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Excerpts from a tract by a staunch atheist? On the contrary, those are assertions offered by a bishop of America's Episcopal Church, John Spong of Newark, in his new book, Rescuing the Bible from Fundamentalism (Harper San Francisco, $16.95). Spong's unorthodoxy is of long standing, but it has now reached epic proportions. His previous book, Living in Sin?, assailed Christian dos and don'ts on sex and asserted that nonmarital sex can be holy under some circumstances. After the work appeared in 1988, Spong ordained a sexually active gay priest, inspiring the Episcopal House of Bishops to "disassociate...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: More Spongtaneous Eruptions | 2/18/1991 | See Source »

...provocative prelate also has Roman Catholics fuming. A task force in his Newark diocese has just declared that Catholicism's view of women is "so insulting, so retrograde that we can respond only by saying that women should, for the sake of their own humanity, leave that communion." Spong handpicked the panel, and offers no particular criticism of its assertions, though he says he might have employed milder language. Newark's Catholic Archbishop, Theodore McCarrick, has decried the "offensive attacks" on Catholicism...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: More Spongtaneous Eruptions | 2/18/1991 | See Source »

...Rescuing the Bible, Spong brands traditional Catholicism as a "destructive" creed. But he is even more offended by conservative Protestants who take a literal view of biblical exegesis. Spong, 59, held similar beliefs in his boyhood as a practicing Presbyterian, and has admitted that Fundamentalism gave him a "love of Scripture that is no longer present in the liberal tradition of the church." In taking aim at literalism, Spong declares his goal is to reveal the spiritual truths underlying the biblical text. Still, his book lashes out both at the conservative view of the Bible and at its adherents...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: More Spongtaneous Eruptions | 2/18/1991 | See Source »

...Spong's wildly offbeat convictions raise an intriguing question: Are there any limits to what an Episcopal leader may believe -- or disbelieve? His Paul- was-gay argument, based tenuously upon the Apostle's unmarried state and frequently mentioned sense of personal sin, is causing a growing uproar among traditionalists. But conservative Bishop William Frey, president of Pennsylvania's Trinity Episcopal School for Ministry, doubts any decisive stand will be taken by the church against his colleague's writings. "The House of Bishops has shown itself to be impotent in the face of challenges to the core beliefs of the church...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: More Spongtaneous Eruptions | 2/18/1991 | See Source »

Williams apologized for belittling Mother Teresa but stuck by his anti- monogamy stand. He plans to defy the bishop's request to cease all priestly activities until the case is settled. Says he: "If ((Spong)) wants to spend another quarter-million dollars, he can take me to trial." And speaking of trials, conservative Episcopalians are planning to file charges against Bishop Spong himself for ordaining an active...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: Knocking Monogamy | 2/12/1990 | See Source »

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