Equal marriage
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Originally posted by jean View Post. . . It's as if you wanted to apologise for slavery, but if you did, you would seriously upset the Christians who still believed slavery was part of the natural order of things.
That wouldn't be so bad; they'd just have to get used to it, or break away and form a new slave-owning Church themselves.
But worse, you would upset non-Christians who also believed in slavery, and they, thinking that the local Christians had given up their belief in slavery because you had, would set upon them and kill them in case the rejection of slavery should spread to them and infect them.
That's the situation the archbishop finds himself in, if the stories about what happened in Nigeria are true. . . .
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Originally posted by jean View PostIt's more complicated than that.
Originally posted by jean View PostIt's as if you wanted to apologise for slavery, but if you did, you would seriously upset the Christians who still believed slavery was part of the natural order of things.
Originally posted by jean View PostThat wouldn't be so bad; they'd just have to get used to it, or break away and form a new slave-owning Church themselves.
Originally posted by jean View PostBut worse, you would upset non-Christians who also believed in slavery, and they, thinking that the local Christians had given up their belief in slavery because you had, would set upon them and kill them in case the rejection of slavery should spread to them and infect them.
Originally posted by jean View PostThat's the situation the archbishop finds himself in, if the stories about what happened in Nigeria are true.
Originally posted by jean View PostAnd I have to say I would pause and consider foregoing my right to get married in church, which I wasn't about to exercise anyway, if it would save African Christians from being massacred.Last edited by ahinton; 08-04-14, 09:43.
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Originally posted by Sydney Grew View Postthe Africans are two thousand years behind in the slow slow race towards civilization
Originally posted by Sydney Grew View PostDid not Enoch Powell warn us?
Originally posted by Sydney Grew View PostA new multitude of martyrs is foreseeable
Originally posted by Sydney Grew View PostThe impotent Dr. Welby can wrestle all he likes as he cycles off to communion, but the persecution will not stop until a second Constantine arises among the Africans themselves.
All that said, as wrestling while cycling is at least as dangerous a practice as consuming alcohol while driving, it might be useful were it to occur to the equally impotent Mr Cleggeron and his henchpersons to introduce a law criminalising the former as has already long since been implemented in respect of the latter...Last edited by ahinton; 08-04-14, 09:45.
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Originally posted by ahinton View Postwhere Christian practice is interpreted in ways so very different to those which he would wish to associate with his own country - which in turn raises the question of the extent to which Christianity and its practice has become factionalised rather than being the kind of universal global phenomenon as which they are customarily painted.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostI'm clearly misinterpreting what Justin Welby said. I thought he meant that Christian communities would be wiped out in some African countries by non-Christians.
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Originally posted by jean View PostFf is not misinterpreting what Justin Welby said at all
Originally posted by jean View Postand nobody needs to address me about it, because it's all in the link I posted earlier in the thread.
Originally posted by jean View PostI think you just misread the article I linked to.
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Knots was R D Laing's finest work, wouldn't you say ?Last edited by MrGongGong; 08-04-14, 14:55.
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To return to jean's quote, which is as follows:
African Christians will be killed if the Church of England accepts gay marriage, the archbishop of Canterbury has suggested. Speaking on an LBC phone in, Justin Welby said he had stood by a mass grave in Nigeria of 330 Christians who had been massacred by neighbours who had justified the atrocity by saying: "If we leave a Christian community here we will all be made to become homosexual and so we will kill all the Christians."
"I have stood by gravesides in Africa of a group of Christians who had been attacked because of something that had happened in America. We have to listen to that. We have to be aware of the fact," Welby said. If the Church of England celebrated gay marriages, he added, "the impact of that on Christians far from here, in South Sudan, Pakistan, Nigeria and other places would be absolutely catastrophic. Everything we say here goes round the world."
This reasoning has until now been kept private, although both Welby and his predecessor, Rowan Williams, anguished about it in private.
OK, so let's unpack this, as the cliché would have it.
First off, one might argue that certain Africans risk being killed on such grounds anyway, given that the C of E is the established Christian Church in England and the British government has legalised same sex marriage. In order to comply with the law, therefore, C of E effectively "accepts" same sex marriage to the extent that it is sanctioned by law and its mere refusal to carry out same sex weddings is not of itself signify refusal on its part to "accept" the law that now enables such marriage. How might it propose to treat individual same sex couples who wish to remain Anglicans despite having married outside the Church they are now obliged them to do? Will it refuse them admittance to Church services, decline to baptise any children that they might adopt, forbid them from taking Communion and the rest? Whilst I do not know the answers to such questions, I take leave to doubt that the Church has not asked them of itself and taken positions on them even if it has not yet made them public but, if the Church does decide to admit same sex married couples to services, baptise any children that they might adopt, offer them Communion et al (and refusing to do so would hardly be "Christian", would it?), its "acceptance" of what is already the law will be seen as something more than merely tacit.
What "reasoning [my italics] has untiil now been kept private"? Where is the reasoning / rationality in the assertion by those who apparently seek to justify having massacred those Christians that, were they to "leave a Christian community" in the area concerned, they "we will all be made to become homosexual"? Do not these people know that same sex marriage is something that is now offered to homosexual couples in Britian who wish to marry, that it is not compulsory and that no one becomes homosexual for the express purpose of being able to marry someone of the same sex?! In short, no one will, or could, force anyone to "become" homosexual for any purpose or none.
Welby refers to "something that had happened in America" as another instance of motivation for attacks on groups of Christians in Africa. What was that "something"? The Guardian journalist doesn't tell us.
Welby then speaks of the adverse outcomes for Christians in countries far from Britain if the "Church of England celebrated gay marriages", but does he really believe that such risks might arise only if the Church actually conducted same sex marriage ceremonies? Might such Christians also be vulnerable because British law endorses same sex marriage and if the Church were to decide to accept participating gay married couples into its congregations in the ways that I outlined above, even though it continues to refuse to conduct same sex marriage ceremonies?
The Guardian piece that jean quoted continues:
Welby also condemned homophobia in England. "To treat every human being with equal importance and dignity is a fundamental part of being a Christian," he said.
Fine - but how is his round condemnation of homophobia likely to go down with those who presume to justify massacres of Christians on the grounds of their evident assumption, however absurdly illogical, that failing to condemn homosexuality means that people will be "made to become homosexual".
Never mind SG's proposed second coming of Constantine; I submit that we already have St. Peter here, in the form of a rock and a hard place...Last edited by ahinton; 08-04-14, 15:15.
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostYou think who did that? My own comments were not intended to be read as being on the article particularly but on the more general ramifications of widening divergences of thinking within the Christian Church.
That's the situation the archbishop finds himself in, if the stories about what happened in Nigeria are true.
I took Jean to be saying that the risk of atrocities in Africa were a price that might not be worth paying (presumably that would weigh on the Church as a whole, not merely on its head, if they occurred).It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Ignore mine - Jean has answered this point: I will leave her to pursue this if she feels it should be pursued.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostSo the question about differing attitudes between individuals within the Church and the Church having to face up to this that or the other were slightly baffling.
Originally posted by french frank View PostI took Jean to be saying that the risk of atrocities in Africa were a price that might not be worth paying (presumably that would weigh on the Church as a whole, not merely on its head, if they occurred).Last edited by ahinton; 08-04-14, 15:39.
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