"I am the door. By me if any man enter in he shall be saved, and shall go in and out and find pasture." - John 10:9 At every parish where I have had the pleasure of attending services, there is always a small group of people who find their way all the way up to the church building but don't actually attend services. At one parish it was a group of male gypsies who talked on cellphones or smoked cigarettes. At another it was a few Protestant husbands who, though they never attended services, opened the parish doors for people as they filed in. At yet another parish the men stood in the narthex and chatted until it was time to receive and then got in line. Latin or Greek Catholic, Eastern or Oriental Orthodox I see the same small throng of men standing next to the front door, but not standing, sitting, or kneeling amongst the people. If it were me (and I can only speak for myself here) this option would be an unsavory one. The boredom would be immediate. The anxiety of som...
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ReplyDeleteDear dmw,
DeleteI mean this with absulutely no ill-will or condescension, but that comment seems quite distasteful if not completely disrespectful to all our suffering fellow Christian's in the Middle East, who are experiencing terrible persecution.
Everyone on the right side of the table is certainly educated & experienced enough to recognize the core issue & they're all more than capable of respecting the diverse cultural & religious traditions of the people on the left side of the table.
This isn't a 7th grade classroom, so please refrain from making degrading comments.
My point, which I have deleted lest my irony be misunderstood, was precisely to say that those on the right are certainly NOT educated and experienced enough to recognize the core issue. Having heard the President's address and seeing the nonsense that came from Cruz, my point is that our hope for the Christian East against Islam surely cannot be found in the American political system.
DeleteEveryone on the right side of the table is certainly educated & experienced enough to recognize the core issue & they're all more than capable of respecting the diverse cultural & religious traditions of the people on the left side of the table.
ReplyDeleteI think you're giving them too much credit. These are people from the same cut of cloth as the British and French bureaucrats who drew lines on maps and wrote incoherent political charters for their friends and ignored everybody else.
What the people on the right are mainly concerned with is maintenance of the status quo. There are four countries struggling to be born where a rump Iraq and Syria currently exist and we in the US have no understanding of the place.
I do not know what to tell my Christian brothers in the region. This has been brewing for decades and can only end with bloodshed and the borders redrawn to reflect the ethnic and creedal facts on the ground. If anybody can think of something different I will be delighted to be proved wrong. Maybe a safe area can be carved out for Christians but that was actually the French intent for Lebanon as well. The Christians forgot to have kids and found it easier just to move to Europe and the Americas.
The President at least managed to meet with the Patriarchs and bishops in a respectful manner unlike the unfortunate behavior of the Texas senator.
ReplyDeleteIs it too late for Obama to do what Bush should have done?. Bush should have given the Assyrians their own state.
ReplyDeleteIsn't this what Turkey did to Cyprus?