SEARCH Journal

Spring 2016

Editorial

It was intriguing last November to note that a black man had succeeded
a white woman as Presiding Bishop of The Episcopal Church in the United
States. This had to be a very special individual. And so it proved, when the
Most Revd Michael Curry responded with such grace and confidence to
the humiliation of TEC at the Primates’ meeting in January. We offer two
views of the new PB, one by a TEC priest who is also black, one by a white
woman who worked with him closely in North Carolina.

1916 and the Rising has already been so thoroughly explored in the media that the story of “A Protestant Family in the Citizen Army” by the Late Valerie Jones comes as a remarkable “exclusive”. Warm thanks to her daughter, Dr Heather Jones, for offering this excerpt from her forthcoming publication of Valerie’s research. With the Sexuality Committee’s “Guide to the Conversation” now available, the C of I is called once again to “listen, learn and dialogue” about same-sex relationships between Christians. An interview with the Select Committee’s chairman, Dean John Mann, aims to show us the way ahead. Do male-dominated church structures turn a blind eye to domestic violence – or to put it more crudely to wife-beating? Even by clergy? Some shocking facts have been unearthed by research in Scotland and the USA and underlined by a recent court case. Julia Capps has been relating these to the scene in Ireland.And how careful are we not to jump to predetermined conclusions in our reading of Old Testament narratives? Brad Anderson challenges us with the example of Jacob and Esau, the brother cheated of his birthright. Could Esau be blessed after all, in his own way, not cursed? With the Syrian migrant crisis and ISIS terrorism continuing unabated in 2016, the challenge to learn about core Islamic teaching and to relate to Muslims in our country increases daily. Our thanks to Shayk Umar Al Qadri, one of Dublin’s leading imams, for his consideration of the Prophet Mohammad’s respectful, if conditional, attitude to Christians.Our spring issue closes with an In Retrospect on Archbishop John Ward Armstrong by Dr Michael Kennedy, and with our usual section of Book Reviews. Readers are kindly invited to renew their subscriptions to SEARCH if they have not already done so. Our PAYPAL facility, after some undesirable teething troubles, is now functioning successfully. Please see last pages for relevant forms.

Contents

Bishop Michael Curry: Man with a Mission

The Episcopal Church in the United States made a momentous decision at its last General Convention held last year in Salt Lake City Utah, when they elected the Right Reverend Michael Curry as the 27th Presiding Bishop. Bishop Curry, the former bishop of North Carolina, is the first African American to be elected to this office. The vote was by all indications a landslide, and as a result there is much speculation about what this means for the future of The Episcopal Church.

spring2016
Bishop Michael Curry: Man with a Mission
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Keeping the Faith: Michael Curry as we know him

If it's discussion about God and Church doctrine you want, then the Most Rev. Michael Bruce Curry, Presiding Bishop and Primate of The Episcopal Church is your man. In fact, this son of an Episcopal priest, this graduate of Yale Divinity School who continued his studies at The College of Preachers, Princeton Theological Seminary, Wake Forest University, the Ecumenical Institute at St. Mary’s Seminary, and the Institute of Christian Jewish Studies, would most likely engage with you for hours.

spring2016
Keeping the Faith: Michael Curry as we know him
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The case of the Norgroves: a Protestant Family in the Irish Citizen Army

An Example is offered in what follows of how kinship networks were often fundamental to the radicalisation of Irish Protestants involved in the Easter Rising of 1916. It concerns the Norgrove family – five members of whom took part in the Rising as members of the Irish Citizen Army. This case study provides a valuable insight into how family ties could accelerate individual radicalisation and into the nature of the 1916 revolutionary “generation” identified by Roy Foster, as it developed in the years prior to the Rising.

spring2016
The case of the Norgroves: a Protestant Family in the Irish Citizen Army
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All about ‘The Guide to the Conversation’

Dean John Mann talks to Ginnie Kennerley

spring2016
All about ‘The Guide to the Conversation’
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Where Are the Violent Men? In the Church?

Emma Murphy's black eye has been viewed more than six million times since she uploaded her video to Youtube last July. Although some accused her of washing her dirty linen in public, Women’s Aid praised her courage for speaking out about her former partner’s violence and said it had seen a rise in calls to its domestic violence helpline. Francis Usanga, her former partner and the man who gave her the black eye, was questioned by gardai (although not charged), and despite talk of deportation, he remains in Ireland, and is attending anger management classes. Following his trial by social media, the press announced that his reputation was now ruined, but violent men don’t always lose their reputations.

spring2016
Where Are the Violent Men? In the Church?
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Reconsidering the Unchosen in the Old Testament: The Case of Esau

A pervasive yet difficult notion in the Old Testament is the idea that the God of the Bible chooses some (Israel and its ancestors) as his special people. The theological term for this idea is election, a concept that is clearly set out in Deuteronomy 7:

spring2016
Reconsidering the Unchosen in the Old Testament: The Case of Esau
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Christianity in light of Islamic Primary Sources

The world has become a global village where happenings in one area have a bearing on the all the rest. The need to foster positive understanding and interaction among all religions has greatly increased, especially in view of the peculiar nature of threats to global order and peace posed by religiously motivated violence.

spring2016
Christianity in light of Islamic Primary Sources
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In Retrospect – John Ward Armstrong (1915-1987)

My first encounter with John Ward Armstrong was in the role of the Wallace Lecturer in Trinity College where he was engaged in exercises with Divinity Students in “Reading the Liturgy”. Looking back, the setting (in a large lecture room in the Museum Building) was far removed from the ambience of the churches in which most of us would be spending our lives and one often wondered, subsequently, why some of the Dublin churches including the College Chapel could not have been used for the purpose. And there was a certain artificiality in separating the spoken parts of the services from the liturgical context in which they would actually occur. However, it was a good thing in principle for future members of the clergy to learn how to speak clearly and well in public and so, on balance, this was a beneficial exercise, lightened by the genial manner of the Dean of St Patrick’s (as he was then) and the occasional one-liner, of which the most memorable, in relation to dealing with one’s mistakes was, “If you drop a brick...don’t kick it around!”

spring2016
In Retrospect – John Ward Armstrong (1915-1987)
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