Volume > Issue > A Letter From a Concerned Episcopalian

A Letter From a Concerned Episcopalian

TOLERANCE FOR VAMPIRES

By Edward B. Connolly | October 2003
Fr. Edward B. Connolly is Pastor of St. Joseph Parish in Pottsville, Pennsylvania. In his weekly bulletin he has a feature called "Ask the Answer Priest," from which the above is adapted.

Dear Answer Priest [Fr. Connolly]:

I am a member of a small, closely knit Episcopal parish. I am writing you because you are not a member of my denomination and you have a reputation, despite being a Catholic, for being fair and objective in your advice.

I think it was about 10 years ago when our Vicar stood up in the pulpit on a Sunday morning and made a distressing announcement of a personal nature. He told us that he and his wife were divorcing, and that she was moving out of the vicarage. He told the congregation that, while his soon-to-be ex-wife and he were the best of friends and hoped to remain so, they had certain irreconcilable lifestyle preferences, which made it impossible for them to live together in Christian peace and tranquility. The Vicar asked us to pray for him and for her, and to respect their privacy by not making them the subject of unnecessary conversation, so much of which would simply be uninformed gossip. He reminded us of the following: all of us are sinners; Christ died for sinners; none of us is perfect; and permanent marriage is an ideal proposed to us for our admiration, but is not always possible or practical.

Well, of course, we were sad, but we accepted the situation and wished the both of them well in their transition. With the exception of two cranky spinsters who joined the Salvation Army, the congregation stuck together and supported the Vicar.

I have to admit that, along with others, I was curious about the lifestyle differences that the Vicar referred to, but I tried to suppress my curiosity. I thought it would be unseemly to allow my mind to wander in that direction. But you know how human beings are!

This next thing that I have to tell you will seem, at first, unconnected with what I have just told you. Please be patient as I continue my account.

Enjoyed reading this?

READ MORE! REGISTER TODAY

SUBSCRIBE

You May Also Enjoy

Newman, an “Apostate”?

Arthur Schlesinger said the most "tenacious tradition of paranoic agitation in American history has been anti-Catholicism." This book is a product of it.

The Phenomenon of Robert Hugh Benson

While he lived, from first novel to last, he enjoyed an immense audience, an international audience drawn from all classes, including the royal family.

A Letter From a Concerned Episcopalian

The Vicar reminded us that the Anglican Communion embraces a wide variety of lifestyles and said the time had come for him to come out of the closet.