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Public concerts in 'churches' ?

McGrath of Harlow 06 Oct 11 - 07:33 PM
GUEST,999 06 Oct 11 - 06:45 PM
Snuffy 06 Oct 11 - 06:35 PM
GUEST,Suibhne Astray 06 Oct 11 - 04:55 AM
MGM·Lion 05 Oct 11 - 03:43 PM
Paul Burke 05 Oct 11 - 03:35 PM
GUEST,Suibhne Astray 05 Oct 11 - 02:29 PM
MGM·Lion 05 Oct 11 - 02:01 PM
McGrath of Harlow 05 Oct 11 - 01:48 PM
MGM·Lion 05 Oct 11 - 01:25 PM
GUEST,Suibhne Astray 05 Oct 11 - 01:07 PM
GUEST,Suibhne Astray 05 Oct 11 - 01:06 PM
GUEST,999 05 Oct 11 - 12:43 PM
GUEST,Margaret 05 Oct 11 - 12:11 PM
GUEST,petecockermouth 05 Oct 11 - 11:48 AM
GUEST,glueman 05 Oct 11 - 11:41 AM
GUEST,Suibhne Astray 05 Oct 11 - 11:28 AM
GUEST,999 05 Oct 11 - 11:21 AM
GUEST,glueman 05 Oct 11 - 09:48 AM
GUEST,Suibhne Astray 05 Oct 11 - 09:34 AM
GUEST,FloraG 05 Oct 11 - 08:54 AM
GUEST,glueman 05 Oct 11 - 08:47 AM
Nigel Parsons 05 Oct 11 - 08:38 AM
Nigel Parsons 05 Oct 11 - 08:36 AM
banjoman 05 Oct 11 - 07:43 AM
Bounty Hound 05 Oct 11 - 06:54 AM
GUEST,Suibhne Astray 05 Oct 11 - 04:38 AM
MGM·Lion 05 Oct 11 - 04:36 AM
GUEST,FloraG 05 Oct 11 - 04:04 AM
Musket 05 Oct 11 - 03:41 AM
Dan Schatz 04 Oct 11 - 11:06 PM
Bounty Hound 04 Oct 11 - 08:38 PM
GUEST,Tony 04 Oct 11 - 08:20 PM
GUEST,mg 04 Oct 11 - 06:27 PM
GUEST,glueman 04 Oct 11 - 06:04 PM
PoppaGator 04 Oct 11 - 05:55 PM
GUEST,Margaret 04 Oct 11 - 05:37 PM
GUEST,mg 04 Oct 11 - 05:12 PM
GUEST,glueman 04 Oct 11 - 04:53 PM
Desert Dancer 04 Oct 11 - 04:39 PM
GUEST,Suibhne Astray 04 Oct 11 - 04:13 PM
GUEST,Margaret 04 Oct 11 - 04:03 PM
Wesley S 04 Oct 11 - 03:47 PM
foggers 04 Oct 11 - 03:17 PM
GUEST,Suibhne Astray 04 Oct 11 - 02:32 PM
GUEST,Guest TF 04 Oct 11 - 02:26 PM
McGrath of Harlow 04 Oct 11 - 02:16 PM
GUEST,mg 04 Oct 11 - 01:57 PM
GUEST,SteveG 04 Oct 11 - 01:41 PM
Marje 04 Oct 11 - 10:55 AM
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Subject: RE: Public concerts in 'churches' ?
From: McGrath of Harlow
Date: 06 Oct 11 - 07:33 PM

I suppose an alternative term for Easter Sunday could be Eggsmass.


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Subject: RE: Public concerts in 'churches' ?
From: GUEST,999
Date: 06 Oct 11 - 06:45 PM

X marks the spot.


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Subject: RE: Public concerts in 'churches' ?
From: Snuffy
Date: 06 Oct 11 - 06:35 PM

I suppose it depends if he's an Ex-music-Ian or an Ex-magic-Ian


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Subject: RE: Public concerts in 'churches' ?
From: GUEST,Suibhne Astray
Date: 06 Oct 11 - 04:55 AM

Well, that's another reason right there. If you say that you're an Ex-Ian, then people are going to curious as to what it was about being an Ian you found so objectionable in the first place. Being a Sean is a sort of Ian I suppose, along with all the Johns, Jacks, Ewans, Shawns, Johnnys, Evanes, Yanns, Ivans, Johans, Johanneses, Gjons, Gjins, Chuans, Xuans (close!), Jons, Yons, Ions, Manezes, Ganixes, Joaneses (try keeping up with them!), Yankas, Yaneks, Yases, Yaninas, Yoanses, Ghjuvannis, Ivos, Ives, Ivicas, Ivanos, Ivankos, Jankos, Jans, Honzas, Hans, Jens, Jans, Jons, Hannes, Jaans, Juhans, Juhos, Jannos, Jukks, Jaanuses, Hanneses, Juans, Huans &c. &c. &c. of this word - in which case one can understand the urge to be an Erstwhile Ewan (rather than an Ex-Jimmy) or an Ex-Ian, if one is loathed to be associated with either the prototypical Voice Crying in the Wilderness or else the Sainted Apostle, however much I might love his Gospel and Revelation.


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Subject: RE: Public concerts in 'churches' ?
From: MGM·Lion
Date: 05 Oct 11 - 03:43 PM

"so Extian which is easier than Exian" ···
,.,.,.
Why? A man called Ian William Bracegirdle, who was called Ian as a child but decided when he grew up that he would rather be known as William, could be said to be an Ex-Ian. Perfectly easy to pronounce. I can't imagine, otoh, what an Ex-tian could possibly be. If, mind you, it were ex-Tuan, then it might be a former Malaysian lord, but ~~~

Oh, wotthehell archie; let it pass!


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Subject: RE: Public concerts in 'churches' ?
From: Paul Burke
Date: 05 Oct 11 - 03:35 PM

Was the great African American activist called Malcolm Chris or Malcolm Christ?

But to the point; I love the history in old English churches. They were truly the agglomerated achievement of the community over hundreds of years. In most cases the congregation were responsible for the nave, while the vicar/ rector/ impropriator was responsible for only the chancel. The nave was historically used as meeting hall and gathering place by the community, and it would be most appropriate to commemorate that by song and music.

On the other hand, there's always the vicar hanging round hoping for a chance to make a speech.


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Subject: RE: Public concerts in 'churches' ?
From: GUEST,Suibhne Astray
Date: 05 Oct 11 - 02:29 PM

It's a matter of emphasis - so Extian which is easier than Exian, but oddly enough it's always Exmas as in Exmouth, rather than Exmouth.

Anyway - how long before They bounce this below the line do you reckon? I'm amazed it's lasted as long as it has. Maybe I'd better say something about music in churches. Okay - ahem - I'm a great one for a spot of impromtu sonic-archaelogy in medieval churches and often field-record the acoustics using various flutes, fiddles & Jew's harps. Here's a link to me playing my Karadeniz Kemence in one of my favourite old Norfolk churches; sorry about the crappy sound though - the new camera (new summer last year anyway) appears to record on am internal wax-cylinder.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xVB9zrG9Xgs

The acoustics are amazing in there, as they are in most Norfolk churches which have resisted the modern trend to such creature comforts as carpeting. Those tiles are Elizabethan...


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Subject: RE: Public concerts in 'churches' ?
From: MGM·Lion
Date: 05 Oct 11 - 02:01 PM

I think that was Sean's point, McG. Similarly, he says 'ecks-tian' but says he can't say 'ecks-ian' {Haven't I got that right, Sweeney?}; to which I reply, Why not?


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Subject: RE: Public concerts in 'churches' ?
From: McGrath of Harlow
Date: 05 Oct 11 - 01:48 PM

People tend to pronounce "Xmas" as "exmass" in any case.   Uggh.


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Subject: RE: Public concerts in 'churches' ?
From: MGM·Lion
Date: 05 Oct 11 - 01:25 PM

It would work as 'X-ian' ~ why not? But the bruxation is a bit extreme: most people will say, e.g., the sort-of-comparable "PIN number" or "the hoi polloi", without every molar in the nation being instantly eroded.

~M~


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Subject: RE: Public concerts in 'churches' ?
From: GUEST,Suibhne Astray
Date: 05 Oct 11 - 01:07 PM

bruxation in linguists

The best linguists I find roll with pragmatic flow of language rather than insist on summary correctness. That's not linguistics anyway - it's pedantry - which induces bruxation in the best of us, but in this case, insists on a rule in the face of so well established a neologism. Also in pronouncing Xtian, I say X-tian, just as I say X-mas; it wouldn't work as X-ian.


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Subject: RE: Public concerts in 'churches' ?
From: GUEST,Suibhne Astray
Date: 05 Oct 11 - 01:06 PM

bruxation in linguists

The best linguists I find roll with pragmatic flow of language rather than insist on summary correctness. That's not linguistics anyway - it's pedantry - which induces bruxation in the best of us, but in this case, insists on a rule in the face of so well established a neologism. Also in pronouncing Xtian, I say X-tian, just as I say X-mas; it wouldn't work as X-ian.


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Subject: RE: Public concerts in 'churches' ?
From: GUEST,999
Date: 05 Oct 11 - 12:43 PM

Good luck with that, Margaret.

A google of Xtian brings up 1,860,000 sites. A google of various approaches to Xian will land one in a gang of Chinese sites with the name Xi'an to the tune of 107,000,000.

I agree with you, but I think it's too late.


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Subject: RE: Public concerts in 'churches' ?
From: GUEST,Margaret
Date: 05 Oct 11 - 12:11 PM

For the sake of decreasing bruxation in linguists, do please spell it "Xian", not "Xtian". As Nigel pointed out above, the t is completely surplus to requirements, since the X itself stands for the full word including the t, cf 'Xmas' not 'Xtmas'.


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Subject: RE: Public concerts in 'churches' ?
From: GUEST,petecockermouth
Date: 05 Oct 11 - 11:48 AM

(coincidentally i am just listening to dylan's christmas album. on my computer it follows bert jansch alphabetically, and i just nodded off)anyway, i am an atheist and would have no problem going to any religious building if the music was tempting enough. however, much as i like kate rusby i have no interest in her religious offerings and would avoid a gig around that time of year. my major concern is that many gigs i go to these days (i saw kate rusby at the york barbican a couple of weeks back) are depressingly safe and sterile. not kate's fault (though i do prefer the artists to drink beer or wine to water or tea) it was more the venue which was unsuitable and sterile. and the audience - what has happened to us - ties? heels? impeccable behaviour? i long for the days of smoke and sticky carpets, intimacy, drink and general recklessness and a better community thing. clearly not every gig can be a pogues christmas reunion but this is supposed to be fun isn't it- we don't have to act like we are at church, we don't have to get old -peace and love, pete


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Subject: RE: Public concerts in 'churches' ?
From: GUEST,glueman
Date: 05 Oct 11 - 11:41 AM

Polemics is attack by controversy, science is a diagnostic method. Atheism - or so my atheist friends tell me - is simply a lack of belief in a deity. The association between that (dis)belief and materialism is a social construct which is folkloric in nature. That's fine by me because I value folklore highly. What it ain't is scientific.


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Subject: RE: Public concerts in 'churches' ?
From: GUEST,Suibhne Astray
Date: 05 Oct 11 - 11:28 AM

Polemics are good, as is science. Apart from anything else they equip people to better deal with the evangelising psychic terrorism of the religious and their various political / spiritual / cultural agendas.


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Subject: RE: Public concerts in 'churches' ?
From: GUEST,999
Date: 05 Oct 11 - 11:21 AM

X was from the Greek chi.

I think that this abbreviation was the result of seeing/reading the letter X aloud and taking that as an abb for Christ. If ya go Christ-tian the double T is difficult to say. Go X-tian and it's easier.

English speakers are 'lazy' with pronunciations, thus things like the great vowel shift and the great consonant shift. Both occurred to make pronunciation easier for the speaker.


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Subject: RE: Public concerts in 'churches' ?
From: GUEST,glueman
Date: 05 Oct 11 - 09:48 AM

Xtian was popularised at the same time as New Atheism and is part of the same folklore. It differs from the noble tradition of disbelief by being polemical and science centered.
I'm not arguing about the viability of Christianity or any other belief, I'm attempting to posit the word Xtian in the context of the time.


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Subject: RE: Public concerts in 'churches' ?
From: GUEST,Suibhne Astray
Date: 05 Oct 11 - 09:34 AM

Whatever one's personal beliefs the major world religions differ from folklore and fantasy on size and membership at least but that's lost on materialists.

How can there be limits on such things just because of numbers? A community is a community; fantasy is fantasy & folkore is folklore. Having been brought up Essentially Secular in a supposedly XTIAN UK then the accomodation of such Hoo-Hah and Horse Chocolate (rather than its outright dismissal) becomes a matter of some urgency with respect of a move towards a greater material enlightenment, which is, as I say, common to every single one of us Human Animals on Planet Earth however so diverse we might be otherwise. In this I remain eternally optimistic, and my Atheism is both an outward expression and inner experience of that optimism.

If a Culture / Community chooses to believe in Christ, Klingon, or Harry fecking Potter it amounts to the same thing; I can appreciate this as long as a) they refrain from divisive fundamental righteousness and b) maybe think twice about indocrinating others - including their kids. Material reality is the Common Universal law, anything else is pure fantasy, which is fun until they come knocking at your door offering you salvation from your own humanity. People are free to believe whatever they like but once they assume that what they believe applies to anyone but themselves, that's when the trouble starts.

Atheism isn't a belief; it's a fundamental reality that aspires to all inclusive and accomodating humanistic and compassionate world-view. However if XTIANS are carrying around the idea that everyone but them is going spent eternity in HELL then - how on earth are we meant to accomodate that in the wider scheme of things? Thus I may be a tad vociferous in my encounters with JWs, Mormons and other Random Proselytisers who accost me at home or abroad, otherwise, I'm open to a healthy debate as part of the Human Crack.

So - XTIAN is not a wind-up term; neither is strictly correct (as pointed out by Nigel Parsons above); it's simply a convenient shorthand, like XMAS, derived from the Chi-Ro adopted by the early church and still used as an icon by various Xtian churches today. If Xtians feel it somehow crosses out Christ then that's fair enough because in the unlikely event of Christ pulling off this second coming, and judging by things he actually said during his ministry, the Xtian churches would be the first thing to go. He'd sweep them all aside just as he threw the money lenders out of the temple and resume his usual habit of hanging around with outsiders and outcasts, the same folk I've seen routinely ejected from Manchester Cathedral least their presence offend the more deserving clientelle.


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Subject: RE: Public concerts in 'churches' ?
From: GUEST,FloraG
Date: 05 Oct 11 - 08:54 AM

When we were in Orkney earlier on this year the local music school put on a free concert inside the Cathedral on the saturday morning. It was a lovely way to view the cathedral, and the music was very good too. I thought at the time what a good way to use the building, while also encouraging the local children in performance arts. I doubted any of our mainland cathedrals would be so innovative.
FloraG.


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Subject: RE: Public concerts in 'churches' ?
From: GUEST,glueman
Date: 05 Oct 11 - 08:47 AM

Nigel, Xtians is increasingly used as a problematizing word for Christianity, mostly by atheists. It's an attempt to mix religion with fantasy - Klingon, pixies, Santa Claus, etc. Whatever one's personal beliefs the major world religions differ from folklore and fantasy on size and membership at least but that's lost on materialists. Basically, Xtian is a wind-up term to rile believers.


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Subject: RE: Public concerts in 'churches' ?
From: Nigel Parsons
Date: 05 Oct 11 - 08:38 AM

For Flora G.

'I have come so you shall have life, and have it in a barndance'
John 10.10


Or, without deliberately misquoting:
Praise him with the timbrels & dances. (Psalms 150.4)


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Subject: RE: Public concerts in 'churches' ?
From: Nigel Parsons
Date: 05 Oct 11 - 08:36 AM

Suibhne:
Can you explain the use of 'Xtians' & 'Xtianity'?
I'm used to the term Xmas, but haven't seen the two terms you use elsewhere.
If you're hoping to introduce them to the language, should the superfluous 't' be removed?
At present, if 'X' is representing Christ, Xtians would seem to be Christ tians.

Cheers
Nigel


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Subject: RE: Public concerts in 'churches' ?
From: banjoman
Date: 05 Oct 11 - 07:43 AM

Flora - well said -that just about sums it up thanks
Keep in touch
Pete


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Subject: RE: Public concerts in 'churches' ?
From: Bounty Hound
Date: 05 Oct 11 - 06:54 AM

For Flora G.

'I have come so you shall have life, and have it in a barndance'
John 10.10


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Subject: RE: Public concerts in 'churches' ?
From: GUEST,Suibhne Astray
Date: 05 Oct 11 - 04:38 AM

Atheism is positive, humanist and all inclusive. It is based on the simple equation that not Religions can be right, but the can all be wrong. Thus, if one is wrong, as human historical & cultural constructs, they all must be wrong. However, the nature of that WRONG isn't absolute, for in being human historical & cultural constructs, Atheism recognises there is human historical & cultural value in them too - be it in terms of music, philosophy, architecture, folklore - and all the good things that human beings get up to anyway.

The negative stuff comes from righteousness, fundamentalism, the notion of heresy & the subsequent opressions and persecutions. As an Atheist I accept Religion as an aspect of Human Culture; I don't think it's an essential, neither do I think that it's an inevitability, nor do I think the religious should be accorded any level of respect or have special priviledges. In the UK today Xtianity is little more than folklore. It gives us holidays like Xmas and Easter - both derived from earlier pre-Xtian seasonal festivals - and it gives us the life and example of some geezer called Jesus Christ who by the simplicity and humility of his life and teachings tells us that all the churches founded in his name are, in effect, 100% horse-chocolate.

True spirituality is the reserve of each and every one of us - it is our right and purpose that comes through simply being alive in the first place; it comes about by recognising that we are but one of billions, each of whom not only have their own way of seeing things but the right to that uniqueness of perspective. The nature of Atheism is to engender that tolerance by removing any sort of absolute from the equation. Life is the only absolute, and life is common to all of us; life is splendid, diverse, equitable and a lot better without the aforementioned equine confectionary no matter how enriching it might be to certain individuals who feel the need for its narcotic comforts.


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Subject: RE: Public concerts in 'churches' ?
From: MGM·Lion
Date: 05 Oct 11 - 04:36 AM

Bible seems ambivalent, inconsistent, self-contradictory [o whevs!] about dances & dancing, as so many things. David seems all for harps & timbrels,& danced before the Lord with all his might in II Samuel 6 [tho some ~ er ~ eccentric-sounding glosses about what his actual motive for doing so might have been have been suggested ~ nuff said; google if interested!];

but then there was Salome...

~M~


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Subject: RE: Public concerts in 'churches' ?
From: GUEST,FloraG
Date: 05 Oct 11 - 04:04 AM

My local church ( C of E ) was built as a multi use venue and wev'e done some great barn dances there. They just screen off the alter.
Seems a good use of a venue to me and the acoustics are good. I don't think God would mind people getting healthy exercise and enjoying themselves - but it doesn't say a lot about barn dances in the Bible.
FloraG.


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Subject: RE: Public concerts in 'churches' ?
From: Musket
Date: 05 Oct 11 - 03:41 AM

A church near us has been given lottery money to make it more of a community asset, including a museum to its famous past and getting rid of the pews in favour of removable seating so it can be reorganised to suit events, including concerts.

Interestingly, the complaints and "how dare you!" brigade seem to be consisting of those who, according to a friend working on this project, aren't part of the Sunday congregation anyway. T'was ever thus....

Me? Looking forward to suggesting and perhaps helping organise a few concerts once the renovation is complete.

Oh, as everybody is decrying such things, I am irreligious. (Note, not atheist. That has baggage attached in the perception of many people, so I prefer irreligious to describe myself as an onlooker in the same way as I have a mate who is a stamp collector. I don't know of a term of reference for anybody who isn't a stamp collector, but if there was, I am sure a stamp collector came up with it as a term of contempt. I see "atheist" in the same light.)

So there.

Right, where was I? Oh bugger, something to do with work.....


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Subject: RE: Public concerts in 'churches' ?
From: Dan Schatz
Date: 04 Oct 11 - 11:06 PM

Thank you Becky - I appreciate the link to my bio. I wasn't being purposefully mysterious, but given the subject of this thread, I had no wish to proselytize. And yes, even atheists! My own theology is a form of Religious Humanism.

And yes - most congregations do charge some rent. But the coffeehouses aren't paying the bills, trust me. (I could only wish....)

Dan


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Subject: RE: Public concerts in 'churches' ?
From: Bounty Hound
Date: 04 Oct 11 - 08:38 PM

I'm putting on a day of folk in one of our local churches in Bury St Edmunds The Bury St Edmunds OXJAM Folk Day
on the 29th October, raising money for the work of Oxfam. Because of the charitable nature of the event, I approached several local venues and the church was the only one to offer me free use of their facilities.

I approached Tescos to see if I could get a bit of sponsorship out of them for the event, and was told by the local store management that they could not support the event as it was in a church, despite me making the point that it was merely the building where the event was being held and was not connected in any way with the church. Dissapointed with this response, I phoned head office to check whether this was in fact company policy, and was told that whilst they would not support a religious event for any denomination there was no problem at all with supporting a secular event held in a church premesis. Head office pointed this out to the local store, and I'm pleased to say I got a donation from them. Common sense prevailed, and Tescos showed an understanding that the building is just a building and nothing else.

I will add that the vicar of this particular church is an avid folkie, so that undoutably helped in getting the use of their building. They also have no issues whatsoever with having a bar in the church. Don't forget that people who have a faith of any description are generally just ordinary people.

So if you are in the general area of Bury St Edmunds, don't be afraid to come along, tickets are just £10.00 for the day, with a cracking lineup, including a few regular catters.

John


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Subject: RE: Public concerts in 'churches' ?
From: GUEST,Tony
Date: 04 Oct 11 - 08:20 PM

Indeed, mg. An increase in the burning of churches and the killing of Christians has been one of the main effects of US policy in the Muslim world.

Deckman: before you unleash the formidable economic power of your boycott on this church and on any fellow-travellers or dupes in the folk community, why not give them a chance to redeem themselves? Wouldn't that be the ethical humane thing to do? Tell the minister your complaint; tell him what he has to do to get you to honor, as you say, his church with your presence. And tell the performer, too, so that fear of losing the price of your ticket will make him put additional pressure on the church to reform in accordance with your views.


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Subject: RE: Public concerts in 'churches' ?
From: GUEST,mg
Date: 04 Oct 11 - 06:27 PM

I mean persecution as traditionally practiced..hopefully there is none in US or UK at present..but there is elsewhere in the world. mg


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Subject: RE: Public concerts in 'churches' ?
From: GUEST,glueman
Date: 04 Oct 11 - 06:04 PM

If ridicule means being denied a position an individual is equipped for based entirely on their beliefs, it is persecution. I notice Prof Dawkins advocates scorn as his preferred method of disenfranchisement. I've found a person's beliefs to be a poor way of judging their abilities and humanity, though I make an exception for politician.


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Subject: RE: Public concerts in 'churches' ?
From: PoppaGator
Date: 04 Oct 11 - 05:55 PM

It may be true that some Christians ~ particularly those of the more fundamentalist persuasion ~ are ridiculed in the US, the UK, and elsewhere in the West. This is by no means the same thing as being persecuted.


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Subject: RE: Public concerts in 'churches' ?
From: GUEST,Margaret
Date: 04 Oct 11 - 05:37 PM

"That sounds like a gauntlet being thrown down... Care to eleborate? "

I didn't mean it that way, particularly, and I'm sorry if it seemed a contentious statement.

My point was only that, just as evolution remains, technically, a "theory" capable of being falsified by future evidence, so the existence of an entity we'd call "God" cannot be determined to be true or false based on the evidence we have.

However _unlikely_ the existence of such a being might be, it's not _impossible_, and therefore any absolute stance for or against is necessarily just opinion. "I (don't) believe there's a God, but I might be wrong" is considerably different to "there is a/no God".

Does that clear things up at all?


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Subject: RE: Public concerts in 'churches' ?
From: GUEST,mg
Date: 04 Oct 11 - 05:12 PM

Globally all sorts of Christians and people of other religions are being persecuted..plus many more have discrimination but not what you would call persecution...which I would define as having some physical aspects to it. No laughing matter regardless of who does it. mg


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Subject: RE: Public concerts in 'churches' ?
From: GUEST,glueman
Date: 04 Oct 11 - 04:53 PM

"...the sky-high rhetoric that holds that Xtians are in any way persecuted for their beliefs..."

It's hard to say whether it constitutes persecution but one can well imagine those who profess religious beliefs being overlooked in academia, particularly the material sciences.


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Subject: RE: Public concerts in 'churches' ?
From: Desert Dancer
Date: 04 Oct 11 - 04:39 PM

The question posed above doesn't seem to have been answered...

---
From: Spleen Cringe
Date: 04 Oct 11 - 02:55 AM

I am a minister - from a religion that proudly counts Humanists, Pagans, Buddhists, Christians, Jews, Atheists and others among our number

Wow, Dan! Even atheists? Sounds like my kind of religion...

From: MtheGM
Date: 04 Oct 11 - 02:56 AM

Has your religion a name, Dan?

~M~
------

Dan Schatz (see also here) is a Unitarian-Universalist minister.

A (Jewish) friend had a joke that he'd never belong to a religion who's main sacrament was coffee (he was a tea drinker). Or was it the potluck? Anyway, UU churches have hosted a lot of folk "coffee houses" (and other concert series) over the years.

~ Becky in Long Beach


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Subject: RE: Public concerts in 'churches' ?
From: GUEST,Suibhne Astray
Date: 04 Oct 11 - 04:13 PM

agnostic since that's the only defensible position for anyone who also identifies with science

That sounds like a gauntlet being thrown down... Care to eleborate?


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Subject: RE: Public concerts in 'churches' ?
From: GUEST,Margaret
Date: 04 Oct 11 - 04:03 PM

Some small congregations must hire space, often secular, in which to hold their services. Tiny Orthodox Jewish congregations are exemplary, I believe.

That makes me wonder whether that fact would contaminate such a building for Bob such that no amount of regular secular use could decontaminate it for him.



(Full disclosure: I quit the RC church at age 15, and have for ages identified as agnostic since that's the only defensible position for anyone who also identifies with science)


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Subject: RE: Public concerts in 'churches' ?
From: Wesley S
Date: 04 Oct 11 - 03:47 PM

If the church is being used as a rented building then the location of a concert shouldn't be a problem for anyone. But those of you who might have a problem with a particular church might want to find out if the profits from the concert would be used to promote programs that you might disagree with in principle. If you don't want the money from your ticket promoting a food bank that feeds the poor - that's your decision. Same goes if your concert ticket would help promote demonstrations of a political nature that you would not normally have anything to do with. So it sounds like a little bit of investigation would be in order.


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Subject: RE: Public concerts in 'churches' ?
From: foggers
Date: 04 Oct 11 - 03:17 PM

I can identify with a sense of discomfort about concerts in church due to my own teenaged experiences within the fundamentalist wing of UK Christianity. During that part of my life I would have disapproved of a church building being used for secular purposes. Having moved away from any version of Christianity, I am left with a tendency to associate certain kinds of church building ("Non-conformist") with a sense of feeling inhibited, which in turn (when I have attended concerts) affects my enjoyment. However it does not affect me in older more traditional church buildings whose architecture, history (and acoustics) I very much enjoy.

So the OP has a valid point that a (possibly small) number of punters may not attend such venues; I would be one such person. Its purely subjective, shaped by my personal past and the sense I make of that now.

(Would now be a good time to share the ironic flipside of this? I still love singing gospel songs, almost as a kind of cultural artefact in my personal heritage, but you will usually find me doing so in
The decidedly secular settings of folk clubs in pubs, or at festivals!)


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Subject: RE: Public concerts in 'churches' ?
From: GUEST,Suibhne Astray
Date: 04 Oct 11 - 02:32 PM

I am puzzling why anyone would smile at the thought of anyone being persecuted by anyone else. mg

The smile is one of wry & bitter irony at the sky-high rhetoric that holds that Xtians are in any way persecuted for their beliefs, in the the west in general, and in the UK in particular. I hope (and suspect) that this is a minority view, and that people in general (Xtian or otherwise) don't regard the increased and essential secularisation as persecution, just a move towards a wider accomodation of cultural diversity as we have in the UK presently, and in my lifetime.


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Subject: RE: Public concerts in 'churches' ?
From: GUEST,Guest TF
Date: 04 Oct 11 - 02:26 PM

Deckman. Standing this somewhat on it's head. I take it that you are forced to leave some concerts early or not go to see some artists of a religious bent. I'm thinking Dolly or Alison Krauss who, regardless of the venue, have a habit of finishing with songs which IMO ram their faith into the assembled throng.


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Subject: RE: Public concerts in 'churches' ?
From: McGrath of Harlow
Date: 04 Oct 11 - 02:16 PM

"If I honor a "church" by my presence...

That bit really cracked me up.


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Subject: RE: Public concerts in 'churches' ?
From: GUEST,mg
Date: 04 Oct 11 - 01:57 PM

I am puzzling why anyone would smile at the thought of anyone being persecuted by anyone else. mg


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Subject: RE: Public concerts in 'churches' ?
From: GUEST,SteveG
Date: 04 Oct 11 - 01:41 PM

Marje
If you look at the prevailing sentiment being expressed in this thread, you'll realise that it really isn't worth bothering taking it into account.


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Subject: RE: Public concerts in 'churches' ?
From: Marje
Date: 04 Oct 11 - 10:55 AM

I think it's fair enough for the OP to draw our attention to the fact that he and others like him have reasons for not wanting to attend performances in a church. There's another group who wouldn't want to attend for the opposite reason - those who feel the church should be kept holy and not used for secular purposes, and who prefer not to go there if it's not for worship. I don't happen to agree with either view, but it's still worth taking into account if you're considering setting up an event in a church.

Marje


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