Sunday, November 07, 2004
Egotistical hypocrite - Episcopal Gene Robinson
(Read Article from previous post "Deep Red/Blue divisions unlikely to heal soon" first - this is the ending:)
Can the differences be bridged? This might be one area in which all sides agree.
Not likely, they say.
Views so deeply rooted in moral doctrine — however a person chooses to interpret “moral” — aren’t likely to change. But Americans suggest they and the nation’s leaders could do more to forge at least some understanding — a way to live together in a society of opposing convictions.
“Learn to accept people the way they are, not how you would like them to be,” says Santa McKenna, a Cuban-American hairdresser in Florida.
“Be more substantive in what we say ... rather than attacking people personally,” says Jerry Folk, a Lutheran minister in Wisconsin.
“The president could do something magnanimous, like naming a Democrat to his cabinet,” suggests Larry Gore, a Bush supporter in Pennsylvania.
“Find a sense of community that goes beyond my needs, my wants ... that draws the lines of community very broadly, so ultimately there is no ‘them,’” says V. Gene Robinson, the nation’s first openly gay Episcopal bishop whose election itself caused great division among churchgoers.
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"Find a sense of community that goes beyond my needs, my wants" - this from the homo Gene Robinson that made the Episcopal Church fracture and who destroyed the Episcopal community thanks to his egostistical homosexual needs, his sexual wants.
We do not want to be gay dittoheads, with a blurry sense of life, with no responsability, a particularly lewd, violent, sorry culture. We would like to draw the lines elsewhere, and anyone is welcome to join if they let go of their dysfunctional sexuality and culture.
Can the differences be bridged? This might be one area in which all sides agree.
Not likely, they say.
Views so deeply rooted in moral doctrine — however a person chooses to interpret “moral” — aren’t likely to change. But Americans suggest they and the nation’s leaders could do more to forge at least some understanding — a way to live together in a society of opposing convictions.
“Learn to accept people the way they are, not how you would like them to be,” says Santa McKenna, a Cuban-American hairdresser in Florida.
“Be more substantive in what we say ... rather than attacking people personally,” says Jerry Folk, a Lutheran minister in Wisconsin.
“The president could do something magnanimous, like naming a Democrat to his cabinet,” suggests Larry Gore, a Bush supporter in Pennsylvania.
“Find a sense of community that goes beyond my needs, my wants ... that draws the lines of community very broadly, so ultimately there is no ‘them,’” says V. Gene Robinson, the nation’s first openly gay Episcopal bishop whose election itself caused great division among churchgoers.
========================================================
"Find a sense of community that goes beyond my needs, my wants" - this from the homo Gene Robinson that made the Episcopal Church fracture and who destroyed the Episcopal community thanks to his egostistical homosexual needs, his sexual wants.
We do not want to be gay dittoheads, with a blurry sense of life, with no responsability, a particularly lewd, violent, sorry culture. We would like to draw the lines elsewhere, and anyone is welcome to join if they let go of their dysfunctional sexuality and culture.
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