Complicated Times in Old SC: Do We Really Have Diocesan Rebellion?

At the start of the month, I made the following statement regarding the Episcopal Bishop of Virginia's "victory lap" in the Washington Post: To put it bluntly, this is one of the most duplicitous things I have ever seen a man of the cloth put out.  I’ve griped about the Anglican Fudge and how Episcopal …

Why Lay Presidency Over the Holy Communion is a Bad Idea for Anglicans (and Everyone Else)

While casting about the Anglican blogosphere, I ran across an idea from an unexpected source: an endorsement of the lay presidency from John Richardson, the "Ugley Vicar".  This concept is usually associated with the Archdiocese of Sydney, Australia, the same archepiscopal entity which put subordinationism within the Trinity back into play in order to counter …

The Blowback: The NAE and the Church of God, the Baptists, and the Constitution

It's been an active week at this blog, so it's time to catch up on the "mailbag" so to speak. Did the NAE Really Ruin the Church of God? It's been a long time since a piece I've written has gone so viral as this one.  Based on the response I've been able to see, …

They May Not Be French, But They're Definitely Not Arab

The Old Grey Lady needs some education in ethnicity re comments like this: The effects of this exclusionary mindset are palpable. France today has Europe’s largest Islamic minority, making up nearly 10 percent of its population. Yet Muslims remain a people apart, as documented in 2011 by a research team recruited by the Open Society …

Did the NAE Really Ruin the Church of God?

Now that Holy Week is done, I'd like to turn to a very thoughtful piece by Jonathan Stone about the future of the Church of God written as if that future had passed.  For superannuated hippies such an approach suggests the Moody Blues, and indeed the piece has an artistic ring to it. There are …

"…for they were frightened": An Easter Reflection

When the Sabbath was over, Mary of Magdala, Mary the mother of James, and Salome bought some spices, so that they might go and anoint the body of Jesus. And very early on the first day of the week they went to the tomb, after sunrise. They were saying to one another: "Who will roll …

Social Darwinism: The Republicans Can't Win on Evolution

That's what the President basically said in his grim speech to the newspaper editors: As he often does, the president chose to deal with gritty political issues -- what to do about the deficit, spending, taxes and entitlements such as Medicare -- by widening the lens. This election, he said, will be nothing less than …

The Church of the Palm Crosses Becomes the Church of the Double Cross

Today is Palm Sunday, when we celebrate Jesus' triumphal entry into Jerusalem, an entry which turned sour very quickly for Maundy Thursday and Good Friday, then back to the supreme triumph of the Resurrection.  For those who experienced it the first time, it was at least an emotional roller-coaster; our attempts to recreate the experience …

Colors of Grace Production 2 April 2012

An excellent way for people in the Chattanooga, TN area to fill their Holy Week is with this production:

The Tax Issue is the Central One for the Health Care Mandate

Our government wants to play both sides of the street in this issue, but is having a hard time doing so: Throughout the two-year history of the health care litigation, judges have mocked the Obama administration’s have-your-cake approach to the central question debated at the Supreme Court on Monday: whether the constitutional challenge is even …

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