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Stacy Sauls |
The man, Bishop Stacy Sauls, a theological liberal,
is in an alternative moral universe than classical Christendom. Stacy recalls his conversation with a disaffected Episcopalian in Savannah, GA. Of course, 1000s have fled the TEC. 66% over 43 years and 23% over the last decade. Many have seen these capitulations for decades, e.g. your's truly and 1000s of others. What's laughable, if it weren't so sad, is this forlorn effort to shape this narrative: we are radically faithful to our tradition. In what world does this blind man live? (I met one of Stacy's TEC hacks years ago. A total disastre as a cleric. Alot of people and I mean "alot" of people were hurt by this hack.) These recent GC 2012 issues are one fruit of liberalism, amongst other
rotten fruits from the poisonous tree. Stacy will
die soon and he can find out, then, how things play out for him. Of course, he doesn’t probably believe in
biblical words like sin, condemnation, lawlessness and immorality...for starters. (They chopped some of those things away in
the larger effort to expunge a whole range of biblical categories. Actually, shorn of theology, these liberals
have little else to agitate for and advance.)
In one sense, it's not our fight. In another, we have a duty to speak and that we do. May God be faithful to our children and grandchildren in their generations according to their birthright and the divine promises in the baptisms. May they raise the faithful and manful banner.
Episcopal Church Is Radically Faithful to Its
Tradition
Space does not permit
a correction of the numerous factual points I could dispute in Jay Akasie's "What
Ails the Episcopalians" (Houses of Worship, July 13). Instead,
I offer a spiritual correction.
The church has been
captive to the dominant culture, which has rewarded it with power, privilege
and prestige for a long, long time. The Episcopal Church is now liberating
itself from that, and as the author correctly notes, paying the price. I hardly
see paying the price as what ails us. I see it as what it means to be a
follower of Jesus.
Many years ago when I
was a parish priest in Savannah, a local politician and disaffected
Episcopalian began a conversation with me. In that case the subject was
homosexuality. It could have been any of the things mentioned last week as our
ailments. "I just think the church should not be governed by the
culture," he said. I replied that I agreed with him, but that "I just
hadn't noticed that the culture was all that hospitable toward gay
people." He stammered. "Well, maybe not here in Georgia."
The Episcopal Church
is on record as standing by those the culture marginalizes whether that be
nonwhite people, female people or gay people. The author calls that political
correctness hostile to tradition.
I call it profoundly
countercultural but hardly untraditional. In fact, it is deeply true to the
tradition of Jesus, Jesus who offended the "traditionalists" of his
own day, Jesus who was known to associate with the less than desirable, Jesus
who told his followers to seek him among the poor. It is deeply true to the
tradition of the Apostle Paul who decried human barriers of race, sex, or
status (Galatians 3:28).
What ails the
Episcopalians is that this once most-established class of American Christianity
is taking the risk to be radically true to its tradition. There is a price to
be paid for that. There is also a promise of abundant life in it.
Bishop
Stacy F. Sauls
Chief
Operating Officer
The
Episcopal Church
New
York
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