Deifying our leaders

When we break it down, leaders are just human. Human. Nothing more. Nothing less. We, as a society place value and status on those humans and elevate them above ourselves to bring about a sort of aura. Moreover, add in some charisma, charm, money, and shazaam and you have a recipe for danger. Once a person reaches this elevation, it is hard to, as they say, turn the ship around. In mainstream Christian culture we have done this eerily well unfortunately.

Now, I have my list of leaders, speakers, pastors, friends and scholars who I have deemed as great and sometimes even spectacular. However, at the end of the day, I know they are human and prone to kinks in the armor. More importantly, I realize that at some point in their life, they will fail. I am no different.

That said, the issues surround Bishop Eddie Long are not surprising to me. Now, let me make this clear, I’m not accusing Long with anything, nor am I saying that Long is guilty of what he is being accused of. My point in this is that we have, for a long time, deified our leaders to the point of perfection—i.e. they can do no wrong. Then, when they fall—and people inevitably do—we are always surprised. I will say, however, that I was not surprised in the least when I heard the allegations. I merely shook my head and am waiting for the evidence to fall. The problem here is that we have glorified a “man.” Yes, there are some problems in that.
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Sad Times for the Episcopal Church

I attended an Episcopal church one summer a few years ago. I’m not Episcopalian, but I enjoyed the church and the experience. I loved the liturgy and tradition of it—the sense of being part of an ancient, worldwide, structured body of believers. I loved the use of organ and the singing of 500 year-old hymns. I loved the creeds.

But sadly, the Episcopal Church is a dying denomination, and the events earlier this week at the Episcopal General Convention in Anaheim only underscore its deterioration.

At the convention, Episcopal leaders pronounced gays and lesbians eligible for “any ordained ministry,” even though Anglican leaders had sought a clear moratorium on consecrating another gay bishop after the Gene Robinson hoopla of 2003.

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