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  • Penitential Rite, from the 1928 Book of Common Prayer

    It’s needed now:

    One thing that always struck me about this and so many other penitential rites in the Anglican liturgy (like this one) is that God always is ready to forgive and have us back. That’s missing in many of the moral systems that are being imposed on us these days.

  • The Hidden Life of Jesus Until His Baptism

    This section of the Elevations concentrates on Jesus’ growing up years, and specifically the one incident that is recorded in the Gospel: his visit to Jerusalem, his separation from his parents, his time in the Temple with the Jewish sages, and his reunion with his parents. The weeks are as follows: The hidden life of […]

    The Hidden Life of Jesus Until His Baptism
  • My Canadian Sheeple Problem

    Justin Trudeau’s brutal suppression of the truckers’ protest in Ottawa–and it upholding by the Canadian Parliament–has for me one silver lining. It’s solved a long-running mystery concerning a long time commenter (troll, really) of this blog and then my Twitter account, one David Lloyd-Jones of Toronto. For four years, from 2013 to 2017, we went back and forth, and after that moved the dialogue (such as it was) to Twitter. Sometimes informative, occasionally entertaining, frequently contentious, I often found myself scratching my head: what is wrong with this guy? How could someone who had been as many places as he’s claimed to be (and he was quite proud of that) be this uncritical in his acceptance of the existing order, even when that existing order has changed on our lifetimes?

    The answer to that question has finally come. In the days following Trudeau’s invocation of the Emergencies Act, the adulation shown by his subjects in the Twitter comments has been shocking. Beating protesters, seizing their assets, anything the government could dole out has been greeted with clapping and barking one would associate with seals. For all of his years outside of Canada, including being a Congressional staffer in Washington, he’s Canadian to the core. The existing order can ultimately do no wrong. I’m sure that, had Trudeau wanted to speed up the job and fired on the protesters, they all would have cheered for that too. (Probably the reason why he didn’t was because, in some parts of the world, it’s considered in bad taste for police/militia/army to fire on its own citizens, the optics are bad.)

    The thing that separates me from David Lloyd-Jones (and most Canadians evidently) is that I do not go along with the uncritical acceptance of human authority. That’s more of a life philosophy issue rather than a political one. I explain it in my post Advice to Graduates: The Two Promises I Made to Myself and growing up at the top of this society only reinforces that. That applies to the church I find myself in, which has saved me a great deal of grief. David describes himself as a “country boy” from Sydenham, Ontario, and for him that adds upward social mobility to the mix.

    I’m not sure how meaningful democratic process is when the electorate is so much into group think like the one we’re seeing in Canada these days. It’s heartening to now that several provincial leaders and some Canadian human rights organisations have objected to this ex post facto and draconian application of the Emergencies Act. The provincial leaders see extending COVID sanctions as a non-starter, something that state leaders in the US and national leaders elsewhere have already figured out. Whether the Canadian judiciary is independent enough to go against the Parliamentary wave remains to be seen.

    If people’s persons and money can be seized for stuff that yesterday was legal and with no new law passed, what will happen is that people will a) stop working and accumulating wealth, which will run down the economy, b) starting finding ways of hiding their money, or c) emigrate to happier places. In all cases both economy and country will run down. We’re seeing the start of this already.

    We spent half a century in the Cold War. The question before us now is simple: was it a real victory or just a thirty year delay of imposing a regime equally undemocratic? As one Russian pastor told our church in the 1990’s, our past is your future.

    Update: after I wrote this piece, Trudeau cancelled his invocation of the Emergencies Act. This is a positive step, but leaves many questions unanswered, such as whether the freezing of accounts will be reversed, whether he or someone else can do this again, how long something has to go on before it becomes an “emergency” (the Biden Administration has had its own problems with this at SCOTUS,) etc. Most importantly it’s hard to know what motivated Trudeau to cancel this invocation. Perhaps institutional pushback is stronger in Canada then I’ve been lead to believe.

    And as for David? He’s locked his Twitter account, whether because of something I did or just a dislike for adverse opinion. So his reaction to this is hard to know as well.

  • The liberal order is already dead — Unherd

    In the summer of 1990, I stood where the wall had been and wondered at what had happened to Europe. I wasn’t alone: the rest of the city, the rest of…

    The liberal order is already dead
  • Those Un-Aspirational Americans

    Or, as the New York Times magazine put it, anti-ambitional:

    But those top-line numbers obscure a muddier truth. After the latest employment numbers were released in February (which seemed to show remarkable job growth and an unemployment rate of 4 percent), one B.L.S. economist took to his Substack to call it the “most complicated job report ever.” In addition to those workers trying to trade their way into objectively better jobs, millions of others have simply left the work force — because they’re sick, or taking care of children, or retiring, or just plain miserable.

    Last month I posted Reaching the Turning Point, where I observed the following:

    It’s called the “Great Resignation,” and it’s partly due to COVID, but also partly due to the fact that Americans find their bosses to be things described by words that don’t appear on this blog. People are finding out that they can do without the income their multiple jobs paid to them, that they were underpaid for many of them, and that the family work was really as valuable as the “right-wing nutjobs” told them. The exodus from explicitly paid work is accelerated by the government forcing people out of their jobs by vaccine mandates. To do this in the middle of a general labour shortage might seem to be good public health policy but the effect on the economy and the performance of the system is still adverse.

    I still do not think that the United States will remain the preeminent nation it has been with a work force as demoralised and un-aspirational as ours is becoming. The energy that has come out of that is something that has made this country special. It’s passing is understandable but there are consequences and our elites, whose own preeminence depends upon an aspirational workforce willing to put in that extra effort, have not quite grasped what this tectonic shift in American attitude really means.

    But they will find out soon enough.

  • Those Needy Pentecostals

    One of the things I heard frequently as a NOM (Novus Ordo Missae, as opposed to a Trad or Rad Trad) Catholic was the phrase “your needy people.” This was generally rolled out when same needy people were about to “come to the table” (which they really didn’t.)

    And yet…somehow, the whole concept of “needy people” didn’t strike a chord. Almost all of the Catholic parishes I haunted were nice, middle class places where the people around me didn’t look too needy, even though Roman Catholicism wasn’t an upper middle class WASP ghetto like the Episcopal Church. The only time I detected serious neediness was when our prayer group leader, under attack by their own church for being Charismatic, admitted that they couldn’t afford to send their eight kids to Catholic school. That incident ultimate broke my relationship with the Catholic Church and its whole obsession with “social justice.”

    All that changed when I married and joined a Pentecostal church. It’s true that the one I’m going to is somewhat “privileged” because the educational level of the congregation is higher than most Pentecostal churches. (The congregation is also well endowed with educators from kindergarten to graduate school, which guarantees the income doesn’t match the education.) Even with that, for the first time I found myself going to church with people who were either poor or who had come up from poverty.

    And that’s where things get interesting. One thing that has irritated me for a long time about our ministers is the constant message–usually implicit, occasionally explicit–that the purpose of our gathering on Sunday is to get enough “victory” to get us through to the next Wednesday or Sunday, at which point we’ll be recharged again. Coupled with a focus on getting from God what we need to get from now until then, it’s a fairly short-term focus on what I always thought was a long-term deal from where we are to eternal life. People who adhere to this are truly “needy people.”

    To illustrate this, about twenty years ago I co-authored a book entitled Ministering at the Altar. In the last chapter I took on this issue, starting as follows:

    Our Lord Jesus Christ taught us to be persistent in prayer. He said: “In a certain town there was a judge who neither feared God nor cared about men. And there was a widow in that town who kept coming to him with the plea, ‘Grant me justice against my adversary.’ For some time he refused. But finally he said to himself, ‘Even though I don’t fear God or care about men, yet because this widow keeps bothering me, I will see that she gets justice, so that she won’t eventually wear me out with her coming!’“ And the Lord said, “Listen to what the unjust judge says. And will not God bring about justice for his chosen ones, who cry out to him day and night? Will he keep putting them off? I tell you, he will see that they get justice, and quickly. However, when the Son of Man comes, will he find faith on the earth”? (Luke 18:2-8). Unfortunately some people, in the course of their persistence, come to the idea that all of God’s blessings are so transitory that they can only get enough at one time for a short period.

    Ministering at the Altar

    My approach was through this classic quotation from Hebrews, followed by a brief history of salvation:

    Therefore, since the promise of entering his rest still stands, let us be careful that none of you be found to have fallen short of it. For we also have had the gospel preached to us, just as they did; but the message they heard was of no value to them, because those who heard did not combine it with faith. Now we who have believed enter that rest, just as God has said, “So I declared on oath in my anger, ‘They shall never enter my rest.’” And yet his work has been finished since the creation of the world. For somewhere he has spoken about the seventh day in these words: “And on the seventh day God rested from all his work.” And again in the passage above he says, “They shall never enter my rest.” It still remains that some will enter that rest, and those who formerly had the gospel preached to them did not go in, because of their disobedience (Hebrews 4:1-6).

    I thought this was a sound approach, but my co-author had a hard time understanding this. I ended up rewriting it (with a nifty closing quote from Bossuet) but the lesson was learned: this transitory view of the blessings of God is deeply ingrained in the mentality of Pentecostal churches.

    Now I’m sure that many (especially the Reformed types) will say that it is because of our bad doctrine. But ministers of all types, if they want to communicate the truth they have, will aim their message to their audience. I think that the Pentecostal view of the persistence of God’s blessings comes from our ministers’ understanding (and in many cases their own experience at the margins of society) of life from a secular point of view. They know instinctively that their congregations are made up of people who live on the edge of disaster, that they couldn’t get through anything else.

    Such a mentality is not a product of our own times or even those just before us. Consider this in France of the ancien regime:

    Fear and insecurity were the experience of everyone: fear of the dark, of solitude, or unknown places, of death, of evil spells, of the devil’s work, of marauders and beggars in this world…Who could feel secure when the vital harvests were subject to the ravages of storms, and plagues were still endemic?…Living so close to the breadline, people were callous, fatalistic and yet highly strung, their emotions were more volatile and, on the evidence of literary texts, tears flowed more easily than in our culture today.

    Peter Robert Campbell, The Ancien Regime in France

    It’s sad but true that much of our world’s population lives in a state not as much advanced from this as we would like to think. Getting through the week is a major chore; a religion that makes its appeal on this basis is bound to be attractive.

    So how do we proclaim Christ’s work as finished in a credible way to people who don’t think much of anything is finished, other than them? I’m not sure I’ve got a good answer to that. I think an emphasis on discipleship (which is just about becoming a must in our post-Christian culture) would go a long way, even though the process is a “nine yards and a cloud of dust” business. That’s ongoing in my denomination at least; I’m glad to say that, in my last years at the denomination’s men’s ministry, we shifted towards a more discipleship-based ministry model.

    But wait: why is it that, in a country where church is as class stratified as it is here, that only the churches for “them” have to change? We have to deal with two facts:

    • Churches with people with a higher socio-economic level find a more static approach to life and life with God easier to understand, but…
    • It hasn’t been that long since these same churches understood that life was an uncertain business, something COVID has taught us with a vengeance.

    As an example, consider this part of the Litany from the 1928 Book of Common Prayer:

    One thing’s for sure: a church which beats Satan down under its feet is more likely these days to be Charismatic than to be a part of the Anglican/Episcopal world.

    I think some “meeting in the middle” is in order here. Doing that would go a long way to bringing us together again and also back to reality. And perhaps we wouldn’t have so many “needy people” as we have now.

  • The Passage from Jerome that Landed @bethallisonbarr in a Mess

    It’s this one, from Jerome’s Letter 108, his panegyric to Paula at the time of her death:

    Inflamed by their virtues she thought more and more each moment of forsaking her home. Disregarding her house, her children, her servants, her property, and in a word everything connected with the world, she was eager — alone and unaccompanied (if ever it could be said that she was so)— to go to the desert made famous by its Pauls and by its Antonies. And at last when the winter was over and the sea was open, and when the bishops were returning to their churches, she also sailed with them in her prayers and desires. Not to prolong the story, she went down to Portus accompanied by her brother, her kinsfolk and above all her own children eager by their demonstrations of affection to overcome their loving mother. At last the sails were set and the strokes of the rowers carried the vessel into the deep. On the shore the little Toxotius stretched forth his hands in entreaty, while Rufina, now grown up, with silent sobs besought her mother to wait till she should be married. But still Paula’s eyes were dry as she turned them heavenwards; and she overcame her love for her children by her love for God. She knew herself no more as a mother, that she might approve herself a handmaid of Christ. Yet her heart was rent within her, and she wrestled with her grief, as though she were being forcibly separated from parts of herself. The greatness of the affection she had to overcome made all admire her victory the more. Among the cruel hardships which attend prisoners of war in the hands of their enemies, there is none severer than the separation of parents from their children. Though it is against the laws of nature, she endured this trial with unabated faith; nay more she sought it with a joyful heart: and overcoming her love for her children by her greater love for God, she concentrated herself quietly upon Eustochium alone, the partner alike of her vows and of her voyage. Meantime the vessel ploughed onwards and all her fellow-passengers looked back to the shore. But she turned away her eyes that she might not see what she could not behold without agony. No mother, it must be confessed, ever loved her children so dearly. Before setting out she gave them all that she had, disinheriting herself upon earth that she might find an inheritance in heaven.

    As J.N.D. Kelly notes in his biography of Jerome:

    If the rhetoric seems overdone, it remains a fact that the break she was making with home and family cut far deeper than any sacrifice of his (Jerome’s.)

    As I noted here, making a major renunciation like that for God is deeply alien–and incomprehensible–to American Christians on both sides of the debate.

  • Back in the Day, They All Hated Science

    Another one of those “inconvenient truths:”

    Embracing the science he hated until a year ago means that like a whole lot of partisan people, he only pretends to accept it because the issue is political. Writing in The Daily Beast, Louis Anslow reminds the public that just a few years ago Young released a whole album devoted to undermining the same biotechnology that is saving the world in 2022. He even named it “The Monsanto Years” and it was bought by people who think Science Is A Vast Corporate Conspiracy and still do – unless they can dunk on Republicans about being anti-science. 

    The simple fact that the 1960’s revolution (for lack of a better word to describe it) was deeply Luddite and anti-science is a simple fact that those who have survived the era until the present time are working hard to forget. That’s true even when their embrace of the ethos continued until nearly the present, as is the case with Neil Young. That Luddite streak extended to such things as the space program and nuclear power. The latter is really handy now that we need carbon-free power generation, but it’s still an uphill battle to get people to see daylight on this issue. (The Germans, in the face of dependence upon Russian gas and massing military might on the borders of Ukraine, shut down their nuclear power plants, as if to underscore their stupidity.)

    You can only cover up so much ignorance with self-righteousness…

  • The Left Pushes Back Against Vaccine Mandates

    Yes, they do:

    As writers from the Left, we are disturbed by this turn of events. We don’t think there is anything progressive about the current move towards compelled — and in places mandatory — Covid vaccinations. These are discriminatory against minority communities, many of whom for historical reasons are suspicious of medicine and the state, and have had lower vaccine take-up rates. They are enormously costly, not only in economic terms, creating huge profits for the pharmaceutical companies rolling them out, with BioNTech, Moderna and Pfizer making between them over US$1,000 per second, but also in human resources terms — with thousands of health workers being pulled out of (already understaffed, in many cases) hospitals to run mass vaccination centres.

    The difference between these people and those who run our government are twofold.

    The first is a realisation between real social justice and that which is promoted by our moneyed interests. It should be obvious that the latter is artificial, but in the “party line” that gets put out these days does its best to hide this simple fact.

    The second is that no solution is going to be perfect, especially in the Third World. This was the point I tried to make in Teaching Secular Blasphemy, but that reality hasn’t percolated to our conceited, unscientific elites.

    If enough people on both sides will refuse to be bought off so easily and have a reality check, we just might get this fiasco under control.

  • “Getting to Know You”: My Profile for UTC’s College of Engineering and Computer Science

    It’s not often that someone else does a write-up about me, but where I teach (at the University of Chattanooga’s College of Engineering and Computer Science) they did a profile of me in their series “Getting to Know You.” You can read it all here.

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