After several years outside of their circles, I went to my parents' church over my vacation. Here's my rundown of the ~30min sermon:
--Pre-emptive strike at science and philosophy to discredit any opposition before it starts.
--Sexism (with vague swipe at feminism)
--Homophobia
--Transphobia
--An endorsement of capitalism
--Worm theology; it is actually part of their Statement of Faith -- a core, binding document -- that humans live under God's condemnation by default!
@sumpnlikefaith Did…did we grow up in the same church?
@iamwill1w9 @sumpnlikefaith
It's reading things like this which makes me realise how blessed I am. The UK church (all denominations) is deeply flawed and many folk can be hateful in their personal views, but never have I ever heard hatred from the pulpit.
I *have* seen homophobia on the corporate level. eg. some local churches signed a very homophobic letter to the Archbishop of Canterbury last year and guess what? Those churches are the ones which are dying.
@iamwill1w9 I agree, and it's a heartbreaking truth. I'd like to believe that a backlash is coming and that more Christians will take a stand against the hate. I believe it's happening on a grass roots level worldwide and in the UK we're seeing more inclusivity in more churches all the time. The penny seems to have dropped and we're literally just waiting for powerful old bigots to die in order to affect real and lasting change.
It's a long slog but the USA *can* do it too. @sumpnlikefaith
@stueytheround @sumpnlikefaith I think that what the Episcopal Church is doing is on the right track. If people are looking for expressions of Christianity in the US that are more likely on a better track, I suggest they start there.
I attend a wonderful Episcopal Church here and work with young adults to help them have a safe, affirming place to explore faith without the pressure of being anyone other than the best of who they are.
But that kind of religious space is rare.