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The first Episcopal church in the U.S. to become Catholic under...
Insight Scoop ^ | October 10, 2011 | Carl Olson

Posted on 10/10/2011 12:03:16 PM PDT by NYer

... the guidelines established for the Anglican ordinariate by Pope Benedict XVI's in his 2009 apostolic constitution, Anglicanorum coetibus his 2007 Apostolic Letter "Summorum Pontificum" is St. Luke’s, in Maryland:

“This truly is a historic moment,” said Cardinal Donald W. Wuerl, the archbishop of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Washington, who led Sunday’s conversion Mass, which he called “a joyful moment of completion.”

Fifty-eight of St. Luke’s roughly 100 parishioners were confirmed at the applause-filled Mass, during which they were anointed by Wuerl — one by one, old and young, white and black.

Osita Okafor, a 56-year-old Nigerian immigrant, found himself first in line before Wuerl for the rite of reception. His reaction? “Oh, my God, I must be blessed.” ...

The parish’s conversion made international headlines when it was announced in June. After all, St. Luke’s had been an Episcopal church for more than a century. But it wasn’t too much of a leap for the parish, which for years had been part of Anglo-Catholicism, a movement that embraces various Catholic practices and theology but still treasures aspects of Anglican ritual, such as kneeling to receive Communion.

At the basilica, before the archbishop, parishioners stood for Communion. But at St. Luke’s, they’ll be allowed to kneel under the guidelines laid out by the Vatican in 2009 when it announced plans to create a special body that would let American Anglicans keep some of their traditions, including their married priests.

Read the entire Washington Post article, "Episcopal parish in Bladensburg converts to Roman Catholic Church" (Oct. 9, 2011). for more about the ordinariate, see the book, Anglicans and the Roman Catholic Church: Reflections on Recent Developments (Ignatius Press, 2011), edited by Stephen Cavanaugh. Here is the Introduction:



TOPICS: Catholic; Current Events; Mainline Protestant; Ministry/Outreach
KEYWORDS: episcopal
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To: Dutchboy88
I am directed to encourage you to escape their clutches...if you can.

If there is no free will and all is determined by God then the only one's clutches we are in is God's and there is no escape.

101 posted on 10/12/2011 6:04:33 PM PDT by Petrosius
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To: Dutchboy88

What you’re espousing is not the Biblical position and that’s exactly why no one taught it until Calvin.

http://www.ewtn.com/library/ANSWERS/COOPERAT.htm


102 posted on 10/12/2011 7:27:06 PM PDT by vladimir998 (To be deep in history is to cease to be a Protestant (or ignorant).)
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To: djrakowski
what sort of god would take delight in dividing us into groups of winners and losers, and setting up the system such that we had no control whatsoever over the group to which we belong?

Also don't forget that not only this but the "winners" gloat (as we see on this forum) over the losers -- but since the "winners" are just puppets gloating at other puppets, it's just the evil puppet-master god that they worship, being sadistic

103 posted on 10/12/2011 9:36:22 PM PDT by Cronos (http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/religion/2787101/posts?page=58#58)
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To: djrakowski

When everything is up for interpretation, that’s the end result. As we see, this eventually leads to the Presbyterians saying gay marriage is ok, abortion is ok, etc. etc.


104 posted on 10/12/2011 9:37:13 PM PDT by Cronos (http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/religion/2787101/posts?page=58#58)
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To: Petrosius
"If there is no free will and all is determined by God then the only one's clutches we are in is God's and there is no escape."

Well, you are beginning to be granted a peek at the problem.

105 posted on 10/13/2011 8:05:03 AM PDT by Dutchboy88
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To: vladimir998
"What you’re espousing is not the Biblical position and that’s exactly why no one taught it until Calvin."

I don't recall mentioning Calvin. But, if he got it right, then all the better. What we have been discussing is the biblical view versus Rome...Rome loses.

106 posted on 10/13/2011 8:07:31 AM PDT by Dutchboy88
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To: Dutchboy88

Yes, and the problem is with the anti-Biblical view that denies free will. I notice that you did not respond to my post # 48 which clearly shows that the Bible does indeed teach that we have free will and can resist the will of God.


107 posted on 10/13/2011 8:17:23 AM PDT by Petrosius
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To: Petrosius
Sorry about missing this post. There was so much background noise with the others, I overlooked it. But, happy to address it.

What you have described in each of these passages is a demand by God of man to choose. There is no question that He asks, no requires, men to choose. I do not argue that the demand has not been made upon man. The matter at hand is whether the choice has been possible, unaided and undirected.

First, let me mention that it appears the Ecclus. passages are from the Apochrypha. Those are not in any accepted Bible except for the Catholic collection. They have no standing here.

Second, each of the remaining passages in fact do note that God has placed this requirement before man, but in each case there has not been a man in existence who has chosen rightly. If your organization does in fact believe in "free will" one would think that someone, somewhere along the line chose rightly. But, Paul clearly notes from Old Test. Scriptures that in spite of the cajoling, the demands, the threats by God, no man ever chose to seek God. The proofs are from David's hand and Isaiah's hand, those who also penned the demands. Rom. 3.

Now, which must subsume which? If you pound your fist on the table and demand that I lift this office building, and try as I might, I cannot, does that still make the demand possible? Well, only if something significant changes. But, a couple things are clear...you have made the point about what is required and if I am paying attention (and am permitted to see this) I now know my inability.

That was the entire point of the Law. Gal. 3:24. It taught the Jews (the ones upon whom the demands you quote were actually made) that they could not comply with the demands of holiness. Did God require it? Of course. Did any man every comply unaided by God? Well, if they did then Pelagian was right. There exists enough righteousness in man to save himself.

But, you might argue that all we are talking about is the choice to turn to Christ to make up for all the failure. Well, that is not all you are arguing, but it is the beginning. This choice matter is based upon "God has done all He can, now it is up to us to choose Christ or death." That choice, according to Paul, is just as much in the hands of God as the initial choice to be holy or evil.

When Paul reaches the climactic argument in chap. 9 of the letter to the Romans, the point is that, "so then it does not depend upon the man who runs (acts) or the man who wills (chooses), but upon God who has mercy...and He will have mercy on some and harden some." Now, from my perspective, this has to subsume the raw demands made earlier in the story. Like any unfolding narrative, the story develops and then the decoding begins. In this case, Paul holds the decoder ring for the entire book.

We now find from Paul that there has never been a man that could seek God, nor actually tried to seek God. There is none who obeyed , nor tried to obey. Not really. No one really even understood the first thing about righteousness. Even in your system, the "free will" was not very successful if everyone SHOULD become a Catholic to find forgiveness. Forgiveness? Why forgiveness if some men of their own "free wills" could have chosen to be good from the get go? Let's just keep hollering "Obey, doggone it!!!!" Salvation will be unnecessary

And the same goes for resisting Him. Of course we have resisted Him. Every man has resisted Him. That is Paul's argument. We all like sheep have gone astray...at God's management. Man plans his way, but God directs his steps. Proverbs. Why? So He could send the Lamb slain BEFORE the foundation of the earth, to show His incredible Glory.

The whole matter of "free will" is foundationally impossible as I have mentioned before. Think about it. If God knows what sox you are going to pick out tomorrow, then that matter is really fixed...whether you "feel" it or not. He says He brings all things to pass. He is going to make all things that come into a believers life good. Just like He managed Joseph's life. This is how He directed all things to lead to the vicarious atoning death of His Son, per Peter Acts 2:22,23. Why would God predetermine to have His Son executed for men if some would choose to straighten up? Wouldn't He just want those who straightened up? But, Christ died for us while we were enemies. That is love.

The Catholic Church has confused the sense of turning toward Christ with an independent act of the man executing a choice apart from God's operation on him. Such a misunderstanding is either driven by a pride (at least we turned to Christ and they did not, so now we deserve salvation) or a misapprehension of just how lost, lost is.

No, my FRiend, these are the same old arguments that tend to put men on a pedastal. We are victims of God's will, His decisions, His mercy. Romans 9:19ff You and I are putty in His hands...thankfully.

Eph. 2:1ff "And you were dead in your trespasses and sins, in which you formerly walked according to the course of this world, according to the prince of the power of the air, of the spirit that is now working in the sons of disobedience (everyone lost). Among them we too all formerly lived in the lusts of the our flesh, indlulging the desires of the flesh and of the mind. But God, being rich in mercy, because of His great love with which He loved us, even when we were dead in our transgressions, made us alive togther with Christ (by grace you have been saved) and raised us up with Him, and seated us with Him in the heavenly places in Christ Jesus, in order that in the ages to come He might show the surpassing riches of His grace in kindness toward us in Christ Jesus." Now, where is man's "free will"?

108 posted on 10/13/2011 9:48:45 AM PDT by Dutchboy88
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To: Dutchboy88
Just a lot of fancy tap dancing that tries to obscure that, as I have shown, the Bible clearly states that we can choose and that we can resist the will of God; free will is a fact taught by the Bible.

Did any man every comply unaided by God?

Here you show that you do not understand Catholic teaching. The statement above is Pelagianism and has been condemned by the Catholic Church as a heresy since the 5th century. The true Catholic teaching is that we obey God's will only by the aide of his Grace but that this obedience is not compelled and we can resist it. Interestingly in today's Office of Readings we have the following passage from St. Augustine from his Tract on the Gospel of St. John:

‘No-one can come to me unless the Father draws him.’ You must not imagine that you are being drawn against your will, for the mind can also be drawn by love. Nor should we be afraid of being taken to task by those who take words too literally and are quite unable to understand divine truths, and who might object to these words of scripture, saying: How can I believe of my own free will. if I am drawn? In reply I say this: It is not enough to be drawn of your own free will, because you can be drawn by delight as well.

What does it mean, to be drawn by delight? ‘Take delight in the Lord and he will give you the desires of your heart.’ There is a certain desire of the heart to which the bread of heaven appeals. Moreover, if the poet can say: ‘Everyone is drawn by his delight’, not by necessity but by delight, not by compulsion but by sheer pleasure, then how much more must we say that a man is drawn by Christ, when he delights in truth, in blessedness, in holiness and in eternal life, all of which mean Christ?

Or must we assume that the bodily senses have their delights, while the mind is not allowed to have any? But if the soul has no delights, how can scripture say: ‘The children of men will take refuge in the shadow of your wings. They will feast on the abundance of your house, and you will give them drink from the river of your delights. For with you is the fountain of life: in your light we shall see light’?

Show me a lover and he will understand what I am saying. Show me someone who wants something, someone hungry, someone wandering in this wilderness, thirsting and longing for the fountains of his eternal home, show me such a one and he will know what I mean. But if I am talking to someone without any feeling, he will not know what I am talking about.

Offer a handful of grass to a sheep and you draw it after you. Show a boy nuts and he is enticed. He is drawn by the things he is running to take, drawn because he desires, drawn without any physical pressures, drawn simply by the pull on his appetite. If, then, the things that lovers see as the delights and pleasures of earth can draw them, because it is true that ‘everyone is drawn by his delight’, then does not Christ draw when he is revealed to us by the Father? What does the mind desire more eagerly than truth? For what does it have an insatiable appetite, why is it anxious that its taste for judging the truth should be as healthy as possible, unless it is that it may eat and drink wisdom, righteousness, truth and eternal life?

Christ says: ‘Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness’, but here and now! ‘for they shall be satisfied’, but in the future! I give him the thing he loves. I give him what he hopes for. He will see what he believes in but does not yet see. He will eat what he hungers for and be filled with what he thirsts for. When? At the resurrection of the dead, because I will raise him up at the last day.

The whole matter of "free will" is foundationally impossible as I have mentioned before. Think about it. If God knows what sox you are going to pick out tomorrow, then that matter is really fixed...whether you "feel" it or not.

And here we have the foundational error in Reformed theology. God does not exist in time, he is eternal. What we experience as time — the past, the present and the future — for God is an eternal present. "Before Abraham was, I AM." Thus when we say that God knows what I will do in the future it is incorrect to say that he has foreknowledge or knows beforehand what I will do. Rather, what I will do in the future God experiences as an event in his eternal present. Thus God's knowledge of the choice I will make in the future does not contradict my free will in making that choice.

First, let me mention that it appears the Ecclus. passages are from the Apochrypha. Those are not in any accepted Bible except for the Catholic collection. They have no standing here.

Ecclesiaticus (Sirach) is also held as Sacred Scripture by the Eastern Orthodox, Oriental Orthodox (other than the Copts) and Assyrian churches, i.e. by 2/3 of the worlds Christians. The fact that the Protestants broke with 1500 years of Christian teaching and rejected what is properly called the Deuterocanonical Books is what should have no standing. In any case, I have provided enough Biblical references that the Biblical truth of free will is not dependent upon these quotes.

109 posted on 10/13/2011 6:43:06 PM PDT by Petrosius
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To: Dutchboy88

Calvin did not side with the Bible. Rome wins.


110 posted on 10/13/2011 7:33:35 PM PDT by vladimir998 (To be deep in history is to cease to be a Protestant (or ignorant).)
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To: Petrosius
"Just a lot of fancy tap dancing

"Nor should we be afraid of being taken to task by those who take words too literally..."

Well, there you have it...don't be afraid of those of us who actually believe what the Bible teaches. You folks have your men in bathrobes to guide you. We leave you to them.

111 posted on 10/14/2011 8:13:00 AM PDT by Dutchboy88
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To: Dutchboy88
Perhaps you missed the part that said "too literally." You cannot take one passage from the Bible and ignore the rest. The passages that I quoted show quite clearly that the Bible teaches our ability to choose and to resist the will of God. John must be understood in light of this truth. It seems that it is you who are afraid of us who actually believe what the Bible teaches.
112 posted on 10/14/2011 8:40:51 AM PDT by Petrosius
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To: Petrosius
"You cannot take one passage from the Bible and ignore the rest."

. Actually, you cannot take one phrase from the Bible while ignoring the argument being posited. Rome suffers badly from this error. Re: Matt 16...please, where is Rome in this?

113 posted on 10/14/2011 8:55:58 AM PDT by Dutchboy88
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To: vladimir998

Calvin? Actually, the Bible’s authority wins...Rome’s authority loses. Even Calvin would agree with this. Would Rome?


114 posted on 10/14/2011 9:37:01 AM PDT by Dutchboy88
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To: Dutchboy88

The Catholic Church wrote the New Testament. Calvin only wrote the Institutes. The Church agrees with the Bible. The Bible agrees with the Church.


115 posted on 10/14/2011 9:44:08 AM PDT by vladimir998 (To be deep in history is to cease to be a Protestant (or ignorant).)
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To: vladimir998
"The Catholic Church wrote the New Testament"

Now there, my FRiend, is an example of the unadulterated propaganda peddled by the most corrupt, most self-aggrandizing cult in the world. I will entreat God to open your eyes to the utter falsehood of this error.

116 posted on 10/14/2011 9:51:29 AM PDT by Dutchboy88
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To: Dutchboy88

God did open my eyes. That’s why I posted as I did. What I said is true.


117 posted on 10/14/2011 9:59:52 AM PDT by vladimir998 (To be deep in history is to cease to be a Protestant (or ignorant).)
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To: vladimir998
"That’s why I posted as I did."

If all the RCs believe this tripe, it explains why the darkness is so thick around them. Sad, but managed by God.

118 posted on 10/14/2011 10:37:41 AM PDT by Dutchboy88
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To: Dutchboy88

The darkness only surrounds you and your ilk, Dutchboy.


119 posted on 10/14/2011 10:39:53 AM PDT by vladimir998 (To be deep in history is to cease to be a Protestant (or ignorant).)
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To: vladimir998
The darkness only surrounds you and your ilk, Dutchboy."

You may want to ask some other RCs if they actually believe THEY wrote the NT. Could you provide the Scriptural reference for Paul, Peter, Matthew, Mark, John, Luke, Jude joining the Roman Catholic Church? Any of them? Any single one of them? Just one...please. This is what the normal world calls a delusion, my FRiend.

120 posted on 10/14/2011 10:50:40 AM PDT by Dutchboy88
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