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November 22 2004 By virtueonline LAGOS: Dr. Williams barely survives no-confidence vote at CAPA meeting

Angered by the perceived snub to the Anglican Churches of Africa, a motion was put forward at the conference that sought to “censure” Dr Williams for his absence. Following a prolonged debate on October 28, the chairman of the day’s session, Bishop Johanes Seoka of Pretoria, urged the bishops not to act, arguing a rebuke would serve no positive purpose. Two senior bishops then rose to speak asserting that a rebuke would be ill-mannered and was not the African way of resolving conflict.

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November 22 2004 By virtueonline LONDON: Bishops turn blind eye to gay wedding ceremonies in church

Despite efforts of conservatives in the worldwide Anglican hierarchy to maintain a strictly biblical line, the Western Church is heading inexorably down the liberal road.

Bishops are turning a blind eye to gay ceremonies, many in church, which mirror blessing services offered already each year to thousands of divorcees who have civil weddings.

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November 21 2004 By virtueonline Brother Andrew Brought Gospel To Arafat

"I had visited him many times and given him an Arabic Bible and an Arabic copy of God's Smuggler. It was one of Arafat's favorite books, incidentally. He always asked for more copies. He would tell me, 'Bring a dozen more, Andrew. I want all my officers to read God's Smuggler;’ so he was one of the book's distributors."

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November 20 2004 By virtueonline ROME: Secular forces 'pushing God to margins'

The warning, in a long interview in La Repubblica, Italy's Left-leaning newspaper, comes as the Bavarian-born cardinal, who is the Pope's doctrinal chief, is being viewed as an important late entry for the papacy.

Coming shortly after MEPs refused to approve the Italian politician Rocco Buttiglione as European justice commissioner because of his strong Catholic views on gays and women, his statements may be seen by some as something of a manifesto.

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November 20 2004 By virtueonline LONDON: We must think of God as a therapist, says Williams

Dr Williams makes no reference to the debate over gays, which has all but split the Anglican Church in recent months. But some are certain to see in his autistic analogy a measure of his frustration that, in spite of the closely argued Windsor Report, produced last month by the commission set up to find a way through, the Church is still at war with itself over gays.

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November 19 2004 By virtueonline TWO THEOLOGIANS BLAST ECUSA ENVOY ON LAMBETH COMMISSION

This statement is of course deeply undercut by the very shape of the Report’s theological premises, which the bishop knows so well: the character of God’s own life as Trinity, the mission of God within the world, the Church’s life as a reflection and instrument of that mission, its demanded life in unity and radical holiness, its subjection, especially through its bishops, to Scripture’s dynamic call and shaping in the life of the Church as a whole, and the ordering of common life in a way t

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November 18 2004 By virtueonline NEWPORT BEACH: Seceding churches might be sued as one

St. James Church in Newport Beach, All Saints' in Long Beach and St. David's in North Hollywood seceded from the Episcopal Church of the United States in August because they did not agree with the national church's liberal views on homosexuality, the divinity of Jesus Christ and the supremacy of the Bible.

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November 18 2004 By virtueonline PHILADELPHIA: Church seeks to sell sculpture by Augustus Saint-Gaudens

The piece, which was removed from St. Stephen's sanctuary earlier this year, went on display last week at a New York gallery and will be there through Dec. 17 as part of a 60-piece show of American sculptures.
In February, after it had been removed, St. Stephen's pastor, the Rev. Charles Flood, said he had taken the piece down for cleaning and that it might be sold.

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November 18 2004 By virtueonline SAN DIEGO: Ex-official sues CEO, directors of troubled charity

According to his suit, filed last month in Superior Court, Norgard was lured from Minnesota to San Diego on the promise of succeeding May as chief executive sometime "in the foreseeable future."

Instead, he was excluded from the chain of command on decisions affecting his areas of responsibility; held accountable for things he was kept unaware of; and "placed in an ethical dilemma regarding ECS' accounting and personnel practices," the suit alleged.

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November 17 2004 By virtueonline JERUSALEM: Anglican Bishop Praises Arafat's, "strong faith in God"

In the early 1980's I was afforded the opportunity to meet the President, and immediately I was charmed by his leadership, humility, and gracious hospitality. He has been a source of strength for me and the Diocese, for his commitment to peace, justice, and truth has been genuine and remarkable. He has been a true friend, and I have deeply cherished his loyal friendship.

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