letters

 

Lots of religion as we get into the holiday season, and more


Maracuya

Great "paper," it's nice to have a window open to Panama as I haven't been back for over 30 years.

The reunion is as close as I get.

Keep up the good fight!

Peace,

Mark Burbine C.H.S. '67

P.S. What the hell's a maracuya?

Editor's note: In dialects of English other than Panamanian English, a "maracuya" is better known as a "passionfruit."


Gasoline vs. liquid propane: error in your article

I don’t mean to nit-pick, however, I found a flaw in your article.

The equation that you have for the combustion of octane is:

C8H18 + 25O2 8CO2 + 9H2O

That equation isn’t balanced. If you look at it you have 50 oxygens on the left side of the equation and only 25 on the right.

Actual equation for the combustion of octane:

2C8H18 + 25O2 16CO2 + 18H2O

Because it’s unbalanced your enthalpy of formation is off significantly (by an order of magnitude).

Just wanted to help.

Sean Wyman


Jesus Christ depicted as the Black Christ

I take exception with your footnote on the Father's letter on the Black Christ of Portobello. As an explanation I present the following from Holy Scripture:

The story of the Blind Men and the Elephant, nails the indisputable fact that people tend to understand only a tiny portion of reality and then extrapolate all manner of dogmas from that, each claiming only his one is the correct version. Only God provides the truth and the way. In John 8:12 it is written, “I am the light of the world. No follower of mine shall ever walk in darkness; no he shall possess the light of life.”

If God is infinite and we are finite, it is reasonable to believe that none of us can fully capture His nature. Nobody here on earth really knows what he looks like! Sure there are many pictures and statues of Jesus Christ that we see in churches and in books but is this really how he looks? No, not really! This is the sculptures or painters rendition on marble or canvas. So as true believers we should not read too much into why the Black Christ is depicted that way. It is not relevant to the discussion at hand. The idea of racisms playing a part in the sculpture is ludicrous. It may have turned to its present color when it went into the sea as the ship being used to transport it to the New World sunk off Panama. We should not get focussed on that and that Jesus lived in Africa, which he did but for only two years and it was Alexandria, Egypt. His parents Our Blessed Mother and Saint Joseph took him there to escape King Herod’s order to kill all kids less than two years old. The family suffered many hardships while there. But that is not the crux of the matter!

We must focus on that we can only know God through His Son, Jesus Christ --- the image of the invisible God --- who, “for us men, and for our salvation, came down from heaven, and was incarnate by the Holy Spirit of the Virgin Mary, and was made man.” To know Christ is to truly know God and experience His redeeming love.

Through the teaching of the Holy Scriptures, Christians have a living relationship with the Lord. During our short pilgrimage on earth, we are content to "walk by faith, not by sight." (2 Cor. 5:7). We love the Lord Jesus even though we have never seen Him with our physical eyes. “Although you have never seen him, you love him and without seeing you now believe in him and rejoice with inexpressible joy touched with glory” (1 Peter 1:8). Yes eagerly we wait for that glorious day when “we shall see him as He is” (1 John 3:2). Then our joy will be complete!

Lest we forget, “…then you will know the truth and the truth will set you free.” (John 8: 32.)

God bless you and yours,

Louis Joseph Barbier Jr.
Largo, Florida


Gay church in Panama

Yes, Virgin-ia, there is a gay church in Panama. We all know there are umpteen gay priests; but only this church claims it loud and claims it proud. She may be bi and married to a man, but Our Lady of the Rainbow is here.

Last February 1, on the Feast of Brigid of Kildare, Bishop William C. “Rusty” Clyma, III, bishop of St Savior’s Inclusive Celtic Episcopal Church-San Francisco, and his spouse/partner, the Rev’d. George McCauslan, traveled to Panama City to ordain the then-deacon oonagh to the priesthood. In attendance, as presenters were members of AHMNP and UNAIDS, her husband --- “my true tribe.”

Since then (and before) Amma oonagh has traveled the length and breadth of Panama, carrying the church “in the streets” for those who ask. Weddings, blessings, baptisms, adoptions, hand-fastings, Pride eucharists, World AIDS Day memories and vigils, house blessings, bar blessings, labyrinth walks. “You name it,” she claims,”we’ll write and pray a service! And I do mean ‘we.’ I’m not very good at being 'Tha Man.’ This is your life; I’m your humble servant and people have a right to agree and disagree on what is said and done in sacred spaces…There is a common denominator of a ‘gay spirituality’ that speaks out of oppression and speaks from Liberation Theology, and most especially a way of thinking-being-and living in the world. My favorite book is Marcella Anthus-Reid’s ‘Indecent Theology;’ my other favorite theologian is Ivone Gebara. Both of these women come from the tradition of Liberation Theology, born right here in Latin America, speaking deeply from our experiences here that have always been deeply rooted in 'The New World’ and the ‘Old Old’ of the New World that’s powerful and aboriginal, not Spanish, English, French, or US.”

One need not be Christian either. “We are all sacred beings of The Divine One. I use Christian language because that is my tradition, but I’m far from what is usually considered traditional, thank the God/dess!” she grins. “I believe we might be closer to what Jesus had to say about people…Early Church meeting 21st century people meets monastic prayer meets Gaelic and English..and now Spanish…My personal theology is as much a blend of my DNA, a Sioux mother and an Irish father, as it has to do with eight years in seminary; much of who I am has as much to do with Earth-based spirituality as it does with so-called Christian anything. We adapt lots of liturgy from Iona and other Celtic-Christian work and prayers. We practice a way of being church, a verb, as God is a verb, that's about small groups and house church intimacy and safety; we call it 'Brigid's Mantle.' You can read the story on the website. The ‘old’ of the Earth and Creation never left Ireland; it’s still there, underground, but it’s alive. Just as many RC nuns walk the sacred wells as lay people. Mary Daly is in Ireland. Starhawk danced the Spiral Dance in Ireland. If I don’t honour my Irish heritage then I’m doing a disservice to who and how I am. It’s one of the reasons I’m a member of ICEC, that intentional Celtic connection. The primary reason I’m a priest in this gay church is I couldn’t wait for my former Church to quit arguing about the full rights of Baptism with GLBT folk. A bumper sticker reads: Women, if we’re not going to ordain them, then stop baptizing them.’ The same has been said of GLBT folk; certainly my favorite t-shirt claims that. I’m not here to convert anyone…to anything! I’m here to walk with people, to stand shoulder-to-shoulder with people in their lives. For me, that's the real sacred, in the day to day. That's where the real miracles are. And besides God is Metaphor, Mystery, and Something Greater Than We That's About Love And Relationships. That's how I see it anyway, this day. Ask me tomorrow when I might not be able to say there is a God, whatever G/god is.”

Our Lady of the Rainbow/Nuestra Senora del Arco Iris and the Inclusive Celtic Episcopal Church use inclusive language. They honour the gay saints of Christendom and some of those like William Stringfellow, Martin Luther King, Jr., the s/heroes of Stonewall, and Harvey Milk are not officially canonized, “but that doesn’t matter…a saint’s a saint and a martyr is a martyr. Anyone here can speak to the life of Oscar Romero, the blessed, brilliant, and wonderful Jesuits, the Maryknolls, the ‘Disappeared.’” The liturgies and homilies are specifically addressed towards GLBT rights. “I’ll wear a collar into a gay bar in Panama City; I’ll have a few drinks; I’ll smoke a cigar; I’ll wear a collar to a GLBT movie showing. But you’ll usually find me in a nahua, whether I’m wearing a collar or not. They are beautiful walking rainbows and I love the Ngobe. They’re my other community.”

She hopes all her work in life reflects social justice. “I’m not so much interested in social works, although that is important. Churches with only 'feeding programs' raise my eyebrows. I come from the Father Robert Warren Cromey School of Church that lives and teaches an actual change in poverty, homelessness, hunger, education, housing, and health care --- especially for women and children. Otherwise, what is the point? Sure a feeding program is important and necessary. But without the other, you're just only making yourself feel less guilty.” The words of a hero, Camera say: When I gave food to hungry people, they called me a saint: when I asked why people are hungry, they called me a Communist. "I don’t know if anyone could call anyone from the US a real live Communist, but I could certainly pass as a Christian Socialist.” A life-long gay rights advocate and “fag hag,” her work before ordination was in hospice and AIDS-advocacy. She’s been working with WPA before we called it HIV, before ARC, before GRID. Her most “fun” job was as a chaplain on the NAIAD, the San Francisco Neptune Society’s yacht, where five days a week you’d find her blessing cremains scattered into the San Francisco Bay. She dreams of establishing a hospice in Panama.

Included are pictures of the cathdral/bishop’s see in San Francisco. The other picture is most of us ordained folks at San Francisco’s Pride. The silver-haired man is oonagh+’s spouse Kenny, an Episcopal priest in Bocas. Mother oonagh struggles with Spanish. “Language is not my gift; I was in terminal remedial Old Testament Greek” but with twenty-four hours notice, I can read the Mass in Spanish and in 72 hours, with translation assistance, I can preach in Spanish. On a good day and with lots of assistance from mi amiga Meri Elvia, I might be able to utter a few Ngobe words.”

For more information, please email: ammagh.oonagh@gmail.com or check http://www.myspace.com/ammaoonagh for ongoing revisions, music, images, thoughts. Celtic Advent reflections are at http://www.ammaghoonagh.wordpress.com named “Fay, Gay, and On The Way”.

The Rev'd. oonagh Ryan-King
The Inclusive Celtic Episcopal Church
http://inclusivecelticchurch.com/stsavior1.aspx


Kudos for Hugo's ex

Hooray for Venezuela’s Marisabel Rodríguez (ex-wife of Venezuela's president Hugo Chávez and former first lady) who has successfully campaigned against the defeated referendum on constitutional changes that would have allowed Chávez to run for president indefinitely (possible president for life) giving Chávez his first defeat at the ballot box in nearly nine years in office. “We were on the verge of handing over the country to the president like a blank check,” she said, calling it a “road straight to totalitarianism.” As first lady she was part of the assembly that drafted the current 1999 constitution. Now she is proposing an amendment to shorten presidential terms from six to four years, saying Chávez has been in office long enough. She also warned that Chávez has an extraordinary ability to fool the people. It’s wonderful to see people like Marisabel who understand what freedom means and have the courage and means to rise up and protect it. I hope this signifies a long overdue awakening in Venezuela and everywhere south of the border to the realization that freedom, and not government controls and entrenchment, is the ONLY security. President Chávez’s friend and advisor, Fidel Castro, must be having some very sobering thoughts over this setback. Countries south of the border have always vacillated, it seems, between Marxist Socialist and private enterprise regimes and I hope the people, including the US, continue to magnify their inherent genetic drive toward strength and prosperity through personal freedom. Toward this end I would recall a few of those crossing the cosmic stage: Batista of Cuba, Somoza of Nicaragua, Pinochet of Chile, see: JBS.org (search: pinochet, somoza, batista), all heroes who defended foundations for freedom in their time. Good luck to Marisabel Rodríguez!

Ed Nemechek
Landers, California


Doesn't accept Sparky as the prince of peace

Dear fellow Global Villagers,

Stop ALL the wars and disputes, and start Unite the Nations: One NATION under DOG vs. One NATION under GOD!

This personal appeal is safely presumed to be loaded with the GOoDwills of your very-own-people, praying for their own, offspring, ancestors and homeland, yours (might be) included.

INSHA Sun ALLAH

Tri Pujanarto Sumantri
IR


 

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