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Prayer for Rosh Hashanah
From the Jewish High Holiday Prayer Book
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O God, divine Ruler of the universe, as the twilight of the old year fades into the night that marks the birth of another year, we gather together in Thy house with mingled emotions, mindful of the blessings and the sorrows Thou hast seen fit to lay upon us.
Thou, O Lord, art without beginning and without end. Before Thee, time and change are as naught. A thousand years in Thy sight are as yesterday when it is past, but as for man, his years are numbered; every hour is precious for Thou hast set a limit to his days on earth. On Rosh Hashanah we become aware of the flight of time, the vanity of our possessions, and the uncertainty of life. We feel the need of pursuing that which is timeless and indestructible. O may our prayers on these Holy Days arouse within us lofty resolves. Stimulate us to find richer meaning and fuller content in all our daily tasks and aspirations.
We pray that this year be for us and for all mankind a year of life and health, a year of sustenance and cheer. Help us to make it a year of consecration to the Torah, of devotion to Israel, of loyalty to Zion and of service to humanity; a year of faith and wisdom to meet the perplexities and perils which may beset us.
On this Rosh Hashanah and in the days to come, may we acknowledge Thee our Father and regard all men as brothers. May it be a year of peace, concord and serenity, a year in which Thy spirit will fill the hearts of all Thy children everywhere. Amen.
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"Garbage In Garbage Out" Works for the Soul, Too
From Bossuet’s Elevations on the Mysteries, IV, 8:
To correct the abuse and distraction of our wandering and dissipated imagination, it is necessary to fill it with holy images. When our memory fills up, it will only take us to those religious ideas. The water wheel pushed by the flow of a river always goes, but it only matters that water crosses its path. If the waters are pure, it will carry nothing but pure water; but if they are impure, the contrary happens. Thus, if our memory is filled with pure ideas, the turning, so to speak, of our restless imagination will not draw from this well and will only take us to holy thoughts. The wheel of a mill will always turn, but it will grind the grain that is there: if it is barley, we will have ground barley; if it is wheat and pure grain, we will have flour. Let us put in our memory all holy and pure images, and whatever is the agitation of our imagination, it will only return to us, at least generally, in the spirit, as the fine and pure substance of items with which we will be filled.
Let us be filled in Jesus Christ, in his actions, his suffering, his words. To give more than one object to our senses, let us be filled with the holy ideas of Abraham sacrificing his son; of a Jacob pulling from God by a holy battle the blessing he hoped for: from a Joseph leaving His coat in the hands of an immodest person to rescue his chaste body; of a Moses who dared approach the burning bush which the fire does not consume, and take off his shoes out of respect; of an Isaiah, who trembles before God until His lips Were purified; of a Jeremiah, who stutters so humbly before God and dares to announce His word; of the three young men for whom the flame of a burning furnace respects the faith; of a Daniel also saved by faith from the teeth of hungry lions: of a John the Baptist preaching repentance under poverty and the hair shirt; of Saul, who was beaten down by the powerful word of Jesus whom he persecuted; and all the other beautiful images of prophets and apostles. Your memory and imagination, consecrated as a holy temple by these holy images, should not bring you anything that is not worthy of God.
Catholic preachers and authors have long been made fun of the “pure thoughts” business. But with the images coming across our computer screens these days, I think they have the better part of the argument. It’s the spiritual version of the “garbage in-garbage out” mantra coding people have used for years.
It’s also interesting that all the images the Bishop of Meaux uses are from the Scriptures, contrary to the #straightouttairondale approach in fashion these days. He doesn’t even include the Mother of God in the list!
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Old News, New News: The St. Andrew's School Sex Scandal
I said a couple of weeks ago that I was shifting away from commenting on things Anglican, but my past has caught up with me again. As I have mentioned more than once, I am an alumnus of the St. Andrew’s School in Boca Raton, FL, and same school is now caught up in a sex scandal. I hadn’t been paying much attention, but a friend brought up some things and I decided to do a little research.
I found that the best “executive summary” of the business can be found at the Episcopal Café. That’s one of the most prominent blogs on the left side of the Anglican blogosphere. I don’t pretend to be in the same rank on the other side, but it brings me to my first point: St. Andrew’s was and is a very liberal institution, one that didn’t commend left-wing Anglicanism to me in a very convincing way.
Although things really broke in the Spring–and Headmaster Peter Benedict resigned at the time–it’s still an ongoing business, as Interim Head of School Jim Byer discussed in an email to the alumni:
At the same time, the start of this school year has been a difficult time for all of us at Saint Andrew’s, and I appreciate your interest and concern for what has happened here. Many of you are aware of the results of two independent investigations related to violations of faculty/student boundaries and inadequate policies and procedures to protect students, as well as the stories that have been reported in the local media.
Please know that our school is committed to student safety, and I fully expect our community will be stronger and safer as the result of improvements in this regard. We have instituted mandatory child abuse annual training for all faculty and staff in accordance with Florida Department of Education training curriculum, we will hold accountable all who interact and engage with students on a daily basis, and we have engaged qualified, trained professionals to thoroughly examine and closely supervise the residential life program. I am also engaging an expert to oversee the restructuring of all aspects of risk in the school, to further safeguard the welfare of each and every student here.
That said, let me make some comments on the situation:
- The fact that the school decided to “lawyer up” tells me that something bad has really happened. Colleges and universities have gone “whole hog” on this subject due to the “Dear Colleague” letter that the Department of Education sent out, but this is the result, IMHO, of things that happened at the school. Bringing the attorneys in shield the investigation using attorney-client privilege, and coupled with the raft of confidentiality requirements in education, it’s pretty simple to put the “quietus” (a good TN expression) on something like this.
- Contrary to what some of the commenters on the Café said, St. Andrew’s was not started in response to the integration of public schools in Palm Beach County. It was started as a boarding school to replicate the prep schools in New England and the Northeast. Social trends and the explosive growth of South Florida have converted it primarily into a day school, where it addressed another issue: the lacklustre quality of Florida’s public schools.
- One thing that St. Andrew’s has always been sensitive to a fault about is its community reputation. Although any institution needs to pay attention to that, in St. Andrew’s case there’s a very relevant issue: the school wasn’t properly endowed when it was set up, the seed money largely going to physical plant. Its early survival was a difficult proposition and it’s not as ready as some of its older, prep school counterparts to take the hit that a scandal such as this brings.
- Unless the years I was there were an anomaly, I don’t think that St. Andrew’s has an innate culture which encourages sexual harassment of the students by the faculty. That may be relevant in considering the role of the Rev. George Andrews, Headmaster from 1989 to 2008. He is involved in the sex abuse scandals at St. George’s School in Middletown, RI, one of the New England boarding schools involved in their own imbroglio. In spite of the founders’ intentions, St. Andrew’s had a dynamic that was different from its Northern counterparts, something faculty who had taught at both noted.
As is always the case in situations like this, it will be a long time before the truth comes out, if it ever does completely. But South Florida in general and St. Andrew’s in particular was a hard schoolmaster on many issues of a sexual nature, albeit for reasons other than the ones in this scandal. I explored many of these issues about a decade ago in my book The Ten Weeks.
What I am about to say will probably make some people blow their stack. That isn’t hard to do these days. But I think this is the time to say it. We live in a society with two polar opposite ideas on this subject, and they cannot stay conjoined indefinitely.
I’ve consistently defended the Christian sexual ethic on this blog. One important corollary to that is that everyone is inviolate in their person with regard to sexual activity, i.e., it’s entirely voluntary. I want to make it clear that I support that corollary. That’s the underlying assumption to things such as the prohibition against rape, molestation, and sexual harassment. The persistence of these is part of our post-Christian condition.
On the other hand, we have the pervasive ethic these days that sexual activity is a necessity for life (not in a procreative sense,) and that one is defined by same. A corollary to that is that people who refrain, temporarily or permanently, are a) not really human and b) need to be brought into line, most usually these days by peer pressure, or now the internet.
Given the realities of the human condition, I believe that sooner or later society will realise that, as my father would say, we “have a no-fit going here.” Our educational system, which is expected in inculcate all kinds of values it was not designed to do, will be brought to bear on making sex education not only a “how-to” project but to make sure the lesson is carried out.
When that happens, the scandal such as is unfolding at St. Andrew’s will no longer be about doing something wrong as it will be about doing something outside of proper channels. In other words, after all the years of such scandals rocking the Catholic Church, boarding schools, etc., they will no longer be scandals, and the victims who have not “kept up” with the times will be left in the lurch.
Whether our civilisation, such as it is, will survive to that point is another matter altogether. But the business of same-sex civil marriage shows that public opinion, led by élite opinion, can turn around very quickly under the right conditions. As always, I doubt most people are ready to face a societal flip of that kind, but just because we’re not ready to face it doesn’t mean it won’t happen.
