Rite proposal stirs passion: (proposal to substitute gender neutral language changes to baptism rite fails).The United Church has dropped an attempt to substitute gender-neutral language for "Father, Son and Holy Spirit" in the baptism rite -- a proposed change that caused concern among the church's ecumenical partners, including the Anglican Church. About 100 groups and congregations last fall were asked their opinions of various new forms of the rite, said Fred Graham Fred Graham (born October 6, 1931) is the chief anchor and managing editor of Court TV. Graham was born in Little Rock, Arkansas and graduated from West End High School in Nashville, Tennessee. , liturgical officer for the United Church. The church is developing a new worship book, Celebrate God's Presence. Conservatives, however, did not care for the changes -- as Mr. Graham put it, "that sector in our church rose up" against alternate wording. Others felt, he said, that inclusive language was to be encouraged. At the same time, the United Church's General Council Executive, which rules on matters of doctrine and faith, decided that such a fundamental change would need to be put to a church-wide vote. Among the wording considered was: You are baptized bap·tize v. bap·tized, bap·tiz·ing, bap·tiz·es v.tr. 1. To admit into Christianity by means of baptism. 2. a. To cleanse or purify. b. To initiate. 3. in the name of God, source of Love; In the name of Jesus Christ Jesus Christ: see Jesus. Jesus Christ 40 days after Resurrection, ascended into heaven. [N.T.: Acts 1:1–11] See : Ascension Jesus Christ kind to the poor, forgiving to the sinful. [N.T. , Love incarnate in·car·nate adj. 1. a. Invested with bodily nature and form: an incarnate spirit. b. Embodied in human form; personified: a villain who is evil incarnate. ; And in the name of the Holy Spirit, Love's power. Another formula read: We baptize bap·tize v. bap·tized, bap·tiz·ing, bap·tiz·es v.tr. 1. To admit into Christianity by means of baptism. 2. a. To cleanse or purify. b. To initiate. 3. you in the name of the Father, And of the Son And of the Holy Spirit -- One God, Mother of us all. Another proposal substituted "creator, Christ and spirit." The process "concluded a two-year examination of the trinitarian formula The trinitarian formula is the phrase "in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit" (original Greek εις το ονομα του Πατρος και with our Roman Catholic partners," said Mr. Graham. "We asked, is this the only way to identify the Holy Trinity or are there other ways?' Why do we have to stick with those words (Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit)?" The document that resulted (In Whose Name -- The Baptismal Formula in Contemporary Culture) said congregations have two basic choices: retain the classical formula or augment it with options in the form of blessings, said Rev. Richard Leggett, an Anglican priest who is associate professor of liturgical studies at the Vancouver School of Theology History The Vancouver School of Theology was established in 1971, as an amalgamation of the Anglican Theological College (ATC) and Union College of British Columbia (UCBC), affiliated with the United Church of Canada. in British Columbia British Columbia, province (2001 pop. 3,907,738), 366,255 sq mi (948,600 sq km), including 6,976 sq mi (18,068 sq km) of water surface, W Canada. Geography . The United Church and the Anglican, Lutheran, Presbyterian and Roman Catholic churches List of Roman Catholic Churches
"My view was that while we empathize em·pa·thize v. To feel empathy in relation to another person. with the desire to find inclusive language for the trinity, that was of sufficient importance ecumenically that it was difficult to see one church doing that on their own. And it would put in jeopardy the agreements on baptism which go back a long way," Canon Barnett-Cowan said. Talk of changing the baptismal rite has led to concern that one of the basic tenets of Christianity -- the Trinity -- could disappear or be changed so much as to be unrecognizable. "Without the Trinity, there is no church," said Mr. Leggett. "When you meet Jesus Christ, you meet God and the Spirit leads you to recognize that is what's happening," he said, explaining the concept. "The `father' language talks about the relation of the first person to the second person of the Trinity," he added. However, there is room for an expanded view, he believes. "You don't solve the problem of sexist language by going neutral. You expand the images (in the rest of the service)," he said. The primary motivation, however, for keeping the traditional language was ecumenical, not theological, said Mr. Leggett. "We are dealing with fundamentally an ecumenical question. If we don't have commonly-agreed consensus on an alternative, we are going to err on the side of conservatism and that is not always a bad thing," he said. For now, the United Church proposals were dropped and the new worship book is going to press with the traditional trinitarian words for baptism. It does, however, include three optional prayers, one of which says, "May the blessing of the one God, Mother and Father of us all, be with you today and always." Book or no book, some priests already use alternative language in their baptismal rituals, Mr. Graham and Mr. Leggett said. While declining to identify anyone in particular, Mr. Leggett said some of the wording used, such as "Creator, Redeemer, Sanctifier sanc·ti·fy tr.v. sanc·ti·fied, sanc·ti·fy·ing, sanc·ti·fies 1. To set apart for sacred use; consecrate. 2. To make holy; purify. 3. " would "cause problems" if someone moved to another denomination Denomination The stated value found on financial instruments. Notes: This term applies to most financial instruments with monetary values. The denomination for bonds and securities would be face value or par value. and sought to have the baptism recognized. "Some (clergy) would like to know what was said. To some people, I'm sure (the issue) sounds trite, but language does matter," he said. |
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