Monday, November 27, 2006

Pagan Episcopalians

By Rick Pearcey

* Earth Mama -- Be Unfruitful and Do Not Multiply: "New Episcopal Church Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori recently told the New York Times that her fellow Episcopalians are proudly not procreating so as to spare the environment," writes Mark Tooley in the American Spectator.

"The Presiding Bishop was asked how many Episcopalians there are in the U.S. 'About 2.2 million,' Schori responded. 'It used to be larger percentage-wise, but Episcopalians tend to be better-educated and tend to reproduce at lower rates than some other denominations.'

"...'Aren't Episcopalians interested in replenishing their ranks by having children?' the New York Times asked.

" 'No,' Schori replied. 'It's probably the opposite. We encourage people to pay attention to the stewardship of the Earth and not use more than their portion.'

"True to Schori's boast, the Episcopalians have done magnificently in reducing their numbers and, purportedly, sparing the Earth the ravages of an enlarged Episcopalian presence." HT: WTimes

* Apostate Mama -- Help Thou My Unbelief: Author and thinker Os Guinness says Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori of the Episcopal Church is "not an orthodox believer."

"By that he means that she doesn't accept the Christian creeds and historical teachings about Jesus Christ, personal salvation, biblical revelation, sexuality, and other issues," reports AP.

"Guinness, an Anglican, says that much of the U.S. Episcopal Church has embraced heresy and become 'apostate' and even 'pagan.'

"He says he considers Jefferts Schori part of 'a new phenomenon in the world, where there are Christian leaders who no longer believe the Christian faith, and yet stay on as leaders.'"

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Rick Pearcey is editor and publisher of The Pearcey Report.

Frank Schaeffer, Mother, and Monkey Blood

By Rick Pearcey

When I met Frank Schaeffer, the son of Francis and Edith Schaeffer, in Switzerland in 1972, he went by the name "Franky."

Because Nancy and I met in Switzerland at L'Abri Fellowship, people sometimes ask us, with a note of concern: How is Franky doing? The answer has always been, "I don't really know," because I haven't really known.

Once I did have supper with him and his wife, Genie, along with another fellow, in the basement of Chalet Les Melezes. Really enjoyed it.

I recall talking with Franky about how it might be worthwhile, given his dad's study of Western thought, interest in the arts, and so on, that his father might consider doing some kind of a film project in response to Kenneth Clark's book and video series titled Civilisation (which is out now in DVD, by the way -- I finally purchased a copy).

Several years later I saw Franky and the gang again in St. Louis (after the How Should We Then Live? project was completed). The Schaeffers were in the U.S. on a pro-life tour based on the newly published book and film project Whatever Happened to the Human Race? I think the younger Schaeffer and I said, "Hi," and that's about it.

The most recent time I saw Frank was when he was on C-SPAN. He was giving a lecture on his new coauthored book AWOL, I think, and afterward, in response to a question, he let loose with a "Godd---" something or other.

Now we have Frank Schaeffer blogging at the Huffington Post, in a submission dated Nov. 25, 2006, and titled, "Jesus and the Monkey Blood -- Growing Up Fundamentalist Then Joining the Human Race." This post may confirm the misgivings of many.

Here's a bit of what Frank writes: "In 1954 I got polio. I was two-years-old and fortunate that the doctor Mom took me to didn't kill me. This 'polio specialist' talked Mom into allowing him to replace some of my spinal fluid with a 'special serum' he made from tapping the spinal fluid of chimpanzees.

"Years later Mom admitted she knew that this sounded crazy but she prayed for guidance anyway. Apparently God told her to proceed. They administered one 'treatment.'

"When I told this story to Dr. Koop, a friend who was about to be appointed by President Reagan as Surgeon General, he said that you couldn't design a better method to murder a child."

On Frank's bio that pops up at Huffington, there's this: "Frank is a survivor of both polio and an evangelical/fundamentalist childhood, an acclaimed writer who overcame severe dyslexia, a home-schooled and self-taught documentary movie director, a feature film director and producer of four ('pretty terrible') low budget Hollywood features, and a best selling author of both fiction and nonfiction. Frank's three semi-biographical novels about growing up in a fundamentalist mission include Portofino, Zermatt, Saving Grandma."

Frank has made strong statements and will have to defend them. Like it or not, he's stuck with being Schaeffer's son, and if he's going to write what he's written, blowback shouldn't surprise him.

Having said that, apart from Frank's report on his upbringing, let those of us who care about the direction of society ourselves not be surprised: Dehumanizing secularism is often preceded by dead orthodoxy is often preceded by killer activism.

Life is hard. Let's not make it harder. People are wounded. Let's not wound them more. And don't let their anger scare you away.

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Rick Pearcey is editor and publisher of The Pearcey Report.