Category : TEC Bishops

(Anglican Ink) Jay Lambert elected 7th Bishop of the Diocese of Eau Claire

Fr. Lambert succeeds the Rt. Rev. Edwin Leidel who served as provisional bishop following the translation of the diocese’s fifth bishop, the Rt. Rev. Keith Whitmore as assistant Bishop of Atlanta in 2008

The diocesan profile said the “ideal candidate” for the half time position would be able to “support himself or herself through a part-time position, provide vision for new ways of working in the Episcopal Church, and an energetic spirituality that will nurture the wide variety of people to whom we minister.”

The diocese has a baptized membership of 2200 in 21 congregations served by 15 priests, 12 deacons and 7 active retired clergy. Its 2012 budget is $223,632.

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Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, Episcopal Church (TEC), TEC Bishops

The Latest Edition of the Diocese of South Carolina Enewsletter

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Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, * Culture-Watch, * South Carolina, Episcopal Church (TEC), Media, TEC Bishops, TEC Conflicts, TEC Conflicts: South Carolina, TEC Diocesan Conventions/Diocesan Councils

(CEN) Global South backing for the Diocese of South Carolina

The leaders of the Global South coalition of Anglican archbishops have written to the Bishop of South Carolina offering their prayers and support in his battle with the head of the American Episcopal Church, Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori.

On 25 Oct 2012, Archbishop Ian Ernest of the Indian Ocean, and the Presiding Bishop of Jerusalem and the Middle East, Bishop Mouneer Anis of Egypt wrote to Bishop Mark Lawrence from Singapore, where they were attending the installation of the Rt. Rev. Rennis Ponniah as 9th bishop of the diocese.

“We were saddened, but not surprised, by the news of your inhibition and possible deposition by the TEC. We all want to assure you and the Diocese of South Carolina of our continuing prayers and support. We thank God for your stand for the Gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ! We are proud that you are willing to suffer for the faith once delivered to the saints,” the archbishops wrote.

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Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, * South Carolina, Episcopal Church (TEC), Global South Churches & Primates, TEC Bishops, TEC Conflicts, TEC Conflicts: South Carolina

(Diocese of SC) Group Attempts to Mislead Clergy; Unauthorized Use of Diocesan Seal and Name

…it was extremely disturbing to learn that on Wednesday afternoon, November 7, 2012, a majority of the clergy of the Diocese of South Carolina received an email that pretended to be from the Diocese of South Carolina but in fact was not. The sender of the email was not identified beyond an email address registered to an organization in Florida named “Domain Discreet Privacy Service”. The corresponding web page is hosted by a San Francisco organization stating: “This temporary landing page will be replaced when you publish your site.”

The email was an invitation to a “Clergy Day for the Diocese,” to be hosted at Holy Communion, Charleston and presided over by Bishop. Charles von Rosenberg (A retired bishop from Tennessee).

There are several crucial facts that need to be addressed regarding this announcement.

First, this message did not come from the Diocese of South Carolina.

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Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, * Culture-Watch, Episcopal Church (TEC), Executive Council, Media, TEC Bishops, TEC Conflicts, TEC Conflicts: South Carolina, TEC Polity & Canons

Your Prayers Requested for the Diocese of South Carolina Clergy Conf. Tonight Through Friday

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Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, * Christian Life / Church Life, * South Carolina, Episcopal Church (TEC), Ministry of the Ordained, Parish Ministry, Pastoral Care, Spirituality/Prayer, TEC Bishops

A Statement from the Diocese of Virginia Regarding the Falls Church Anglican's Appeal

Specifically, the Supreme Court agreed to review the lower court’s ruling that held that the Diocese of Virginia and the Episcopal Church have contractual and proprietary rights in the property of the Falls Church. In addition, the Court declined to hear a cross-appeal which sought to confirm that the Diocese of Virginia and the Episcopal Church also have a trust interest in the property.

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Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, * Christian Life / Church Life, * Culture-Watch, Episcopal Church (TEC), Law & Legal Issues, Parish Ministry, TEC Bishops, TEC Conflicts, TEC Conflicts: Virginia, TEC Polity & Canons

The Supreme Court of Virginia grants The Falls Church Anglican's Petition for Appeal

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Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, * Christian Life / Church Life, * Culture-Watch, Episcopal Church (TEC), Law & Legal Issues, Parish Ministry, TEC Bishops, TEC Conflicts, TEC Conflicts: Virginia, TEC Parishes

A Beaufort Gazette Ad from those who Oppose Bishop Lawrence and the Diocese of S.C.

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Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, Episcopal Church (TEC), TEC Bishops, TEC Conflicts, TEC Conflicts: South Carolina, TEC Polity & Canons

(RNS) S.C. Episcopalians say split goes beyond Debate on Same Sex Unions

A spokeswoman for the national church, Neva Rae Fox, has said even if leaders or individual members of a diocese leave, the diocese itself stays within the Episcopal Church.

[Tom] Woodle said any church that wishes to remain in the Episcopal Church ”” which is effectively the U.S. branch of the worldwide Anglican Communion ”” can make that move, though he only expects five or six to do so. The problems between the diocese and Lawrence run deeper than disagreements over homosexuality and church property, he said.

“The press has made this out to be only about openly gay bishops and priests, but we see that as a symptom of a flawed Christology in the Episcopal Church,” Woodle said. “The overwhelming majority in the denomination are revisionists. What they’ve decided is that Jesus is a way, a truth and a life, not the way, the truth and the life.”

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Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, * South Carolina, Episcopal Church (TEC), TEC Bishops, TEC Conflicts, TEC Conflicts: South Carolina, Theology

Edward Gilbreth–South Carolina Episcopal schism: Predictable, Understandable

[In the 39 Articles of Religion]…Article VII… says, “… Although the Law given from God by Moses, as touching ceremonies and rites, do not bind Christian men, nor the Civil precepts thereof ought of necessity to be received in any commonwealth; yet notwithstanding, no Christian man whatsoever is free from the obedience of the Commandments which are called moral.”

In other words, obey God’s law. The most sensitive issue involving the church, of course, was Gene Robinson’s election to bishop in the state of New Hampshire in 2003. Robinson was the first priest in a blessed and openly gay relationship to be ordained bishop in a major denomination believing in the historic episcopate (the collective body of all bishops of a church).

This is such a difficult conundrum, because reasonable people believe that we’re all God’s children, that no one chooses to be gay, and that no one who is gay would be excluded from heaven simply for being such. Although acceptance of this is, or at least should be, a no-brainer, there is evidence in both the Old and New Testaments clearly suggesting that gay relations are in violation of the word. By ignoring this when it comes to promoting individuals to positions of authority, whom are we trying to please: ourselves or God?

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Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, * South Carolina, Episcopal Church (TEC), TEC Bishops, TEC Conflicts, TEC Conflicts: South Carolina, TEC Polity & Canons, Theology, Theology: Scripture

(Living Church) Mark McCall on South Carolina–Dumbing Abandonment Down

This points to the most troubling question of all concerning the disciplinary board’s decision. Among the new Title IV provisions is IV.4.1(f), which requires all clergy to “report to the Intake Officer all matters which may constitute an Offense.” This comes immediately after subparagraph IV.4.1(e) pertaining to property. It appears members of the disciplinary board scrutinized these matters for more than a year and concluded that Bishop Lawrence had violated certain canonical provisions, yet not one thought to comply with the canon requiring them to report this to the Intake Officer so that the normal canonical process could be used.

This is not a technical issue. Had they proceeded as required by canon ”” there is no exception for matters that might also constitute abandonment ”” they might have spared the church the havoc we are now witnessing. Title IV after all is said to be a more pastoral way of dealing with possible canonical violations. If Bishop Lawrence is alleged to have violated subparts (c), (e), and (g) of Canon IV.4.1, why did the disciplinary board not comply with subpart (f)? Why did it not comply with mandatory disciplinary procedures that might have permitted a pastoral response instead of pursuing a process designed solely to remove a bishop summarily from the rolls of the church? Having first concluded that the disputed actions were those of the diocese, not the bishop, the board must have known the consequences “abandonment” would entail.

How have Bishop Lawrence’s theological opponents reacted to these developments? One prominent assertion has been that the automatic response of the diocese triggered by the disciplinary board’s action proves that Bishop Lawrence “lied” and intended to leave all along. But this claim fails both the tests of logic and simple chronology.

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Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, * South Carolina, Episcopal Church (TEC), TEC Bishops, TEC Conflicts, TEC Conflicts: South Carolina, TEC Polity & Canons

Fellowship of Confessing Anglicans (FCA) Primates Council Writes in Support of Bishop Lawrence

We are grieved, however, by the attitude and actions of the leadership of The Episcopal Church and their efforts to demand canonical obedience through unjust means to their ungodly agenda. As we have made clear in the Jerusalem Declaration we reject their authority and call on them to repent and return to the Lord.

Please know that we continue to recognize you as a faithful Anglican bishop and the Diocese of South Carolina as part of the One, Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church.

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Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, * South Carolina, Episcopal Church (TEC), Global South Churches & Primates, Presiding Bishop, TEC Bishops, TEC Conflicts, TEC Conflicts: South Carolina, TEC Polity & Canons

The Episcopal Bishop of Western Louisiana (Jake Owensby)–Hearing Bartimaeus

Jesus teaches us to be merciful: to hear with our hearts the cries for help around us and to respond with the same help that Jesus has already given us. We have received mercy so that we can show mercy. A vital congregation is known for its works of mercy.
Jesus’ healing of blind Bartimaeus teaches us some helpful things about being a merciful congregation. That story invites us to explore three questions:
What is mercy?
What are the works of mercy?
What effect do works of mercy have on the believing community?

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Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, Episcopal Church (TEC), TEC Bishops, Theology, Theology: Scripture

An ENS story on TEC and the ACC meeting in New Zealand

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Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, Anglican Church in Aotearoa, New Zealand and Polynesia, Anglican Consultative Council, Anglican Covenant, Anglican Provinces, Episcopal Church (TEC), Presiding Bishop, TEC Bishops

Fond du Lac Episcopal Bishop announces his retirement

The Right Rev. Russell Jacobus, Seventh Bishop of Fond du Lac, announced today his intention to resign effective Oct. 31, 2013.

He made the announcement at the conclusion of the 138th Annual Convention of the Diocese of Fond du Lac meeting in Manitowoc.

He has served as Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese which covers northeast Wisconsin since his election and consecration in 1994. He will also retire from active ordained ministry at that time.

Read it all (and it is a nice picture).

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, Episcopal Church (TEC), TEC Bishops

The Bishop of Georgia on the Diocese of South Carolina/Mark Lawrence Developments

(Via email):

Broken bottles broken plates, Broken switches broken gates
Broken dishes broken parts, Streets are filled with broken hearts
Broken words never meant to be spoken, Everything is broken – Bob Dylan

I was saddened when I heard that the Disciplinary Board for Bishops charged the Bishop of South Carolina, Mark Lawrence, with abandoning The Episcopal Church “by an open renunciation of the Discipline of the Church.” They made that determination under Canon IV.16(A). You can read the details of this on the Episcopal News Service website and read reactions from the Diocese of South Carolina on their website. I commend both websites so you may better understand what is transpiring.

Bishop Lawrence is my friend. He has been and continues to be a good colleague of mine. I respect him as a person and as a disciple of Jesus. Our relationship has always been marked by candor, mutual support, and affection. We always have great discussions, with only occasional disagreements, on the challenges facing the Church as we engage in God’s mission. Our disagreements have only been “occasional,” because we’re united in our commitment to spread God’s Kingdom on earth and make disciples for Jesus while making a difference in God’s world.
I have prayed that the ongoing tension between Bishop Lawrence (and leaders of his Diocese) and The Episcopal Church would be resolved by other means and would come from our Anglican ethos of comprehensiveness and a generosity with those with whom we disagree. I regret that the Disciplinary Board for Bishops felt they had to act in such a way at this time. I’m not judging them harshly for I don’t know all of what they know nor was I privy to their deliberations. I simply believe that the pastoral work of grace is sometimes impeded by the application of the letter of the law.

I also regret the actions that Bishop Lawrence and other leaders in the Diocese of South Carolina have taken. Their actions have been and continue to be provocative and have not been marked by self-restraint and our Anglican ethos. The escalation of this conflict mirrors other conflicts we have all seen in human history where two sides are unwilling to back down. Both are acting out of fear that the other side will get the upper hand, so they escalate their defenses, begin demonizing the other side, and the drum beat for more drastic action continues unabated. Bishop Lawrence, like some of those in disagreement with him, has in my judgment participated in this escalation.

I hope we will find a way forward together. It would be a painful loss to lose members of the Diocese of South Carolina from our Church. It is, however, way too early to make any sort of conjecture about what will or will not happen next. Pray for our sisters and brothers in South Carolina. Pray also for our Church that together we will live out God’s will on earth as it already is lived out in heaven. Dylan’s lament that “everything is broken,” however true, is never the last word for Christians. We believe everything will be mended through the merits and mediation of our Lord & Savior Jesus Christ.

–(The Rt. Rev.) Scott A. Benhase is Bishop of Georgia

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, Episcopal Church (TEC), Pastoral Theology, TEC Bishops, TEC Conflicts, TEC Conflicts: South Carolina, TEC Polity & Canons, Theology

Bishop William Love of Albany–Response to the Inhibition of Bishop Mark Lawrence of South Carolina

This latest action taken against Bishop Lawrence and the Diocese of South Carolina is indicative of the brokenness and ongoing division within The Episcopal Church and wider Anglican Communion over a number of important theological, moral, and societal issues, not the least of which include: the interpretation and authority of Holy Scripture as the Word of God; the uniqueness of Jesus Christ as “the way, the truth and the life;” the responsibility and means by which a bishop is to “guard the faith, unity, and discipline of the Church;” the true purpose and nature of marriage as intended by God; as well as the never ending debate over human sexuality and sexual relations outside of marriage between one man and one woman.

Closely tied to all of this is the current debate over the true polity or structure of The Episcopal Church which directly impacts the numerous lawsuits within the Church over property and assets totaling untold millions of dollars….

Sadly, we seem to have reached a point in the life and history of the Church that any action taken by a conservative bishop or diocese to uphold their understanding of Holy Scripture and the traditional teaching, polity and Constitution and Canons of The Episcopal Church risks having charges brought against them if their actions are deemed to threaten or challenge the majority view, particularly in regard to polity issues and the control of Church property and assets. If the conservative voice is to have any future in The Episcopal Church, there must be a way to address controversial issues and to differentiate from that which is believed to be inappropriate or offensive.

Bishop Mark Lawrence is and continues to be a dear friend and Brother in Christ. I believe he is one of the finest and most capable bishops to serve in the House of Bishops in recent history.

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Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, Episcopal Church (TEC), TEC Bishops, TEC Conflicts, TEC Conflicts: South Carolina

Another South Carolina Rector Writes his Parish About recent Developments

To All the Saints,

Please pray with me.

Almighty and ever living God, source of all wisdom and understanding, be present with those who take counsel for the renewal and mission of your Church. Teach us in all things to seek first your honor and glory. Guide us to perceive what is right, and grant us both the courage to pursue it and the grace to accomplish it; through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.

(Prayer Book, page 818)

I want to first and foremost remind you of the called parish meeting for this Sunday after the 10:30 service. We will grab some refreshments in the parish hall, have a brief presentation and then the vestry and I will attempt to answer any and all of your questions about the Diocese, All Saints, and the national church. In the meantime, let me refer you to our Diocesan web site and this article containing frequently asked questions and answers.
I know that many of you are wondering what all this means for you, me and our life at All Saints? It is very clear: We are part of the Diocese of South Carolina, a member of the world wide Anglican Communion holding the faith of the Apostles handed down to us. How will it change our life? Not at all. We continue to be faithful to the Biblically centered leadership of our Diocese.

Personally, I cannot begin to tell you how painful this is for me and I know that I am not alone in this feeling. I know of several clergy who have been in tears over this. They know our disaffiliation is right, but for (a lifelong and) any Episcopalian (for that matter), this is tough.

Between now and then, please read the website of the Diocese of South Carolina. Finally let me say this: These are very emotional times, but in the words of Jeremiah, “we are entering a new season of health and wholeness. A time of building and planting.”

Please pray for the leadership of our Diocese and the leadership of All Saints as together we walk faithfully and humbly in Christ to transform hearts through Jesus Christ.
Please pray for the Church.

–(The Rev.) Karl Burns is rector, All Saints Church, Florence, South Carolina.

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, * Christian Life / Church Life, * South Carolina, Episcopal Church (TEC), Parish Ministry, TEC Bishops, TEC Conflicts, TEC Conflicts: South Carolina

(CEN) South Carolina expelled from the Episcopal Church

South Carolina’s diocesan constitution and canons do not recognize the authority of the disciplinary canons inaugurated by the national Church in 2009, and it is unlikely the bishop will make a formal response to the charges ”” thereby recognizing their jurisdiction over him.

However, the diocesan convention has adopted defence measures against the contingency of a theologically motivated attack by liberal clique currently controlling the Church’s offices in New York and adopted resolutions to protect its independence.

The diocese is also protected by South Carolina law. The state’s Supreme Court has struck down the national Church’s property rules, the “Dennis Canon”, holding they have no legal effect in the state. While the national Church has set aside a $3million war chest to fund litigation, canon law experts tell The Church of England Newspaper it is unlikely to prevail in a fight to seize church property.

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Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, * South Carolina, Episcopal Church (TEC), TEC Bishops, TEC Conflicts, TEC Conflicts: South Carolina, TEC Polity & Canons, Theology

Letter of Support from Global South Primates Steering Committee to Bishop Mark Lawrence

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Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, Episcopal Church (TEC), Global South Churches & Primates, TEC Bishops, TEC Conflicts, TEC Conflicts: South Carolina

Panel of Reference report on the Fort Worth 7 finds misconduct

In an 19 Oct 2012 email Bishop Matthews wrote:

“The Reference Panel unanimously decided according to IV. 6.sec.8 that the complaint will proceed with option (c), Conciliation pursuant to Canon IV.10.”

Under the Title IV disciplinary canons, if the intake officer finds that if a prima facie case can be made against the accused ”“ if the charges if proven true would constitute an offense ”“ the proceedings are passed on to a Reference Panel for action….

the panel proposed…option b, conciliation.

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Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, --Aggressive Title IV Action Against Multiple Bishops on Eve of Gen. Con. 2012, Episcopal Church (TEC), TEC Bishops, TEC Conflicts, TEC Polity & Canons

Frequently Asked Questions About the Assault on the Diocese of South Carolina

What actions were taken against Bishop Lawrence?

On Monday, October 15, 2012, the Bishop was informed of the actions of the Disciplinary Board for Bishops (a feature of the Title IV changes to the national Canons which our Diocese rejected because they are contrary to the TEC Constitution). They had apparently voted a month earlier to “certify” that he had abandoned the Church.

What does that mean?

To this Diocese, as explained below, it has no canonical meaning or legal effect. However, TEC believes his actions amounted to renouncing the doctrine, discipline and worship of the Church. The TEC canons require the Presiding Bishop promptly to notify the Bishop. It appears that did not happen. She informed him verbally nearly a month after the ostensible date of this certification. Even now we do not know when the certification was signed. All this after beginning a conversation in the interim about the potential for a negotiated settlement of our differences.

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Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, Episcopal Church (TEC), TEC Bishops, TEC Conflicts, TEC Conflicts: South Carolina

Two Letters to the Editor of the Local Paper on the Diocese of South Carolina Situation

One is from a former bishop of the diocese, and the other from a layman–read them both.

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, * South Carolina, Episcopal Church (TEC), TEC Bishops, TEC Conflicts, TEC Conflicts: South Carolina

A Pastoral Letter from Maryland Bishop Eugene Taylor Sutton–Political Voices and Gospel Values

I write this pastoral letter to you, the clergy and laity of the Diocese of Maryland, because you will be voting on November 6 on a number of issues of great significance for the future of our state. In particular, there are are three referenda on the ballot that have caused much controversy as we are inundated with ads on television, radio, and the internet – all seeking to direct our attention to one point of view or another.

In the coming weeks, you may see, read or hear me interviewed in the media about certain issues that our church or diocese has spoken about in convention resolutions or pastoral letters from your bishops. In all of these matters, I want to assure you that The Episcopal Church considers what and who you vote for in an election to be an act of your personal choice, an expression of your responsibilities as a faithful child of God as well as an informed citizen of the state. We have too much respect for you and your conscience to tell you how you should vote; that to us would be an abuse of power that does not honor the way of Jesus.

Instead, I consider the role of bishop in public issues to be that of reminding the church and the public at large of our Christian tradition of 2,000 years of moral and ethical reflection on matters of social concern. In our Anglican way of moral reasoning, we make use of the resources of Holy Scripture, tradition and human reason, and bring them to bear upon the difficult issues of the day. It is in the spirit of continuing a dialogue with you – not silencing, excommunicating or closing off conversation with you, my brothers and sisters in Christ – that I present this pastoral letter as a communication from me to you, as chief pastor of a diocese seeking to shepherd his flock.

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Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, * Culture-Watch, Episcopal Church (TEC), Gambling, Same-sex blessings, Sexuality Debate (in Anglican Communion), TEC Bishops

The Rector of Saint Michael's Charleston, S.C., writes his Parish About recent Developments

For many years there has been a split coming in the Episcopal Church over the core issue of the authority of Scripture. Do we have the freedom to re-write the Bible to fit social trends, or do we re-write our hearts according to the changeless word of God in Scripture? That has been the tension between our Diocese of South Carolina that says the Word is the Word and cannot be re-written, and the national church. The National Episcopal Church is changing Scripture according to social norms and in doing so has changed the core of the Christian faith, including:

The uniqueness of Jesus Christ
The meaning of marriage
The reason for mission
The nature of what it means to be human

Our Bishop, the Rt. Rev. Mark Lawrence follows generations of South Carolina Bishops who have not wavered in holding fast to the Biblical anchor of Christian faith. That holding fast has resulted in a charge that Bishop Lawrence has abandoned the national church.

Read it all.

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, * Christian Life / Church Life, * South Carolina, Anthropology, Christology, Episcopal Church (TEC), Ministry of the Ordained, Parish Ministry, Pastoral Theology, TEC Bishops, TEC Conflicts, TEC Conflicts: South Carolina, Theology

Bishop Mark Lawrence's April Address given in England – Transcript

Transcript of the talk given to the Guildford Diocesan Evangelical Fellowship of the Church of England Evangelical Council in April 2012.
The Presiding Bishop hired an attorney in the Diocese of South Carolina, who presented himself as ”˜Counsel for The Episcopal Church in South Carolina’. I said, wait a minute, according to our polity we are The Episcopal Church in South Carolina. I am the only one that has juridical or jurisdictional authority here. She has not spoken to me. She has not asked for my permission, and there is no constitutional or canonical authority that the Presiding Bishop has to hire an attorney to investigate me and the Diocese or South Carolina. We called a Special Convention; told the Presiding Bishop to remove the attorney. I have never received any notice from her ”“ it is four years later.

That brought us into a cold war with the national church, and in a cold war the difficulty is everything you do to protect yourself in a cold war, can be interpreted by the person on the opposite side of the cold war as an act of aggression. That goes for me towards them and them towards me and so we have lived with that for three years now.

I need to conclude because our time is all but up, mine is already past. In the Fall of last year, I was informed that there were 12 allegations brought against me that I had abandoned the communion of The Episcopal Church. And after 2 or 3 months, the Disciplinary Board for Bishops came back and said, there is not enough evidence – I think that is the simplest way to put it ”“ that I have abandoned the communion and so I will not be brought up on charges. They will not go forward to become actual charges, they will just be removed.
Philip Plyming:
It’s my pleasure to hand over now to the Chair of the DEF, Stephen Hofmeyr, who is going to introduce our two speakers.

Stephen Hofmeyr, QC:
Thank you very much indeed Philip.
Some of you will know the bishops well, others of you will not, and so please forgive me ”“ I just thought it would just be helpful if I gave you just something of their backgrounds.

Bishop Mark Lawrence was born in Bakersfield, California. He is a fifth generation Californian. He is married to Alison and they have five married children, some of whom are following in their father’s footsteps. His youngest daughter in fact right now is expecting. He is hoping that the baby will be born today, on St Mark’s Day, so let’s be praying for her at this time. He was educated at California State University, Bakersfield – BA in 1976 and Trinity Episcopal School for Ministry – he got a Masters in Divinity in 1980. He also has received honorary doctorates from Nashotah House in 2008 and Sewanee in 2009.

Bishop Lawrence has ministered in a wide variety of parish settings ”“ suburban church plant, rural mission, inner-city church, downtown parish. These include Holy Family in Fresno, California, St Mark’s Shafter, California 1881-84, St Stephen’s, [McKeesport] Pennsylvania 84 to 97 and St Paul’s Bakersfield California 1997 to 2007. Bishop Mark is widely known for being a dedicated pastor-teacher. He served as a deputy to the General Conventions of 2003 and 2006 and he has published articles on devotional and ecclesial concerns in various different periodicals. Bishop Mark was consecrated the fourteenth bishop of the Diocese of South Carolina on the 26th January 2008, and just to bring him down to earth as well, like many of us he enjoys reading on various subjects. He likes outdoor activities ”“ hiking, back-packing, canoeing, fishing and jogging.

Bishop John Guernsey was born in St Louis, Missouri and now lives in Woodbridge, Virginia, and his wife, the Reverend Meg Phillips Guernsey is with us this evening and we welcome you as well. They have two married children. Bishop Guernsey is a Magna Cum Laude graduate from Yale University with a Bachelor of Arts degree in History. He earned his Master of Divinity degree from the Episcopal Divinity School in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Bishop Guernsey served as the Associate Rector for Christchurch in Alexandria, Virginia from 1978 to 1981 and was called to be Rector of All Saints Church, Dale City, Virginia, a position he then held for 29 years, and during that time from 1982 to 1993 he also served as an Adjunct Professor of Pastoral Theology in the area of Stewardship at the Protestant Episcopal Theological Seminary of Virginia.

In 2007 he was consecrated as the Bishop for Congregations in America under the Church of Uganda, and he became Bishop of the Diocese of the Holy Spirit in the Anglican Church of North America in 2009 shortly after that was formed, following the GAFCON Conference in 2008. He serves as a volunteer in many ways on a number of different ACNA committees. He also serves as Chairman of the board of SOMA [Sharing of Ministries Abroad] USA and he has served as the Dean of the Mid-Atlantic Convocation of the Anglican Communion Network 2004 to 2009 and on a number of other committees and agencies.

So we have two very distinguished bishops with us this evening. We are most grateful for you giving up ”“ it is the one free night they have at the FCA Conference this week ”“ and they have given up that night to be with us, so thank you both very much indeed. Bishop Mark will speak to us first in a moment and Bishop John after that. But before they do I am just going to hand over to Julian Henderson who has a message to bring.

Julian Henderson, Archdeacon of Dorking:
Thank you Stephen – just simply to add a welcome not just from the Diocesan Evangelical Fellowship, but from the Diocese of Guildford and Bishop Christopher knows that this gathering is happening and has asked that these words be read out as a form of his welcome to both of you here in the Diocese this evening:

”˜I hope the evening at Claygate on the 25th with Bishops Mark and John goes well. I wonder if you would be kind enough to give my greetings to the assembled gathering as the host church. You may add if you wish that it is my intuition and prayerful hope that in the long term there can be some restoration of relationship between the two streams of Anglicanism in the United States such that the rifts within the whole Anglican Communion may also at least in part be healed.’

So he sends his greeting and his welcome to you and he is delighted that this meeting here tonight is happening and I think I have been asked to pray for our two bishops. Let us pray.

God our Father, we thank you for the opportunity of meeting here this evening. We thank you again for Bishops John and Mark and their willingness to be with us. We pray that you will help them as they now come to speak to us and inform us. We pray that it will be a useful meeting for us as we listen and learn and we pray that you would help us to hear your voice and what it is that you are saying to us in this country through the experience of our colleagues across the water. And so we pray, Father, for your blessing on this evening’s gathering, that it may be for your glory and the extending of your kingdom for Christ’s sake we pray. Amen.

6 mins, 45 seconds in
Bishop Lawrence
Stephen mentioned that we gave up the only free evening. I don’t think I have given up anything. It is a delight to be here with you tonight and to talk a little bit about the challenges that we face in the Diocese of South Carolina, and thank you for your interest.

When I meet with our various deaneries to talk about the various challenges and things coming up recently in our various conventions and special conventions I’ve said: you know I have to thank you first off tonight because you have given up an evening, and evenings are precious things. And most people go to church, at least the last time I checked, to be comforted, to be strengthened and to be encouraged, and to walk into these muddy waters of church conflict and struggle are anything but comforting, encouraging and strengthening. So the fact that you are willing to engage these things, especially for those of us who are Anglicans on the other side of the Atlantic, thank you, and I am sure I am speaking for Bishop John as well.

How to talk about these things in 20 minutes? Let me say first that I received a letter recently from an editor inviting me to write an article for a publication and it said in the letter: ”˜As you are aware, Anglicans in our age are facing a unique set of problems, and there are an array of responses that North American Anglicans are making, and we are wondering if you would be willing to make a contribution to that. We do ask that it be positively written, emphasising what can be done rather than just what cannot be done.

A Unique Set of Problems ”“ well let’s go quickly through them:

Anglicanism, Episcopalianism, that I received so many decades ago, the way I’ve described it has been dominated in the Episcopal Church by what I’ve called an ”˜Indiscriminate Inclusivity’, that like Kudsu on an old growth forest [Kudzu is a plant from Africa that has taken root in many parts of the American South] and since there is no natural enemy or hindrance to it, it just goes rampant and it will cover entire forests. And the first time I came to South Carolina as a Californian and driving down the highway you’d see these vines covering the trees and I thought ”˜well that’s lovely’ you know, because in California it is more desert, arid. So the lush green looked gorgeous. What I didn’t know is the Kudzu is killing the tree upon which it had climbed and gutting it of all life] ”“ and so I’ve described this gospel, a false gospel of Indiscriminate Inclusivity, not that we don’t want to be inclusive of all people, but we can include certain things indiscriminately that can begin to destroy the church from within. And so I have described it as Kudzu in an old-growth forest that has decked The Episcopal Church with decorative destruction.

And one of the key dimensions of that, besides what we would call ”˜Communion of the Unbaptised’ would be just one indiscriminate inclusivity. But another would be to fully embrace what Helmut Thielicke once called ”˜Individual Eros.’ Individual Eros – he didn’t mean just our sexual expression, but how we understand ourselves sexually, and he began to see as he wrote in the 1970s and 80s that people were beginning to define how they, by their own choice how they went about expressing their eros, their whole sense of romance, sexuality, behaviour. But Individual Eros has gone now to the point of not just how I express my sexuality, but what my sexuality is, and we now have the capacity don’t we, because of medical developments in technology to even change our sexuality, so that we are at a place where we can choose whether we be male or female, how we engage that, how we understand that, everything about sexuality is now individualised; and it can be radically reinterpreted, reapplied, lived out and changed.

Then there is this tearing of the fabric of the Anglican Communion that recent decisions of The Episcopal Church and the Anglican Church of Canada has brought about, which I assume that most of you at least know something. And then the fracturing within Anglicanism in North America, and the recent law suits, parallel jurisdictions, provinces that have emerged.

And then there is the reshaping and revision of the polity of The Episcopal Church, in some cases in order to win litigation and law suits, so that the polity of the church is being revised, reinterpreted and transformed for the sake of an agenda of control over things like property.

And then there is the radical decline within The Episcopal Church in terms of numbers. I don’t have time to go into all of those things; but that is just a quick thumbnail sketch of the overarching challenges that we face within North American Anglicanism.

Now let me talk briefly about the context of the Diocese of South Carolina and the complexity of that; and then what I see as our calling or vocation; and then finally our challenges.

When I became Bishop of the Diocese of South Carolina in 2008, I inherited a strongly evangelical orthodox diocese, that most people on the outside assumed was almost monolithic in its approach to the Christian Faith as Anglicans or Episcopalians. But as I began to drive around the diocese, I began to see that it was a bit more diverse than that, especially in terms of how we are understanding the current challenges which I outlined to you just ever so briefly, and along with that is how we should respond to them. So, about a year into the whole task of being a bishop, and I had visited every parish and made a visitation at all the parishes of the diocese, often doing that by visiting two or three on a Sunday, or in the middle of the week ”“ and I developed what I would call a taxonomy or typology for the Diocese of South Carolina. You may recognise some of these characteristics in your parishes or congregations:

There were the Number Ones who were in lockstep with the decisions of the General Convention of The Episcopal Church for the last 20 years, completely on board with what I would call this ”˜gospel of Indiscriminate Inclusivity’ and wherever The Episcopal Church goes in its decisions, they will gladly go, even enthusiastically go. They are not merely following it, some are even leading the charge – very few actually in South Carolina leading the charge. But that group, what I call the Number Ones, make up 10 per cent of the diocese.

Then there are the Number Twos, I call them ”˜St Swithun’s by the Swamp’, and St Swithun’s by the Swamp just want to do what they have done at St Swithun’s for two or three hundred years. My job as bishop is to keep all the problems of the national church away from them, and all the problems of the diocese away from them, and if I need to show up once a year for a confirmation, a visitation, that’s fine, but ”˜bishop here’s the reception, and there’s your car, have a pleasant journey back to Charleston’.

They just want to be St Swithun’s and they are convinced that these things that I am talking about aren’t going to happen, in South Carolina. God-willing on my watch, I trust they won’t, but as I said the culture is bringing it all to a neighbourhood near you, so you need to awaken and engage the challenge culturally if not ecclesiologically. But those are the Number Twos ”“ they make up about 30 to 35 percent of the diocese of South Carolina.

Then there were the Number Threes, I call them ”˜St Mary’s by the Marsh’. They keep up with what is going on, not every day, but they will visit the blogs at least once a week. They really become involved when there is some controversy. They know there’s problems out there, they know they are opposed to them. They make sure that it is not going to happen in their parish: ”˜There may be a day that we cross the Rubicon and we have to leave The Episcopal Church, but it hasn’t happened yet’. Every General Convention, as it approaches, and there is one this Summer in 2012 in July – it may be a rattling of the cages but by and large ”“ they make up 35 percent of the Diocese of South Carolina: ”˜There may be a time we have to leave but it hasn’t yet happened’.

Then there are the Number Fours. They have had two questions of me from the time I landed in South Carolina. The first question is: ”˜Are we leaving, or are we going?’ [laughter], and the second is like unto it: ”˜When?’ And they are some of our strongest, most innovative, and evangelistic parishes.

So that was the Diocese of South Carolina. And so the Number Threes and the Number Fours were all focused on this question: ”˜Are we leaving or not?’ and I told you the Number Fours were not ”˜Are we leaving or not?’ but ”˜When?’ and ”˜Are we leaving or going?’ And then the Number Twos were concerned about that because they just want to be who they are and they are afraid of something that might disrupt. And the Number Ones, 10 per cent of the diocese, they are concerned about that because they are enthusiastically Episcopalian whatever that means and wherever that goes.

So, As I began to look at that I thought: you know, you know the problem with this is we are paralysed by a decision. And the problem with a decision is a decision is not a vision. You can make a decision about leaving or staying and still not have a vision for who you are and what you are to be about!

And it just so happened my first year as a bishop I ended up going to Lambeth 2008 and I also went to GAFCON, so I got a good exposure to the Communion. I came back thinking to myself what I had already suspected as a parish priest and that is that what is at stake in this current crisis in North America is not The Episcopal Church. Frankly the Episcopal Church could drop off the face of the earth and it would hardly be a blip on the radar screen of the kingdom of God. Well ”“ we are less than two million people, and on any given Sunday we are lucky if we have 600 thousand people in church. There are more Muslims in the United States than there are Episcopalians – far more Pentecostals of various different denominations than there are Episcopalians – we are hardly a blip on the radar screen of the kingdom of God in North America. But the Anglican Communion, ah now, now we are talking about 80 million Christians, the third largest body in Christendom.

As I began to think about this I thought what is at stake here is the Anglican Communion, and whatever we do in the Diocese of South Carolina, it is time that we begin to think as a diocese, not about what’s best for us, but what’s best for the larger Anglican world. And so ”˜Emerging Anglicanism’, that’s what had caught my imagination as to what we are to be about ”“ helping to shape that. And so as I began to look at that I thought you know, our vocation here in the 21st Century has to go beyond ourselves. As the Stanford Economist Paul Romer once said ”˜a crisis is a terrible thing to waste’ [laughter]. Sometimes I think we are wasting it as Anglicans. We are not grappling with what we need to be engaged with.

So, I wrote a vision statement for us. It went like this: We will help shape the future of Anglicanism in the 21st Century through mutually enriching missional relationships with dioceses and provinces of the Anglican Communion [biblical texts Romans 1:11 and 12, 2 Corinthians 9:1-15], and through modelling a responsible autonomy and inter-provincial accountability [Philippians 2:1-5 and Ephesians 4:1-6] for the sake of Jesus Christ, His Kingdom and His church.

Now the problem with that as a vision statement is ”“ you are never going to get most of the people in the diocese to even read it, let alone remember it. So I thought yup, boil it down to T-shirt size. You know I’m from California, you got to have it on a T-shirt. So the T-shirt version of that vision is:

”˜We are called to make Biblical Anglicans for a Global Age.’

There’s no going back, even if you are St Swithun’s by the Swamp. There’s no going back to a non-global age. What happens in Rwanda is read about in Alaska. What happens in New Zealand is read about the next day in Egypt. You can’t even be a farmer without knowing what to plant because of who is going to be buying products and needing goods in various parts of the world. How in the world do we think we in the church can somehow or another begin to focus or continue to focus on our own little world, as if the rest of the globe is not important? Well I don’t need to tell you as English persons that. And so, our task was to make Biblical Anglicans for a Global Age.

I need to tell you something by the way before I forget. When I say the Number Fours were asking are we leaving or are we going and when, it’s not because they are separatists. They really want to be Anglicans. You see no one goes into Episcopal or Anglican ministry because he or she wants a preaching station. They are there because they are committed to at very minimum, the Chicago-Lambeth Quadrilateral: the importance of Holy Scriptures as the Word of God containing everything necessary for Salvation, point 1 of the Lambeth Quadrilateral. Number 2 is the sacraments of Holy Baptism and Holy Eucharist with the words instituted by Christ. The historic Creeds as a sufficient statement of faith and the historic Episcopate locally adapted. And most of the Number Fours, if not all of the Number Fours, if they left would want to be reconnected, or connected or linked somehow or another with some Anglican body. We are not talking about separatists back in the time of Elizabeth or later. We are talking about people who want to be Anglicans. But it has become for them such a profound compromise with this, what I have called a false gospel of Indiscriminate Inclusivity, that they feel like it is hindering their mission.

So, that was the context, if you will, within the Diocese of South Carolina. That is our mission to make Biblical Anglicans for a Global Age. So we have formed relationships with Egypt, North Africa, Horn of Africa, the Sudan, Uganda, Ireland [Kilmore, Elphin and Ardagh], various dioceses in England, the province of Tanzania, Turkey, we have Bishop Michael Nazir-Ali as the visiting bishop of Anglican Communion relationships, connected with Burundi, Uganda. We have connections all over the Anglican world because you see, we are so isolated as a diocese that if we are going to model a legitimate, authentic, responsible autonomy we better be in relationship with other places around the world who can keep us authentic and true to our calling.

So, I said that we would quickly look at the context of South Carolina, our calling to make Biblical Anglicans for a Global Age. The challenge is that while we are struggling with these, what I would call theological and moral issues of a false gospel as I understand it, we also have a church which is changing its polity, as I said in some cases, at least from my perspective [others would give you a different take], in order – You know when an institution begins to decline it seeks greater and ever greater control over what remains. It doesn’t realise that that is the wrong thing it needs to do. And so one of the things that happened at General Convention 2009 is that we changed what is called the Title IV canons – the disciplinary canons of The Episcopal Church. They expanded the charges that a priest could be brought up on. They expanded the power of the bishop over a priest to pursue charges and in one reading of it, in our reading of it within the diocese, it removed the priest’s ”“ what’s the word I want ”“ rights for due process.

And along with that, as it expanded the powers of the Presiding Bishop over a Diocesan Bishop, essentially granting the Presiding Bishop metropolitan powers, the same powers that a bishop has over his or her diocese, the Presiding Bishop through this disciplinary canon, now has that power over a sitting bishop. That is contrary to the Constitution of The Episcopal Church, so we as a diocese looked at that and said we are not embracing that canon, because the Constitution takes precedence over the canons of the church and it is an unconstitutional canon that has been constructed, that has been approved and we are not going down that road. That happened in 2009.

I don’t have time to go into all these things but let me briefly say another thing that happened in the Fall of 2009 – there was a Court Ruling. My predecessor had a parish that chose to leave, some 10 years before I arrived on the scene in South Carolina, that formed what is called the Anglican Mission in America. Some of you may have heard of the Anglican Mission in America. That mission that broke away from The Episcopal Church, its headquarters are located in the Diocese of South Carolina. They sued the Diocese of South Carolina. We counter-sued. The Episcopal Church nationally entered into the lawsuit and that went on for some eight to nine years, and in the Fall of 2009 the Supreme Court of the State of South Carolina ruled in favour of the departing parish. It is probably, if not the only, one of the most clearest rulings of any Supreme Court ”“ it went contrary to what is the case every place else in the United States.

So suddenly, we have a landscape in South Carolina where parishes believe and rectors believe they can leave the diocese at any time, take their property with them. Suddenly how do I hold the Number Fours together? How do I keep them intact? Well it can no longer be by coercion, by manipulation or fear. There is only one thing that can hold us together, and that is a common commitment to the Gospel of Jesus Christ and a common vision of what we are called to do.

Most of the diocese held firmly to that. Our largest congregation came to the conclusion that to continue with The Episcopal Church was going to hinder their proclamation of the Gospel and they felt conscience-bound to leave at that time, or to begin a process to leave at that time. It is not that they wanted to leave the Diocese of South Carolina, they are quite comfortable with that, but to be labelled with The Episcopal Church was hindering their mission.

So when noises began on that front, the Presiding Bishop hired an attorney in the Diocese of South Carolina, who presented himself as ”˜Counsel for The Episcopal Church in South Carolina’. I said, wait a minute, according to our polity we are The Episcopal Church in South Carolina. I am the only one that has juridical or jurisdictional authority here. She has not spoken to me. She has not asked for my permission, and there is no constitutional or canonical authority that the Presiding Bishop has to hire an attorney to investigate me and the Diocese or South Carolina. We called a Special Convention; told the Presiding Bishop to remove the attorney. I have never received any notice from her ”“ it is four years later.

That brought us into a cold war with the national church, and in a cold war the difficulty is everything you do to protect yourself in a cold war, can be interpreted by the person on the opposite side of the cold war as an act of aggression. That goes for me towards them and them towards me and so we have lived with that for three years now.

I need to conclude because our time is all but up, mine is already past. In the Fall of last year, I was informed that there were 12 allegations brought against me that I had abandoned the communion of The Episcopal Church. And after 2 or 3 months, the Disciplinary Board for Bishops came back and said, there is not enough evidence – I think that is the simplest way to put it ”“ that I have abandoned the communion and so I will not be brought up on charges. They will not go forward to become actual charges, they will just be removed.

But one of the things I have continued to seek to do, is to not see the Anglican Church in North America as our enemy – that if we can bless a priest, a deacon, a congregation within the Anglican Church n North America, we would seek to do that – so that when St Andrew’s Mount Pleasant, our largest parish left, we brought no lawsuit against them – challenges when allegations were brought against me that I did not sue them or practice litigation. And so we look for opportunities that we can be of assistance to them and pray that they look for opportunities to be a blessing to us. So in spite of the fact that many within The Episcopal Church see the Anglican Church in North America as the enemy, we are committed to see them as our brothers and sisters in Christ. After all, many of them served right beside us in various councils of the Diocese of South Carolina, and in The Episcopal Church.

I am going to end there because I am over time. [Applause].

To 35 mins in

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, * South Carolina, Episcopal Church (TEC), TEC Bishops, TEC Conflicts, TEC Conflicts: South Carolina

Local Paper front Page–Episcopalians on both sides of the schism feeling the pain

The fact that the break has been coming for a long time doesn’t make it any less painful, [Saint Michael’s rector]… said.

“For many years there has been a split coming in the Episcopal Church over the core issue of the authority of Scripture,” Zadig read. “Do we have the freedom to rewrite the Bible to fit social trends, or do we rewrite our hearts according to the changeless word of God in Scripture? ”¦ The National Episcopal Church is changing Scripture according to social norms and in doing so has changed the core of the Christian faith.”

[Grace Episcopal Church rector Michael] Wright said the Episcopal Church has always welcomed diverse opinions, and the issue was disregarding church law.

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Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, * Christian Life / Church Life, Episcopal Church (TEC), Parish Ministry, Pastoral Theology, TEC Bishops, TEC Conflicts, TEC Conflicts: South Carolina, Theology

Episcopal Church Hits Bottom, Keeps Digging–Robert Munday on South Carolina Developments

Wander into any of Charleston’s downtown parishes on a Sunday morning and you will hear some of the finest Anglican choral music on either side of the Atlantic. The Bishop of London, preaching at last year’s Mere Anglicanism conference, at St. Phillip’s Church in Charleston, praised the choir for one of the finest renditions of Sir Hubert Parry’s “I Was Glad When They Said Unto Me” that he (or I, for that matter) had ever heard. (If you aren’t familiar with that piece, you can listen to it here, although you will have to settle for the choir of Westminster Abbey performing it at the wedding of Prince William and Kate Middleton.)

More importantly, if you visit most of the Diocese of South Carolina’s parishes on a Sunday you will hear the Word of God exposited faithfully and well. And therein lies the problem, at least as far as the Episcopal Church is concerned. Anglicans/Episcopalians in South Carolina want the Word of God preached whole and entire, and unadulterated (no pun intended). Consequently, they aren’t on board with some of the new things the Episcopal Church has been promoting lately. As the Episcopal Church’s departure from biblical and historic Christian belief and practice has increased, the Diocese has sought to differentiate itself from the innovations of the Episcopal Church, while still remaining in it.

But it appears that some local malcontents, in concert with the Episcopal Church’s leadership, decided that they were tired of the Diocese of South Carolina not getting with the program; all of which led to this week’s news

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Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, * Christian Life / Church Life, Episcopal Church (TEC), Parish Ministry, TEC Bishops, TEC Conflicts, TEC Conflicts: South Carolina, Theology, Theology: Scripture

(One News Now) Bible-believing South Carolina Episcopal Bishop Penalized

“I think the Episcopal Church has really shot itself in the foot by doing this,” …IRD spokesman [Jeff Walton] comments. “They’re losing one of their larger, more vibrant dioceses. Indeed this diocese is one of the few that’s posted growth in recent years, and there is just nothing that the liberal leadership of the Episcopal Church is really gaining by effectively forcing this diocese out the door.”

Walton does not believe the national office wants to tolerate the type of public dissent displayed by South Carolina.

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Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, * Christian Life / Church Life, * South Carolina, Episcopal Church (TEC), Evangelism and Church Growth, Parish Ministry, TEC Bishops, TEC Conflicts, TEC Conflicts: South Carolina, TEC Data, TEC Polity & Canons

Upper South Carolina Episcopal diocese meets, plans for next year

This year’s convention focused a great deal on making, equipping and sending mature disciples into the world, McKay said.

“That’s what the bishop is focusing on,” she said.

To do that, the Rt. Rev. W. Andrew Waldo laid out four priorities for the diocese’s 63 congregations: building the church community for prayer and discussion, teaching and vocation within the church, bearing witness and bringing service to the world and good stewardship of people, place and money, [Sally] McKay said.

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Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, * South Carolina, Episcopal Church (TEC), TEC Bishops, TEC Diocesan Conventions/Diocesan Councils