in another’s.

The second approach is more missionary. One makes a distinct, explicit effort to reach out, proclaim Christianity as the True Faith, and invite others to listen to the Good News. This method is a bit pushy, but it also can be an honest expression of one’s faith (see below).

The last effort is radical. It seeks to spread the Word by making sure that’s the only Word around to be spread. Stamping out “heresy,” mandatory education of religious precepts, suppression of disagreement, and on we go to the world of synchronized bouncing balls. This is the most likely to happen where, as noted above, society and a specific religion are tightly bound, where to dissent from one becomes an attack on both. In Christian terms, this model says it’s not enough to be proclaiming the Good News — you have to put down all those who are trying to proclaim deceptive, sinful, Satanic, and plain-ol’-wrong Bad News.

Having rhetorically displayed what I hope is clearly my distaste for those who are into that sort of things, let me offer an analogy in their defense.

Let’s say you see that my house is on fire. My death is imminent (not to mention the death of my wife and my child). Would it be merely enough to be demonstrating through your diligent removal of greasy rags from your closets, and your installation of fire alarms, and your regular family fire drills, that these are things I should be doing (or should have done), and, at that point, do nothing further? Most folks would say no. I hope so, at least, if I live next door to you.

Okay, so you run to my house and knock on the door. “Excuse me, Dave. Your house is on fire.”

“No, it’s not.”

“You’re in terrible danger.”

“No I’m not. Stop bothering me.”

Does that end your moral obligation to me? “Well, I warned him. Let’s sit back and watch him burn. Shame, that. Good neighbor.” Most folks, again, would probably say no, you should keep trying. Knock on the door again. Shout. Become more frenzied. The stakes are frighteningly high — being polite and non-confrontational is probably not what’s called for.

Would you be morally justified in kicking in the door and dragging me and mine out? And if I stood in your way while you were trying to rescue my child, knocking me down and taking her away?

Hmmmm. That’s a tough one. Firemen certainly do things of that sort, at times. I dunno.

So where does this analogy fall apart (as most analogies do)? Because it’s a lot easier to demonstrate that my house is on fire than that my soul is in peril of eternal damnation in the Fiery Furnace. Just as it’s a lot easier to demonstrate that I have a house than that I have a soul.

So at what point in simply thinking that my house may be on fire — smelling something burning, maybe an errant puff of what might have been smoke, a half-perceived flicker of orange light in the darkness — are you justified in telling me about it, warning me, urging me to some action? Most folks, I think, would indicate that some sort of warning would be in order.

And if I slam the door in your face?

And how would you feel if it turned out that there was a fire in my basement, and you did nothing, or did very little, to warn me of it? How certain are you of your (un)certainty? How much of a risk can you take? If not your brother’s keeper, do you still have any moral obligation toward your brother’s interests?

That is, I think, the conflict that a lot of Christians face. To them, the souls of millions, if not billions, face eternal torture and destruction (a topic for another day). They believe that, with a “moral certainty.” And, in that belief, they must act to at least knock on the door — if not to actually knock it down and drag you out, kicking and screaming, to safety.

There. Consider that an Apologetic and move on.

So why aren’t I stuffing tracts into the hands of folks who come to visit us at the Consortium? Why aren’t I wearing crucifix earrings, and decorating the house in Christian Modern?

A lot of reasons.

First is, while there are Things I Consider To Be True, I also know that a lot of people disagree with those things, and who Believe Other Things. And, where possible, I must extend them the same courtesy and respect I expect them to extend to me.

Second is, I don’t think it makes all that much difference. And here’s where I start to diverge from what most folks would consider orthodox Christianity.

See, I believe that life is a classroom. Literally. We are here to learn things. I don’t know if we are all here to learn the same things. I’m pretty certain there’s more to learn than we can learn during one lifetime, but when each class (life) is over, we get to review our work with the Teacher, cringe over our mistakes (I expect to cringe a lot), and enjoy praise for what we did right. And if we pass, if we’ve learned another sliver of the Truth, we get to move on to the next class (“This week — long division!”). And if we fail — we get to take the class over. Or take a remedial course over the summer. Or maybe get sent to a Special Ed class.

Yeah, you can call it reincarnation if you want. Though I don’t know that it’s restricted to this world, or what we would consider life, or even in any sort of chronological sequence. Because, hey, eternity is a long time. And I suspect there’s a lot to learn. And what happens when we graduate, I have no idea.

I just know (or believe very, very deeply) that the Creator has a purpose in the Creation, and that the purpose is benevolent, and therefore nobody ever ends up spending eternity in the Fiery Furnace. Nobody. Even if they have to repeat 8th Grade twenty thousand times. Because what would be the point otherwise?

So, am I preaching some sort of moral equivalency here? Are all beliefs true? Are all moral codes equally valid?

I don’t think so. I don’t see how that’s possible (though when dealing with Eternal Verities, terms like “impossible” should be used with great restraint). I think I’m doing a better job at what God wants me to do, in the way I should be doing it, than Pol Pot did. I think. I hope.

But that doesn’t mean that the superiority of one code, or belief system, or religion or philosophy over the others is obvious. And it also doesn’t mean that it’s all nearly that simple.

Frankly, if Truth is at the top of the mountain, we’re all still sitting down in the parking lot. Some of us maybe haven’t gotten out of our cars yet. Others are out, our packs are on, our canteens are full, and we’re deciding which of the trails will lead us there — or whether we want to cut cross-country. Others are complaining about how our shoes hurt. Some are drinking a beer. Some are wandering off aimlessly. Others are purposefully headed where they think the mountaintop is, even though it’s not really visible through the trees and clouds. Some of us are fumbling with maps that others have drawn for us.

Some of us may have made more progress — in a few aspects — than others. But none of us are so far up the mountain, or so sure of our direction, or so free of scrapes, cuts, blisters, or raging bouts of poison oak, that we should feel that much superior to anyone else.

Really, to my mind, the point is trying to learn what we can while we’re here, keep moving along, keep trying, and trying to do what we can to help each other. If we work on keeping our own feet on the path, lending a hand when we can to others to help them over a rocky patch, I think we’re on the right course.

So that’s probably why I’m (if I may pat myself on the head) a pretty tolerant person when it comes to other belief systems. I mean, I have friends who are Christians, Jews, Muslims, Druids, Wiccans, Agnostics, Atheists, Buddhists, and I know I’m leaving out some others, not to mention those whose faith systems I don’t even know. I can talk with them about day-to-day things. Or I can talk with them about religion. And I manage to avoid coming to blows with them in either context.

Maybe that’s in part the folks I hang out with. Maybe in part it’s because US society has become a lot more heterogenous. Out of the rebellion of the 60s, the cynicism of the 80s, and the retrenchment of the 90s, we’re in a period when it’s easier to believe differently, and to criticize the dominant paradigm, than ever before.

Which gets back to that concept of it not being cool to be Christian. I’m not going to get into a litany of “reverse discrimination” whining here. But I know of people who are much more open about their faith (or lack thereof) in ways that, if they were Christian, would be considered flaunting and aggressive or pushy or disparaging of others’ beliefs.

So what do I do? I’m not particularly interested in “converting” anyone (for reasons I hope are already clear), let alone being considered aggressive or “Nyah, I Know the Truth and You Don’t, You Soon-To-Be-Sizzling Sinner” about it. On the other hand, my faith is (rightly so, I would hope you’ll agree) an important part of my life. Editing out all references to it would be a lie, not to mention a pain in the neck, and a betrayal of those beliefs.

So I don’t. I mention it when it seems appropriate — particularly in my activities — and don’t when it’s not. “Yeah, Margie’s been cooking for this Christian Ed class we’ve been taking — boy, is she pooped.” “Can’t make it over until this afternoon — we’ve got church in the morning.” We’ve some home decor that could be considered Christian, but we have a lot that’s not — all chosen because we like it, not because it does (or doesn’t) proclaim a faith system. If folks are visiting from out of town over a weekend, we’ll mention that we’re going to church Sunday morning, invite them to come along if they want (and make it clear it’s in no fashion obligatory), and go on from there.

And, of course, I’m willing to chat about religion and the like at the drop of a hat.

And when it comes to discussions about religion, I try to make clear that my own opinions are just that — my opinions. Informed, perhaps, by a “small, still voice within,” but not confused with something demonstrable and empirical — or even confused with something applicable to anyone besides me. But that they are my opinions, whaddaya think?

And, maybe, that’s cool enough.

Thus Endeth the Lesson (and one damned long blog).

Theological chit-chat

I was raised Catholic. My family stopped being avid church-goers around the time my brother was born, but we remained at least Christmas/Easter Catholics, and there was always an understanding…

I was raised Catholic. My family stopped being avid church-goers around the time my brother was born, but we remained at least Christmas/Easter Catholics, and there was always an understanding that this is what we were and how we believed and so forth. I went to Catechism, took First Communion (5/9/69, as I have memorized from the back of the little St. Christopher medallion I had for years), was Confirmed (by Bishop Juan Arzube), and so forth.

In college, as my folks were beginning to attend church more regularly again, I was able to explore my own beliefs more. And I found I enjoyed participating in the Mass at McAlister Religious Center and leading the music and being involved in — well, I guess, as part of the show of the Mass. Not that I treated it solely as such — it was still a solemn sacramental gathering, but there were also logistics and staging and hitting your lines and all of that show biz sort of terminology. Because much of the Mass is ritual, which is the community both establishing, through formula, what they believe, and that they believe it all together.

(Put that way, it sounds sort of creepy, but it also makes a lot of sense, which is why ritual is important in so many social and religious groups. Indeed, I think, as communication shorthand, it’s part of all social interaction. But I digress.)

Cheryl and I were married at the parish where the priest, Fr. Frank, who served the college campus actually was a part of. We had to stretch a bit to make that happen, since you’re really supposed to be married in the bride’s parish — but Cheryl had no parish, having converted to Catholicism during our courtship, so it worked out okay.

After that, the whole religious thing sort of faded from my life a bit, in terms of regular practice. Main problems was that the parish where Cheryl and I lived was kind of — I don’t know, after the intimate, lively college experience, it was sort of dull and staid. And, to be honest, no longer being a big fish in a small pond, I might not have been as quick to rush off to Mass on a Sunday morning. And, of course, since Catholics are really supposed to be tied to their geographical parish (church shopping being pretty much out of the question), that was that.

And when things started going seriously south in our lives, and so on and so forth (and that is, perhaps, another blog), the whole religious thing sort of went by the wayside. I mean, I never stopped believing that there was a Deity, or a purpose, or anything like that. But I was angry, not to mention distracted. I explored other avenues of my faith, but not with a fervor that would actually lead me to convert anywhere.

Fast forward several years or so (mercifully). Cheryl and I are through, except for the settlement. Margie and I are going together. And we’re looking toward getting married.

Margie had gotten involved in the Episcopal Church when she was off in North Carolina, I believe, participating in choir and so forth. As we were looking for a religious aspect to our wedding and marriage, not just a civil one, the Episcopal Church seemed a reasonable way to go. And, frankly, the EC always struck me as the Catholic Church with the Latin serial numbers filed off and a cute English accent. The ritual stuff was all there and familiar to me. Besides which, they allowed women to be priests, which I found philosophically and theologically pretty nifty (or, rather, found the lack of which in the Catholic Church to be goofy and indefensible).

So, Episcopal we went.

And here in Colorado, as we started contemplating expanding from 2 to 3+, we decided we wanted our hypothetical children raised in a religious, church-going context. That’s a bit difficult to explain. I think it was less about the specific theology or ritual or beliefs (though those are important) than it was that our kids would grow up with the idea of church and God and rules as part of their lives. I fully expect that Katherine, et al., will eventually make her own decisions about her faith, her beliefs, what she wants to do and why. And I have to respect that, even as I expect my own decisions to be respected. But I think that, without growing up in a church-going context (to whatever degree), it’s more likely that those decisions are less likely to be made, because the need for them is not perceived.

Or, put another way, being actively religious (whatever that means, in whatever faith) means one is (or should be) engaged in the objects of religion — the spirit, the Deity, faith, the Meaning of Life, what it means to live a good life, to act rightly, etc. I think that’s a good thing. I think it’s particularly good for a kid, because it gives them a foundation to make those sorts of decisions on their own someday.

At least that’s what we figure. Your Mileage May Vary, and that’s what makes a horserace.

So we searched around the area, and eventually found a home at Good Shepherd Episcopal. We’re active in the community there, I administer their web page, Margie cooks for some of their classes, we serve as Lectors and as Chalice Ministers, we’re off on our annual Parish Retreat in three weekends, and so forth. Katherine was baptized there, hangs out in the Nursery during the service, gets fetched out for Communion at the right time, etc.

All of which is prelude to what I actually wanted to talk about in this blog post.

Y’see, though I think my folks are disappointed that we’re not Catholic, and though they’ve become much more active in their religious practice (going to Mass daily, going on retreats, and, heck, my Dad served as parish administrator for several years after he retired, and they never had a better one), we still have a kick talking about the subtle differences between the Catholic liturgy and the Episcopal one. They go to Mass Sunday a.m., then join us at Good Shepherd afterwards, and then my Dad and I have theological chit-chat (hence the post name) about it.

For example, they use a fairly similar lectionary to ours. This week, their Old Testament reading was from Ecclesiasticus (Wisdom), which the Protestant churches consider part of the Apocrypha, so we had Deuteronomy, but the Epistle and the Gospel readings were the same. The various prayers and even the order of the Mass are much the same.

So my Dad and I have great fun chit-chatting about the differences.

And the really cool thing is, it doesn’t make that much difference. Where we have specific differences, it is, at worst, an “agree to disagree,” and, usually, a “huh, that’s weird, oh well.” Like, in the Catholic Church, kids don’t go to Communion until they’ve been through certain classes so that they understand its significance, hence the whole “First Communion” thing. Usually happens around age 8 (gauging from my own). In the Episcopal Church, the rule is as soon as they can put it in their mouth and keep it there, they can take Communion, since it’s an invitation by Christ to his table. Two different approaches, both of which I can see the reasoning behind, and so can my Dad, and we go from there.

My folks are really cool about this. Which maybe is a way I’m like them, since I tend to look at the religious differences between me and others and say, “Huh, that’s kind of cool.” When it’s cool. And, really, it usually is, since I think the religious/spiritual influence is a natural, intended part of human nature, and stems from a desire to reach the same, ultimate goal. But that’s a subject for another post.

And we all share the same ability to observe the human frailties of our respective denominations. And both chuckle/regret them, and not let them unduly influence our faiths in what those denominations stand for. We can even stand some ribbing of each other. Again, that’s neat. And that’s probably why I started writing this very, very long post, which has wended and wound its way through some very lengthy side passages through the mare’s nest which is my brain.

Actually, what’s kind of fun about discussing this stuff with my folks, is that I went through a lot of these “Wow, they do it that way? That’s odd/neat” thought processes and discoveries when I first started attending the EC, comparing them to my experience as a Catholic. Like I said, the similarities, theologically and liturigically, between the Episcopalians and Catholics are, in some ways, much more trivial than substantive. (I know there are a number of folks in both denominations who would hasten to disagree, but maybe that’s my own open mind — or lack of understanding — showing). It’s sort of like American English vs British English. It’s a sibling denomination, as opposed to cousins. With the exception of the whole Apocryphal books thing (and the Dissolution of the Monastaries), the split by the Church of England from the Roman Church had very little to do with basic beliefs and more with politics. (Again, I know there are some who would disagree vehemently.) So it’s not surprising that there are so many similarities.

Though we still have a cute English accent on our side.

Satanic Games!

The interesting web bit of the day. From Satanic Games: After an exhaustive research one commission, the Christian Life Ministries, tells the naked truth through these incisive comments: ‘Dungeons &…

The interesting web bit of the day. From Satanic Games:

After an exhaustive research one commission, the Christian Life Ministries, tells the naked truth through these incisive comments: ‘Dungeons & Dragons, instead of a game is a teaching on demonology, witchcraft, voodoo, murder, rape, blasphemy, suicide, assassination, insanity, sex perversion, homosexuality, prostitution, Satan-worship, gambling, jungian psychology, barbarism, cannibalism, sadism, desecration, demon summoning, necromantics, divination, and many more teachings, brought to you in living color direct from the pit of hell.’

Wow. I feel so … dirty.

It hurts so good.

Parish the thought

I finally got around to updating the parish web page. Everyone at the church has been wildly enthusiastic about the job I’ve done on it, but nobody wants to help…

I finally got around to updating the parish web page. Everyone at the church has been wildly enthusiastic about the job I’ve done on it, but nobody wants to help contribute (e.g., send me electronic documents to post). Annoying. Still, it’s a service to the church community, and (dare I say it) to God, which is a bit daunting when I consider my occasionally slothful attitude toward it.

Still, if I had to commit a deadly sin related to my web work, sloth is probably the best. Better than the others. I mean, I could see Pride (of what I’ve done), Envy (of others’ web work), Wrath (pounding on the keyboard when my connection goes down doesn’t really help). Not sure how Lust would play a role (unless I was doing one of those web sites). Or Avarice (unless it’s “I want more megabytes!”). Or Gluttony (wanting to consume those self-same megabytes?).

The acronym I learned as a wee Catholic lad for the Seven Deadly Sins was PEWSLAG — Pride, Envy, Wrath, Sloth, Lust, Avarice, Gluttony.

For a web development Seven Deadly Sins, click here. Or for a more modern pop media interpretation, try here.