C
Contarini
Guest
You’re over-generalizing from a statement addressed to Catholics to the hasty conclusion that Episcopalians don’t want anyone to change at all.I was, for a few years, a participant with a local Unitarian Universalist (UU) community. I was at the time an atheist, and I was drawn towards their acceptance of atheists, theists or whatever-ists. Pretty much, my UU experience can be summed up in, “be whoever you are just don’t be an inconvenience to anyone else”.
Nearly a decade has gone by since then, where in that time I became a Catholic. Recently an Episcopalian Bishop addressed a group of us Catholics, telling us that the Episcopal Church loves us for who we are, and does not seek out a change in who we are. He also pointed out that within the Episcopal Church itself, the members of the clergy do not agree with each other and that is ok.
I’ve been thinking on this for a few weeks, have come to my own conclusions, and have a few questions, and appreciate any feedback particularly from the Episcopalian or UU POV.
Is this the prevailing thought in the Episcopalian Church? If so it strikes me as Universalist and I see no difference between the two religions.
- Not seeking a change in oneself, as a Christian, strikes me as a UU approach. Does Jesus not call us to die to ourselves? From a UU perspective, I could understand this to mean God accepts everyone for who they are and the dying to oneself means an idea that God, or any gods, or your socio/psychological understanding of the world, should be oriented towards letting people be.
- There is no absolute truth regarding God, gods, or no God, and therefore seeking the truth about God is really seeking the truth about humanity. Seeking a change in a person, persons or groups of persons, that is not towards this humanist ideology, is bad form. An inconvenience to someone, or a group of someones.
That being said, there is certainly a kind of “antinomianism” prevalent in the Episcopal Church today (ironically given the history of Anglican moralism), which says simply that God accepts everyone for who they are without asking them to change. That still isn’t the same as Unitarianism, though, which denies the Trinity and all the historic Christian doctrines. Antinomianism is unorthodox, but it proceeds from a basis of belief in the Trinity and the Incarnation. There are Episcopalians, like John Shelby Spong, whose theology is indistinct from Unitarianism. But they are not the majority, and in my opinion they are becoming fewer and less influential. Spong is retired and fairly elderly, and the younger clergy of my acquaintance are much more orthodox (in the sense of believing in basic creedal Christianity). I should also note that my characterization of much of Episcopalianism as antinomian would be contested by many folks, and that it certainly doesn’t apply to all Episcopalians by any means.
Edwin