tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2911068236939343613.post2831436987515474533..comments2023-08-24T16:41:19.306+01:00Comments on Let nothing you dismay: Time for reflectionMichael Gollop http://www.blogger.com/profile/00076220518083389674noreply@blogger.comBlogger4125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2911068236939343613.post-44824036000394934492012-06-25T03:22:03.285+01:002012-06-25T03:22:03.285+01:00What a good post and, I must say, your site's ...What a good post and, I must say, your site's inspiring and helpful. Your ministry's by no means wasted. But my, what hard times we live in, as Anglo-Catholics.<br /><br />Of course one option is to bite the bullet and join the Ordinariate; just get on with "fishing from the big ship". The other's sticking with the program, however difficult.<br /><br />But whatever the case, feet forward, heels down, ride on.<br /><br />God bless.LSPhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08120630078039958644noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2911068236939343613.post-45103913450260631572012-06-24T11:34:40.157+01:002012-06-24T11:34:40.157+01:00At least the music is rousing. In England too the ...At least the music is rousing. In England too the Established Church has become in lots of instances just like brothers and sisters of the protestant churches. You can attend a Sunday service which has been made up and the 30 or so people being led by a couple of ordained ministers (and yes there has to be a woman to show how inclusive it is) You can go to a wedding where its resemblance to either an old or new rite is negligible. So I guess if you want pan protestant religion the Anglican Communion is where you should be. If you don't then move on.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2911068236939343613.post-67674382022424850612012-06-23T23:35:23.513+01:002012-06-23T23:35:23.513+01:00It seems you are not alone in your thoughts on mod...It seems you are not alone in your thoughts on modern liturgy Father!<br />I was interested to read in the Guardian Review (p.5) today that "on liturgy, the archbishop [Rowan Williams], was at his boldest, extolling the Book of Common Prayer and scornfully dismissing modernised liturgies where 'the aim is to make things clear'. Instead Williams favoured using 'rather wild phraseology and pushing the boundaries, as that way we might discover something unexpected. Pile on the words, pile on the ritual'."<br />Stick at it.AncientBritonhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/12357913998344777403noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2911068236939343613.post-4024474289635011402012-06-23T22:24:15.932+01:002012-06-23T22:24:15.932+01:00You have given yourself to despair. What do you ex...You have given yourself to despair. What do you expect? God is good, all things are possible. Return to your vocation and speak well of all God's creation.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com