Pope Francis to meet Archbishop of Canterbury in October

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And talking of odd, what an odd expression! Who is getting shanked by whom, and how is this evinced?
Beats me.

Anglicanorum Coetibus was not a move against Anglicanism. It was a matter of recognizing that a certain portion of the Anglican Communion had reason to want to depart from it, and that some form of accommodation was appropriate for those of them who wanted to join the Roman Communion.
 
Correct. And it (Anglicanorum Coetibus) had 2 causes; one the long standing campaign from the Continuum group (TAC) to bring about some from of corporate union and, the proximate trigger, the visit of several CoE bishops, early in 2009, to ask the Pope to extend some form of life raft to the orthodox in the CoE, as the specter of females in miters loomed ahead.
Wow. I guess I was aware of that at the time, but some things didn’t seem so shocking in my youth (early thirties is youth right?) as they do in old age.

😉
 
Wow. I guess I was aware of that at the time, but some things didn’t seem so shocking in my youth (early thirties is youth right?) as they do in old age.

😉
Early thirties is not youth. Mid- forties is youth. You’re still a stripling in your mid- thirties. 😉
 
And talking of odd, what an odd expression! Who is getting shanked by whom, and how is this evinced?
From my perspective, its the Catholic representatives of the dialogue. They ‘dialogue’ about how to reunite, then the Anglicans disregard their half; the talk about the role of the Papacy in a unified hypothetical, then ignore the Pope; talks go on about the importance of the priesthood being male, then the Anglicans ordain women; they talk about preserving traditional marriage, then Anglicans marry homosexuals; talks go on about openly gay clergy, meanwhile Anglicans are already doing it. Am i missing something or are the dialoguers saying things that Catholics shouldnt?
 
From my perspective, its the Catholic representatives of the dialogue. They ‘dialogue’ about how to reunite, then the Anglicans disregard their half; the talk about the role of the Papacy in a unified hypothetical, then ignore the Pope; talks go on about the importance of the priesthood being male, then the Anglicans ordain women; they talk about preserving traditional marriage, then Anglicans marry homosexuals; talks go on about openly gay clergy, meanwhile Anglicans are already doing it. Am i missing something or are the dialoguers saying things that Catholics shouldnt?
Well, you seem to think the talks have been about why the Roman viewpoint is right and why Anglicans should share it. They haven’t been. They have been about various issues where the two sides think it worth exploring differences and similarities of approach, and they have developed increased understanding, That’s really all they’ve been, but the churches seem to find that worthwhile. Your description of the dialogue doesn’t match anything I’ve read.

My understanding is that the Catholic Church no longer believes that the way she should proceed is to require separated brethren to surrender to the truth of Rome and come home. But that is what you seem to regard as the only appropriate road.

Incidentally, I don’t think the meetings and joint celebrations of the Pope and the archbishop are tied to these discussions. They are part of healthy brotherly relations between Christians (and it surprises me that I, a non-Christian, should have to point this out)…
 
Beats me.

Anglicanorum Coetibus was not a move against Anglicanism. It was a matter of recognizing that a certain portion of the Anglican Communion had reason to want to depart from it, and that some form of accommodation was appropriate for those of them who wanted to join the Roman Communion.
That’s about it.

Plus, the occasional slight smile.
 
Wow. I guess I was aware of that at the time, but some things didn’t seem so shocking in my youth (early thirties is youth right?) as they do in old age.

😉
Some things don’t seem so shocking in my old age (early 70s is old age, right?) as they did in my youth. I’ve seen so much in the interim.
 
Early thirties is not youth. Mid- forties is youth. You’re still a stripling in your mid- thirties. 😉
Maybe. But I had a 13 year old daughter, in my youth, in that case. Which means she’s a youth herself, today.

Complicated.
 
Some things don’t seem so shocking in my old age (early 70s is old age, right?) as they did in my youth. I’ve seen so much in the interim.
Nonsense. Early 70s is the middle years. Full of peace and wisdom. Probably.
 
If so, it represents a value for “peace” (at least) that I was previously not familiar with.
I take it, then, that the appropriate amount of wisdom may perhaps have been vouchsafed?

For myself, I find an increased quantity of peace (though admittedly still an inadequate quantity) and if wisdom has not yet turned up, at least I am fairly sure that I’m not quite as daft as I was.
 
I take it, then, that the appropriate amount of wisdom may perhaps have been vouchsafed?

For myself, I find an increased quantity of peace (though admittedly still an inadequate quantity) and if wisdom has not yet turned up, at least I am fairly sure that I’m not quite as daft as I was.
I can’t claim wisdom. Just knowledge, in selected areas.
 
Nothing against Anglicans, or England, but that wouldn’t be universal. By definition. :o

On a side note, I think it would help if you guys would get your story straight on the word “catholic”.
He didn’t say Catholic, he said Catholic… 🤷
 
From my perspective, its the Catholic representatives of the dialogue. They ‘dialogue’ about how to reunite, then the Anglicans disregard their half; the talk about the role of the Papacy in a unified hypothetical, then ignore the Pope; talks go on about the importance of the priesthood being male, then the Anglicans ordain women; they talk about preserving traditional marriage, then Anglicans marry homosexuals; talks go on about openly gay clergy, meanwhile Anglicans are already doing it. Am i missing something or are the dialoguers saying things that Catholics shouldnt?
You kind of lost me with that last sentence. Everything else you said makes it sound like the dialoguers are saying things that Catholics should say.
 
He didn’t say Catholic, he said Catholic… 🤷
Irregardless, it’s still Catholic. 👍 On a more serious note, the word Catholic, regarded as a word out of the Greek that means Universal ( hence the Protestant usage of the Church Catholic rather than the Catholic Church, when describing the " Church without Borders").
 
You kind of lost me with that last sentence. Everything else you said makes it sound like the dialoguers are saying things that Catholics should say.
I’m wondering if the Catholic representatives are actually representing Catholicism, or their own personal stance - which might extend from ‘pastoral sensitivity to Anglican sensibilities’
 
I’m wondering if the Catholic representatives are actually representing Catholicism, or their own personal stance - which might extend from ‘pastoral sensitivity to Anglican sensibilities’
The talks have been in progress nigh unto 50 years, with a mass of paper published on the …conclusions. If you haven’t checked into it, look into the Anglican- Roman Catholic International Commission.
 
I’m wondering if the Catholic representatives are actually representing Catholicism, or their own personal stance - which might extend from ‘pastoral sensitivity to Anglican sensibilities’
But every single example you gave looks to me like the opposite: Anglican participants representing their own personal stance rather than Anglicanism.
 
The talks have been in progress nigh unto 50 years, with a mass of paper published on the …conclusions. If you haven’t checked into it, look into the Anglican- Roman Catholic International Commission.
Indeed. But perhaps the conclusion one can draw from ARCIC is that Anglicanism of yore has much in common with Catholicism of today.
 
Irregardless, it’s still Catholic. 👍 On a more serious note, the word Catholic, regarded as a word out of the Greek that means Universal ( hence the Protestant usage of the Church Catholic rather than the Catholic Church, when describing the " Church without Borders").
True. The “universal” meaning is why Anglicans and many Protestants still adhere to the unmodified Nicene Creed statement that we believe in the “one, holy, catholic and apostolic Church” or the Apostle’s Creed’s similar verbiage of, “the holy catholic Church.”

The latter perplexed my dad yesterday when he attended my daughter’s baptism as he was raised and nominally is Catholic (albeit non-practicing). As part of the Episcopal baptismal rite we renew our baptismal covenant including the Apostle’s Creed and that line. I had to explain it to him after mass.
 
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