Monday, February 11, 2013

Pope versus Archbishop of Canterbury. VirtueOnline - News.
The Contrast Is Great, But B-16 Is No Champion of Christian Orthodoxy

VirtueOnline - News:

Pope Benedict and Rowan Williams: A Study in Contrasts

COMMENTARY

By David W. Virtue DD
www.virtueonline.org
February 11, 2013

The resignation of two world religious figures - one the head of the Roman Catholic Church and the other the leader of the Anglican Communion -- highlights two very different men with two very different theologies, worldviews and visions of how the church universal ought to look in a rapidly evolving and changing world.

Pope Benedict XVI, a profoundly conservative figure whose papacy was overshadowed by clerical abuse scandals, has said that he will resign at the end of the month. The pope continued to say that due to his increased weakness accompanying advanced age - he is 85 - he feels that he is unable to carry out the duties of his office. He said he had come to the certainty "that my strengths, due to an advanced age, are no longer suited to an adequate exercise of the Petrine ministry." His surprise announcement caught everyone, except a few insiders, by surprise including American Catholic leaders who appeared stunned when they heard the news. Benedict was elected by fellow cardinals in 2005 after the death of John Paul II. He is reportedly the first pope to resign in six centuries. The code of canon law does allow for the resignation of a pope. In accordance with church tradition, a conclave of cardinals will be convened to select the next pope. Press reports say that the conclave will likely take place in mid-March.

By contrast, Dr. Rowan Williams Archbishop of Canterbury, a mere 61, announced his retirement in March 2012 to take effect at the end of the year, some nine years before mandated. He will take up an academic post as Master of Magdalene College. The normal retirement age for Church of England bishops is 70.

Not only does a quarter of a century separate the two men, but centuries of theology do as well. When he was Cardinal Josef Ratzinger, the head of the powerful Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, he was known as God's Rotweiller. He maintained that pose throughout his tenure as Pope asserting that Catholicism is "true" and other religions are "deficient;" reinforcing that Anglican orders were Apostolicae Curae, that is, invalid, based on an encyclical by Pope Leo XIII which claimed they were deficient of intention and form. He has also said that the modern, secular world, especially in Europe, is spiritually weak, calling for its re-evangelization and that Catholicism is in competition with Islam. He also strongly opposes homosexuality, ridding gay seminarians dubbed the "Pink mafia" from US seminaries. He also rejects the ordination of women priests and stem cell research. While Vatican II and the Jesuits ripped the heart out of the Roman Catholic Church, Ratzinger significantly restored it.

During a visit to Washington, Benedict addressed the sexual abuse of minors by clerics scandal that has rocked the U.S. Catholic church in recent decades. He said the abuse of minors by members of the clergy is "evil" and "immoral". It has to be eradicated in a broader attack on the degradation of modern-day sexuality.

Under Williams, an already divided Anglican Communion became even more divided. He proposed a Covenant to keep the communion together. It now lies in tatters. The long struggle to prevent a schism over women and gay bishops and same-sex unions has gone badly, making realignment of the Anglican Communion inevitable. His Affirming Catholicism failed to take hold in the communion. His speeches and sermons, couched in riddles and convoluted language structures, is in direct contrast to the Pope who speaks straightforwardly and clearly in English, which is his third or fourth language. In truth, the less understandable Williams's utterances became, the more frustrated orthodox Anglicans became.

The 72-million-strong worldwide Communion has been threatened with division for several years. Progressives, liberals and revisionists are pushing the boundaries on sexuality and women bishops, while conservatives are pushing back and forming new alliances. Williams's book, The Body's Grace, only cemented orthodox Anglicans views that he is truthfully on the "other side" on sexuality issues and has never fully embraced the Biblical prohibitions on sex outside of marriage between a man and a woman.

In truth, his prevarication and failure to safeguard his Anglo-Catholic wing resulted in the Pope offering a safe harbor of an Ordinariate for traditionalists who could no longer stomach the theological innovations of the Church of England and, more specifically, the Episcopal Church. Ironically, a former Episcopal bishop was selected to lead the worldwide movement for Anglicans wishing to become Roman while retaining some of their liturgical traditions.

When Williams announced his retirement, reviews were mixed across the Anglican Communion. Liberal bishops and archbishops praised Williams' tenure. Nearly all conceded that he has been a leader at a difficult time in the Communion's history. Broad church Anglicans reflected on the difficulty of his leadership, liberals in the US blasted him for not being liberal enough on sexuality issues while Global South archbishops took him to task for not exercising leadership. His lack of clarity on sexuality issues and not bringing western pan Anglican liberal leaders like Katharine Jefferts Schori to heel -- over her less than orthodox views on the Deity of Christ, homosexuality and what she euphemistically called "God's mission" which excluded any talk of The Great Commission to save souls - has been particularly troubling to the Global South. 

One African Anglican leader hammered Williams' leadership.

In a blistering attack, not seen in modern memory, the Metropolitan and Primate of the Anglican Province of Nigeria ripped the Archbishop of Canterbury saying his sudden resignation announcement will leave behind a Communion in tatters, with highly polarized, bitterly factionalized, issues of revisionist interpretation of the Holy Scriptures, and human sexuality as stumbling blocks to oneness.

Archbishop Nicholas D. Okoh noted that when Dr. Rowan Williams took over the leadership of the Anglican Communion in 2002, it was a happy family. He is leaving it with decisions and actions that are stumbling blocks to oneness, evangelism and mission all around the Anglican world. Okoh went so far as to say that it was like being "crucified under Pontius Pilate".

The leader of the world's most populace Anglican Province - over 20 million - said the lowest ebb of this degeneration came in 2008, when there were two "Lambeth" Conferences -- one in the UK, and an alternative one, GAFCON in Jerusalem -- that saw more than one third of the Anglican Communion's bishops as "no-shows" at Canterbury. The trend continued recently when many Global South Primates decided not to attend the last Primates' meeting in Dublin, Ireland.

The Nigerian archbishop said that because Williams did not resign in 2008 over the split Lambeth Conference, he should have worked assiduously to "mend the net" or repair the breach, before bowing out of office. Okoh also blasted the covenant proposal saying it was "doomed to fail from the start", as "two cannot walk together unless they have agreed".

Okoh concluded his rip by saying that the announcement did not present any opportunity for excitement. "It is not good news here, until whoever comes as the next leader pulls back the Communion from the edge of total destruction."

No such words will be uttered by an African Catholic prelate about Pope Benedict. He took a consistently hard line, never wavering on theology, ecclesiology or Culture War issues like abortion and contraception saying the West had capitulated to the "culture of death". 

"In our times, we need to say 'no' to the largely dominant culture of death. We say 'no' to this culture to cultivate a culture of life." Pope Benedict urged people to rediscover their faith. Pope Benedict denounced what he called the anti-culture of the modern world, comparing it to the decadence of the ancient Roman Empire. "[There is] an anti-culture demonstrated by the flight to drugs, by the flight from reality, by illusions, by false happiness...displayed in sexuality which has become pure pleasure devoid of responsibility."

No such exhortations were ever uttered by Dr. Williams. His words, sermons and exhortations invited reflection, but there were never condemnations of sin or calls to repentance and faith. He toyed with the Bible like a high wire tight rope walker, making it mean whatever he wanted it to mean in the cultural moment. The Pope's resignation is a sign of his humility (leaving before he dies); Williams's departure is a sign of his failure to hold the communion together and to stay in the job for another nine years, which would have been hell for him, a hell he did not want or need. Better let someone else take it over and go down with it. Williams's total failure to heal the deep divisions within the Anglican Communion will be his legacy.

It is not without its significance that the Church of England has chosen an out and out Evangelical in the school of archbishops like George Carey and Donald Coggan to lead it, making Archbishop Justin Welby, at least for the moment, a darling of the Global South. Time will tell if he can reign in the liberal West and still retain their admiration. What is needed now, wrote Rod Thomas chairman of Reform, "is someone who will hold firm to Biblical truth in areas such as human sexuality in order to promote the gospel and unite the church in the face of militant secularism." 

Whereas the Pope railed against post-modernism, atheism and secularism, Williams said little or nothing, instead praising the need for social networks, more good works and for a sense of community while blasting multi-national corporations for their rapacious greed and more. In a culture wars spat over the wearing of a cross by a BA employee, Williams called the cross a "religious decoration", a "substitute for faith" mocking the need to wear it. The British Press said he simply helped secularists. Whose side is he on, they asked?

Homosexuals and secularists railed against the Pope out of their own fears revealing in truth their fear of monolithic Catholicism. They fear him because he adheres so strongly to traditional Christian teaching and champions principles they abhor. The same group did not vent their spite and vitriol on the Archbishop of Canterbury because Williams has been so cowed by the forces of secularism that he no longer poses any threat to their bleak vision, noted one British commentator.

T. E. Hulme famously said, "An institution is only finally overthrown when it has taken into itself the ideas of its opponents." This seems to me to be a good description of the response of the Church of England to the pernicious assaults of militant secularism. The Church has been thoroughly penetrated by the mindset of its enemies, said one British blogger.

What better time to preach the Good News than when there is a sense of defeatism in the face of the incoming tide of secularism as congregations dwindled and parish churches closed? Williams lost that moment. The question future historians will ask is: did he ever have it?

The Roman Catholic Church now faces something of a crisis. Will it elect a clone of Pope Benedict XVI or someone more moderate? The question for the Anglican Communion will be if Archbishop Welby is up to the job of breathing new evangelical life into a moribund Church, and maintaining the respect and support of the Global South while confronting Western pan Anglican liberals like Jefferts Schori and Fred Hiltz with their apostasies and heresies. Only time will tell.

END

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BBC News - Pope Benedict XVI to resign citing poor health

Nudge. Nudge. "The Catholic-Lutheran talks aren't that bad!"


BBC News - Pope Benedict XVI to resign citing poor health:


Pope Benedict XVI announces his resignation in a surprise statement


Pope Benedict XVI is to resign at the end of this month after nearly eight years as the head of the Catholic Church, saying he is too old to continue at the age of 85.
The unexpected development - the first papal resignation in nearly 600 years - surprised governments, Vatican-watchers and even his closest aides.
The Vatican says it expects a new Pope to be elected before Easter.
Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger became Pope in 2005 after John Paul II's death.

Pope Benedict XVI

  • At 78, one of the oldest new popes in history when elected in 2005
  • Born in Germany in 1927, joined Hitler Youth during WWII and was conscripted as an anti-aircraft gunner but deserted
  • As Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger spent 24 years in charge of Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith - once known as the Holy Office of the Inquisition
  • A theological conservative, with uncompromising views on homosexuality and women priests
The BBC's David Willey in Rome says the move has come as a shock - but adds that in theory there has never been anything stopping Pope Benedict or any of his predecessors from stepping aside.
Under the Catholic Church's governing code, Canon Law, the only conditions for the validity of such a resignation are that it be made freely and be properly published.
But resignation is extremely rare: the last Pope to step aside was Pope Gregory XII, who resigned in 1415 amid a schism within the Church.
Doctor's advice
A Vatican spokesman, Father Federico Lombardi, said that even Pope Benedict's closest aides did not know what he was planning to do and were left "incredulous". He added that the decision showed "great courage" and "determination".
Italian Prime Minister Mario Monti is quoted as saying he was "greatly shaken by this unexpected news".

At the scene

The Pope's elder brother Georg and his private secretary, Archbishop Georg Gaenswein, were probably the only people to know in advance about Joseph Ratzinger's long-pondered decision to step down from the papacy. Even the Vatican's official spokesman admitted he had been taken by surprise.
But the signs were there for anyone to read. For the first time in decades no papal travel plans had been announced for 2013. Visitors to the Vatican had noticed his weakened voice. He sometimes uses a cane to walk, and has cut back of all his public engagements. The 2013 Easter vigil mass, perhaps the most important liturgy of the year, usually celebrated at midnight, had been scheduled for early evening this year, to allow the Pope to retire well before midnight.
But by Easter 2013 the Roman Catholic Church should have a new spiritual leader - and his identity is sure to be another surprise.
The brother of the German-born Pope said the pontiff had been advised by his doctor not to take any more transatlantic trips and had been considering stepping down for months.
Talking from his home in Regensburg in Germany, Georg Ratzinger said his brother was having increasing difficulty walking and that his resignation was part of a "natural process".
He added: "His age is weighing on him. At this age my brother wants more rest."
The Pope is not expected to take part in the conclave that will choose his successor, and will then retire to the papal residence at Castel Gandolfo when he leaves office.
Father Lombardi said the Pope would then move into a renovated monastery used by cloistered nuns inside the Vatican, for "a period of prayer and reflection".
'Full freedom'
At 78, Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger was one of the oldest new popes in history when elected.
He took the helm as one of the fiercest storms the Catholic Church has faced in decades - the scandal of child sex abuse by priests - was breaking.
In a statement, the pontiff said: "After having repeatedly examined my conscience before God, I have come to the certainty that my strengths, due to an advanced age, are no longer suited to an adequate exercise of the Petrine ministry.

Damian Thompson, former editor of the Catholic Herald, says the Pope has made a "brave move"
"I am well aware that this ministry, due to its essential spiritual nature, must be carried out not only with words and deeds, but no less with prayer and suffering.
"However, in today's world, subject to so many rapid changes and shaken by questions of deep relevance for the life of faith, in order to steer the ship of Saint Peter and proclaim the Gospel, both strength of mind and body are necessary, strength which in the last few months, has deteriorated in me to the extent that I have had to recognise my incapacity to adequately fulfil the ministry entrusted to me.
"For this reason, and well aware of the seriousness of this act, with full freedom I declare that I renounce the ministry of Bishop of Rome, Successor of Saint Peter, entrusted to me by the cardinals on 19 April 2005, in such a way, that as from 28 February 2013, at 20:00 hours, the See of Rome, the See of Saint Peter, will be vacant and a conclave to elect the new Supreme Pontiff will have to be convoked by those whose competence it is."
A theological conservative before and during his time as Pope, he has taken traditional positions on homosexuality and women priests, while urging abstinence instead of blessing the use of contraceptives.

European press roundup

The Pope's shock resignation on health grounds is an "eruption of modernity" into the Vatican, according to Ezio Mauro, chief editor of Italy's La Repubblica daily.
The Spanish daily El Mundo says Benedict XVI will be remembered as "God's sweeper" - the man who tried to resolve the "numerous problems of the Church that did so much harm to its image".
The editor of German broadcaster Deutsche Welle, Bernd Riegert, calls the Pope's move "a courageous step, a revolutionary step". "He has helped himself to freedom, he is setting boundaries. No longer will successors be able to cling onto their office."
His attempts at inter-faith relations were mixed, with Muslims, Jews and Protestants all taking offence at various times, despite ongoing efforts to reach out and visits to key holy sites, including those in Jerusalem.
A German government spokesman said he was "moved and touched" by the surprise resignation of the pontiff.
"The German government has the highest respect for the Holy Father, for what he has done, for his contributions over the course of his life to the Catholic Church.
"He has left a very personal signature as a thinker at the head of the Church, and also as a shepherd."


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The cleric on the right is his snooze alarm guy.
See the photo above.

Organ Transplants and Church Music

The pipe organ at St. John Lutheran Church in Milwaukee
should be played 16 hours a day -
it is a musical treasure.

This week a Missouri Synod church got rid of their custom-made pipe organ, cheap, to make way for their praise band and coffee bar.

Some Evangelicals were overhead saying, "We don't need another pipe organ donated here. They are so last century."

One of the Bethany members asked, "Why do you use The Lutheran Hymnal?"

The short answer is - "It is the best one. Do you agree?"

She did.

Harrison's Campaign and Damage Control Team at Work
Steadfast Lutherans » What a Week!

Steadfast Lutherans » What a Week!:


What a Week!

February 10th, 2013Post by 
Untitled
This is a play on DP Benke's "It's OK to pray."
Wilken and McCain ran the campaign to replace
the unionist Kieschnick with the unionist Harrison.
What have we learned?
1) We have learned that the world hates us, and is just waiting for a reason to unload on us. We can’t change that. It’s not a PR issue; it’s a Confession issue. A church that confesses Christ Alone will be hated and reviled by the world. That’s what we saw last week.
2) We have learned that some in the LCMS were waiting to unload too. They took their opportunity last week, jumped on the bandwagon with both feet, and joined in the world’s chorus of condemnation.
3) We have learned that time does not heal all wounds; it makes some worse. The LCMS put a dirty bureaucratic bandaid on inter-religious prayer 10 years ago. That did nothing but cause an infection. It’s time to stop following the prescription of public opinion, and seek the remedy of God’s Word.
4) Finally, we learned that Pastor Harrison is willing to do something previous synodical leaders have been unwilling to do for a decade: Repent.
Many of us were a little stunned to hear a synodical president say he’s sorry. He didn’t circle the wagons. He responded like a churchman, not a company man. I had come to believe that the LCMS was institutionally incapable of admitting to any kind of mistake. Pastor Harrison proved me wrong. I’m glad he did.
While the Lutheran Left complained about the LCMS’s failure to be a “witness” in the world over the last week, Pastor Harrison actually made that witness to Christ’s forgiveness of sinsby admitting that he needs it himself.
But, don’t expect to read about that in the New York Times.


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LPC has left a new comment on your post "Harrison's Campaign and Damage Control Team at Wor...":

The PR machine kick started into motion, we can say that again.

I remember Rev. Dr. Harrison making a speech (testimony?) in front of some congressional body a few years back - the speech was all about "we" - the LC-MS.

LPC