tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3915617830446943975.post972602323693590015..comments2024-03-28T19:03:49.275+13:00Comments on Anglican Down Under: The Lord will providePeter Carrellhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09535218286799156659noreply@blogger.comBlogger12125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3915617830446943975.post-65190559756903701832009-12-19T19:05:43.869+13:002009-12-19T19:05:43.869+13:00Thanks for all your enlightening postings on the c...Thanks for all your enlightening postings on the current (and previous) topics Peter - I have so enjoyed your blog which I discovered this year. Always challenges me to think things through and helps me understand the theological underpinnings and implications of some of the massive turmoil going on in the Communion at the moment. Keep up the great work!Terinoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3915617830446943975.post-30608071662815007712009-12-19T19:01:14.847+13:002009-12-19T19:01:14.847+13:00I agree, Teri, it is time to take church disciplin...I agree, Teri, it is time to take church discipline seriously. That might help de-confuse Glynn.Peter Carrellhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09535218286799156659noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3915617830446943975.post-75617615071768594912009-12-19T18:49:30.945+13:002009-12-19T18:49:30.945+13:00So having listened to Cardy's speech as far as...So having listened to Cardy's speech as far as I can tell he:<br />- doesn't believe in the accounts of Jesus birth<br />- considers that Jesus was executed for his outrageous hospitality (although I notice Cardy doesnt mention his hospitality to the rich and unpopular - only the poor and deserving). <br />- Cardy also doesnt appear to believe that Jesus actually died on the cross - calling it "a symbolic vindication". <br /><br />I am merely confused why he even calls himself a Christian and quite frankly wish that he wouldn't. Perhaps it's time for us to take church discipline a little more seriously?Terinoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3915617830446943975.post-81593595648892926422009-12-18T10:31:09.355+13:002009-12-18T10:31:09.355+13:00“I can see how my thinking might seem strange to o...“I can see how my thinking might seem strange to others, especially those who believe that Mary was perpetually a virgin.” <br /><br />Quite the opposite. Your referring to the virgin Mary standing at the foot of the cross would not make someone who accepted the extremely ancient tradition of Mary’s perpetual virginity pause for a moment. But it should make someone who denies that early tradition sit up and say – “hang on a minute, what did you just call her?”liturgyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11822769747947139669noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3915617830446943975.post-91192120568767444802009-12-18T09:54:44.306+13:002009-12-18T09:54:44.306+13:00Hi Bosco
Yes, I can see how my thinking might seem...Hi Bosco<br />Yes, I can see how my thinking might seem strange to others, especially those who believe that Mary was perpetually a virgin.<br /><br />However the discussion has arisen among us because you have suggested (if not asserted) that the wording in our prayer books requires us to believe in the perpetual virginity of Mary.<br /><br />Perhaps I should have, at the very beginning, checked on the prayer books! I do not have time to go through all references to Mary, but I have in front of me NZPB p. 660 which marks the feast day of Mary as "Saint Mary, the Mother of Jesus" and offers two collects. One of these collects makes no reference to Mary by name (and, on other grounds, you and I might have a less than eulogistic appraisal of it :) ). The other collect begins thus, <br /><br />"God of love,<br />you chose the blessed virgin Mary<br />to be the mother of your only Son ..."<br /><br />I would understand this reference to affirm that Mary was a virgin when chosen to the mother of our Lord and to make no requirements with respect to believing in her perpetual virginity by so describing her.<br /><br />It could be, to better clarify my understanding - from the Bible, of course - that Mary had other children and thus was not a perpetual virgin, that I refrain from phrases such as the capitalised "Blessed Virgin Mary", and consciously refer to her, in line with the ascription in capitals on p. 660, as 'the Mother of Jesus'!Peter Carrellhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09535218286799156659noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3915617830446943975.post-66822600938247596872009-12-18T09:39:39.261+13:002009-12-18T09:39:39.261+13:00I reply again, conscious of tipping the balance to...I reply again, conscious of tipping the balance towards my own caution of “devoting so much time to biological distractions.”<br /><br />In your opinion, after the birth of Jesus, Mary went on to have other children, and lost her virginity in doing so.<br />Yet you continue to call her a virgin even after you believe she is not (eg. at the foot of the cross, in the Pentecost upper room).<br />And you claim, contra “Progressive Christianity”, you are using the term “virgin” literally, biologically, not metaphorically or symbolically. <br /><br />I hope while you find your way of thinking makes perfect sense to you, you might at least try and understand why it appears pretty strange to some others.liturgyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11822769747947139669noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3915617830446943975.post-9696267060334656922009-12-17T23:11:41.345+13:002009-12-17T23:11:41.345+13:00Hi Bosco
That was not what I said!
Mary is the Vir...Hi Bosco<br />That was not what I said!<br />Mary is the Virgin Mary even for Reformed and Protestant Anglicans because she was a virgin when our Lord was conceived in her womb. The state of being a virgin when conceiving a child is unusual if not unique rather than universal.Peter Carrellhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09535218286799156659noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3915617830446943975.post-29487173664826005212009-12-17T22:26:27.780+13:002009-12-17T22:26:27.780+13:00Your response really will not do, Peter. We are al...Your response really will not do, Peter. We are all virgins until we are not. And some are virgins all their life. Your response that we call Mary the Blessed Virgin Mary because she once was one just doesn’t work. By your logic – everyone would continue to be called a virgin, and the term becomes meaningless (born-again virgins notwithstanding).liturgyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11822769747947139669noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3915617830446943975.post-59591016484107617392009-12-17T22:10:33.511+13:002009-12-17T22:10:33.511+13:00Hi Bosco
I understand the references to the Virgin...Hi Bosco<br />I understand the references to the Virgin Mary in our prayer books (and, say, even someone such as my good Prot self calling her 'the Blessed Virgin Mary') to mean that Mary is a celebrated woman both because she responded to God's call to serve him by being pregnant with and giving birth to his Son and was the recipient of the miracle of conception without intercourse (while a virgin). Thus 'Virgin' refers to her state as the young mother of our Lord but implies nothing per se about being a perpetual virgin.<br /><br />Your second paragraph neatly brings out a further possible difference between Islam and progressive Christianity. <br /><br />Of course I can understand how Islam can believe in the Virgin Birth (it is a faith open to the miraculous) but I cannot understand why progressives are so confident they know Jesus is the human face of God when they cast so much doubt on Scripture.Peter Carrellhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09535218286799156659noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3915617830446943975.post-71430052690187213152009-12-17T21:47:38.370+13:002009-12-17T21:47:38.370+13:00The BCP as well as the NZPB, both formularies of o...The BCP as well as the NZPB, both formularies of our church, both continue to call Mary a virgin right up to the celebration of her death. <br /><br />I am never very good, as you know, with different categories of Christianity - but I would have thought that some Christians might question whether Luke's story of Mary's virginity was symbolic or literal while holding firmly to Jesus being the human face of God; but Muslims would almost all accept the virgin birth story as history whilst struggling to make any sense of calling Jesus ('Isa) divine.liturgyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11822769747947139669noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3915617830446943975.post-6341385845051165782009-12-17T18:06:29.418+13:002009-12-17T18:06:29.418+13:00Hi Bosco
I think we Protestant minded Anglicans n...Hi Bosco<br /><br />I think we Protestant minded Anglicans need a "please explain where, how and why" it is thought that Mary's virginity being perpetual is a "formulary"?!<br /><br />There are differences between Muslims and progressive Christians, but the closeness of progressive Christianity's doubts/denial about the divinity of Jesus to Islamic denial of Jesus' divinity never seems to give progressive Christians much pause for thought!Peter Carrellhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09535218286799156659noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3915617830446943975.post-19311990975395126402009-12-17T16:59:26.202+13:002009-12-17T16:59:26.202+13:00Certainly St Matthew’s is to be congratulated for ...Certainly St Matthew’s is to be congratulated for a magnificent piece of viral advertising – all over the web, on twitter, and in the newspaper. I still hope to write a blog post on it. <br /><br />“I suppose Protestants and Catholics might have different responses to the implications of the billboard.” Clearly Anglicans ought not to differ from Catholics? Our formularies have Mary’s virginity perpetual – though, like our formulary on wearing a chasuble, generally more honoured in the breach than the observance. People are SO selective about which formularies they beat others over the head with!<br /><br />The selectively biblically literalist (here termed “fundamentalist”) can devote so much time to biological distractions that the celebration of the incarnation is lost in wondering if God created sperm or God mysteriously fertilized “an egg in Mary's womb”. Atheists will answer the question “no”, selectively biblically literalist will answer the question “yes” – neither notices it is the wrong question. Luke isn't interested in where the other 23 chromosomes came from. It’s not a story about an anthropomorphic God. It is a story about us as theomorphic children.<br /><br />Many Christians are Arians. Even more are Docetists. They think that Jesus is “God’s Son” because God got Mary pregnant. And Jesus just pretends to be learning Aramaic while he’s really toddling about seeing the errors in Einstein’s theories. <br /><br />As to Glynn wearing his stole as if he is a deacon, clearly he’s one of these Anglicans who thinks he still is one. I have met more than one bishop who proudly proclaims to still be a deacon. These people think they are also still lay people – orders are like stamps and cards, you collect them. And you aren’t satisfied until you have the full set of four.<br /><br />I’m not as impressed by Stand Firm and North American intelligence as you are. “What is the difference between a Muslim and a progressive Christian who denies the divinity of Jesus?” Well the first thing that immediately springs to mind is Muslims don’t accept that Jesus died on the cross.<br /><br />Blessings<br /><br />Bosco+<br />www.liturgy.co.nzliturgyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11822769747947139669noreply@blogger.com