Re: Perception and acceptance.
by
catfishncod
06/28/2008, 11:17 AM #
And as another Episcopalian, I'd like to make the separation of experiences clear. I also do not approve completely of Ms. Quinn taking the sacrament solely to be closer to Tim -- but I do not wholly disapprove either, as by joining closer to Tim she draws closer to God. However, it's a terribly roundabout way to do so. If you were planning to drive from Chicago to Baltimore by way of Nashville, I'd take approximately the same attitude. Sure, you're not headed in the wrong direction, but there's a much better way to do it. However, I much prefer going to Nashville first to driving due west, or staying home. The Catholic attitude, in contrast, seems to be that if you don't take I-80 to Cleveland, then I-76 to Pittsburgh, then I-70 -- in that order and no stops -- then you'd best stay home and study the map some more.
artandsoul, you wrote: "It is possible to view [no Episcopals at Catholic altar rails] as an event to which one is not prepared to participate yet." That would be possible if you were willing to concede one of the two following principles:
1) That Catholic Communion is fundamentally different from Episcopal Communion, or,
2) That one or more of the Episcopal sacraments I have been consecrated by (baptism, confirmation, confession) are fundamentally inadequate.
I am not prepared to make those statements, myself. Perhaps you are. If the Catholic Church were honest about this exclusivity, I might not mind so much; but it also makes constant calls for ecumenism and greater Christian unity, while its actions all imply "we mean you should do exactly as we do and nothing else."
You wrote also: "Spirituality... [is not] about me judging others based on my own beliefs and behaviors." But can you not see that this is exactly what the Catholic priesthood does? They judge me according to their beliefs about the ordination of a priest they've never met. Can you not see why this is wrong?