Nice, Paul. You are clearly not 19 (Brussels) anymore. With much affection, Sarah Sent from my iPad On Jun 25, 2012, at 1:05 AM, PSchrijnen@aol.com wrote:
I trust that all is well, as well, John.
Christine and I have four sons: from left to right: Patrick, Max, Joshua and Stefan. Awesome young men. <Schrijnen%20walk%202.JPG> Max finished York University yesterday and we send him off to join Teach First. He will live not far from the place where the Hahns and the Avery's opened the Teesside house some forty years ago. He will teach Maths there. A wonderful moment.
The picture was made on the wedding day of Stefan last year. We walked to Stonehenge the mark the last time that this particular family unit was the primary unit for the 6 of us.
Best wishes,
Paul
Paul Schrijnen London
In a message dated 24/06/2012 18:08:00 GMT Daylight Time, jpc2025@triad.rr.com writes: I seem to know you. Didn't you used to be on that first among equals thingy called the Panchayat that that weird group called Order Ecumenical concocted?
We Americans have such simple last names, like Crow and Cock. Who can even pronounce or spell his name? Sort of like that other group called Shriner. Not such a bad fellow, as I remember. Did have a funny accent though.
(;>)
Cheers, Paul.
Trust all is well.
John
Has your son finished school?
From: dialogue-bounces@lists.wedgeblade.net [mailto:dialogue-bounces@lists.wedgeblade.net] On Behalf Of PSchrijnen@aol.com Sent: Sunday, June 24, 2012 12:14 PM To: dialogue@lists.wedgeblade.net Subject: Re: [Dialogue] Gad,another priest with some balls that don't clank in the da...
Hi Carol,
I am Paul Schrijnen, a Dutch Roman Catholic living in London.
Paul
In a message dated 24/06/2012 15:40:14 GMT Daylight Time, carol@songaia.com writes: Paul who? Please identify yourself!
Carol Crow
On Jun 24, 2012, at 1:41 AM, Paul wrote:
Rowan has spoken and written about these ideas for a number of years. Nothing new, he would say. I have no data to support the idea of him doing the equivalent of 'selling children'. I suspect that he prefers to see himself as a theologian and an academic than sit on the seat of Canterbury, where his job is to represent the stated consensus, which he fundamentally disagrees with, as I hear from Anglican priests near him. Paul
Sent from my iPhone
On 24 Jun 2012, at 08:24, Lee Early <lees.mail@comcast.net> wrote:
Whoa there big pony. Let's take a step back a moment. This is an issue worth debate, investigation and thought - - not more tirade. Who out there knows more about this? This is something of note and we want to hear more, speaking for myself.
Anyone have more to add?
Lee
On Jun 23, 2012, at 10:57 PM, Tracy E. Longacre wrote:
Believe me when I say, as an Anglican myself, that Rowan is decidedly NOT going to aid any revolution and would just as soon sell the young down the river to protect the current establishment. One thing he definitely does NOT have are balls.
I find it rather hilarious that they describe something written that will not be published for 6 months as "outspoken"!
Tracy Longacre sent from my iPhone
On 23 juin 2012, at 23:15, LAURELCG@aol.com wrote:
Perhaps the retired will aid the young in leading the revolution.
Jann
In a message dated 6/23/2012 2:11:59 P.M. Pacific Daylight Time, stevehar11201@gmail.com writes: The archbishop of Canterbury has denounced David Cameron's "big society", saying that it comes across as aspirational waffle that was "designed to conceal a deeply damaging withdrawal of the state from its responsibilities to the most vulnerable".
The outspoken attack on the prime minister's flagship policy by Rowan Williams – his strongest to date – is contained in a new book, Faith in the Public Square, that is being prepared for publication ahead of his retirement in December.
Passages from the book, obtained by the Observer, reflect the archbishop's deep frustration not just with the policies of Cameron's government and those of its Labour predecessors, but also with what he sees as the west's rampant materialism and unquestioning pursuit of economic growth. Williams also laments spiralling military expenditure, writing that "the adventure in Iraq and its cost in any number of ways seems to beggar the imagination".
-- Steve Harrington
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