To the AB -
The time for a warning to be issued concerning personal attacks was when Al Hartman first impugned my motivations, not after I simply returned the favor.
Of my "more than once" co-respondents here at the BB (Al, Marcia, Tom, Mark, summer, and Joe S), only Al has felt it necessary to impugn motivation.
Marcia is correct - the discussion can continue at other BBs. In fact, as I have mentioned before, there is a very good BB to which fundamentalists/evangelicals. agnostics, and atheists all post. Personal attacks there are considered part of the freight, but much good discussion also goes on. Since the fundamentalists and evangelicals at this BB are way out-numbered and could use some help (specially from the hearts of Mark, Marcia, and Joe and the brain of TomM), I will give instructions for posting to this BB to Marcia via private email, and she can pass them on, or not, as she sees fit. (PS - Mark, Marcia, and Joe - in my opinion it is no aspersion on your intelligence that you choose to "think" with the heart first when it comes to religious matters, so please don't take it that way.)
What really amazes me is the suspicion that I am so against the Paulist version of Christianity because of his views on homosexuality. Marcia asked me about this in an email, phrasing the question delicately. and TomM just asked me the same thing in slightly different words.
So it may be worthwhile to close by reprinting Marcia's email to me and my response to her, as I have below. There is no need to editorialize further; what I learned from my ex-wife can be learned by anybody with an open heart and an open mind - ignore the sin, love the sinner, and dismiss Paul as nothing more than a HIGHLY neurotic usurper of the REAL good-news (Godspell) brought to us by ChristJesus.
In other words, once you have read the email interchange below between Marcia and myself, all you really have to do to understand my views on ChristJesus is to ask yourself - really ask yourself - why my ex-wife never missed Mass one week in her entire life, insofar as I know. And if the only answer you can come up with is:
"She was covering her bets", then shame on you, not on her.
Blessed are all of us in Christ. regardless of how and why he has entered our hearts.
David Halitsky
-----Original Message-----
From:
marinier@canada.com [mailto:marinier@canada.com]
Sent: Tuesday, September 21, 2004 9:36 AM
To: David Halitsky
Subject: personal question
Hi David,
Please do not be offended by my personal question. Is there
something about your lifestyle that would 'support' the reason why
you do not like the apostle Paul and his epistles?
I agree that others hold to a similar opinion as you do. At least
they did when they wrote the books and publish the articles that
they have.
I will respond to the BB posts sometime today, but I was curious
about another matter.
Blessings,
Marcia
-----Original Message-----
From: David Halitsky [mailto:dhalitsky@www.cumulativeinquiry.com]
Sent: Tuesday, September 21, 2004 9:39 AM
To: '
marinier@canada.com'
Subject: No - not in the sense I think you intended
Hi M -
No.
My first wife was an ex-call-girl. This was not the
reason we split up; I knew the facts of her life
before we married. The abuse in her childhood which
led her to her "profession" also led her into what I
call "episodic alcoholism" of the worst kind - she
would be stone-cold sober and a perfect mother to her
three children for weeks at a time, and then "disappear
for an evening or a night, to be found sleeping outside
the door in the morning.
She went to Mass every week while she was "working" in
her "profession" and I asked her once how she could
reconcile her religious beliefs with what she chose to do
for a living.
She said that in confession, the priest would say
"Avoid the near occasion of sin." And she felt that she
was obeying this instruction by never having a repeat
customer.
The whole marriage was a very painful experience in many
ways, but it did lead me to see that Paul's Christianity
is not sufficiently robust and subtle to handle the
varieties of true religious experience one encounters
in today's world - far too judgmental, far too narrow.
Best regards
David