Category Archives: Religious News

Vatican call for #Anglicans to join #Catholics revisited

A couple of days ago, I posted on the reaction to the Vatican’s invitation to conservative Anglicans who disagreed with the Episcopal Church’s policy on gay and female clergy.  Here’s more blogosphere feedback.

A press release from Voice of the Faithful asks, IS THE ANGLICAN COMMUNITY GOING TO SOLVE THE PRIEST SHORTAGE?  Voice of the Faithful is a progressive group of Catholics who coincidentally are holding their annual convention this weekend on Long Island.

Susan Russell (recent past president of Integrity USA) links to an NPR audio and quotes Jim Naughton:

I think for Episcopalians, what we need to do in the wake of this announcement is to continue going out there and saying, look, we do offer very traditional liturgy, beautiful music, a style of worship that many people like. But we are a democratically governed church. We think men and women are equal at the altar, and we respect the dignity of gay and lesbian Christians. If that makes us outcasts, I think that that’s a status that we embrace happily. So if what we’re talking about here are people offering alternatives, I think Episcopalians offer that alternative to their Catholic brothers and sisters. 

Is Pope Benedict’s action dynamite under the logjam of stalled ecumenical discussions?  This is the question posted on America, the American Catholic Weekly.  In another post on the same blog, noted Lutheran theologian Martin Marty is quoted:

Bypassing forty years of Anglican-Roman Catholic conversations-cum-negotiations and blindsiding Archbishop Rowan Williams, the head of the seventy-million-member Anglican Communion, Vatican officials announced that they were taking steps to receive Anglican (in the United States, Episcopal) clergy through conversion into the Roman Catholic priesthood.  Headlines had it that Rome wanted to “lure,” “attract,” “bid for” or “woo” priests and congregations to make the drastic move, while the Vatican front man, as he fished for Anglicans, said he was not fishing for Anglicans….

And, a third post on the same blog suggests that the fine print over the acceptance of married Anglican priests into the Catholic church needs some clarification.

One Anglican cleric who blogs as Madpriest, dismisses the Anglicans who are receptive to the Pope’s invitation as “The Dying Gasps of Anglican Misogyny.”

Religion writer Julia Duin at the Washington Post raises lots of questions:

And which elements of the Anglican liturgy will these converts will be allowed to retain? Anglicans have multiple versions (1662, 1928, 1979 to name a few) of their Book of Common Prayer. Will they have to accept Roman Catholic theology on transubstantiation (the bread and wine really becoming the body and blood of Christ), on papal infallibility, on the bodily assumption of the Virgin Mary into heaven, not to mention the doctrine of the Immaculate Conception, which holds that Mary was born without sin?

Finally, Minnesota blogger, progressive Catholic Michael Bayly, dares to speak that which must not be spoken.  In a post entitled Keeping All the Queens Under One Roof, Bayly suggests that there is a subtext of closeted and repressed gay clergy in both the Anglican communion and the Catholic communion.

We’re not supposed to talk about this aspect of the drama in the Vatican. But there is as much an overlap of closeted gay priests and bishops with liturgical and theological orthodoxy as there is of closeted gay politicians finding ways to oppress other gays who are out and open.

Bayly quotes Chris Dierckes:

If personal experience and lifelong immersion in a sub-culture is any form of persuasive evidence, I can tell you that conservative Anglo-Catholicism — at the clerical level — is totally dominated by gay men. Mostly repressed. What used to be called when I was in seminary, the pink mafia. And the thing that is the initial trigger for this decision is the upcoming very likely to happen decision to ordain women as bishops in the Church of England (there have already been women priests there for about 15 years or so). Which has a certain irony in this case. If these Anglo-Catholics join the Roman Communion they can join up with very conservative Roman Catholic groups like Regnum Christi and The Legionaries of Christ, also totally dominated by closeted gay fellows. You don’t need to be Sigmund Freud to see the awesome tragic humor in a bunch of non-wife-having grown men wearing pink dresses (and in the Pope’s case super expensive fabulous Prada shoes!!!) telling everybody else they shouldn’t be gay.

Integrity Eucharist on eve of Minnesota Diocesan Convention #Episcopal

Last night I walked with Integrity.  I was blessed to participate in the Integrity Eucharist at historic St Paul’s Episcopal Church on-the-Hill on Summit Avenue in St Paul, Mn.  This weekend, the Minnesota Diocese of the Episcopal Church will choose it’s ninth Bishop, and Integrity USA, the LGBT Episcopal advocacy group, celebrated Eucharist with the local LGBT community and allies on the convention’s eve.

St Paul’s dates back to 1854, four years before Minnesota was granted statehood.  It has a long and proud history that includes hosting the first electing convention when Bishop Henry Benjamin Whipple became the first Bishop of the Minnesota Diocese.  More recently, St Paul’s has been the home to progressive Christians and Episcopalians.  The first woman on a Vestry from Minnesota was elected at St. Paul’s.  The Rev. Jeannette Piccard of Philadelphia Eleven fame was a longtime member.  Here is a link to her Wikipedia entry:

Jeannette Ridlon Piccard (January 5, 1895 – May 17, 1981) was an American teacher, scientist, priest, and aeronaut who was a pioneer of balloon flight. A member of the famed Piccard family of balloonists and of the International Space Hall of Fame, she was the first licensed female balloon pilot, the first woman to fly to the stratosphere, and a speaker for NASA. Her 1934 flight held the women’s altitude record for three decades. Called a woman of causes and irrepressible, Piccard is remembered as one of the Philadelphia Eleven, the first women to be ordained Episcopalian priests.

David Norgard The homilist last night was the Rev. David Norgard, recently elected to serve as the President of Integrity.  Rev. Norgard, who has served parishes in San Francisco and New York City, returned to his Minnesota roots for the occasion (born in Hibbing, home to Kevin McHale and Bob Dylan).  He told his story of truth telling and coming out to his bishop during his candidacy process, thus becoming the first openly gay Episcopal priest in Minnesota in 1979.  The full text of his homily has been posted on the Walking with Integrity blog.  Here is a portion:

Coming out does not make life easier…but it does unequivocally make life better.  Telling the truth and seeking justice, while painfully difficult at times, are inherently better options for living than their alternatives because they are the constellation that leads us on the path toward integrity.  And as the psalmist says, “No good thing will God withhold from those who walk with integrity.”

I met new friends, including Rev Norgard, and old ones as well, including Ross Murray, the interim Director of Lutherans Concerned / North America.  Ross was a leader of Goodsoil at the recent ELCA 2009 Churchwide Assembly, and I worked as a Goodsoil volunteer.

Our prayers are with the Minnesota Episcopalians as they meet in Convention this weekend.

Voice of the Faithful: Progressive Catholic Convention

I have blogged several times about the upcoming Call to Action (CTA) Conference in Milwaukee  beginning November 6 (click here to follow the thread).  However, I have been remiss in reporting the annual conference of Voice of the Faithful (VOTF) that will convene this weekend in Melville, New York.  Both CTA and VOTF are progressive Catholic organizations, but I am not sure how they differ or how they are alike.

Here is the agenda for the VOTF convention:

Schedule of Events

Friday evening, October 30th

7 pm-8:45 pm          Registration & cocktail hour

7:00 pm-8:45 pm    Presentations on Strategic Platform and the American Catholic Council 
(Come find out where you fit into the action plan that VOTF is unfolding by learning more about the five platforms: Local/Diocesan Action, Protect Children/Support Survivors, Universal Church Reform, Networking and Partnerships, and Spiritual and Communal Growth.  Get an overview of the proposals, ask questions, and sign up for involvement!  This new strategy has a place for every VOTF member to participate in meaningful activities that will help us “make our voices heard.”)

8:00 pm-8:30 pm &
8:45 pm-9:15 pm       Presentations on Vigil Strategies with LI-VOTF and SNAP

Saturday October 31st

8 am  Registration and Continental Breakfast

9 am  Opening Prayer 
Welcome to Long Island – Joan Hopkins- co-chair LIVOTF

9:15 am-9:45 am
President Dan Bartley’s  Report  On the State of VOTF”
“Ask the President” Q & A

9:45 am Introduction of distinguished guests and acknowledgments – Phil Megna

10 am  BREAK

10:15 am-11:15 am Sister Joan Chittister

11:15 am-12:15 pm  Discussions, Remarks, Solutions & questions for speaker
(Attendees will have time for discussion and reflection on Sister Joan’s remarks in light of VOTF’s Strategic Plan and the opportunities available for action based on her presentation.)

12:15 pm-12:30 pm President’s Special Awards for Contributions at the Local and Affiliate Levels  – Dan Bartley

12:30 pm-1:30 pm LUNCH

1:30 pm-2:00 pm Presentation of National VOTF awards-Priest of Integrity and St. Catherine of Siena awards

2:00 pm-2:30pm BREAK (browse & check out the books & merchandise at the tables)

2:30 pm-3:30 pm Rev. Thomas Reese

3:45 pm-4:30 pm Discussions, Remarks, Solutions & questions for speaker
(Attendees will have time for discussion and reflection on Father’s remarks in light of VOTF’s Strategic Plan and the opportunities available for action based on his presentation.)

Break- Preparation for Mass

5:00 pm Mass celebrated by Father Tom Reese (including singing and prayers)

#Catholic

Vatican actively trolling for disaffected Anglicans #Anglican #Catholic

Last week, the Vatican made a stunning announcement.  Here is the story in the New York Times.

In an extraordinary bid to lure traditionalist Anglicans en masse, the Vatican said Tuesday that it would make it easier for Anglicans uncomfortable with their church’s acceptance of female priests and openly gay bishops to join the Roman Catholic Church while retaining many of their traditions.

Anglicans would be able “to enter full communion with the Catholic Church while preserving elements of the distinctive Anglican spiritual and liturgical patrimony,” Cardinal William J. Levada, the prefect for the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, said at a news conference here.

It was unclear why the Vatican made the announcement now. But it seemed a rare opportunity, audaciously executed, to capitalize on deep divisions within the Anglican Church to attract new members at a time when the Catholic Church has been trying to reinvigorate itself in Europe.

Not surprisingly, the blogosphere is afire with commentary.  A sampling follows.

Here in Minnesota, progressive Catholic blogger Michael Bayly quotes author and Benedictine specialist David Gibson:

While both Pope John Paul II and his successor Benedict XVI have been known as staunch conservatives, they have in fact shown a remarkably liberal willingness to bend the rules when it comes to certain groups.

For a church whose leadership has earned a reputation for reprimanding liberal Catholics who color outside the lines, these developments could be more than a bit frustrating. If conservatives can get special consideration, how about Catholics who have divorced and remarried but can’t take communion? Or those who back ordaining women? Or perhaps an exemption for the 25,000 or so priests who left the ministry in recent decades when they married? Many of them are ready, willing and able to return. Priest shortage solved.

In another post, Bayly quotes Mary Hunt:

Let history record this theological scandal for what it is. Touted by Rome as a step forward in ecumenical relations with a cousin communion, it is in fact the joining of two camps united in their rejection of women and queer people as unworthy of religious leadership.

Walking with Integrity, the blog of an Episcopal LGBT advocacy group, suggests disaffected Anglicans who would join the Roman Catholic church will be on the wrong side of history.

“It is also ironic that this announcement comes just days after the Vatican unveiled plans for an exhibit honoring Galileo–who was condemned by the church 400 years ago,” said [an Integrity spokesperson]. “Let us hope for the sake of the gospel we share, that our Roman Catholic brothers and sisters don’t have to wait 400 years for their church to get on the right side of history on the full inclusion of women and the LGBT baptized in their work and witness.

Blogger Gary Stern quotes a New York Episcopal Diocese assistant  bishop, Catherine Roskam:

We appreciate the welcome the pope extended to those in the Anglican communion who are disaffected. We for our part continue to welcome our Roman Catholic brothers and sisters, both lay and ordained, conservative and liberal, who wish to belong to a church that treasures diversity of thought.

Theolog, the blog of Christian Century magazine, contains blog links covering a spectrum of responses.  Notre Dame professor Cathleen Kaveny wonders about Episcopalians who come over who might bring more liberal attitudes regarding contraception. 

Vox Nova, a Roman Catholic blog, offers a lengthy and thoughtful post that suggests:

It is helpful for a few, meaningless for most and pernicious for those (those in the Anglican communion specifically) who have to deal with the fallout.  Oh, and it has some very interesting, perhaps unintended, possibilities for the future of the Church.

The progressive Catholic group, Call to Action, will meet next week in Milwaukee for their annual convention.  It will be interesting to hear what comes out of the convention regarding this issue.

Swedish Lutheran Church will conduct same gender marriages #ELCA #CWA09 #Lutheran

During the debates at the ELCA 2009 Churchwide Assembly in August, the opponents of  LGBT friendly measures argued that such actions would jeopardize ELCA relationships with ecumenical partners.  True enough regarding the more conservative Missouri Synod (LCMS)  and the Roman Catholic Church, but the ELCA does not have full communion agreements with either of these bodies.  On the other hand, ELCA full communion partners (United Church of Christ, Episcopal Church, Presbyterian Church USA, Reformed Church of America, and the United Methodist Church) are pretty much in the same boat as the ELCA regarding LGBT issues.  The UCC and the Episcopalians allow gay clergy while the PCUSA and UMC are wrestling  with the issue.  In fact, some within the opposition would prefer the ELCA to make a sharp right turn toward the LCMS and Roman Catholicism and away from our communion partners.

Eva Brunne A parallel situation exists with worldwide Lutheran bodies.  While African Lutherans stand strongly against the ELCA actions, the European Lutheran allies appear to be of like mind; indeed, the Swedish Lutheran Church has moved faster than the ELCA.  Earlier this year, Eva Brunne, a lesbian pastor in an open same-gender relationship, was elected bishop of the Stockholm diocese.  About the same time, the Swedish government passed marriage equality legislation, and the Swedish Lutheran Church has quickly moved to allow gay marriage within the church, according to an Oct 22 press release from Lutherans Concerned / North America.

This morning the Board of the Lutheran Church of Sweden voted and announced that the church would conduct marriage ceremonies for same-gender couples, using gender-neutral liturgies for both LGBT and heterosexual weddings.

The vote of the board of the church was taken at its meeting this morning and is reported as 176-62, with 11 abstentions and 2 absences.

Thirty years ago, Sweden declared homosexuality was not a disease. The church has offered blessings for same-gender couples since 2007. In April, Sweden passed a law that granted marriage equality to all. That law went into effect in May.

Some in the Church of Sweden are of the opinion that marriage in the church ought to be reserved for man-woman unions, and argued for that position. Today’s vote ended that debate. The new ruling will go into effect on November 1, 2009.

UPDATE: The Lutheran Church of Germany has just elected its first female leader, thus adding further evidence that European Lutherans are pretty close to the ELCA in their thinking and internal politics.

The greatest generation: “What did we fight for?”

Dad and SueIt was Tom Brokaw, the retired nightly news anchor, who coined the term, The Greatest Generation, which was the title of his popular book about the Americans that grew up during the depression and fought valiantly in World War II “not for the fame and recognition, but because it was the right thing to do.”  The wars since then—Korea, Viet Nam, Iraq I, Iraq II, and Afghanistan—lack the moral clarity and consensus that existed back then. 

My dad served on a destroyer, the USS Caperton,  in the Pacific fleet that survived Kamikaze attacks and patrolled Tokyo harbor during the peace treaty ceremony aboard the USS Missouri.  He recently visited the WWII memorial in Washington D.C. in the company of my sister, Susan.  They were part of the “Honor Flight” program, which quotes Will Rogers, “We can’t all be heroes.  Some of us have to stand on the curb and clap as they go by.”

Thanks to Pam Spaulding’s blog, Pam’s House Blend, I post a video of another WWII hero from the Allied effort in Europe, and he asks the poignant question, “what do you think I fought for in Omaha Beach?”  Listen to his answer.

ELCA Youth Gathering in New Orleans: the Journey Continues #ELCA #Lutheran

For many in the ELCA, the biggest event last summer was the Youth Gathering in New Orleans and not the Churchwide Assembly in Minneapolis.  Here is a list of earlier blogposts about the 37,000 who gathered in Louisiana in July, 2009:

ELCA Youth Gathering in New Orleans July 25

ELCA Youth Gathering: the journey to New Orleans July 28

New Orleans Resident Thanks ELCA Youth July 31

The theme of the gathering was “Jesus, Justice, and Jazz.”  During the gathering, the youth raised over $150,000 toward world hunger relief, and that effort continues with the “JJJ Music Tour” featuring several of the musicians and the music that pulsated through the New Orleans Superdome.Lost and Found

The “JJJ Music Tour” is an extension of the challenge. It features the hip-hop sound of “Agape” (David Scherer), the singing voice of Rachel Kurtz, and “Lost and Found” — the musical comedy experience of George Baum and Michael Bridges.

A cheap date:

Those who attend the concerts are challenged to raise $20 each. Lutheran congregations, colleges, universities and seminaries are underwriting many of the expenses of the events, so “the money raised can go directly to ELCA World Hunger,” according to the tour’s Web site: http://www.ELCA.org/jjjtour

Coming soon to a venue near you:

  Remaining stops for the JJJ Music Tour:
+ Oct. 24 — Texas Lutheran University, Seguin, Texas
+ Oct. 25 — Lenoir-Rhyne University, Hickory, N.C.
+ Nov. 7 — Gustavus Adolphus College, St. Peter, Minn.
+ Nov. 8 — Concordia College, Moorhead, Minn.
+ Nov. 14 — Trinity Lutheran College, Everett, Wash.
+ Dec. 5 — St. Stephen Lutheran Church, Lexington, S.C.
+ Feb. 13-14 — Augustana College, Sioux Falls, S.D.

Bishop John Shelby Spong speaks

Retired Episcopal Bishop John Shelby Spong has been a popular author for a generation.  A review of his 1991 book, Rescuing the Bible from Fundamentalism, is posted here.  He has now published a personal Manifesto, which is posted on the blog of the Episcopal LGBT advocacy group, Integrity USA, and reprinted below:

Perhaps many of you are already subscribed to “A New Christianity For A New World: Bishop John Shelby Spong on the News and Christian Faith.” If so you received this note a few days ago, and perhaps shared it far and wide already. We hope that if you haven’t, maybe now you will. As you may know, Bishop Spong is one of the most vocal and passionate advocates of LGBT people everywhere. So when this article came across our inbox well, we knew we had to share it. We do so by permission of Waterfront Media, Brooklyn, NY, Website www.johnshelbyspong.com.

Thursday October 15, 2009

A Manifesto! The Time Has Come!

 

I have made a decision. I will no longer debate the issue of homosexuality in the church with anyone. I will no longer engage the biblical ignorance that emanates from so many right-wing Christians about how the Bible condemns homosexuality, as if that point of view still has any credibility. I will no longer discuss with them or listen to them tell me how homosexuality is “an abomination to God,” about how homosexuality is a “chosen lifestyle,” or about how through prayer and “spiritual counseling” homosexual persons can be “cured.” Those arguments are no longer worthy of my time or energy. I will no longer dignify by listening to the thoughts of those who advocate “reparative therapy,” as if homosexual persons are somehow broken and need to be repaired. I will no longer talk to those who believe that the unity of the church can or should be achieved by rejecting the presence of, or at least at the expense of, gay and lesbian people. I will no longer take the time to refute the unlearned and undocumentable claims of certain world religious leaders who call homosexuality “deviant.” I will no longer listen to that pious sentimentality that certain Christian leaders continue to employ, which suggests some version of that strange and overtly dishonest phrase that “we love the sinner but hate the sin.” That statement is, I have concluded, nothing more than a self-serving lie designed to cover the fact that these people hate homosexual persons and fear homosexuality itself, but somehow know that hatred is incompatible with the Christ they claim to profess, so they adopt this face-saving and absolutely false statement. I will no longer temper my understanding of truth in order to pretend that I have even a tiny smidgen of respect for the appalling negativity that continues to emanate from religious circles where the church has for centuries conveniently perfumed its ongoing prejudices against blacks, Jews, women and homosexual persons with what it assumes is “high-sounding, pious rhetoric.” The day for that mentality has quite simply come to an end for me. I will personally neither tolerate it nor listen to it any longer. The world has moved on, leaving these elements of the Christian Church that cannot adjust to new knowledge or a new consciousness lost in a sea of their own irrelevance. They no longer talk to anyone but themselves. I will no longer seek to slow down the witness to inclusiveness by pretending that there is some middle ground between prejudice and oppression. There isn’t. Justice postponed is justice denied. That can be a resting place no longer for anyone. An old civil rights song proclaimed that the only choice awaiting those who cannot adjust to a new understanding was to “Roll on over or we’ll roll on over you!” Time waits for no one.

I will particularly ignore those members of my own Episcopal Church who seek to break away from this body to form a “new church,” claiming that this new and bigoted instrument alone now represents the Anglican Communion. Such a new ecclesiastical body is designed to allow these pathetic human beings, who are so deeply locked into a world that no longer exists, to form a community in which they can continue to hate gay people, distort gay people with their hopeless rhetoric and to be part of a religious fellowship in which they can continue to feel justified in their homophobic prejudices for the rest of their tortured lives. Church unity can never be a virtue that is preserved by allowing injustice, oppression and psychological tyranny to go unchallenged.

In my personal life, I will no longer listen to televised debates conducted by “fair-minded” channels that seek to give “both sides” of this issue “equal time.” I am aware that these stations no longer give equal time to the advocates of treating women as if they are the property of men or to the advocates of reinstating either segregation or slavery, despite the fact that when these evil institutions were coming to an end the Bible was still being quoted frequently on each of these subjects. It is time for the media to announce that there are no longer two sides to the issue of full humanity for gay and lesbian people. There is no way that justice for homosexual people can be compromised any longer.

I will no longer act as if the Papal office is to be respected if the present occupant of that office is either not willing or not able to inform and educate himself on public issues on which he dares to speak with embarrassing ineptitude. I will no longer be respectful of the leadership of the Archbishop of Canterbury, who seems to believe that rude behavior, intolerance and even killing prejudice is somehow acceptable, so long as it comes from third-world religious leaders, who more than anything else reveal in themselves the price that colonial oppression has required of the minds and hearts of so many of our world’s population. I see no way that ignorance and truth can be placed side by side, nor do I believe that evil is somehow less evil if the Bible is quoted to justify it. I will dismiss as unworthy of any more of my attention the wild, false and uninformed opinions of such would-be religious leaders as Pat Robertson, James Dobson, Jerry Falwell, Jimmy Swaggart, Albert Mohler, and Robert Duncan. My country and my church have both already spent too much time, energy and money trying to accommodate these backward points of view when they are no longer even tolerable.

I make these statements because it is time to move on. The battle is over. The victory has been won. There is no reasonable doubt as to what the final outcome of this struggle will be. Homosexual people will be accepted as equal, full human beings, who have a legitimate claim on every right that both church and society have to offer any of us. Homosexual marriages will become legal, recognized by the state and pronounced holy by the church. “Don’t ask, don’t tell” will be dismantled as the policy of our armed forces. We will and we must learn that equality of citizenship is not something that should ever be submitted to a referendum. Equality under and before the law is a solemn promise conveyed to all our citizens in the Constitution itself. Can any of us imagine having a public referendum on whether slavery should continue, whether segregation should be dismantled, whether voting privileges should be offered to women? The time has come for politicians to stop hiding behind unjust laws that they themselves helped to enact, and to abandon that convenient shield of demanding a vote on the rights of full citizenship because they do not understand the difference between a constitutional democracy, which this nation has, and a “mobocracy,” which this nation rejected when it adopted its constitution. We do not put the civil rights of a minority to the vote of a plebiscite.

I will also no longer act as if I need a majority vote of some ecclesiastical body in order to bless, ordain, recognize and celebrate the lives and gifts of gay and lesbian people in the life of the church. No one should ever again be forced to submit the privilege of citizenship in this nation or membership in the Christian Church to the will of a majority vote.

The battle in both our culture and our church to rid our souls of this dying prejudice is finished. A new consciousness has arisen. A decision has quite clearly been made. Inequality for gay and lesbian people is no longer a debatable issue in either church or state. Therefore, I will from this moment on refuse to dignify the continued public expression of ignorant prejudice by engaging it. I do not tolerate racism or sexism any longer. From this moment on, I will no longer tolerate our culture’s various forms of homophobia. I do not care who it is who articulates these attitudes or who tries to make them sound holy with religious jargon.

I have been part of this debate for years, but things do get settled and this issue is now settled for me. I do not debate any longer with members of the “Flat Earth Society” either. I do not debate with people who think we should treat epilepsy by casting demons out of the epileptic person; I do not waste time engaging those medical opinions that suggest that bleeding the patient might release the infection. I do not converse with people who think that Hurricane Katrina hit New Orleans as punishment for the sin of being the birthplace of Ellen DeGeneres or that the terrorists hit the United Sates on 9/11 because we tolerated homosexual people, abortions, feminism or the American Civil Liberties Union. I am tired of being embarrassed by so much of my church’s participation in causes that are quite unworthy of the Christ I serve or the God whose mystery and wonder I appreciate more each day. Indeed I feel the Christian Church should not only apologize, but do public penance for the way we have treated people of color, women, adherents of other religions and those we designated heretics, as well as gay and lesbian people.

Life moves on. As the poet James Russell Lowell once put it more than a century ago: “New occasions teach new duties, Time makes ancient good uncouth.” I am ready now to claim the victory. I will from now on assume it and live into it. I am unwilling to argue about it or to discuss it as if there are two equally valid, competing positions any longer. The day for that mentality has simply gone forever.

This is my manifesto and my creed. I proclaim it today. I invite others to join me in this public declaration. I believe that such a public outpouring will help cleanse both the church and this nation of its own distorting past. It will restore integrity and honor to both church and state. It will signal that a new day has dawned and we are ready not just to embrace it, but also to rejoice in it and to celebrate it.

– John Shelby Spong