#332: From Chaplain to the Queen to Catholic Convert—Gavin Ashenden

The Patrick Coffin Show | Interviews with influencers | Commentary about culture | Tools for transformation - A podcast by Patrick Coffin - Fridays

Support our work: https://www.patrickcoffin.media/donate Join our community of culture builders: www.coffinnation.com Telegram: https://t.me/patrickcoffinmedia Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/realpatrickcoffin/ BitChute: https://www.bitchute.com/channel/1NpgZJSoZaLJ/ Gab: https://gab.com/PatrickCoffin Brighteon: https://www.brighteon.com/channels/patrickcoffin ARE YOU TAKING YOUR IMMUNITY BOOSTER ALL-IN-ONE PILL FROM DC ZELENKO? GET IT HERE: 👉Z Stack protocol for early Covid treatment and prevention. Get yours here: www.zstacklife.com/CoffinNation ******************************************************************* His official title was Honorary Chaplain to the Queen (QHC), kind of a big deal for any Anglican clergyman. Then Rt. Rev Gavin Ashenden held the position from 2008 until 2017, when he left following, inter alia, a public liturgical reading in a Glasgow cathedral from the Quran that denied the divinity of Christ.  A good Protestant, he protested. And then he parted ways with the established church. The rest of the story is told in this interview with England’s highest-profile Catholic convert, received into the Catholic Church in December 2019. In this episode you will learn The main influences in his spiritual life and the incident that triggered his conversion His thoughts on the Alpha Program Why he didn’t join the Anglican Ordinariate, erected by Pope Benedict XVI How nationalism, hyper-intellectualism, and collective pride have co-opted the Protestant world Why he stayed outside the Church for so long while understanding her better than many Catholics The strange rage from friends and family that so often gets unleashed at Catholic converts Ashenden’s plans for the future Resources mentioned in this episode The excellent blog of Dr. Gavin Ashenden Priestesses in the Church? Original essay by C.S. Lewis