singerlady:
Anna, you are surely blessed by the Lord for being such a voice of compassion and peace. Your reply to Beth was so kind.
Dear singerlady, I’m afraid you give me too much credit for being kind! In effect, it just hurts me to see good people being railroaded by others, especially when they keep trying to reply, but to no avail. Mostly, I want them to respond in the way that I would, and, sad to say, that wouldn’t be characterized as “kind” so much as “sophisticatedly indifferent.” (I have been told that “indifference” is a sin, but it sure is handy at times!)
That having been said, I think the reason Beth and I continue to dialogue with FromMi is because his behavior is typical of those who have had the upper hand in this diocese for so long. You can’t reason with these people. That is not my purpose. It is rather to expose that behavior for what it is.
Yes, you are so right, and that is all to the good. The problem here is that it is hurting Beth. I do hope she will see that the more often he posts, the more he divulges about himself. And it’s not pretty. OTOH, it’s true that it is good for both you and Beth to know that so many others are in agreement.
I have a pastor who could very well be FromMi… . There are many like him in this diocese. He remarked to me after Bishop Carlson’s installation that the Sioux Falls priests were very different from the Saginaw priests. It never occurred to him to wonder why there are so many more priests being ordained in Sioux Falls.
I am sure that it is little comfort to such priests to have to acknowledge the difference in both the type of priests and number of ordinands that are being ordained in conservative v-a-v liberal dioceses around the country. It must be an awful thing to realize that one has been preaching and teaching what is at best a watered-down Gospel. (see 1Cor 9:16), and that, besides, the train is passing one by!
I have always said that I would never stay at or leave a parish because of the priest. I am close to changing my thinking on that. The only thing that keeps me going is that my ministry makes me feel closer to the Lord. There are a few people who say that what I do makes a difference for them on Sunday morning. Those are the people I serve.
This is probably the best time to stay put. Last weekend I met a seminarian from Sioux Falls who referred to Bishop Carlson’s appontment as his Calvary, as other have done. Surely, changes will be made, and meanwhile you have those other people.
there say that they are “progressive” and “forward thnking.” They talk about the hope that this bishop won’t take us “backward.”
Nonsense!! If they were any of those things, they would have an original idea at least once in a while. Instead, they are “cookie-cutter” liberals who have been mouthing the “same old, same old” non-counter-cultural platitudes for decades. Even secular America is bored with the feel-good and trendy, the warm and the fuzzy, the always politically correct. “Thinking” (whether progressive, forward or anything else), is one activity in which they are not engaged. Rather, they are both destructive and boring.
From the above you can see that, sadly, I’m not helping Beth out of kindness, but rather from a thorough distaste for the frommis of this world and a deep (Yes! Yes! Uncharitable! There’s the operative word!) desire to “one-up” them! (Doubtless, a sin).
Exciting things are headed your way! God bless,
Anna