Idle thought
Sunday, November 26th, 2006 09:00 amWomen priests are the Lubavitch of the Church of England.
(Insofar as that traditional priests/rabbis are in decline or ageing except in major city communities, and it's the women priests/Lubavitch rabbis who end up occupying pulpits everywhere else. One wonders whether the attitude towards women priests is the same as that towards Lubavitch rabbis, namely, that they do a good job but it would have been preferable to have had a rabbi who came from the same world as us, that we could relate to better...)
(Insofar as that traditional priests/rabbis are in decline or ageing except in major city communities, and it's the women priests/Lubavitch rabbis who end up occupying pulpits everywhere else. One wonders whether the attitude towards women priests is the same as that towards Lubavitch rabbis, namely, that they do a good job but it would have been preferable to have had a rabbi who came from the same world as us, that we could relate to better...)
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Date: 2006-11-28 07:57 pm (UTC)Henry XVIII? Didn't he reign in the twenty-sixth century? ;^b (ITYM Henry VIII.)
They still have a Catholic flavour. Some years ago when I travelled as a tourist with a group I was drawn into a church which I assumed was a Protestant one and not an unusual English Catholic one. (Therefore I would like to be a Cohen. Can we change?)Anyway, it reminded me more of a Catholic service I was forced to go when I was in school. The Protestants in Germany do not make a cross over their chest.
Protestantism is not one movement with united practices. It's split into many different denominations, all different; and even within the Church of England there's High Anglican, which has many of the rites of Catholicism, and Low Anglicanism, which does not.