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The Peculiar Peculations of PECUSA [Schism in Episcopal Church (ECUSA)]
The American Spectator ^ | 11/14/2005 | Thomas Lipscomb

Posted on 11/15/2005 4:59:15 AM PST by Mobties

The Nation's Pulse The Peculiar Peculations of PECUSA By Thomas Lipscomb Published 11/14/2005 12:06:13 AM

In a meeting last week in Pittsburgh, an international panel of prominent Anglicans has called for an open break between members of the Anglican Communion and what they view as the wayward Protestant Episcopal Church of the United States. The meeting was hosted by the Bishop Duncan of Pittsburgh and presided over by seven archbishops from the West Indies, South East Asia, and Africa.

The collapse of the authority and membership of mainstream churches in the United States has paralleled the collapse of the influence of other institutions from the media to academia as a yawning gap has continued to open up in the past half century between their actions and their announced goals.

The sad huddle of affluent bedwetters, thumbsuckers, treehuggers, social climbers, homophiles, quavery ladies, and chronic petition signers that makes up the current Episcopal Church is no exception. Historic hubs like lovely Grace Cathedral in San Francisco or St. Paul's in Richmond, Virginia, have been turned into bizarre nests of homosexual and "peace" activism, complete with rainbow and peace flags hanging in the nave and lesbian and homosexual priests ramming their agenda down the throats of the congregations along with the communion wafer.

Many think those activists continually demanding a more "inclusive" church might have paid a little attention to the majority of its communicants. The majority had proven itself perfectly willing to include minorities with equal rights. But the radical minority didn't want inclusiveness... it wanted to dominate. And if success is dominating empty churches by driving out their congregations, they have succeeded.

The reality of the "inclusiveness" of the radicals was brought home a year ago by an idiotic abuse of power by the Bishop of Washington, D.C. against a tiny tidewater Maryland parish and its brave priest. Now the radicals are the majority many places. And they control the lovely churches, seminaries, and the all-important church pension plan.

Those who have left the Episcopal Church, or are being included out, are, in a sense, "Neo-Puritans," just as they are accused of being by those trying to keep PECUSA together.

So were those part of the Reformation movement spread by Martin Luther and his successors and the original Puritans themselves. But they were protesting innovations and abuses by the hierarchies in the reigning churches of their day, including the Catholic practices of simony, benefices, the selling of indulgences, and, in the Puritans' case, the conversion of the Anglican church from a institution of God to an institutional extension of the Stuart Monarchy's recently asserted "divine right."

Their problem was a "trahison des clercs." Congregations weren't trying to reform the basic tenets of the church. If anything they were trying to return to them. Few of the Episcopal laity had any problem with the 39 Articles of Religion at the back of the Book of Common Prayer, but dozens of their bishops and priests did.

In fact they so objected to the Book itself that they destroyed it with a "revision" in the 1970s. The basic language of the BCP somehow had served almost 500 years of Episcopalians from Tudor times to Jimmy Carter's presidency, and suddenly it failed the clergy's "inclusive" test.

Besides, prominent bishops like Spong and Robinson disagreed with some of the most basic elements of the Nicene Creed, the heart of Anglican belief. Some they considered minor matters of definition, like the divinity of Christ. It made one wonder why, if the radical clerics shared such contempt toward these unfashionable tenets of faith, they hadn't left their unenlightened laity to more orthodox priests and moved on?

The American Episcopal Church itself is a byproduct of the Reformation. It proudly called itself the Protestant Episcopal Church of the United States to make that point after the American Revolution. It intentionally dispersed its authority originally through a series of local parishes that owned their own property and selected their own priests under bishops of dioceses of limited power. That way the parishes could reflect whatever the local people wanted, from "Low Church" "plain altar" evangelicals of the Puritan tradition to lush "High Church" parishes with their "smells and bells."

Over the past 50 years radical priests and allied bishops have systematically gutted parishional authority and taken over their property as one diocese after another has swung into line with the new authoritarian radical clergy. In short, the protest meeting led by the courageous Bishop of Pittsburgh was a reaction to a half century of peculation -- embezzlement led by the church establishment. But on whose behalf?

Fortunately a healthy religion is able to renew itself from time to time as required. When it isn't, a black hole like the Islam of today results that becomes the enemy of reform and enlightenment itself.

What a wonderful irony that Third World members of the Anglican Communion are more vital in this renewal than the Mother Church of England itself, much less the incredible, shrinking weirdo Protestant Episcopal Church of the United States.

Thomas Lipscomb is an Anglo-Catholic parishioner of the Mission of Mary Magdalene in New York.


TOPICS: Culture/Society
KEYWORDS: ecusa; fallout; homosexualagenda; homosexualbishop; schism

1 posted on 11/15/2005 4:59:16 AM PST by Mobties
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To: Mobties
"The sad huddle of affluent bedwetters, thumbsuckers, treehuggers, social climbers, homophiles, quavery ladies, and chronic petition signers that makes up the current Episcopal Church is no exception. Historic hubs like lovely Grace Cathedral in San Francisco or St. Paul's in Richmond, Virginia, have been turned into bizarre nests of homosexual and "peace" activism, complete with rainbow and peace flags hanging in the nave and lesbian and homosexual priests ramming their agenda down the throats of the congregations along with the communion wafer"........Un-freakin'-believable
2 posted on 11/15/2005 5:06:48 AM PST by stm
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To: stm

The best line in the whole essay -- and so true.


3 posted on 11/15/2005 5:16:31 AM PST by Chanticleer (A free society is a place where it's safe to be unpopular. -- Adlai Stevenson)
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To: Mobties

Those who have left the Episcopal Church....... Yep that was me and my family in 1985.


4 posted on 11/15/2005 5:17:05 AM PST by showme_the_Glory (No more rhyming, and I mean it! ..Anybody got a peanut.....)
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To: showme_the_Glory

Keep the Faith! Anglo Catholics are "Gathering Together" as in the old hymn. We seek the Lord's Blessing. Good times coming!


5 posted on 11/15/2005 5:24:44 AM PST by Blake#1
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To: sionnsar

ping.


6 posted on 11/15/2005 5:30:25 AM PST by Dane ( anyone who believes hillary would do something to stop illegal immigration is believing gibberish)
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To: Mobties
But the radical minority didn't want inclusiveness... it wanted to dominate. And if success is dominating empty churches by driving out their congregations, they have succeeded.

Yes, this is the state of the Episcopal Church today large beautiful buildings void of normal people and filled with political-left-leaning, activists. I have been in Episcopal churches were everyone has left but due to endowments the churches surrive.

But there are so many organizations like this today, schools, colleges, Lame-Stream-Media, federal agencies and the state of California.

7 posted on 11/15/2005 5:36:07 AM PST by BeAllYouCanBe (Animal Rights Activist Advisory: No French Person Was Injured In The Writing Of This Post)
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To: stm

The Catholic Church, at least at the top, has been working to change and alleviate their problems. The homosexual/ pedophile problem is being admitted to, and major education and change has definitely occurred in Catholic schools and churches and dioceses in this respect. The Vatican is releasing many teachings in an attempt to control the apostate American bishops and priests and their teachings and working to change that major doctrinal problem - I even brought up one of those to one of the pastors in my area a couple days ago when he started teaching something faulty - that gave me "cover". The Catholic church is even starting to tackle the problem of high profile politicians who claim to be Catholic, but who refuse to live their faith.

So different from the ECUSA ... who staunchly continue to deny the plain meaning of the gospel and are driving away members, like me, who decided to make my personal reunification with the Catholic Church.

Sad: it wasn't long ago that it seemed possible the two churches would reconcile.


8 posted on 11/15/2005 6:31:41 AM PST by AFPhys ((.Praying for President Bush, our troops, their families, and all my American neighbors..))
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To: Mobties

A split could be the best thing that has happened to that church in a long time. I might even join the new one myself.


9 posted on 11/15/2005 6:37:53 AM PST by bkepley
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To: Mobties

The only question is why has this taken so long?


10 posted on 11/15/2005 6:44:48 AM PST by STD (Delete)
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To: showme_the_Glory
Similar things are happening in the ELCA.

We left it for the Lutheran Church Missouri Synod last month. Best decision I ever made!

11 posted on 11/15/2005 6:49:42 AM PST by Redleg Duke (9/11 - "WE WILL NEVER FORGET!")
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To: Mobties
"Fortunately a healthy religion is able to renew itself from time to time as required."
Yes. Though God and His Truth are eternal constants, man's understanding and perceptions are imperfect. God's revelations are continuous. Man's struggle for truth is a struggle for knowledge of God and His Truth, the only truth that exists, and is, furthermore, man's attempt to statisfy the most basic human drive: the desire for oneness with God.
"When it isn't, a black hole like the Islam of today results that becomes the enemy of reform and enlightenment itself."
Yes. And an obstruction to man's eternal struggle for knowledge of God and His Truth; to the continuing revelation of God's Truth to man; to man's fulfillment of the will of God; and to the fulfillment of man's fundamental lust for oneness with God.

Not to remain open to the continuous revelations of God is to reject them, which is not only blasphemy but self-condemnation.

"What a wonderful irony that Third World members of the Anglican Communion are more vital in this renewal than the Mother Church of England itself, much less the incredible, shrinking weirdo Protestant Episcopal Church of the United States."
Yes. An irony.

And a reaffermation of the universal brotherhood of man.

And an observation of the decadence of the Western Left, which, dispite its commendable openness to the ever-continuing revelation of God's truth, has succumbed to the ever-present danger of hubris and denial.

12 posted on 11/15/2005 6:50:12 AM PST by Savage Beast (Tragedy is the heavy cost of hubris and denial.)
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To: AFPhys

The rift in the Episcopal Church has been good for the Catholic Church. We have gotten a lot of new members that are distraught about the direction their church is heading


13 posted on 11/15/2005 7:13:27 AM PST by stm
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To: Dane

Thanks! This was posted and pinged yesterday.


14 posted on 11/15/2005 8:46:46 AM PST by sionnsar (†trad-anglican.faithweb.com† || (To Libs:) You are failing to celebrate MY diversity! || Iran Azadi)
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To: stm

The libs hardly ever create something. They infiltrate and take over what conservatives have built, whether it be churches, colleges, seminaries, YMCA, Girls Scouts, etc. They are a bunch of parasites.


15 posted on 11/15/2005 8:48:35 AM PST by DeweyCA
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