> I'd have no problems
> in voting for someone I agreed with and who was a Mormon. I do think,
> however, it's pertinent to ask why Mitt Romney presents himself as a
> Christian despite adhering to a faith which arguably is not.
that one's easy to answer - because as far as mormons are concerned,
they *are* christians.
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At 11 years of age I remember realizing that I had no belief
in the supernatural. Later that year I did a survey of my classmates
(boys' school) to discover that whereas about 2/3 were skeptical I
was the only one who was a convinced non-supernaturalist. It was
later in the year when I came home from the Methodist Sunday school
telling my father who was hard at work building a deep keeled ocean
going yacht,that I intended to give it up. He told me He would like
me to continue and I did. A few years later as a teenager I made
many friends in that church. It was very close to the University of
Western Australia and attracted many students who lived or boarded
nearby. 3 of my friends became Methodist, (later Uniting) Church
ministers when the Methodist, Presbyterian and Congregational
Churches united. I have always regretted the loss of an independent
Congregational Church because my ancestors of both sides were of that
faith and it had a liberal wing closer to my position.
Perhaps my religion can be summarized by 1 Corinthians
13.4-12. I expect to be judged by these criteria (Matthew 7.21).
As far as I can determine neither Albert Schweitzer (who
never lost his status as a Lutheran Minister), nor Bishop Spong of
New York believed in the super-natural but I admit such opinions are
considered abnormal.
You may be surprised that as a a continuing
non-supernaturalist, now 81 years of age, I have continued to attend
church. For some years I have attended a small non-denominational
church which meets in a hired hall and in which members volunteer for
rosters to ether conduct services or to preach. Occasionally we
invite outside preachers. A reasonable choice for a Quaker disowned
for raising a point of "right ordering" which the clerks declared
insulting to them. After the Clerks left, one back to the USA and
the other to the UK, I asked the Elders to reconsider but they simply
repeated that an insult to the Clerks was an insult to the Meeting
and the verdict stood.
I wonder if disbelief in the supernatural would disqualify
one from membership of BYM. I suspect there would only be a problem
if the disbelief was stated in writing.
John Taplin
Perth Australia
Mona Silipo
Member, Strawberry Creek Monthly Meeting, Berkeley, California
Now living in the wilds of Northamptonshire
Mona! Am I right in thinking you haven't been around for a while? Or have I
not been paying attention?
Rosie
Mona! Am I right in thinking you haven't been around for a while? Or have I
not been paying attention?
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Your old heretic
John Taplin
I think I understand the legal difficulty in recognsing same
sex partnerships as marriages. The obvious solution is to have legal
recognition of "partnerships" as they do in New Zealand. Such
partnerships can be heterosexual. I believe I met both kinds of
legal partnership when visiting New Zealand. This may have been the
time I attended NZ YM but may have been one of the times when
attending Meetings for worship when visiting NZ for to lecture on
proportional representation or for another reason.
John Taplin,
disowned by Perth Regional Meeting of Australia YM. I insist on
the Testimony to speak the truth as I understand it. I do not accept
a caveat that one must first ascertain that the truth will not offend anyone.
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John Taplin
At 01:58 AM 17/01/2012, Amelia Schafer-Rutherford wrote:
>John,
>Was that Celo North Carolina? - ASR
>
>
>
>On Mon, Jan 16, 2012 at 2:11 PM, John
><<mailto:jhta...@iinet.net.au>jhta...@iinet.net.au> wrote:
> ***** When I attended the Friends' meeting for worship in a
> mountain village in North Carolina my hostess advised me not
> mention this to her neighbours who were universally of
> fundamentalist evangelical Christian persuasion and might react
> violently, possibly damage her house, if they became aware of her activities.
>
>
>--
>Holding you in the Light, ASR
>
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==> When I attended the Friends' meeting for worship in a mountainvillage in North Carolina my hostess advised me not mention this toher neighbours who were universally of fundamentalist evangelicalChristian persuasion and might react violently, possibly damage herhouse, if they became aware of her activities.
I do not understand _ whose grave? - am I the resident grave digger?
>It would be interesting to know how individual list members define
>this concept, be it a belief in miracles and the intercession of
>Saints following prayer or Grace or, even, the Trinity itself.
Is Supernatural the concept referred to?
>==> When I attended the Friends' meeting for worship in a mountain
>village in North Carolina my hostess advised me not mention this to
>her neighbours who were universally of fundamentalist evangelical
>Christian persuasion and might react violently, possibly damage her
>house, if they became aware of her activities
>I'm a bit unclear, here. Would they have targeted her house 'cos she
>was allowing such activity under her roof, or simply 'cos there was a
>citizen of a country whose Prime Minister practiced it?
My friend attended Meeting for Worship about a mile away. I
understood my friend to mean that she feared her neighbours would be
hostile to her if they knew she was a Quaker or attended Quaker worship.
>CHRIS ROBERTS ==> My question was whether the slightly defensive
>Quakers of 1661 remained discriminated against in Britain as late as
>1776 to the point that they fled to the home of the brave and land of
>the free.
William Penn was an admiral under Cromwell and continued under
Charles 2. Samuel Peyps in his fascinating, warts and all diary,
records how the Admiral sent his son to Paris for education as a
Gentleman and how William put on airs when he returned. It was
inheriting a debt from the King to his father that enabled William
Penn to acquire an interest in Pennsylvania (and part of
Delaware?). My party piece at concerts at Quaker Yearly Meetings
used to be William Penn's account of his trial with William Mead for
preaching in the streets of London. (See "The peace of Europe, "The
Fruits of Solitude and other writings by William Penn, it is
hilarious. To avoid taking off their hats when the Judge entered the
court, the Friends took them off before hey entered the
building. Noticing this the Judge ordered them to put them on again
so they could take them off to honour him. Modern Friends ignore
this "hat honour" part of the tradition. They also ignore the
tradition of refusing to use titles and the use of plain
speech. Conservative Friends in the USA try to preserve a semblance
of plain speech by using "thee" but have forgotten "thou".
***
Your disowned Friend
John Taplin
In my attempt to understand the varieties of Friends I have attended
meetings (including YMs in most) in Australia, New Zealand, USA,
Canada, Gt Britain, India, South Africa, (Georgia?)
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The USA does not have merit titles
unless it is used for retired professors, presidents etc
I have no objection to the use of the
now archaic thee, thou and ye but am amused by
those who use thee in the nominative when they
should use Thou. The use of the once plural ÿou
in the singular instead of thou and thee is a
loss to English which I understand is not lost in
most other languages. I also find it curious that
hymn writers continued to use the archaic forms
long after they had fallen into disuse. Were
they trying to make their hymns sound older than they were?
I assume Amelia is using BYM for
Baltimore YM rather than Britian YM. In my
travels I twice attended the yearly meeting
sessions of the first but the second only once.
John Taplin
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> I have no objection to the use of the now archaic thee, thou and ye
> but am amused by those who use thee in the nominative when they
> should use Thou. The use of the once plural �ou in the singular
> instead of thou and thee is a loss to English which I understand is
> not lost in most other languages. I also find it curious that hymn
> writers continued to use the archaic forms long after they had
> fallen into disuse. Were they trying to make their hymns sound
> older than they were?
In the 1960s in Philadelphia several well-established Quaker families
of my acquaintance used 'thee' within the family, and I even adopted
it myself for a brief, self-conscious, while. My sense of it at the
time was that it was a straight-up swap of 'thee' for 'you' when the
addressee was sufficiently close to the speaker, not a reversion to an
early pattern, so not really a "loss" as such. . .
ht
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10 Crichton Street, Edinburgh EH8 9AB, SCOTLAND -- (44) 131 650-4440
Fax: (44) 131 650-4587, e-mail: h...@inf.ed.ac.uk
URL: http://www.ltg.ed.ac.uk/~ht/
[mail from me _always_ has a .sig like this -- mail without it is forged spam]
> I have no objection to the use of the now archaic thee, thou and ye
> but am amused by those who use thee in the nominative when they
> should use Thou. The use of the once plural �ou in the singular
> instead of thou and thee is a loss to English which I understand is
> not lost in most other languages. I also find it curious that hymn
> writers continued to use the archaic forms long after they had
> fallen into disuse. Were they trying to make their hymns sound
> older than they were?
Sin I wor browt up in t'West Riding o Yorksha, ah've no problem wi t'reight
use o thi an tha - an noan o mi mates were Quakers!!
As another Yorkshire man famously said to a Quaker using thee to him,
"Diven't (don't) tha thee me, Tha thee them as thees thee"
Mike S
John Taplin
At 07:40 PM 24/01/2012, you wrote:
>John writes:
>
> > I have no objection to the use of the now archaic thee, thou and ye
> > but am amused by those who use thee in the nominative when they
> > should use Thou. The use of the once plural ÿou in the singular
> > instead of thou and thee is a loss to English which I understand is
> > not lost in most other languages. I also find it curious that hymn
> > writers continued to use the archaic forms long after they had
> > fallen into disuse. Were they trying to make their hymns sound
> > older than they were?
>
>In the 1960s in Philadelphia several well-established Quaker families
>of my acquaintance used 'thee' within the family, and I even adopted
>it myself for a brief, self-conscious, while. My sense of it at the
>time was that it was a straight-up swap of 'thee' for 'you' when the
>addressee was sufficiently close to the speaker, not a reversion to an
>early pattern, so not really a "loss" as such. . .
>
>ht
>--
> Henry S. Thompson, School of Informatics, University of Edinburgh
> 10 Crichton Street, Edinburgh EH8 9AB, SCOTLAND -- (44) 131 650-4440
> Fax: (44) 131 650-4587, e-mail: h...@inf.ed.ac.uk
> URL: http://www.ltg.ed.ac.uk/~ht/
> [mail from me _always_ has a .sig like this --
> mail without it is forged spam]
>
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> Just out of curiosity can you remember the form of address they used
> to several persons, i.e. the plural of thee?
'thee all', if memory serves.
John Taplin,
Perth, Australia
disowned Friend