Diocese of Niagara emphasising community over truth

An Oakville church has been distributing flyers designed to entice the unwary into its sanctuary. The main selling point is that you can make new friends and join a community without having to believe anything in particular. I doubt that this strategy will work since it faces strong competition from the Oakville Lawn Bowling Club: you can make new friends there, too, get more exercise when bowling and – there is “No Need to Believe!”

The flyer points out: “If you come away believing…. hey, that’s a bonus!” As in lawn bowling, it doesn’t matter what you come away believing because it’s the community that is important, not boring doctrinal trivia.

Social-Club

Diocese of Niagara: 2013 financial update

From here:

Regarding financial resources, Budget Chair Andrew Clinkard reported that “the diocesan financial position continues to get healthier.” He pointed out the diocese has not used their “interest bearing credit line” since March of this year, the “long term debt from parishes has been reduced by $179,000.00 and “we are anticipating an operating surplus for 2013.”

What Clinkard omitted from this rosy assessment was mentioning the influx of cash the diocese received from selling St. Hilda’s church building and rectory.

The rectory sold for $650,0000 and the church building for $2,250,000 (note: I have changed this to an exact number), making the debt reduction of $179,000.00 appear rather less impressive.

Bishop Charlie Masters talks about the Diocese of Niagara

At GAFCON 2, Bishop Charlie Masters discussed how ANiC priests were treated by their former church.

During the legal proceedings between the Diocese of Niagara and ANiC, the diocesan lawyer asked ANiC’s lawyer: “What has your client done which has caused my client, the Diocese of Niagara, to hate them [the ANiC priests] so much”. The answer is pretty simple: power doesn’t like to be defied.

 

You can see the entire video here.

Michael Ingham speaks to the Diocese of Niagara

In Evelyn Waugh’s wonderful novel, Men at Arms, our hero, Guy Crouchback, finds himself out of step with his time and the children of his time; they were not simpatico:

He was accepted and respected but he was not simpatico. Gräfin von Gluck, who spoke no word of Italian and lived in undisguised concubinage with her butler, was simpatica. Mrs. Garry was simpatica, who distributed Protestant tracts, interfered with the fishermen’s methods of killing octopuses and filled her house with stray cats.

Guy’s uncle, Peregrine, a bore of international repute whose dreaded presence could empty the room in any centre of civilization—Uncle Peregrine was considered molto simpatico. The Wilmots were gross vulgarians; they used Santa Dulcina purely as a pleasure resort, subscribed to no local funds, gave rowdy parties and wore indecent clothes, talked of “wops” and often left after the summer with their bills to the tradesmen unpaid; but they had four boisterous and ill-favoured daughters whom the Santa-Dulcinesi had watched grow up. Better than this, they had lost a son bathing from the rocks. The Santa-Dulcinesi participated in these joys and sorrows. They observed with relish their hasty and unobstrusive departures at the end of the holidays. They were simpatici. Even Musgrave who had the Castelletto before the Wilmots and bequeathed it his name, Musgrave who, it was said, could not go to England or America because of warrants for his arrest, “Musgrave the Monster,” as the Crouchbacks used to call him—he was simpatico. Guy alone, whom they had known from infancy, who spoke their language and conformed to their religion, who was open-handed in all his dealing and scrupulously respectful of all their ways, whose grandfather built their school, whose mother had given a set of vestments embroidered by the Royal School of Needlework for the annual procession of St. Dulcina’s bones—Guy alone was a stranger among them.

I can sympathise with Guy’s plight: in fact, as soon as I begin to feel the mildest bout of simpatico insinuating its way into my psyche, a vague sense of unease descends upon me. I freely admit it’s my fault – although, I confess, accompanying the heavy burden of this particular guilt is a profound indifference to it.

Not so for Bishops Bird and Ingham: they are entirely simpatico, united, according to Ingham, by the “shared .. contempt and opposition of the fearful” – otherwise known as people who disagree with them.

From here:

No surprises, either, came when Bishop Ingham acknowledged that the two men also have shared the contempt and opposition of the fearful. The two dioceses, so similar in ideals, face the same challenges of change and adaptation to an emerging world.

At this point Bishop Ingham described the shift in relevance from a time when the church was at the centre of political and national power to the era of Post-Christendom. The next change, the one we are experiencing, is away from the old evangelicalism, liberalism and catholicism.  It will not be shaped by the old culture wars that we continue to fight, even, and perhaps most pointlessly, against each other. The future church holds some surprises for those of us so involved in present difficulties that we do not see where we’re going.

I’d like to end on a point of agreement: the last sentence, in this case. They really don’t know where they are going.

Niagara Anglican circulation numbers

In one year the Niagara Anglican’s (the Diocese of Niagara’s paper) circulation has declined by 6.4%. This is due to the “[i]ncapacity or death” of former recipients.

It’s not unreasonable to infer that the decline in circulation is at least matched if not exceeded by an equivalent 6.4% decline in membership.

Interestingly, the circulation numbers include parishes that have left the diocese – there are 4; I and others in the departed congregations continue to receive the paper – so basing membership on the circulation numbers probably yields an inflated figure.

You will be please to know that $426,573 of your tax dollars have contributed to distributing Anglican Church of Canada newspapers.

From here (Page 4):

In her 2013 report to the recent Anglican Editors Association conference, Senior Manager Beverley Murphy provided the following information:

• Total circulation [of the Anglican Journal] was down 4.49% since last year;

• Incapacity or death is the reason given in most instances for cancellation;

• Electronic updates average 72 per week;

• Majority of updates are sent by parishes via regular mail;

• Half of all circulation emails come from individuals, then parishes (36.7%) and dioceses (13.3%);

• The Canada Periodical Fund provided a grant ($426,573 from April 2012 to April

2013) which basically covers half of all mailing costs for the Anglican Journal and the 23 diocesan newspapers;

• The Canada Post’s Address Accuracy Program compares subscribers’ addresses with valid addresses on Canada Post’s database. All diocesan papers have sustained the required rate of 95% accuracy.

In 2012, the Niagara Anglican had an accuracy rate of 98.5%.

In June 2012, the Niagara Anglican had a circulation of 10,406, which stood at 9,740 in September this year. It is the fifth largest among the diocesan papers.

Toronto Anglican is the largest, followed by Anglican Life (Newfoundland and Labrador), Huron Church News and the Diocesan Times (Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island). The total Anglican Journal circulation for June 2012 was 155,383 subscribers compared with 143,510 in September 2013.

Diocese of Niagara sells St. Hilda’s Church

It was sold to the city and will be turned into a paramedic station.

_Y8C4545From here:

Dear Resident:

Re: Public drop-in session, Wednesday, September 18 – intended development of southwest Oakville paramedic station.

This letter is in follow up to the August 15 letter you received regarding Halton Region’s intention to develop a paramedic station in southwest Oakville at 1258 Rebecca Street, formerly St. Hilda’s Anglican Church. As mentioned in the letter, the Region will be holding a public drop-in session to answer any questions and to hear your thoughts on the construction and operation of a paramedic station at this site. Details about that session have now been confirmed and we hope you can attend.

[…..]

Construction of the new paramedic station is targeted to begin in late 2014, pending planning approvals.

As a reminder, information about the planning and intended development of the station can also be found at www.halton.ca/SWOakvilleStation. We will continue to update the page regularly.

We look forward to hearing from you at the drop-in session. If you are unable to attend and have any questions, please call me at 905-825-6000, ext. 7091, send me an email at greg.sage@halton.ca, or contact Christine Barber, Deputy Chief/Manager, Operations at 905-825-6000 ext. 7045 or christine.barber@halton.ca.

And here:

Why do we intend to build a paramedic station at 1258 Rebecca Street?

    • A new paramedic station will support the health and safety of residents in the community.
    • Southwest Oakville has one of the highest rates of paramedic calls in Halton Region.
    • The area needs a paramedic station to help paramedics respond to calls in the area more quickly, which will improve patient outcomes and save lives.
    • The need for a station in southwest Oakville was identified in 2005, in the Emergency Medical Services 10-Year Master Plan.[…..]

What else will be going on this property?

  • We have no plans for the remainder of the property at this time.
  • Any future land use is required to be approved by Council and the community would be consulted before anything moved forward.
  • The community can be assured that the property will be maintained in good condition at all times by the Region.

When will construction begin and end?

  • Pending permits, demolition would then happen in the fall of 2013.
  • Pending approvals, construction will begin in late 2014 or early 2015.
  • The station is scheduled to be operational in 2015.

 

St. Hilda’s rectory was sold a number of months back for $650,000; it is now a hole in the ground beside a large pile of earth:

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And here is a portion of the letter from the bishop promising to keep the church open:

11-09-2013 5-58-00 PM

The Diocese of Niagara invites me to dinner with the bishop

The invitation arrived by email this morning. The question is, to use the popular vernacular, are they just messing with my head?

If I grit my teeth, pay the $225 and show up at the door, will I simply be slapped with another lawsuit claiming attempted bribery for sending $225 to the diocese under the pretence that I had been invited to dinner – as if that were at all likely.

Or would my appearance be an occasion for the matrons of the diocese to have synchronised attacks of the vapours?

Only one way to find out.

Here is the email:

Bishop’s Company Dinner‏

To: mr.toad @ pobox.com
Picture of Niagara Anglican
News in the Diocese of Niagara

Bishop's Company Time us running outTime is running out!

The Annual Bishop’s Company Dinner is on Monday, September 30, 2013 at The Burlington Convention Centre.

WAIT!!!!!!

Don’t ignore this email please

There are lots of good reasons to go to the Dinner – here are just a few:

  • To support the pastoral ministry of Bishop Michael Bird to those in need of care and assistance.
  • To be nourished through the wisdom of a very prophetic speaker – Bishop Michael Ingham
  • To enjoy a wonderful evening of entertainment, good food, inspirational speaking while connecting with Anglicans from across our diocese.

Sign up now

If you have been to the Dinner before – please sign up again!

If you are new – please don’t be shy….it’s a wonderful evening and we promise you’ll love it!

Here’s the catch:

The deadline to register is just two weeks away: Weds September 18th at 5 pm

It’s easy:

Sign up online – click here

…or….Call Nancy Clause at Cathedral Place – 905.527.1316 x 380

Diocese of Niagara: “Jesus had two Dads and he turned out just fine”

A Diocese of Niagara parish, St. John the Evangelist in Niagara Falls, is displaying the following billboard:

reddit-church-signThe idea is hard to miss: there is nothing wrong with a same-sex couple being parents.

The billboard doesn’t get into any tricky details such as the fact that Jesus was conceived by the Holy Spirit and a woman not two men. Or that the liberal clergy who occupy the Diocese of Niagara delight in calling the third person of the Trinity “she” when it suits them – why not two Mums on the sign? Or that, while they are not busy calling the Holy Spirit “she”, liberal clergy are studiously engaged on expunging all references to God as “he” from liturgies and hymn books because, as they keep telling us, God is genderless. Or that Jesus was raised by a man and a woman, not two Dads. Or that two men can’t conceive, try as they might. Or that a majority of Niagara clerics don’t even believe in the Virgin Birth. I know: picky picky picky.

You will notice that the photographer was leaning heavily to the left when he took the photograph.

More here:

A church billboard that affirms homosexuality has gone viral. After Reddit user Reeb0k posted a photo of the sign online, it quickly gained hundreds of thousands of views. The controversial text on the placard reads, “Jesus had two dads and he turned out just fine.”

Not much information is provided along with the picture, but the sign on which it appears belongs to a “St. John’s Anglican Church.” According to the Reddit user, the house of worship is in his home city, but the name of that city isn’t mentioned in the post.

In addition to the pro-gay message, a portion of the church’s address is present on the sign (the number “3428″ appears). After a quick web search, TheBlaze discovered that the church is located in Niagara Falls, Ontario, in Canada.

In an effort to confirm that the sign is, indeed, posted, we called the church office and phoned the Rev. Duncan Lyon, a member of the St. John’s clergy. His wife answered the phone and confirmed that the pro-gay message is posted outside of the church.

When we asked for more information about the motivation behind it, she referred us back to the church office, adding, “I’m sure you can sort it out yourself.”