Distinction for 09.27.10
I wish people would stop saying celibacy when they mean abstinence. One is a state of life, the other an [in]action.
Tobias Stanislas Haller BSG
The serious and sometimes satirical reflections of a priest, poet, and pilgrim —
who knowing he has not obtained the goal, presses on in a Godward direction.
I wish people would stop saying celibacy when they mean abstinence. One is a state of life, the other an [in]action.
Tobias Stanislas Haller BSG
“a clear-sighted companion.... If you are passionate about the vitality of today’s church, I encourage you to accompany him on his mystagogical excursion into the liturgical landscape. You will rediscover a familiar place rife with fresh provisions planted by the God who longs to feed our deepest hungers and hopes.” —Jay Koyle, chair, Faith, Worship and Ministry of The Anglican Church of Canada
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7 comments:
Indeed: just because I happen not to have drunk any alcohol recently doesn't make me a teetotaller.
Tobias, your wish is my command. You make a legitimate distinction between celibacy and abstinence that I will try to keep in mind when I use the words.
Thanks Marnanel. A good image: there is a difference between a Nazirite and someone who simply doesn't drink.
GM, now if only Rowan would oblige.... ;-)
But they want us to be abstinent for all of our lives so it becomes a state of life. Abstinence implies that you might change your mind. Celibacy implies that it's a non-negotiable eternal state - just what they would like it to be for us.
Erika, I agree; my point is there has been a slippage in the language -- "celibate" does not mean "not having sex" but "not being married." But because of this slippage, even an abstinent couple are looked at askance -- there is a resistance even to companionship, which is an important part of human relationships.
The recent statement from Sugden on Anglican Mainstream reveals this: any household other than a male-female marriage is unacceptable. Out the window with monasticism in true über-Protestant style. (Barth [of Church Dogmatics era -- he repented somewhat later in life] would be pleased, as this was precisely his argument against monasticism.)
(in)action:
My grandmother described virginity as something you have but rather something you don't.
Good one, M.
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