A while back I posted a video we watched in my liturgics class. (I ended up dropping that class but whatever.)
Today, in my Patristics class (formally titled “History of Christian Theology to 451”), we watched snippets of these two videos about the Toronto Blessing, something I had never heard of before.
It was a lead-in to our discussion about Montanism, a heresy that began in the second century, and involved prophetic figures who believed the Holy Spirit spoke directly through them.
The parallels are fascinating. One reason the church at the time rejected Montanism was because it undercut the church’s claim on authority (Apostolic succession? Who cares!) and emphasized the role of the Holy Spirit perhaps a bit too much for a church that was still struggling to figure out just what it thought about God the Father and God the Son.
It turns out the Toronto Blessing types got too much for their Vineyard leaders. Wikipedia tells us: “In 1995, the Airport church was released from affiliation with the Vineyard movement. The reasons for the disaffiliation were for growing tension over the church’s emphasis on extraordinary manifestations of the Holy Spirit and the Vineyard leadership’s inability to exercise oversight over the revival.”
I take two lessons from this: the established church never likes letting the Holy Spirit get out of hand and it turns out Patristics is relevant after all!
(By the way, I am intentionally not using his name in this post so that this picture won’t eventually show up on Google Images attached to him. I’m not sure what the Society of Biblical Literature would think.)
(“Ahoy, me matey – there’s the Big Apple”… or something. Actually, we sailed east not west.)
The presentation before the other bishops.
The magic moment. That’s a lot of bishops!
The new bishop gets a long ovation from his new diocese.
Larry has for a long time been a fire chaplain.
With some other former camp chaplains on hand for the occasion.
There need to be more steel bands at Episcopal events, especially ones with priests playing in them. Note the white-haired woman in the last row. She was my favourite.