Terms like “liberal” and “conservative” are borrowed from the political arena, and are misleading when applied to churches. There are Episcopalians (and Catholics, Protestants) who are orthodox in Christian faith. Then there are others who are not.
I wasn’t going to go down this particular rabbit trail on this thread, but since Memaw just cited this post favorably and thus brought it back to attention:
The claim just isn’t true. It isn’t misleading at all. Any community has “liberal” and “conservative” elements. In fact, the terms are much more straightforward in Christianity than in American politics.
For one thing, as a Catholic you can’t really believe that any Episcopalians or other Protestants are orthodox. Not fully orthodox If you want to say that some of us are more orthodox than others, then you are allowing that orthodoxy has degrees (which it clearly does).
Furthermore, the debate between conservatives and liberals is a debate over what is and is not orthodox. The two sets of terms therefore can’t be collapsed into each other without hopeless confusion.
To be “liberal” is to have relatively loose standards of orthodoxy compared to someone who is more “conservative.”
That second group started the dishonest trend of labeling everything a liberal or conservative position.
No, what is dishonest is claiming that there is no real debate over what orthodoxy is, and no real disagreements within the boundaries of orthodoxy, so that “liberal” and “conservative” are meaningless terms.
But protecting the life of unborn children isn’t “conservative”, it is humane.
I agree that in a secular political sense, the prolife position should not simply be labeled conservative. The justices in Roe v. Wade appealed (though selectively and not entirely accurately) to venerable legal precedent. In the 19th and early 20th centuries, opposition to abortion was a “progressive” position along with opposition to prostitution, alcohol use, slavery, etc.
However, in terms of the Christian tradition, opposition to abortion is “conservative” because it is the traditional, historic Christian position.
Abandoning the sanctity of marriage isn’t liberal, it’s abandoning the sanctity of marriage.
And of course that’s loaded language
Claiming that you best preserve the sanctity of marriage by redefining it as a consensual, permanent union between two adults, regardless of their respective genders, is a liberal position. It claims to maintain the basic principle while redefining what are allegedly more superficial aspects.
Claiming you are a Christian minister, then teaching trusting people doctrines from the secular media instead of the gospel, isn’t liberal; it’s “bait and switch”.
But of course this is a loaded, biased description of what liberal Christians are doing.
Edwin