Category : TEC Conflicts

AP: SC Episcopalians to distance themselves from the national church

“The only model that’s been out there for us has either been leave or acquiesce, and that hasn’t been working,” [Bishop Mark] Lawrence has said. “We need to get the 30,000 members of the Episcopal Diocese of South Carolina awakened to the challenges before us. … Once we have done that, then the question is how do we engage the larger Episcopal Church?”

Saturday’s vote authorizes the South Carolina bishop and the diocesan Standing Committee to begin withdrawing from church councils and governing bodies that have “assented to actions contrary to Holy Scripture,” according to the resolution text.

The Diocese of South Carolina is comprised of 75 parishes in the southern and eastern part of the state. Other Episcopal churches in the state are in the Episcopal Diocese of Upper South Carolina.

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

The Bishop’s Address at the Synod or Special Convention of the Diocese of South Carolina 2009

The Bishop’s Address at the Synod or Special Convention of the Diocese of South Carolina, October 24, 2009

“When the foundations are being destroyed, what can the righteous do?” Ps 11:3

I begin this morning’s address with this verse from the eleventh Psalm of the Psalter. The Hebrew Bible cites this as a Psalm of David. There is some discussion as to whether these are David’s words or the words of his advisors. Certainly what precedes this verse was spoken by the king’s counselors””for they suggest he “flee like a bird to the mountains.” Everything is lost. Seeking refuge is all there is left to do. But the psalmist has begun his prayer by declaring that the only refuge he is interested in is God; and God has not moved to the mountains. So the psalmist will stand tall and trust. Nevertheless, this verse from the psalm has haunted me for some time now. “When the foundations are being destroyed, what can the righteous do?”
No one can fail to acknowledge that this Special Convention””this synodical gathering of the Diocese of South Carolina””is being carried out before watching eyes. The resolutions that are before us while seeming tepid to some, have to others the feel of haste, even imprudence. Whatever can be said in support or detraction, they have caught the attention of the secular and religious world around us. Even before we take up the work of this gathering it can hardly be suggested the rank and file members of the diocese have not been apprised that at least something of significance is going to take place today. This is not another ho hum ecclesiastical meeting. To that end, even those who would mount resistance have helped in getting the word out, even if fraught with fear and misinformation. I am thankful that along with the lay delegates and the clergy of the diocese we also have three bishops of the Church present; The Rt. Rev. C. Fitzsimmons Allison, 12th Bishop of South Carolina, The Rt. Rev. George Edward Haynesworth, retired Bishop of Nicaragua and retired assisting bishop of South Carolina, and The Rt. Reverend Alden M. Hathaway, retired bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Pittsburgh. Their presence is important because the issues before us in final analysis are issues of faith and order, and historically these have been the concern of the episcopacy.

We owe it to ourselves and to those we represent as well as to the larger Church to take these matters seriously and, I might add, prayerfully. So let me return to the words of the psalmist””whether uttered by a hard pressed king or his advisors, these words come down to us through the centuries: “When the foundations are being destroyed, what can the righteous do?” Surely most of you know that I believe the foundations of The Episcopal Church and this Anglican way of being a Christian are being bit by bit destroyed. This is hardly the time for me to state again the argument that I put before the Clergy of the Diocese in my address on August 13th. Whether I was sufficiently clear in my exposition of the problems, or whether my words were fully understood, I believe their main thrust through congregational forums, clericus and deanery meetings should at least by now be broadly understood. Put simply it is a false understanding of the Christian faith that has spread abroad in our Church; a wrong understanding founded upon human speculation rather than divine revelation. This false teaching, that I have called the Gospel of Indiscriminate Inclusivity, has challenged the doctrine of The Trinity, the Uniqueness and Universality of Christ, the Authority of Scripture, our understanding of Baptism, and now, that last refuge of order, our Constitution & Canons. Like an invasive vine, like kudzu in an old growth forest, it has decked The Episcopal Church with decorative destruction. It has invaded and now is systematically dismantling the fundamental teachings of our Church and our Christian heritage. This has happened through the concerted actions of a few and the passivity of a multitude of churchmen and women””bishops, priests and laypersons.

And I might say it has happened, ironically, because of the faithfulness of many to the tasks that were set before them and giving too little time to resist the maneuvers a foot in the Church. I count myself for many years among them. For most of my ministry I have been plowing the field before me. If I tell my own story here it is because I believe it is the story of many. I was always working to grow the congregations to which God had called me. I knew I did not like the direction the “national” church was headed. But I did not get overly involved in these problems. I did my work in the parish””whether I was a vicar or a rector. There was always more work to do than time in the day. Baptisms to prepare people for, confirmands to teach, marriages to perform, the faithful, and nominally churched members to bury, the unchurched and lost to win. There were Bible studies to teach, sermons to prepare, services to lead, visitations, pastoral counseling, Stewardship Committees, ECW retreats, etc”¦. I and those with whom I served were busy growing the Church. Then there were diocesan responsibilities””COM, BOEC to chair, Standing Committee, years as a rural dean. Community involvements””Salvation Army Board, Hospital Ethics committee, and other local needs begging for leadership. Certainly I dealt with the challenges of the culture and the larger Church whenever it was in my purview whether parish or diocesan responsibility. All the time, however, I knew that TEC was moving inexorably in what seemed an increasingly unbiblical direction. I knew there were those who were fighting the battle””Bishops like Bishop Allison, Bishop Salmon, and Bishop Hathaway””fighting the good fight. In those days those resisting the dismantling of the foundations were substantial but I fear not bold enough. When some were taking radical actions, disregarding the creeds and the canons, the defenders of orthodoxy were gentleman still fighting according to Marques of Queensbury rules. Those pushing the agenda were more like street-fighters.

Yet even after all the hemorrhaging of the Traditionalist, Catholic and Evangelical wings of The Episcopal Church in the last 30 to 40 years””there are many who still remain. Even today I know that across the country there are vicars and rectors and lay persons who love their church and do not like the direction successive General Conventions have taken us; who do not know what to do. They get up each day to the demands of their flock, the care of their families and jobs, and their parish congregations. They do not know what has happened to their church or how it is they could have so many leaders of TEC that do not represent their views. And now I, like my predecessors, have to find a way to fight the fight in this day when those who are with us in this Church and willing to take a stand, are so few.

I have sought not to make The Episcopal Church the problem. Rather, I have suggested it is the embrace of this false gospel of indiscriminate inclusivity which is the problem. You will have to judge whether I have been successful in this. But what has happened is that the agenda of this false gospel has taken deep roots within the Church. We may have gone past the point of saving, but I have not yet given up.

I’ve said all of this in order to answer three questions:
Ӣ Why are we here today?
Ӣ What are we to do?
Ӣ What difference will it make?

Why Are We Here Today?

Or to ask the question differently, why have the Standing Committee and I called this Special Convention””this Diocesan Synod. Let me begin my answer with a story that Abraham Lincoln once told. When he was a circuit riding lawyer in frontier Illinois he stopped one hot day for a drink at a large farm house that was built under an enormous tree. He found the owner sitting under its shade. “Hank”, said Lincoln, noticing the troubled look on the farmer’s face, “What seems to be troubling you?” The farmer said, “Mr. Lincoln, do you see this here tree? It is the pride of the county. Look at the way those limbs stretch out over of my house like a canopy. About two months ago I came in from plowing the field to rest under the shade of this tree, when I looked up and saw a squirrel run into a hole in that branch. Well that caught my curiosity. So I shimmied up the tree and looked into that hole. It went the entire length of the branch. When I looked around, why there were holes in other branches too. And to my horror even the very trunk was hollowed out. Well, I figured I’d better fell the tree. But with all the contorted branches I couldn’t figure out a way to fell the tree and not bring down my house. So then I figured I’d just leave it up. But one night while I was in bed the wind began to howl and I thought ”˜What if one of those branches crashes down on my house and kills my family?’ I’ve been thinking about that now for two months” “Well,” asked Lincoln, “what did you decide?” “I decided I wish I’d never seen that darn squirrel!”

Well that’s why we’re here today. Your Bishop and Standing Committee have seen the squirrel. And in spite of the fact that at times we wish we hadn’t, we cannot deny it. In my Bishop’s Address to the Clergy, I not only described the challenges that are deconstructing our Episcopal heritage, I put forward what I believe ought to be four unswerving principles to guide us: The Lordship of Christ and the Sufficiency of Scripture; Godly Boundaries; Domestic Engagement for Missional Relationships; and, Emerging 21st Century Anglicanism. I believe we need to hold on to these guiding principles while remaining in a state of ready flexibility. The landscape around us in The Episcopal Church and the Anglican Communion is changing almost daily. This week alone has brought remarkable and gracious news from the Vatican but it will give us little relief but that of hope that one day all who hold the faith of the apostles shall be one. Meanwhile these four principles need to guide us; otherwise we will be tossed about by every windy gust of news or tidal wave crashing on the shore. I fear these principles have been lost in the discussion and debate over these resolutions. The guiding principles have produced the resolutions; the resolutions have not produced the principles. As a reminder, the principle is put succinctly at the top of each resolution. The resolutions have been drafted by members of the Standing Committee and some of the deans. Are they perfect? Of course not. There are places that I even would make changes. But I hope we will not get so bogged down in amendments that we fail to discuss or debate the substance.

Clearly the resolution that has caught the most attention has been Resolution #2. The controversy over this resolution is a good illustration of how the resolutions have been unhinged from the principles. Take the way resolution #2 has been portrayed””that we are leaving The Episcopal Church. That it gives the bishop and Standing Committee permission to leave the “national” church at will. It does nothing of the kind. Frankly bishops have been staying away from House of Bishops meetings for years without needing the permission of their diocesan conventions. This gives me no authority I do not already have. What it does is acknowledge we have entered a time when the need for more radically ways of speaking is painfully apparent. As for the suggestion this gives the Standing Committee and me the power to take the diocese out of TEC that is just not true. This argument ignores Article I of the Constitution of this Diocese which states that we “”¦accede to the Constitution & Canons of the Protestant Episcopal Church of the United States of America.” The Episcopal Church didn’t put that statement in our Constitution & Canons; this diocese did. It was a sovereign act of this Diocese of South Carolina.

Then there is the question often posed to me””if your intention bishop is to more thoroughly engage the “national” church and the culture, how does withdrawing from certain bodies of the Church enable us to more fully engage? To that question I say three things””first, remember there are four principles, not just this one. Secondly, most of us at some point in our lives have found ourselves in a dysfunctional system or relationship. We eventually recognized the need for appropriate boundaries. It is the only way to remain engaged with the family or system that embodies the dysfunction. Thirdly, it is the very withdrawing that facilitates the engagement. Here I refer to the analogy Canon Kendall Harmon uses. Our purposed action is similar to a wife whose husband is having an affair and after frequent confrontations and conversations he continues in his adulterous behavior. Eventually, without ending the marriage or leaving their home, she says, “I’m moving my bedroom down the hall. I haven’t given up on this yet, but somehow I have to get your attention that this isn’t working for me!” To summarize or evaluate all that she is doing to bring health or wholeness to the relationship by this one action would be patently unfair and inaccurate. What needs to be recognized is that it is one action she is taking along with several others. And the action regarding the bedroom is because it is the marriage bed that is the place the covenant has been broken. She knows that this move may provoke his anger. The children may blame her for their discomfort. But she has not ceased to engage.

Then others will ask, “Will this mean we will not send deputies to General Convention? How can we effect change if we don’t go to General Convention?” While the first question will ultimately be a decision of the diocese, let me say one thing clearly about the second question. The General Convention is not the answer to the problems of The Episcopal Church. The General Convention has become the problem. It has replaced a balanced piety in this Church with the politics of one-dimensional activism. Every three years when the Episcopal Church train pulls into the station of General Convention more traditional, catholic and evangelical Episcopalians get off the train and do not return. Do you know that in 1968 this Church had 3, 600, 000 members. In 2008 we had just barely over 2,000,000. It is even less than that now. Think about it, in what the Bible refers to as one generation we have lost 1,600,000 members! That is a 44% decline in one generation. All this while the U.S. population has skyrocketed! If you as an Episcopalian entered a train in 1968 with ninety-nine people randomly chosen, the odds were you would encounter another Episcopalian. But if you enter a train today with a random sampling of ninety-nine others, there would not be another Episcopalian on board, and the odds are just barely over 50–50 that even you would be there. I do not cite this to beat up on our Church. I cite it to say, we cannot take another generation like this. Some would suggest this is the price of being prophetic; I fear it is the price of being increasingly irrelevant. We have little to offer the world that a segment of the culture is offering. It is a matter of institutional survival. This train is moving fast toward a station where many of us in this diocese will not go. We fear the track this train is on””this train ain’t bound for glory, this train. That’s why we’re here today; to try and wake up passengers, brakemen and engineers alike. “When the foundations are being destroyed, what can the righteous do?”

What are we to do?

Frankly, I have been wondering how long the average Episcopalian will just sit there and let this train load of radical activism roll them along to a dead end station. It reminds me of an old story of a parish which had fallen into lethargy. The priest invited an elderly nun from a nearby convent to address the congregation one Sunday. She said to the congregation, “There is a folk legend where I come from that when a baby is born, an angel comes down from heaven and kisses it on one part of its body. If the angel kisses him on the hand, he becomes a handyman. If the angel kisses him on the mouth he becomes a great speaker. If he kisses him on the forehead, he becomes bright and clever. And I’ve been trying to figure out where the angel has kissed all of you so that you should sit there for so long and do nothing.” These four principles that I’ve put forth to guide this diocese set us on a course to further engage our culture and our Church. So likewise, these are not random resolutions. The Standing Committee put them forward in response to my address to the clergy. There’s a resolution for each principle: If one tries to understand them separately you may fail to see they are in response to a consistent strategy, a coherent game plan for engaging the challenges and opportunities before us.

Resolutions 4 seeks to engage the international challenges. I haven’t time to rehearse what I spoke of at our Diocesan Convention last March when I put forth the vision of “Making Biblical Anglicans for a Global Age.” But it is briefly summarized in the “whereas” sections of the resolution. As I’ve stated at the clericus and deanery meetings around the diocese, I believe what is at stake is not merely Anglicanism or Episcopalianism in North America; it is the Anglican Communion. That is the key and vital theatre of engagement. We dare not take ourselves and our difficulties so seriously that we do not see and labor for the bigger prize””the emerging Anglicanism of the 21st Century.

Resolution 3 casts an eye toward those of whom I referred in the beginning of my address. Who are day by day ministering in their parishes but feel paralyzed by the overwhelming magnitude of the problems in our Church. Who yearn for those who will partner with them for the gospel, for the growth of the Church. Where we can, we must encourage them. So also we will look to partner with U.S. dioceses for the common purpose of winning the lost to Christ and to find better ways to grow our parishes and plant new congregations. Our purpose is not merely to establish healthy boundaries as Resolution 2 addresses it is to foster healthy mission and ministry among Episcopalians in this country.

But, if we are to grow we have to continue to ordain clergy. And they need to know, and the congregations in which they are ordained need to know, what the vows they are making mean. That is the purpose of Resolution 1. Over half a century ago Archbishop William Temple put it well: “The Church needs to be very clear in its public pronouncements so it may be very pastoral in its application.” When addressing some of the great moral questions of our day we have been dreadfully muddled in our public pronouncements. The recent resolutions of General Convention ’09, in D025 and C056 regarding human sexuality offer the most recent case in point””the nuances of descriptive not descriptive just doesn’t fly. Is the doctrine, discipline and worship of the Episcopal Church what a news report says? What some presiding officer says? What the Executive Council says on any given day? Is it really so mercurial? It feels at times like were holding liquid mercury.

I realize for some these resolutions are too risky; or even unnecessary. For others it is too little, too late. But it is something; and it is more than we have done to date. The time is now more critical; the clock now ticks loud””all can hear who have not plugged their ears; and so I believe at the present moment, passing these resolutions is what we need to do. We have heard the porter call out the station of destination and there are far too many of us who cannot go there. “When the foundations are being destroyed, what can the righteous do?”

Finally, What difference will it make?

To this question I can only answer, I do not know. But I can say if we do nothing it is clear where we will be three years from today after the next Triennial. To wait until GC2012 to see if this Church canonizes the moral equivalency of same-sex marriage with the Christian understanding of marriage and then mount some protest will be too late. I fear our leaders have succumbed to emotion not reason. I’ve heard clergy in this Church, after casting votes that would alter our Church’s teaching on human sexuality, say “I am humble enough to acknowledge I may be wrong.” Let’s not cloak such actions with the garment of humility. Such action may be misguided compassion, but it is hardly humble. If one recognizes one may be wrong, would not humility suggest that one give the balance of weight to the plain reading of Holy Scripture? To two thousand years of the Church’s reflection upon those Scriptures? To the expressed mind of the Anglican Communion””and to the four Instruments of Unity? To the counsel of Christians around the world””Roman Catholic, Orthodox and the vast majority of Protestants? To what even the Natural Order reveals? Would not humility suggest one should”¦well, why both to say it? This is not about, nor ever has been about, excluding some from the grace and forgiveness of God. It is about is what the Church has the authority to recognize as authentically Christian, and what is appropriate for ordained leadership.

Should this Diocese of South Carolina pass these resolutions I suppose some may accuse us of disloyalty to The Episcopal Church. They might even suggest that it is we who will be guilty of destroying the foundations. I would say to this, if we are disloyal, it is the disloyalty of those who have loved what we believed is our best heritage; the disloyalty of those who have sought to protect the true breadth of our tradition. Not those who in recklessness tore it down or with ill-advised innovation tried to destroy the foundations that were once laid in Jesus Christ.

Ӣ Why are we here today? To face the problem before us, and The Episcopal Church, and the Anglican Communion.
Ӣ What are we to do? Decide the level of our engagement.
”¢ What difference will it make? God alone knows””we shall trust it to Him. The psalmist began his prayer by declaring that the only refuge he is interested in is God; and God has not moved to the mountains. His holy address hasn’t changed. He’s still in charge”¦as always. (The Message)

So let us turn now to today’s business. Let us do so recognizing, as David did in Psalm 11, that God is sovereign; that “His eyes behold the inhabited world; his piercing eye weighs our worth.” May God bless each one of us as we seek Him in the things we do today.

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

Living Church: HOD President Writes South Carolina Deputies

She said her intention in writing to the deputies from South Carolina was to preserve their presence in the House of Deputies.

“I could see them throughout the whole convention,” she said of South Carolina’s deputation to this summer’s General Convention. “I appreciated the depth of their involvement.”

The Rev. Kendall Harmon, canon theologian to the Diocese of South Carolina and a four-time deputy to General Convention, objects to the letter as an intrusion in the deliberations of the special convention.

“I am interested in the issue of precedent,” said Canon Harmon, who published the letter on his weblog, TitusOneNine. “I can’t name a time when a House of Deputies president intervened in a diocese before a convention like this.”

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Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, * South Carolina, Episcopal Church (TEC), House of Deputies President, TEC Conflicts, TEC Diocesan Conventions/Diocesan Councils

Loyal opposition: Meeting considers future of S.C. Episcopal diocese

The Rev. Dr. Frank Larisey, rector of the Episcopal Church of the Redeemer in Orangeburg, says another resolution will ask the diocese to sign the Anglican Covenant. The theological document is an attempt to state the common beliefs that holds the church together.

“It is basically a conservative, orthodox document that carefully holds the line on traditional Christian values with some places for other judicious interpretation,” Larisey said. “The first three sections deal with how we come together, theologically, as a body.”

“The fourth section is the punitive one, the one with teeth. That spells out what will happen if the covenant is entered and then abandoned,” he said. “This is an attempt at discipline in the church that has never been there before.”

Larisey says he feels the document is worth signing, although he points out that the Episcopal Church has a long history of signing agreements and then member components going their own way. Lawrence is asking that the entire four sections of the covenant be accepted by the diocese.

“It’s not as strong as I would like, but it is a good document,” Larisey said. “It will be of help especially if the fourth section is finalized, although that won’t be until at least 2012.”

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

Bonnie Anderson Writes the Diocese of South Carolina Deputies Before Special Convention

Greetings in the name of Jesus Christ. It was good to be with you at General Convention to get to know you a bit better and watch your thoughtful participation in the legislative process. Thank you for all you brought to the work of the House of Deputies.

I am writing to you regarding the five resolutions proposed for consideration at your upcoming Convention on October 24th. The resolutions have come to my attention and I wanted to be in touch with you about them. Several of them, especially Resolutions 3 and 4 speak of developing mission initiatives, partnership and relationships throughout the Episcopal Church, North America and the Anglican Communion. The Diocese has a strong commitment to mission. The continued commitment to mission is one we clearly share as evidenced by our work in that area at General Convention. Thank you for this continued commitment.

Looking at Resolutions 1 and 2 in particular and at Resolutions 1-4 as a whole, entitled “Guiding Principles for Engagement,” I am concerned that some in the Diocese are seeking through these resolutions to move the Diocese out of the full life of the Episcopal Church and perhaps even see the resolutions as steps preliminary in attempting to separate the Diocese from the Church. I fervently pray that is not what is intended. Several of these resolutions are similar to resolutions adopted by dioceses in which the bishop and some Church members have claimed that the diocese has left the Episcopal Church. While individuals have left the Episcopal Church, dioceses have not, and to do so would require the permission of General Convention.
I am concerned that several of the proposed resolutions contain misleading statements or assert positions that are in conflict with those of this Church. For example, in Resolution 1 in the third Whereas, the language referred to comes from the Preface to the Book of Common Prayer which states “This Church is far from intending to depart from the Church of England in any essential point of doctrine, discipline or worship; or further than local circumstances require.” The emphasized words were not included in the Whereas or in any part of the Resolution. Without the omitted language, someone reading the Resolution could come away with the idea that no departures from the doctrine, discipline and worship of the Church of England are permitted at all when the expectation has always been that alterations would be made. The Preface, set forth in October 1789, acknowledges our debt to the Church of England for this Church’s “first foundation and a long continuance of nursing care and protection” and goes on to quote from the Preface of the Book of Common Prayer of the Church of England at that time that “the Forms of Divine Worship are alterable and changes should be made according to the various exigency of times and occasions.”

The proposed addition of a statement of understanding of the meaning of the Constitution’s Article VIII Oath of Conformity is of concern for several reasons. The actual Oath in the Constitution is not included in the Resolution and it is unlikely many delegates or even clergy to your Convention will look it up. I encourage you to inform the Convention of the contents of the Oath so it can consider the proposed resolution in light of what the Constitution already requires. The Oath recited is:

I do believe the Holy Scriptures of the Old and New Testaments to be the Word of God, and to contain all things necessary to salvation; and I do solemnly engage to conform to the Doctrine, Discipline and Worship of the Episcopal Church.

The items referred to in the proposed understanding, or most of them, are set forth in the Book of Common Prayer in the section entitled “Historical Documents of the Church.” The Creed of Saint Athanasius, Preface to the Church of England First Book of Common Prayer of 1549, and the Thirty-Nine Articles are not part of the doctrine, discipline, or worship of The Episcopal Church. To the extent that “the Creeds” in the proposed resolution refer to the Apostles’ and Nicene Creeds, they are already recognized as part of the doctrine of this Church. The Episcopal Church’s Doctrine, according to the Canons, is to be found in the Canon of Holy Scripture as understood in the Apostles’ and Nicene Creeds and in the sacramental rites, the Ordinal and Catechism of the Book of Common Prayer.” The documents listed in the proposed understanding do not fall within this definition. The Church’s Discipline, according to our Canons, is “found in the Constitution, the Canons, and the Rubrics and the Ordinal of the Book of Common Prayer”. Again, the listed documents are not included in our definition of Discipline. The proposed understanding is inconsistent with the definitions we have of Doctrine and Discipline and attempt to add matters to the Church’s Doctrine and Discipline that are not a part of them. Adoption of this proposed resolution risks creating misunderstanding among both clergy and lay of the meaning of the Church’s Doctrine, Discipline and Worship; of suggesting that the Church holds as authoritative and binding things that it does not.

Regarding proposed Resolution 2, there certainly are different interpretations and understandings being given to resolutions D025 and C056. It is not uncommon for people to interpret actions of General Convention differently. On the issues addressed in the two resolutions, the Church has acknowledged that it is not of one mind. However, declaring actions of General Convention to be null and void and having no effect in a diocese is contrary to our polity and our Constitution and Canons. All dioceses must make an unqualified accession to the Constitution and Canons of The Episcopal Church. The General Convention is the governing body of the Church and the authority of all other entities and offices comes from General Convention. So, adoption of a resolution declaring an action of General Convention null and void is itself, a nullity. Actions of General Convention are binding on dioceses regardless of whether their bishops and deputies voted for or against them, agree with them or even participated in General Convention. The Executive Council considered this matter during the last triennium regarding dioceses that had adopted amendments to their Constitutions purporting to limit or lessen the unqualified accession of the Diocese to the Constitution and Canons of the Church. Resolution NAC 023 adopted June 14, 2007 states:

Resolved, That the Executive Council, meeting in Parsippany, New Jersey from June 11-14, 2007,
reminds the dioceses of The Episcopal Church that Article V, Section 1 of the Constitution of The
Episcopal Church requires each Diocese to have a Constitution which shall include “an unqualified
accession to the Constitution and Canons of this Church;” and be it further Resolved, That any amendment to a diocesan Constitution that purports in any way to limit or lessen an unqualified accession to the Constitution and Canons of The Episcopal Church is null and void; and be it further Resolved, That the amendments passed to the Constitutions of the Dioceses of Pittsburgh, Ft. Worth, Quincy, and San Joaquin, which purport to limit or lessen the unqualified accession to the Constitution and Canons of The Episcopal Church are accordingly null and void and the Constitutions of those dioceses shall be as they were as if such amendments had not been passed.

While what your Convention will consider is a resolution and not a constitutional amendment, the principle is the same. A diocese is, of course, free to express its disagreement with an action of General Convention and to work to change it but it may not declare it to be null and void and of no effect in the diocese.

The resolve in proposed Resolution 2 to begin withdrawing from bodies of the Church is likely counter-productive. The views and voices of the Diocese and Bishop will be absent from the Church’s continuing discussion and discernment of these and other issues. Withdrawing will decrease the opportunities for dialogues in which we discover that we are all committed to Christ’s mission and ministry. At ordinations of priests the bishop describes the work of a priest as including “to take your share in the councils of the Church.” Bishops at their ordinations promise to “share with your fellow bishops in the government of the whole Church.” Priests and Bishops are called to be part of the councils and government of the Church, not to withdraw from them. We believe that the Holy Spirit works through the councils and gatherings of the Church. I encourage the Diocese of South Carolina to stay involved, stay active, and participate in the full life of The Episcopal Church, including its governance structures, so that we may embody the unity we all share in Christ to the greatest extent possible.

It is my prayer that Resolutions 1-4 are not steps being proposed to move the Diocese away from The Episcopal Church and towards efforts by others to create an alternate Anglican structure in our midst. While affirming the call to mission partnerships across churches across North America and in the wider Communion, I hope that those will not be used as a substitute for living within The Episcopal Church or to undermine in any way the life of The Episcopal Church.

I am blessed to be a part of God’s Church with you. I hold you and the great Diocese of South Carolina in my daily thoughts and prayers. I pray your diocesan convention is one of joy and thanksgiving.

In Peace,

Bonnie Anderson, D.D.

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

RNS–Celibacy a deal-breaker for some Anglicans

But the provision for married clergy, which the Catholic church has made on a limited basis since at least the 1980s, remains a qualified one. Only unmarried men will be eligible to serve as bishops in the new dioceses, the Vatican said, consistent with a “long historical tradition” in both the Catholic and Orthodox churches.

Other details of the new rules remain unclear pending their still-unscheduled publication, but Cardinal William Levada, head of the Vatican’s doctrinal office, suggested on Tuesday that the new dioceses will not ordain married men unless they have already started their preparation in Anglican seminaries, or permit unmarried priests to take wives after ordination.

For some potential converts, those qualifications are a deal breaker.

“I find the lack of a permanent provision for a married priesthood to be a serious obstacle to unity,” said Anglican Bishop Jack Iker of Fort Worth, who has considered joining the Catholic church in the past.

Read the whole article.

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, * Religion News & Commentary, Anglican Provinces, Archbishop of Canterbury, Church of England (CoE), CoE Bishops, Episcopal Church (TEC), Other Churches, Pope Benedict XVI, Roman Catholic, TEC Bishops, TEC Conflicts, TEC Conflicts: Fort Worth

Keith Ray Putman on his recent experience at St. Luke's Anglican Church in La Crescenta

The morning of October 11, 2009, all of St. Luke’s Anglican Church, La Crescenta were to worship in our original building for the last time before it was confiscated and handed over to the L.A. Diocese of the Episcopalian Church. It was sure to be an emotional time for all of us ”“ maybe even gut-wrenching.

Personally, I had many reasons to be angry and sad over losing the building. This was the place where I had met my wife, Kathy. This was the sanctuary where we were wed. This was where my Godson and his little sister had been baptized. This was where I had experienced the Spirit in worship for the first time after a long dry spell elsewhere. And I am only a member of five years ”“ how much more a loss for those to whom the beautiful stone and wood sanctuary and grounds had been a home for up to five generations!

Yet, that Sunday, as we began to sing familiar songs and speak the liturgical words, I did not feel anger or sadness. I did not witness people wailing and clinging to the walls. Instead, I found myself joining in with loud, strong voices of praise to our faithful God. There was strong emotion all right, but it wasn’t lamentation or mourning ”“ amazingly, as we left the building, the lingering emotion was joy.
Maybe this feeling was on account of the fact that we’d spent so many months letting go already (including the many notes of remembrance that members had posted around the grounds and were now collected in a Book of Testimony). Maybe it was a sense of release from the legal suspense. Maybe it was the word shared by Fr. Rob from Hebrews, Chapter 10 that rang so true and truly prophetic (read the entire chapter and be amazed). It was probably all those things. Most of all, though, the joy was from the living Spirit of Christ Our Savior, present with us in such a way that, afterwards, a member of the press was heard to say that he’d never heard worship quite like what he’d witnessed that morning. Even my 3-month-old boy, Jake, had been compelled to join in, shouting out during each chorus of “Lion of Judah.”

As we all gathered afterwards to check out our new worship space — and again as we had our first service there this past Sunday ”“ I was struck by the full reality of what had before been a concept: the Church, including our little St. Luke’s, is not a building. We had lost the beautiful building, yes. Yet, here was my wife. Here were the smiling faces of the ladies who had coordinated our wedding. Here was our baby boy, to be baptized next month. Here was my Best Man and his lovely wife; my Godson; my pastor; my buddy who had helped me to finish my last short film; so many friends who had brought Kathy and I meals and other support when we brought our baby home. Here was my spiritual family. Here was the Body of Christ.

I’d mentally assented to the concept before, but now I have experienced the reality anew: the Church is God living in and amongst all those peculiar and particular people who love him and are called according to his purposes. So, whether we win or lose legal battles over property, no judge and no religious authority can ever confiscate the Church.

Or our Joy.

Thanks be to God, hallelujah, hallelujah,

Keith Ray Putman

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, * Christian Life / Church Life, Anglican Church in North America (ACNA), Episcopal Church (TEC), Parish Ministry, TEC Conflicts, TEC Conflicts: Los Angeles, TEC Departing Parishes

Bishop Iker: Response to Vatican announcement of “personal ordinariates” for Anglicans

I have read with great interest various reports concerning today’s announcement from top officials in the Vatican about some new provisions being made whereby Anglicans may enter into full communion with the Holy See. For some time now I have understood that high-level discussions about this were taking place in Rome and that an announcement along these lines would be made before the end of the year. As today’s announcement indicates, a new Apostolic Constitution is soon to be released which will spell out Pope Benedict XVI’s response to Anglicans who wish to enter into full visible communion with the Roman Catholic Church.

Many Anglo-Catholics will welcome this development as a very generous and welcoming offer that enhances the Pastoral Provision that has been in place for several years for those seeking reunion with Rome. Other Anglicans who desire full communion with the See of Peter would prefer some sort of recognition of the validity of Anglican orders and the provision for inter-communion between Roman Catholics and Anglicans.

Read it all.

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, * Religion News & Commentary, - Anglican: Latest News, - Anglican: Primary Source, Episcopal Church (TEC), Other Churches, Pope Benedict XVI, Roman Catholic, TEC Conflicts, TEC Conflicts: Fort Worth

Sewanee Trustees welcome new members

The continuing diocese of the Episcopal Church in Forth Worth was reconstituted in February 2009 and is now led by Provisional Bishop The Right Rev. Edwin F. Gulick, Jr., Bishop of Kentucky. As a Bishop, Gulick already is a Trustee of the University; Kent Henning also is a Trustee from the continuing Ft. Worth Diocese and will continue in his appointment.

The Committee on Credentials recommended to the full Board that only the Trustees elected by the continuing Episcopal Diocese of Ft. Worth be seated on the University board.

“This action by the Board was carefully studied over a period of months and is consistent with the governance of the University as mandated by the Constitution and By-Laws,” Chancellor Parsley said.

The Constitution states that the University “must in all parts be under the sole and perpetual control of the Protestant Episcopal Church in the United States of America,” and represented in part by Trustees elected by the 28 dioceses that comprise the owning dioceses.

Read it all.

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, * Culture-Watch, Education, Episcopal Church (TEC), TEC Conflicts, TEC Conflicts: Fort Worth

Living Church: Bishop Ackerman Responds to Claimed ”˜Renunciation’

Bishop Ackerman said he has heard from the Diocese of Bolivia regarding the Presiding Bishop’s actions. “Having heard from the Diocese of Bolivia, I understand that I’m a priest in good standing in that diocese,” he said.

Bishop Ackerman said he is troubled by the Episcopal Church’s apparent inability to transfer bishops peaceably to other provinces of the worldwide Anglican Communion.

“It must see itself as highly independent,” he said. “If orders are not universal in the Anglican Communion, they cease to be catholic in the full sense of the word. ”¦ The Episcopal Church does not own the ministry of the one holy catholic and apostolic Church.”

Neva Rae Fox, the Episcopal Church’s program officer for public affairs, said the Presiding Bishop was unlikely to respond to Bishop Ackerman’s remarks.

Read it all.

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, Anglican Identity, Ecclesiology, Episcopal Church (TEC), House of Deputies President, TEC Bishops, TEC Conflicts, TEC Polity & Canons, Theology

Mark McCall: TEC Polity, The Civil Law and the Anglican Covenant

Turning to the TEC constitution, we find that it has no supremacy clause giving General Convention priority over diocesan conventions. There is no language of supremacy or any of its synonyms, such as “highest” or “hierarchical.” The closest the TEC constitution comes to this concept is in the provision making the Bishop and standing committee “the Ecclesiastical Authority” in the diocese. If the bishop is “the” ecclesiastical authority in the diocese, the Presiding Bishop, the General Convention and the Executive Council are not.

So in TEC we have concurrent jurisdiction without supremacy among the General Convention and the various diocesan conventions, and each can theoretically undo what the other has done. But since the diocesan conventions meet three times for every one time the General Convention meets, this gives a distinct legal advantage to the diocese, and as a practical matter, the diocese gets the last word.

Now: what does this mean for the Anglican covenant? I will conclude with three observations.

First, given this concurrent jurisdiction and lack of a supremacy clause, dioceses have the inherent authority to commit themselves to the covenant as soon as it is available. Moreover, given the principles just discussed, if General Convention were someday to adopt the covenant, dioceses that do not want to assume the obligations of mutual responsibility and interdependence entailed by the covenant””and we know there are many such dioceses in TEC””those dioceses would be able to nullify that adoption and those commitments for their dioceses. So TEC’s polity makes it inevitable that dioceses will have to consider the covenant, and they will be able to do so at any time after it is finalized and sent to the member churches of the Anglican Communion early next year.

Second, what does the Anglican covenant, or the Anglican Communion more broadly, have to say about TEC polity? The short and clear answer to this question is: “Absolutely nothing.” The covenant is explicit in saying that nothing in it alters any provision of the constitution or canons of any church. And that has always been understood as a hallmark of the Anglican Communion. Member churches are autonomous. The covenant and the Communion have no say in how we do what we do””unless, I suppose, we abolished bishops altogether. So the frequent complaint directed by some in the House of Deputies to the wider Communion, “you don’t understand our polity,” is irrelevant. The Communion does not need, or perhaps even care, to understand our polity. They have no interest or say in how we do what we do.

Read it all.

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, * Christian Life / Church Life, Anglican Covenant, Church History, Episcopal Church (TEC), TEC Conflicts, TEC Polity & Canons

In Southern California St. Luke’s Anglican moves into its new home

A visiting parishioner stood before the congregation of St. Luke’s Anglican Church, instructed patrons to bring both wrists together as if bound by shackles, and told them to cast the symbolic chains aside.

“You’re free,” he said, inside the unfamiliar confines of Seventh Day Adventist Church in Glendale.

The Rev. Rob Holman cast a knowing smile over the sermon Sunday, the first since surrendering the keys to the stone-facade church at 2563 Foothill Blvd. following a three-year legal battle for ownership of the building.

Read it all.

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, * Christian Life / Church Life, Anglican Church in North America (ACNA), Episcopal Church (TEC), Parish Ministry, TEC Conflicts, TEC Conflicts: Los Angeles

The Latest Edition of the Diocese of South Carolina E Newsletter

Check it out, noting especially the items related to the upcoming special Diocesan Convention.

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

Tribune-Review: Bishop named to oversee 28 Episcopal parishes in Pittsburgh

“This is an honor. I have been asked to serve in this capacity for a short time. Hopefully, we will be able to bring people to Jesus Christ,” Price said Saturday in Trinity Cathedral, site of the Diocese of Pittsburgh’s 144th annual convention.

Price’s leadership of 28 parishes begins after one of the most prominent splits of an Episcopal diocese in the United States and less than two weeks after an Allegheny County judge ruled that the churches he leads own diocesan property such as offices and endowments.

Still at stake, however, is the future of the majority of parishes that last year chose to split from the Episcopal Church.

That group’s leader, Bishop Robert Duncan, serves as interim head of the Anglican Church in North America, a new church made up of conservative congregations in the United States and Canada.

Read it all.

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, Episcopal Church (TEC), TEC Conflicts, TEC Conflicts: Pittsburgh

Post-Gazette: Episcopal Diocese of Pittsburgh names temporary bishop

The Episcopal Diocese of Pittsburgh has chosen Bishop Kenneth Price, Jr., as its provisional — temporary — bishop, and declared its departing, part-time shepherd, Bishop Robert H. Johnson, to be “assisting bishop emeritus.”

The diocese is still recovering from a split in October 2008, when a majority of the clergy and laity at its last regular convention voted to leave the Episcopal Church over theological issues.

Read it all.

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, Episcopal Church (TEC), TEC Bishops, TEC Conflicts, TEC Conflicts: Pittsburgh, TEC Diocesan Conventions/Diocesan Councils

Living Church: Western Louisiana Affirms Ridley Draft AnglicanCovenant

“This will bring further recognition of our diocese as a part of the Episcopal Church, as a constituent member of the Anglican Communion, and in communion with the See of Canterbury. When I shared with the Archbishop of Canterbury last month the plans for a resolution of this nature, he responded favorably,” the bishop said.

The bishop also spoke of why he believes the diocese needs to remain within the Episcopal Church.

“We need to stay where we are because our Lord needs the faithfulness of the ministry this diocese has to offer, and does offer, through the commitment of those who make this their spiritual home, and in turn are striving to build up the kingdom of God in this place and the life of Christ’s Church,” he said. “We stay also because our historic identity with the Anglican Communion demands it of us. Without ordered processes there is no catholicity, no claim to the ancient Christian unity, which we claim is at the very heart of whom we are as members of the one, holy, catholic and apostolic Church.”

Read it all.

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, Anglican Covenant, Anglican Identity, Episcopal Church (TEC), TEC Bishops, TEC Conflicts, Windsor Report / Process

Robert Munday on the Presiding Bishop's Actions Regarding Bishop Keith Ackerman

I know from speaking with Bishop Ackerman that he sent the Presiding Bishop a handwritten letter merely asking to have his credentials transferred to the Diocese of Bolivia. He said that he had no intention of renouncing his orders and that, while he intends to assist Bishop Lyons in work in Bolivia, he also wished to remain available to assist bishops in the United States, as requested.

The Presiding Bishop says that “…there is no provision for transferring a bishop to another province.” But that is not true.

Read it all.

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, Episcopal Church (TEC), Presiding Bishop, TEC Bishops, TEC Conflicts, TEC Polity & Canons

Post-Gazette: Rival Episcopal dioceses try to resolve large issues

“The judge put a fairly tight deadline on getting things moving … and to present some evidence of what the orderly transition would be. We intend to fully cooperate with that,” said Rich Creehan, a spokesman for the Episcopal diocese.

Anglican leaders have asked their clergy to fast and pray this week over whether to appeal.

“We were dismayed and surprised by the decision,” said the Rev. Mary Hays, canon to the ordinary of the Anglican diocese. “But there’s a lot to consider in an appeal. Financial resources and energy resources are required, so we have to consider whether we want to be side-tracked from our mission, which has nothing to do with litigation.”

The Episcopal trustees reported that in July the total endowment was worth about $17 million, although some of the funds were held for parishes that now belong to the Anglican diocese. The funds have been frozen due to the litigation.

Read it all.

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, * Culture-Watch, Episcopal Church (TEC), Law & Legal Issues, TEC Conflicts, TEC Conflicts: Pittsburgh

Local Group Opposed to Direction of the Diocese of South Carolina Places an Ad

Read it all.

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

William McIntosh III Chimes in

From here:

The writer of a recent letter titled “Don’t break up Episcopal Church” stated, “The church that kept its Northern and Southern sections together during the Civil War. …”

I would like to refer her to the book “The Church in Confederate States” by Joseph Blount Cheshire, D.D.

“A Convention was held in Columbia, South Carolina, to organize the Protestant Episcopal Church in the Confederate States. A church constitution was drawn up and other matters settled. Within a few months, most of the Southern dioceses, including South Carolina, had ratified the constitution and had become part of the new church. The church’s only “General Council” was held in Augusta, Georgia, November 12-22, 1862.”

The Northern and Southern churches did reunite shortly after the end of the War Between the States.

Much of what became the Diocese of South Carolina started as the Church of England, and then freely joined the Protestant Episcopal Church in the United States, then became the Protestant Church of the Confederate States and then back to Protestant Church in the United States, and that name has been recently changed to the Episcopal Church.

WILLIAM McINTOSH III

Co-archivist

St. Philip’s Church

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, * Christian Life / Church Life, * South Carolina, Church History, Episcopal Church (TEC), TEC Conflicts, TEC Diocesan Conventions/Diocesan Councils

Heads up for those of you in the S.C. Lowcountry: [Andy] Savage Report on Dio. of S.C. coming

This local program won an Emmy award recently and just taped a whole program on the Episcopal Diocese of South Carolina. Those of you who have Comcast and can get it, here are the times:

* Weekdays
* 11:30am
* 5:30pm
* 8:30pm

* Weekends
* 9:00am
* 3:30pm
* 8:30pm

I believe it will start airing this Saturday and it will run for about a week. The show lasts 1/2 an hour. Guests include Al Zadig, rector of Saint Michael’s, Barbara Mann, of the Episcopal Forum, Peet Dickinson, Dean of the Cathedral in Charleston, Father John Johnson, an Episcopal priest who taught at General Theological Seminary in New York and who is a Jungian analyst, yours truly, and Adam Parker, religion writer for the local paper, the Post and Courier. The show is hosted by Andy Savage who is a very high profile local lawyer.

This show is entirely focused on the upcoming Special Convention and the reason for the growing tensions between the diocese and TEC’s National leadership and its theology.

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, * Culture-Watch, * South Carolina, Episcopal Church (TEC), General Convention, Movies & Television, TEC Bishops, TEC Conflicts, Theology

TEC Affiliated Pittsburgh Diocese To Hold Convention This Weekend

The Episcopal Diocese of Pittsburgh reaches an important milestone and moves into a new phase of rebuilding this weekend. It meets in convention to approve a Provisional Bishop, conduct business that points to both greater stability and vitality, and to witness the ordination of a woman with deep ties to the diocese’s only predominantly African-American parish.

The governing body will convene Friday and Saturday, October 16 and 17, 2009, at the traditional seat of the diocese, Trinity Cathedral in downtown Pittsburgh.

Approximately 145 clergy and lay deputies from the diocese’s 28 active congregations will be asked to affirm the Rt. Rev. Kenneth L. Price, Jr., as Provisional Bishop. In that role, he would assume full ecclesiastical authority and responsibility as chief pastor and overseer of diocesan administration and finances until a permanent bishop can be elected and installed.

“I look forward to coming to Pittsburgh as part of a collaborative effort. Let’s work together to find out what we can do to make this the strong diocese that is part of its history,” says Bishop Price.

Read it all.

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, Episcopal Church (TEC), TEC Conflicts, TEC Conflicts: Pittsburgh, TEC Diocesan Conventions/Diocesan Councils

Virginia Episcopal Church Dispute Headed Back to Court

A years-long, multimillion-dollar land battle between the Episcopal Church in Virginia and conservatives who broke away from the denomination is headed back into court.

The Virginia Supreme Court said Wednesday that it would hear an appeal by the Episcopal diocese of Virginia and the national church, which lost in Fairfax District Court last year.

A district court judge had sided with nine conservative Virginia congregations whose members were angry about the liberal approach the church takes toward several issues including whether the Bible can be read literally and whether gays and lesbians should be accorded the same rights as heterosexuals (in marriage and access to clerical positions, among other things). Conservative congregants voted to leave the Episcopal Church, take millions of dollars in real estate assets and join another, more like-minded branch of the Anglican Communion.

Read it all.

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, * Culture-Watch, Episcopal Church (TEC), Law & Legal Issues, TEC Conflicts, TEC Conflicts: Virginia

Bishop Bennison’s Attorney Decries ”˜Avenging Court’

The defense attorney for the Rt. Rev. Charles E. Bennison, Jr., has expressed exasperation with the Episcopal Church’s Court for the Trial of a Bishop as he prepares to appeal his client’s conviction and sentencing.

Most recently the court rejected the bishop’s request for a new trial based on 200 personal letters, which his attorney, James Pabarue of Philadelphia, said conflicted with testimony given in court.

Mr. Pabarue believes the court misapplied Canon IV.14.4 because the case involved Bishop Bennison’s response to sexual misconduct by his brother and not any sexual misconduct by the bishop.

“The church has a way of playing more games than do secular courts,” Pabarue told The LivingChurch.

Read it all.

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, Episcopal Church (TEC), Ethics / Moral Theology, Pastoral Theology, TEC Bishops, TEC Conflicts, TEC Conflicts: Pennsylvania, Theology

Debra Wagner–Episcopal Church is clear: Marriage is between a man and a woman

…in Augusta the leadership of Maine casually ignored their own policy when they enacted same-sex marriage. They pretended that the state had no historic interest to protect marriage as an essential institution which preserves the important roles that men and women each play in marriage and the raising of children.

Bishop Robinson of New Hampshire is much like those legislators. He pretends that the Episcopal Church’s teaching on marriage is no longer important. As a partnered homosexual living in a same-sex union, he is outside the church’s official position on sexual relationships.

He is a schismatic ringleader of a recent majority of the Episcopal Church’s leadership, which openly defies the church’s own teaching on sexual relationships. You would think that the way Bishop Robinson and some Maine Episcopal clergy act that the official teaching of the church is to equate same-sex unions to marriage in the eyes of God and the church.

Not.

Read it all.

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, * Culture-Watch, Episcopal Church (TEC), Marriage & Family, Same-sex blessings, Sexuality Debate (in Anglican Communion), TEC Conflicts

Washington Times: Lutherans leave over vote on new Sexual Ethic

The Lutherans aren’t sitting around for three years like the Episcopalians did. For them, the writing clearly is on the wall.

“One of the messages we heard loud and clear from the Episcopalians is that by waiting several years, they lost some of their best and brightest lay people,” Mr. [Ryan] Schwarz told me. “We intend to have our plans in place a lot faster.”

Read it all.

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, * Religion News & Commentary, Anglican Church in North America (ACNA), Episcopal Church (TEC), Lutheran, Other Churches, Sexuality Debate (Other denominations and faiths), TEC Conflicts, TEC Conflicts: Virginia

At St. Luke's Anglican a final sermon boosts spirits before parish relocates

The marquee outside St. Luke’s Anglican Church in La Crescenta was a bit sardonic in its scripture from the Book of Hebrews: “You joyfully accepted confiscation of your property.”

That was the message delivered Sunday by the Rev. Rob Holman, in his last sermon at the Foothill Boulevard church that has been entangled in a legal dispute with the Episcopal Diocese of Los Angeles.

“Next Sunday, as many of you know, we will be worshiping in a different building,” Holman said. “All because we have chosen to stand for the gospel and the authority of God’s word over our lives.”

Read it all.

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, * Culture-Watch, Episcopal Church (TEC), Law & Legal Issues, TEC Conflicts, TEC Conflicts: Los Angeles, TEC Departing Parishes

Local Paper: Differing viewpoints in the Diocese of South Carolina

Barbara Mann, treasurer and board member of the Episcopal Forum of South Carolina, said the Episcopal Church has not contradicted its canons or changed the definition of marriage or rejected the lordship of Christ.

And she took issue with the claim that “withdrawing from all bodies of The Episcopal Church,” as stated in the diocese resolution, did not signify a separation.

“The resolution means basically withdrawing from the Episcopal Church,” she said. “The General Convention is the main body of the Episcopal Church.”

Read it all.

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

Bishop Mark Lawrence Engages in Questions and Answers with the Local paper

Q: You (and others) have said that the national church is walking apart, that it’s abandoned in part or whole its doctrines, canons and traditional practices and therefore has relinquished its authority over the Diocese of South Carolina, which remains true to the original canons. And you have said you are ready to re-engage with the national church if it repudiates its recent actions and returns to the Anglican fold. Do you think there is any chance the national church will do so? If yes, why have you called for a withdrawal from it?

A: Actually, the term “walking apart” was used by the Archbishop of Canterbury and many others around the world. What I have said is the authority of national entities in The Episcopal Church has a limited and defined role within a diocese. But ”¦ relinquished its authority? No, I never said that. What I have said is that the Constitution and Canons are what gives the General Convention its authority. When it passes resolutions contrary to those canons or without changing them, it has entered into a theatre of the absurd. Into an irrational way of legislating — that is what General Convention did when it gave bishops permission to allow same-sex marriages without changing the canons that define marriage as between a man and a woman. Along with being unscriptural and confusing to the laity, it is a dysfunctional way to run a church.

Whether The Episcopal Church will repudiate its recent actions is doubtful at best — but this is not about reading tea leaves. God has called me as a bishop of the church to proclaim the gospel in season and out of season, regardless of what others will or will not do. This includes protecting the faithful from false teachings.

Read it all.

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, * South Carolina, Anthropology, Christology, Episcopal Church (TEC), General Convention, Same-sex blessings, Sexuality Debate (in Anglican Communion), TEC Bishops, TEC Conflicts, TEC Polity & Canons, Theology

The Bishop of Virginia Writes his Diocese

Dear Diocesan Family,

A panel of the Virginia Supreme Court will hear our petition for appeal on October 21 and, while it is unfortunate that these legal proceedings were necessary, I trust that this hearing will bring us one step closer to resolution.

I am proud that the Diocese of Virginia and the Episcopal Church have chosen the path consistently to defend loyal Episcopalians, and to safeguard and to protect the Church’s legacy and the Church from unwarranted governmental and legislative interference. It is with the same determination to stand by the people, traditions and legacy of our diocese that I look toward our appeal.
For nearly 225 years, the Episcopal Church has had the freedom to govern itself according to its beliefs. But that freedom is under direct attack here in our diocese in the form of a Virginia law that allows the government to interfere with the faith, polity and structure of our Church and other hierarchical churches in the Commonwealth.

I believe that this law is unconstitutional and that there is too much at stake to let it remain in effect. The legal struggle to secure our right to organize as we choose and safeguard our churches from those seeking to seize them has not been easy. This journey has been a long one, but now more than ever we must all gather around those who need us most at this difficult time.

Loyal Episcopalians have been exiled from their Episcopal homes for too long and I ask you to keep all of them in your prayers. This includes St. Stephen’s, Heathsville; St. Margaret’s, Woodbridge; Epiphany, Oak Hill; and The Falls Church, Falls Church. These parishioners have been denied the ability to worship as they wish at the very same churches where they were married, where they baptized their children and where they buried their loved ones. I view this next hearing with great hope for the day when I will join these faith-filled Episcopalians as they return to their church homes to celebrate and worship together.

Faithfully yours,

–(The Rt. Rev.) Shannon S. Johnston, Bishop of Virginia

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, * Culture-Watch, Church/State Matters, Episcopal Church (TEC), Law & Legal Issues, TEC Bishops, TEC Conflicts, TEC Conflicts: Virginia