On Rick Warren and Uganda

Filed under Late than Never. Warren condemns the Ugandan Law.

There is a good reason people are confused: Warren is speaking to two audiences. First, his own. The homophobes. If he gets too liberal he loses credibility.

Second, non-homophobes who don’t trust him. He wants them to know he’s not an idiot.

Warren is a little different than other evangelicals: gay people are a second or third order issue. For most of the Christian right, homosexual fervor is a way of raising money. For him, his view of homosexuality is a code for “I still have moral authority.”

His own feelings are probably a bit conflicted. He’s committed to the traditional idea of marriage, yes, but he’s honestly not interested in killing gays. He has enough of a conscience to be offended by a law that executes gay people. If he were to change his mind, he’d probably lose 90% of his people. I’d be happy if he just gets them to be distracted by other issues where we can agree on, like climate change or female genital mutilation.

Could he be the person who opens up some space for safety among gays in Uganda? Warren is like a rock star there. His books are second only to the bible. He could pull it off. And I’d be happy if your average Ugandan gay could just not be killed. They listen to him because he’s an effective moral authority for them. Still, it comes at the expense of his desire to have authority here in the US as well.

Maddow, however, does expose Warren’s attempts to have it both ways. Still, the media might not let him. Remember – most of the media doesn’t understand religion as language: they see it as a series of intellectual propositions that have to calculate.

Father Jake discusses: The Ugandan Trade: Death Penalty for Conversion Clause

Deal!

The public option has changed. Broaden Medicare and Medicaid. Keep cost-cutting devices. Personally, I think it is a smart move. Medicare and Medicaid are public options. Eventually, a single payer system, if possible, will arise from expanding institutions already in place. Politically, these changes happen in steps, and there is plenty of good in other parts of the bill.

Still, they should break the trusts and allow a little more free enterprise.

A few facts and numbers for ya
! A few more.

Update: The Washington Post decries this idea, saying “The irony of this late-breaking Medicare proposal is that it could be a bigger step toward a single-payer system than the milquetoast public option plans rejected by Senate moderates as too disruptive of the private market.”

Burning Down the House

Must have been quite a sermon the previous Sunday.

Parishioner taken into custody for burning Rectory.

Can’t find the website. Perhaps they don’t want anyone to find them. It would be nice to contribute if they needed help. Back to Tiger Woods.

Where the Real Work Is

It’s one thing to elect a bishop. It’s another to house the homeless. Good for the Diocese of Long Island. Call me a cultural imperialist, but this seems a little more Christlike than, say, execution.

Link to a good site with crisp, charitable analysis, Box Turtle Bulletin.

Rules for Using Email in Church.

Good ones. Email is not a conflict resolver.

Hat tip: The Lead.

Also. Don’t drink and email.

The Manhattan Declaration

An obscurantist piece of theological and historical illiteracy, featuring a who’s who of the old time religion, including the man who wants to be the mostests, Fr. Duncan.

God Bless Them. May they be called to repentance.

Hugo says it’s cheap.

The Rev. Dr. Christian Troll is thinking strategically. Fr. Tobias would rather be in the Bronx.

God Always Agrees With Us

Jesus would do what I do.

You, I’m not so sure. He might not do what you do. But I still like you.

Hat Tip Entangled States.

More Here.

Personally, I think that when Jesus was asking “who do You say that I am,” he was focusing on the “What do YOU think” not the “I am” part.

The bible in five words

A fun meme.

1) Be!
2) I promise
3) You are free
4) And I love you
5) So get up and live!

Here’s another.