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Sandy wrote:http://www.npr.org/2012/04/10/150351713/a-church-divided-ruling-ends-va-s-episcopal-battle
The Episcopal Church in America seems bent on destroying itself. It looks like it may dwindle down to just some clergy, though they will be wealthy, living off the assets of the church property they will get back. Too bad, they'll have some really nice buildings, but they'll sit empty.
Tim Bonney wrote:Sandy wrote:http://www.npr.org/2012/04/10/150351713/a-church-divided-ruling-ends-va-s-episcopal-battle
The Episcopal Church in America seems bent on destroying itself. It looks like it may dwindle down to just some clergy, though they will be wealthy, living off the assets of the church property they will get back. Too bad, they'll have some really nice buildings, but they'll sit empty.
Where do you get in that article that the loss of a few congregations is being "bent on destroying itself?" Or that the church is just dwindling down to clergy? Thanks for some Friday fundamentalist falderal Sandy.
Haruo wrote:I don't suppose it would have been possible for the Episcopalians to sublet to the Anglicans, so they could both stay in the space they love and helped buy.
I agree, Tim and Sandy, there's nothing in this article about The Episcopal Church committing suicide. Every denomination has undergone a degree of schism over the issue of gay ordinations. Sandy was editorializing.
Episcopal Bishop Jefferts Schori wrote:According to Jefferts Schori, the only people who can't buy the buildings are the Anglicans.
"I've had two principles throughout this," Jefferts Schori says. "One, that the church receive a reasonable approximation of fair market value for assets that are disposed of; and, second, that we not be in the business of setting up competitors that want to either destroy or replace the Episcopal Church."
David Virtue wrote:In an Oct. 22 blog entry, commentator David Virtue noted that if the U.S. branch of the Anglican Communion continues to lose active members at the present rate, then “in 26 years there will no longer be anyone attending an Episcopal church.”

Sandy wrote:what's happening. You can call it "fundamentalist falderal" if you want to, but it seems that conservative evangelicals and fundamentalists are far from being the only Christians who believe that homosexuality is a sin and that those who are openly involved are not qualified for leadership in the Christian church.
Haruo wrote:Unless the Episcopalians' gay ordinations began in the 1960s, Sandy, there must be another reason for the decline in membership (your initial linked article says the decline has been going on since 1959). And it could have to do with the religious culture (or lack of it) in the nation as a whole, which has also affected the SBC (or at least the white part of the SBC) in the form of declining baptism rates etc.
Tim Bonney wrote:Sandy wrote:what's happening. You can call it "fundamentalist falderal" if you want to, but it seems that conservative evangelicals and fundamentalists are far from being the only Christians who believe that homosexuality is a sin and that those who are openly involved are not qualified for leadership in the Christian church.
Sandy I guess you would be surprised that there are conservative Presbyterians, Methodists, and Episcopalians since you generally paint the mainline with such a broad brush of "liberalism."![]()
The truth is that mainline protestants have something no longer allowed in the SBC, it is called diversity. And yes each and every denomination is dealing with the issue of homosexuality and in each denomination it is the most conservative members who are upset. Is anyone surprised??
Haruo wrote:FWIW, not that Fremont is mainline, but attendance seems to be up significantly, and the growth is mostly college students.
Tim Bonney wrote:Haruo wrote:FWIW, not that Fremont is mainline, but attendance seems to be up significantly, and the growth is mostly college students.
Hauro, the ABC is considered one fo the "seven sisters" of the mainline. Ed is off by about 20 years. The term "mainline" was coined during the modernist/fundamentalist controversy of the 1920s so the term is almost 90 years old. There are other churches that are considered "mainline" depending on which list of churches you look at. But the seven that are always now included are the ABC, UMC, UCC, ECUSA, DoC, PCUSA, and ELCA. Some lists also include AME, AMEZ, and CME (all black Methodist bodies) as well as some Quaker, Moravians, MCC and a few others.
The SBC, the Missouri Synod Lutherans, the Churches of Christ, the PCA, and other conservative split offs of mainline denominations aren't listed as mainline.
Ed you don't have to like the list I didn't create it. I'm just using the terminology as has been used since before you or either one started ministry.
Tim Bonney wrote:Ed where did you get the idea that "mainline" has to do with membership numbers? Mainline means the original mainstream of the different Protestant faiths of which, primarily, fundamentalists chose to break from. It doesn't matter if some of the fundamentalists groups are now larger. That doesn't make them "mainline."
The Book by Andrew D. Walsh, "Religion, Economics, and Public Policy" published in 2000 is my source for the 1920s. The dictionary isn't always the best source for definitions or history of religious terms.
Tim Bonney wrote:Haruo wrote:Unless the Episcopalians' gay ordinations began in the 1960s, Sandy, there must be another reason for the decline in membership (your initial linked article says the decline has been going on since 1959). And it could have to do with the religious culture (or lack of it) in the nation as a whole, which has also affected the SBC (or at least the white part of the SBC) in the form of declining baptism rates etc.
Agreed Hauro. I also believe the decline in membership is probably much greater than many think in all established churches. The Baptists churches I served were seldom open to purging the roll of people who never attend. I see the same thing in Methodist churches. No one wants to remove someone from the roll if their Grandma still attends there even if they've not been to church since their baptism or confirmation.
This isn't a conservative/liberal issue. It is a cultural issue. People in increasing numbers are choosing not to be a part of an established church even if they consider themselves Christian/Religious/Spiritual.
Ed Pettibone wrote:
ED: The MACMILLIAN online dictionary defines mainline as...
Ed Pettibone wrote:
You use of the term is something akin to Southern Baptist who think they are the only Baptist. Or Methodist and Nazarenes who think their Manuasl of discipline is the only way to do church. And note, I am not saying you are one of that type of Methodist.
Haruo wrote:And here I thought "mainline" had to do with an approach to injecting drugs.
That is how it is defined in many online searches, which may have something to do with my aversion to the term.Tim Bonney wrote:So Sandy shall we base how we decid what is true on numbers now? If that is the case we all need to convert to Roman Catholicism because they are the biggest. Size has nothing to with truth. And in fact if you are truly prophetic you very well may lose church members.
I have a friend who nearly lost a pastorate during the 60s over his stand on equality of the races. He lost church members. I suppose he should have kept his mouth shut about racism to keep the numbers up?
Even if you disagree with the theological stance of the Episcopal Church you should respect their willingness to take a stand even when it costs them. That is the true measure of conviction on any issue, standing for what you believe to be true and not counting the cost. And it will cost the ECUSA. They'll lose a lot more money in offerings than they will get in keeping their property from being taken.
Sandy wrote:Tim Bonney wrote:So Sandy shall we base how we decid what is true on numbers now? If that is the case we all need to convert to Roman Catholicism because they are the biggest. Size has nothing to with truth. And in fact if you are truly prophetic you very well may lose church members.
I have a friend who nearly lost a pastorate during the 60s over his stand on equality of the races. He lost church members. I suppose he should have kept his mouth shut about racism to keep the numbers up?
Even if you disagree with the theological stance of the Episcopal Church you should respect their willingness to take a stand even when it costs them. That is the true measure of conviction on any issue, standing for what you believe to be true and not counting the cost. And it will cost the ECUSA. They'll lose a lot more money in offerings than they will get in keeping their property from being taken.
That's generally the direction these conversations take. In pointing out that the ECUSA is losing members at a rate that has accelerated as a result of the ordination of a gay bishop, and the stance of the church's hierarchical leadership in approving of this, we get into the "numbers deciding truth" argument. But that's subterfuge. It's not that numbers have determined the truth. The fact is, in a religious hierarchy, the attitude displayed by clergy is exactly what Bishop Jefferts Schori is demonstrating toward those who have left the church and joined the more conservative Anglican fellowship. Apparently, only the clergy are allowed to think for themselves and discern the Holy Spirit and the congregation must accept that and keep quiet. They are, after all, the only ones who have the educational credentials to be able to determine what the Bible's writers meant when they wrote, right?
I've heard for years now how the liberal end of American Christianity "celebrates diversity," and is the very epitome of tolerance and acceptance. Yet, rather than engage their congregations in helping discern whether some diversity is actually condoning and facilitating sin, instead of helping people deal with conviction and experience true repentance and forgiveness, the attitude is "accept the diversity and tolerance or don't let the door hit your rear on the way out!" If a significant number of people seem to be in disagreement, by conviction, with the pronouncements of the hierarchy, that should indicate there's a problem, and maybe the decision made by the clergy isn't consistent with what the people in the pews have discerned from the scripture. Unfortunately, that seems to be beyond the grasp of a lot of mainline Protestant leadership.
Thank you for that "chance" to comment on colors of the sky. 
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