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"Little Richard, Live in Alexandria"

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Anonymous deluxe said...

a-wop-bop-aloo-bop-a-wop-bam-boom

"man, he's still got it"

I second that emotion

Little Richard was always the wildest of the original rock 'n rollers

go see him before it's too late

October 20, 2009 2:30 PM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

this is an ironic twist

because the Episcopal Church has begun to allow gay priests, hordes are deserting to other deniminations

the Vatican announced new protocals today for smoothing the conversion to the Roman Catholic church

for years, any Protestant clergy who converts to Catholicism has been allowed to remain married

today's move, to attract former Episcopal priests will result in a dramatic increase in the number of married Catholic priests

this will eventually lead to the inevitable question: why can't all priests marry?

which will lead to the end of the leading gay employer, the celibate Catholic priesthood

"(Oct. 20) -- The number of married Catholic priests could grow sharply as the result of the Vatican's epochal decision to welcome thousands of disaffected Anglicans and Episcopalians into the Catholic Church.

At press conferences in Rome and London on Tuesday, Vatican officials announced that the Church would set up a special canonical structure that will ease the conversion of members of the Anglican Communion without them having to give up what the Vatican called "the distinctive Anglican spiritual and liturgical patrimony." That means not only a body of prayers and hymns, but also a tradition of married priests and bishops.

"It's a stunning turn of events," says Lawrence Cunningham, theology professor at Notre Dame University. "This decision will allow for many more married clergy in Western churches, and that's going to raise anew the question, 'If they can do it, why can't the priests of Rome?,'" says Cunningham.

The move comes amidst discord within the Anglican Communion, which unites 77 million Anglicans and Episcopalians under the loose authority of the Archbishop of Canterbury, Rowan Williams. The church has been racked by schisms over its stance towards homosexuality.
For many traditional Anglicans, known in the U.S. as Episcopalians, the last straw was the 2003 election of openly gay Gene Robinson as bishop of the Diocese of New Hampshire. In protest, many have broken links with the Episcopal Church and declared themselves loyal to conservative Anglican bishops in Africa or South America. One group of such dissidents said today, "This move by the Catholic Church recognizes the reality of the divide within the Anglican Communion and affirms the decision to create a new North American province that embraces biblical truth."

The news is likely to have a particularly strong effect in Great Britain, where there has been a tendency for years for members of the nominally Anglican majority to join the Catholic Church, from 19th century theologian John Cardinal Newman, poet T.S. Eliot, and former Prime Minister Tony Blair. Two prominent priests who publicly broke from Anglicanism stated today that after this ruling from Rome, some Anglicans "will begin to form a caravan, rather like the People of Israel crossing the desert in search of the Promised Land.""

October 20, 2009 4:56 PM

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