Tuesday 30 December 2008

Proposed Scheme for Male Only Bishops

The Bishop of Madchester was delivering his lecture on women and bishops to the assembled bishops. His first slide was of signs on public toilets for men and women.

"Now my fellow Bishops, I begin by showing you these. They are photographs of toilet entrances taken from a local shopping centre. On the left you can see a symbol of a person with two long legs. That we take it is the gender of a man, like we assembled here. And on the left, with that inverted V that partly covers the legs, that we take it is the gender of a... woman. And in the shopping centre, there are one of these for a woman for every one for a man."
"Goodness me," said one bishop, "do you mean some men go shopping?"
"Yes," said the Bishop of Madchester, "and some women go to work." A second slide showed a woman with a briefcase walking alongside men.
"Rubbish," another bishop said from the back.
"Now nearly all of us understand women, don't we, because if you remember, for some of us we got married near the end of theological college so that none of the churches we visited would think we weren't attracted to women. And so we understand women from the creatures who share our beds at night."
"Doesn't affect me," said the Bishop of Horse and Ham, sat among the assembled. "No women ever shared my bed."
"Nor me," said another
"Nor me," said yet another. "I came into the Church to be my own woman," he added.
"Nor me," said another, "though I do have a few friends who are women."
"Gosh," said another.
The Bishop of Madchester continued. "But women do other things too, and we have already mentioned going shopping. But, fellow bishops, they go to work, and some of them are in charge of other women..."
"I think I know what's coming," said one in the audience.
"And some are in charge of men." A third slide showed a woman at a desk.
At which point the rate of coughing and spluttering shot up, and many of the assembled tweaked their fine collections of whiskers.
"My Lord Bishop of Madchester, this is the Church of England," said one.
"So in order to catch up again, I have some proposals, by which we can provide complimentary male only bishops and with such a code of conduct some of you can go on ignoring that toilet door sign or even having to think that a woman might be in the same bed as you." A fourth slide showed a pointy hat.

And thus a set of proposals were ready to be launched at the February 2009 Church of England Synod.

8 comments:

Unknown said...

Women as bishops? I can't wait until they get word of the canine and feline bishops over on this side of the pond! It's ironic in some sense in that we were called as bishops to clean up the messes the bi-ped male bishops made over here! +maya, +airedale, +rowan, and +i surely have been effective voices for tolerance and justice within the church, and have provided strong paws of leadership in these times where the previous old dogs have shown themselves to be infested with various forms of parasites.

Pluralist (Adrian Worsfold) said...

What annoys me is that bishops cannot be invited to parish churches - no, no, they have a right to be there and come along and piss against the lamp post outside the entrance in order to mark their territory.

Daniel Lee said...

Thanks lots P I loved it.

June Butler said...

So if I wear trousers, I should obey the sign on the door, right? That's good to know. The lines are not usually as long.

Pluralist (Adrian Worsfold) said...

I have myself stood outside public toilets with a queue of women at one toilet and just the odd man going in and out of the other. I helped a damsel in distress go into the male loo and keep watch - outside to the outside (writing this just after seeing the film Hallam Foe).

June Butler said...

Adrian, you're a good man. I just saw "Bedtime Stories" with my grandchildren. I had to go after the movie, but the ladies were lined up, so I held it in.

There was a funny line at the beginning of the film. "Is everyone settled down and ready for the story? Anyone need to go to the bathroom? Well, hold it in." So that's what I did.

The conversation here has reached such an exalted level that I can barely keep up.

Pluralist (Adrian Worsfold) said...

The relevance of the film Hallam Foe was the male lead's voyeuristic tendencies, which he eventually had to explain to his also occasional love (who looks like his mother, deceased) stood naked. We also see him go to the loo, presumably for our voyeuristic tendencies (or why I don't know). I fancy going to Edinburgh again and seeing whether the clock tower and windows quite line up as they showed.

June Butler said...

...which he eventually had to explain to his also occasional love (who looks like his mother, deceased....

Loaded with significance, eh?

For some strange reason, I've never had a thing for watching other poeple use the loo.