Patrick Stewart talks about his personal experience of domestic violence at the launch of 'Created Equal', a new book on women's rights.
h/t to Simple Massing Priest
Saturday, April 24, 2010
Tuesday, April 20, 2010
How do you say Eyjafjallajokull
How do you pronounce the name of the volcano causing all the travel trouble? An Icelandic singer helps:
Eyjafjallajokull - pronounced ay-uh-fyat-luh-yoe-kuutl-ul
Eyjafjallajokull - pronounced ay-uh-fyat-luh-yoe-kuutl-ul
Wednesday, April 14, 2010
Sexual abuse, exploitation and harassment in The Episcopal Church
From Episcopal Café:
and a brave Catholic priest - I hope for voices like this in all churches:
Andrew Sullivan, writing on The Atlantic's Web site, has been praising the Episcopal Church for its actions on priests who commit sexual abuse, exploitation and harassment. In the comments on his column stories of quick action following the reporting of abuse have appeared. It is good to hear that our system is working for some people who have suffered at the hands of priests and bishops. I wish it had always been the case, but we have our own history of the abuse of power, secrecy, and denial. It was not until the ’70s and ’80s that these abuses were finally addressed by the Church and the General Convention began work on revising the canons and to encourage dioceses to provide procedures and training.
Women clergy began to hear the stories of child and youth sexual abuse by clergy in the late '70s and early '80s. Women had only been ordained since 1974. A few women across the denomination met to compare notes. In the meantime, lawsuits were beginning to emerge when the church would not respond to the suffering. The insurance companies were getting worried about providing liability insurance when churches knew about abuse and passed a priest on to another place. While I was serving on the Executive Council from 1985-91, Ellen Cooke, Treasurer of the denomination, reported to the Presiding Bishop and the Council that something needed to be done both for pastoral and fiduciary reasons.
General Convention began to act. In 1985, a resolution passed to request dioceses to conduct workshops on recognizing child sexual abuse. In 1991, a Committee on Sexual Exploitation was established. During this period several women clergy and some attorneys who had been providing legal counsel for abuse victims/survivors developed training for bishops and other leaders to teach the church about the issue and how to deal with perpetrators and victims/survivors. It was clear that TEC did not have canons or procedures to guide this work, so several of us proposed a resolution for the next General Convention.
The bishops did not think the time was right for this action but we pressed ahead. The women of the Episcopal Church – Episcopal Women’s Caucus, Episcopal Church Women, Daughters of the King, and others – mobilized to lobby both Houses and to talk to their bishops about the importance of immediate action by the church. Abuse victims/survivors came to testify, often the first time they had told their stories in public. 1997 saw a number of resolutions including the revision of Title IV (disciplinary canons) passed. (The history of resolutions is here.) The Bishop’s Pastoral Office led by the Rt. Rev. Harold (Hoppy) Hopkins was a key supporter of funding, education, developing training and facing the issues of abuses and exploitation.
In 2009 another revision of the Title IV canons was passed to set up a procedure that is more like the professional standards of conduct in other professions. The original revisions were based on the Military Code of Justice that while providing a way to deal with abuse and exploitation had proved very difficult to use.
Since the days of these early cases the work to stop abuse in the Episcopal Church has had a mixed record. In my work as a member of committees proposing and acting on guidelines for action and as a advocate for those who have suffered abuse and exploitation, I see the Episcopal Church is currently doing much better work but with areas that are still lacking.
Stopping child sexual abuse has the greatest success. Safeguarding God’s Children training is required of all clergy and all lay leaders especially anyone in the church working with children and youth. Congregations and parents are more aware of how to spot abuse and who to contact if it occurs. Church schools are vigilant about contact with children, requiring 2 adults present, windows in all offices, locking spaces where abuse might occur, and doing background checks on all employees and volunteers. Many dioceses are using online self-guided training and awareness programs which have increased participation 10 to 100 fold over the face to face training. We know that perpetrators will not stop abuse from taking training but the community can become vigilant and prevent incidents. Compliance is left to the dioceses to enforce but most have strict guidelines.
Exploitation of vulnerable adults and harassment has a more mixed success rate. Much depends on the local diocese and requirements for response and discipline. Although the canons are in place, it is often a hard road to get the canons enforced. Rather than viewing events as abuse of power, they are confused with “affairs” or the victim is blamed for the occurrence. Egregious, multiple offenses are usually dealt with eventually but justice is slow to be found for these abuses. Most professions realize that the person in power has the responsibility in any relationship – regardless of actions. The church is beginning to understand this. The discipline of bishops is the least successful area in the church.
The new revisions of the canons hold out the possibility that the procedures will be more available and easier to use with offending priests and deacons in dioceses. The canons have more options before taking the case to court. Child abuse, of course, must be reported to the police or county authorities by civil law. Training in adult exploitation and harassment is now available for congregations and dioceses. The Episcopal Church has learned that a church that faces abuse and exploitation promptly and with justice, restoration, and reconciliation can be a healthier safer place for all.
and a brave Catholic priest - I hope for voices like this in all churches:
Monday, April 12, 2010
Winning the Masters
I have all sorts of issues with Augusta and their leadership but the scene was grand:
Saturday, April 10, 2010
2 Easter
Readings are here.
Thomas is mentioned twice in the Gospel of John. In the passage we read for today and in John 11:16. In the earlier appearance, Thomas is a man of action. Jesus' disciples think they should all stay away from Jerusalem and not go to see about Lazurus death because they are afraid of being killed. When Jesus says he is going anyway, Thomas says " "Let us also go, that we might die with him." It is clear that Thomas is brave and loyal to Jesus.
Thomas is also the patron saint of builders and architects. He is believed to have traveled to India and was the founder of the Mar Thoma church. It is these traditions that make me think he was a man of action and a practical man. Designing and building take knowledge. One cannot just put anything up and hope it will hang together. A builder has to know how things interact and how to make things stable and lasting. When we had our next house remodeled - it was discovered that the person or persons who had owned it before had built it with bits and pieces he had salvaged from the beach -- odd sheets of plywood salvaged off the beach, pieced together, police barricade boards tying the roof beams together. If we were to live in for the future - it had to be taken apart and rebuilt -- the contractor took out everything except the underfloor and the roof. Now the rooms work together instead of being a series of rabbit warrens - and the house is sturdy in the storms of the coast. Our builder knew what was needed. That is how I see Thomas. A person with the practical skills and the knowledge to put it all together.
Thomas in the passage we have today wants proof. His practical, action oriented personality cannot believe that which he has not seen, even though all his friends say they saw it. When Jesus appears Thomas does not really need to put his hand on the wounds - he is stunned and believes saying "My Lord and My God" - taking the story to a whole new level - this is "God" in their presence.
I think we need Thomases in our time. People who do not get swept up in the latest fad or alarmist news story. People who take time to check the facts. To see for themselves. Who do not take something as true just because "everyone" says it is or acts like it is. Thomas is not a doubter or unbeliever in the long run - he is a person who says "hold on" "wait a minute" "let's check this out." He does not refuse to believe but wants more information.
The wonderful thing about God is that we are met wherever we are on our journey in faith. God speaks to everyone regardless - the mystic who is seeking God in meditation and prayer, the Thomas who needs more proof, the unbelieving who live in faith nevertheless, those who are just born with an innate sense of belief, those who follow an ethical compassionate life regardless of belief systems. God is open to all. Jesus says in this reading "Blessed are those who have not seen and yet have come to believe." It is an easier path - but not the only one. Thomas demands to see the nail wounds and Jesus obliges him.
Psalm 150
1 Hallelujah!
Praise God in his holy temple; *
praise him in the firmament of his power.
2 Praise him for his mighty acts; *
praise him for his excellent greatness.
3 Praise him with the blast of the ram's-horn; *
praise him with lyre and harp.
4 Praise him with timbrel and dance; *
praise him with strings and pipe.
5 Praise him with resounding cymbals; *
praise him with loud-clanging cymbals.
6 Let everything that has breath *
praise the LORD.
¡Hallelujah!
Thomas is mentioned twice in the Gospel of John. In the passage we read for today and in John 11:16. In the earlier appearance, Thomas is a man of action. Jesus' disciples think they should all stay away from Jerusalem and not go to see about Lazurus death because they are afraid of being killed. When Jesus says he is going anyway, Thomas says " "Let us also go, that we might die with him." It is clear that Thomas is brave and loyal to Jesus.
Thomas is also the patron saint of builders and architects. He is believed to have traveled to India and was the founder of the Mar Thoma church. It is these traditions that make me think he was a man of action and a practical man. Designing and building take knowledge. One cannot just put anything up and hope it will hang together. A builder has to know how things interact and how to make things stable and lasting. When we had our next house remodeled - it was discovered that the person or persons who had owned it before had built it with bits and pieces he had salvaged from the beach -- odd sheets of plywood salvaged off the beach, pieced together, police barricade boards tying the roof beams together. If we were to live in for the future - it had to be taken apart and rebuilt -- the contractor took out everything except the underfloor and the roof. Now the rooms work together instead of being a series of rabbit warrens - and the house is sturdy in the storms of the coast. Our builder knew what was needed. That is how I see Thomas. A person with the practical skills and the knowledge to put it all together.
Thomas in the passage we have today wants proof. His practical, action oriented personality cannot believe that which he has not seen, even though all his friends say they saw it. When Jesus appears Thomas does not really need to put his hand on the wounds - he is stunned and believes saying "My Lord and My God" - taking the story to a whole new level - this is "God" in their presence.
I think we need Thomases in our time. People who do not get swept up in the latest fad or alarmist news story. People who take time to check the facts. To see for themselves. Who do not take something as true just because "everyone" says it is or acts like it is. Thomas is not a doubter or unbeliever in the long run - he is a person who says "hold on" "wait a minute" "let's check this out." He does not refuse to believe but wants more information.
The wonderful thing about God is that we are met wherever we are on our journey in faith. God speaks to everyone regardless - the mystic who is seeking God in meditation and prayer, the Thomas who needs more proof, the unbelieving who live in faith nevertheless, those who are just born with an innate sense of belief, those who follow an ethical compassionate life regardless of belief systems. God is open to all. Jesus says in this reading "Blessed are those who have not seen and yet have come to believe." It is an easier path - but not the only one. Thomas demands to see the nail wounds and Jesus obliges him.
Psalm 150
1 Hallelujah!
Praise God in his holy temple; *
praise him in the firmament of his power.
2 Praise him for his mighty acts; *
praise him for his excellent greatness.
3 Praise him with the blast of the ram's-horn; *
praise him with lyre and harp.
4 Praise him with timbrel and dance; *
praise him with strings and pipe.
5 Praise him with resounding cymbals; *
praise him with loud-clanging cymbals.
6 Let everything that has breath *
praise the LORD.
¡Hallelujah!
Saturday, April 03, 2010
Easter 2010

Readings for Easter Sunday are here
Thoughts toward a sermon:
The thing I notice about the Easter readings this year is how all are so resistant to seeing the Risen Christ. Resurrection seems to be impossible so they cannot see it. New life, when we are used to the same old same old, is invisible to us. Peter in the has to be awakened by his dream to see the new thing God is doing. He is so entrenched in his belief system that only the horror of God asking him to eat the repulsive unclean food can shock him into awareness.
Peter and the beloved disciple return to their homes after seeing the empty tomb. Their eyes are closed to any other idea than what they always knew. The tomb is empty - reason tells them - some one took the body - probably the terrifying power of Pontius Pilate's soldiers. Pilate had such a terrible reputation in those days that even Rome finally removed him from office. Go home and lock the doors lest this happen to us too.
Mary Magdalene, who knows the healing power of Jesus in her life - the freeing of her from her seven demons, does not want to leave the site where she last saw Jesus body. Lingering in the garden (In the Garden - is Magdalene's song), she encounters a person she believes is the gardener. Echoes of Adam and Eve in the garden remind us of the time when we lived in wholeness and right relationship with God, walking easily with all creation. God was the gardener there and here beside the empty tomb God in Christ appears as gardener. Magdalene cannot see this at first, her preconceptions and grief blind her to the resurrection standing before her.
These stories are our stories. The needs of daily life, the sorrows, the demands can shut down our senses to God appearing all around us. Life paves over us like the asphalt paves over the the earth. We can get in the habit of going through the motions of life and not really living in the fullness to which God calls us.
A few weeks ago I read about children in Haiti who make kites out of plastic bags. You know those bags - you see them hanging on the barb wire fences wherever the wind has blown them. I don't know about you but I see them as trash, an eyesore and I think - why don't people dispose of them properly. And it is true they are bad for wildlife and form great rafts of trash in our oceans. But in the midst of all the tragedy of Haiti - the children see a kite -- a toy that helps they soar in the sky when all around them is death. They take a few sticks and the flatten the bags for the kite then they tie the other bags together to make the string - and out of nothing - joy.
A favorite poem of mine is Manifesto: The Mad Farmer's Liberation Front by Wendell Berry. The last line is Practice Resurrection! And I believe that is a good idea. When we are children we are alive to life - have you ever walked with a small child. No point in trying to get where you are going - they see everything with the new eyes of a child. The least little stone is a delight and something to be explored. Every step you take with them is all new when seen with their eyes. Things you never noticed in walking that same old path is alive with newness.
So today as we go out to "rejoice in the power of the Spirit" let us also "rejoice in the power of the Resurrection" -- allow God to open our eyes to the places of resurrection - new life - that are all around us.
Manifesto:
The Mad Farmer Liberation Front
by Wendell Berry
Love the quick profit, the annual raise,
vacation with pay. Want more
of everything ready-made. Be afraid
to know your neighbors and to die.
And you will have a window in your head.
Not even your future will be a mystery
any more. Your mind will be punched in a card
and shut away in a little drawer.
When they want you to buy something
they will call you. When they want you
to die for profit they will let you know.
So, friends, every day do something
that won't compute. Love the Lord.
Love the world. Work for nothing.
Take all that you have and be poor.
Love someone who does not deserve it.
Denounce the government and embrace
the flag. Hope to live in that free
republic for which it stands.
Give your approval to all you cannot
understand. Praise ignorance, for what man
has not encountered he has not destroyed.
Ask the questions that have no answers.
Invest in the millennium. Plant sequoias.
Say that your main crop is the forest
that you did not plant,
that you will not live to harvest.
Say that the leaves are harvested
when they have rotted into the mold.
Call that profit. Prophesy such returns.
Put your faith in the two inches of humus
that will build under the trees
every thousand years.
Listen to carrion - put your ear
close, and hear the faint chattering
of the songs that are to come.
Expect the end of the world. Laugh.
Laughter is immeasurable. Be joyful
though you have considered all the facts.
So long as women do not go cheap
for power, please women more than men.
Ask yourself: Will this satisfy
a woman satisfied to bear a child?
Will this disturb the sleep
of a woman near to giving birth?
Go with your love to the fields.
Lie down in the shade. Rest your head
in her lap. Swear allegiance
to what is nighest your thoughts.
As soon as the generals and the politicos
can predict the motions of your mind,
lose it. Leave it as a sign
to mark the false trail, the way
you didn't go. Be like the fox
who makes more tracks than necessary,
some in the wrong direction.
Practice resurrection.
Manifesto: The Mad Farmer Liberation Front" from The Country of Marriage, copyright © 1973 by Wendell Berry
PS - today as I pulled up the blog to add to it - I noticed that I had comment moderation on and there were all these unmoderated notes. What a joy to read them and discover more thoughts added to mine, thoughts that stretched back to last fall attached to things I had forgotten I had even said. It is an example of how closed up I can become - not even seeing resurrection that is right here, now.
Thursday, April 01, 2010
My Episcopal Church
I love the scene where ++Katharine is escorted into the House of Deputies following her election as Presiding Bishop:
Wednesday, March 24, 2010
Wednesday, March 17, 2010
Tuesday, March 02, 2010
Wednesday, February 17, 2010
Ash Wednesday
From Trinity Cathedral in Phoenix, AZ:
and from Episcopal Cafe:
Let us show forth the holiness of our creator, with our ashes, so people will know that we are a holy people - committed to God and followers of Jesus Christ. How might we do this? I suggest we move beyond chocolate to declare our own fast and feast ---
and from Episcopal Cafe:
Let us show forth the holiness of our creator, with our ashes, so people will know that we are a holy people - committed to God and followers of Jesus Christ. How might we do this? I suggest we move beyond chocolate to declare our own fast and feast ---
Fast from judgment, Feast on compassion
Fast from greed, Feast on sharing
Fast from scarcity, Feast on abundance
Fast from fear, Feast on peace
Fast from lies, Feast on truth
Fast from gossip, Feast on praise
Fast from anxiety, Feast on patience
Fast from evil, Feast on kindness
Fast from apathy, Feast on engagement
Fast from discontent, Feast on gratitude
Fast from noise, Feast on silence
Fast from discouragement, Feast on hope
Fast from hatred, Feast on love
What will be your fast? What will be your feast?
Monday, January 18, 2010
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