Monthly Archives: July 2009

Living Church–Presiding Bishop: ”˜Idolatry’ of Individualism Causing Church Crisis

Professor Christopher Seitz of the Anglican Communion Institute noted that the presiding bishop needed to define her terms. If by the “Western heresy” she meant the individualism of the Enlightenment, the priority of the individual conscience as articulated by Kant, or the need for individual certainty in science and history suggested by Lessing, “these are bedrock foundations of TEC liberalism.”

As a matter of history, there is no individualist heresy, the Rev. Ephraim Radner, professor of historical theology at Wycliffe College in Toronto told The Living Church. Jesus calls individuals “by name” and saves them “one by one,” he said, and a catholic theology cannot deny this.

“Her remarks would suggest simple ad hominem arguments against conservative evangelicals, masking as theological incoherence,” Fr. Radner said.

Read it all.

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, Episcopal Church (TEC), General Convention, Presiding Bishop, Theology

Caroline Hall on Yesterday's Hearing on Resolution B012

At the other end of the age spectrum, Bishop Shaw of Massachusetts said that Episcopal high school students had told him they could not invite their friends to a church which did not welcome everyone. Sam Gough, who attended in 2006 as part of the official youth presence but is present this year as a deputy for Massachusetts, said “in some places the church of tomorrow has come today” and we should welcome it. Another young man who grappled with the Biblical witness concluded “I do not believe that God addressed this issue.”

Janie Donohue from Connecticut told us that most of her friends and family are not Christian but when marriage became a possibility of same-sex couples, they turned to her to celebrate their weddings. She found it difficult to explain the canons and had to emphasize that God is not the Church ”“ a rejection by the Church is not a rejection by God. Janie is a partnered lesbian about to become a mom and her friends cannot understand why she will not get civilly married in order to provide legal protection for her child, but as an Episcopal priest she wants her marriage blessed by the faith community. She reminded us that people who leave because they think we’re too liberal don’t leave the Church but people who leave because they are not accepted, leave the Church completely.

Read the whole thing.

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, Episcopal Church (TEC), General Convention, Same-sex blessings, Sexuality Debate (in Anglican Communion)

Cherie Wetzel Reports from General Convention

Bishop [Edward] Little [Northern Indiana] replied that there were multiple resolutions on each of these two issues and he did not know if any would survive their legislative committees and actually make it to the floor of either House. Later, he said privately that he believed many bishops were affected by the Lambeth Conference last summer, surprised by the amount of anger and stories they heard from around the Communion. But, was that enough to stop these resolutions? It is not known.

Read it all.

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

Stephen Casey (Central Pennsylvania) reports on the Constitutions and Canons Committee

From here:

The Standing Committee on Constitution and Canons reviews proposed amendments to the Constitution and Canons of the Episcopal Church and places them in proper form before passing them on to the General Convention for action. In addition they carry out a continual review of current Canons of the Church. At its first meeting of the Convention the Legislative Committee discussed at length the revision to Title IV, which is a major review of the Disciplinary Canons of the Church. The Disciplinary Canons as they now stand were originally set down in 1994. The prevailing attitude to clergy misconduct in those days was to consider it in the same terms as criminal law, in a punitive way. The current revision to go before the house approaches the Disciplinary Canons in a more pastoral and theological manner, moving them towards a reconciliation model for all appropriate circumstances. Later in the day the Committee discussed amendments to the Constitution and Canons that refer to the keeping of archival materials of the church, specifically how these are now garnered from dioceses and provinces of the church in an increasingly electronic age. They also considered amendments to the Canons which refer to the manner in which Diocesan Standing Committees transmit consents for Episcopal Elections.

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, Episcopal Church (TEC), General Convention, TEC Polity & Canons

Brian Baker's Report from General Convention

I especially like the picture of Bonnie Anderson.

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, Episcopal Church (TEC), General Convention, House of Deputies President, Presiding Bishop

ENS: Archbishop hears from cross section of Episcopal Church

[Bonnie] Anderson said that the group told the archbishop that, while most of the requests from the wider Anglican Communion for the Episcopal Church to do certain things to resolve the current tensions in the worldwide body have been addressed only to the church’s bishops, “we are a church of more than one order of voices.”

“Our great, deep hope is that we would be included in [future] quests, communications and directions” from Anglican Communion leaders, she said.

Williams expressed “frustration” with the Episcopal Church’s three-year legislative cycle, the Rev. James Simons (Pittsburgh) said. “It’s difficult in some cases for decisions to be held for three years for the General Convention to meet, so we discussed some possible scenarios that would allow for a more timely response, at least in the interim, until a permanent response could be made.”

“There was a lot of give and take in terms of trying to think through how we could work more collaboratively in a way that honors each other’s polity,” he added.

Read it all.

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, Archbishop of Canterbury, Episcopal Church (TEC), General Convention, House of Deputies President

Tracy J. Sukraw Reports on Yesterday's General Convention Committee Hearing on Resolution B012

No one spoke against the resolution during 75 minutes of testimony….

Those who urged the resolution’s passage spoke from a variety of personal perspectives and local contexts. Some described inequality in the pastoral care they are able to receive or provide….

Massachusetts deputies Sam Gould and the Rev. Gale Davis Morris…[were among those who] testified.

“As a priest in the Diocese of Massachusetts I cannot serve my congregation equally. I find this to be a particularly appalling position to be put into as a priest, that the state would allow me but my church will not,” Morris said. “There is something radically wrong with that picture, and I hope that we will allow this resolution to go forward so that we can change that. It doesn’t force any diocese that is not in our position to go ahead and authorize the blessing of same-sex marriage, but it allows those of us who have that privilege to do it in a very holy and just way.”

Read it all (emphasis mine).

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, * Culture-Watch, --Civil Unions & Partnerships, Episcopal Church (TEC), General Convention, Law & Legal Issues, Marriage & Family, Same-sex blessings, Sexuality, Sexuality Debate (in Anglican Communion)

The Full Text of General Convention 2009 Resolution B012

Resolution: B012
Title: Pastoral Generosity in Addressing Civil Marriage
Topic: Liturgy
Committee: 10 – Social and Urban Affairs
House of Initial Action: Bishops
Proposer: The Rt. Rev. Stephen T. Lane

Resolved, the House of _______ concurring, That this 76th General Convention of the Episcopal Church acknowledge the pastoral concerns facing those dioceses in states where the civil marriage of same gender couples is legal; and be it further

Resolved, That in those dioceses, under the direction of the bishop, generous discretion is extended to clergy in the exercise of their pastoral ministry in order to permit the adaptation of the Pastoral Offices for The Celebration and Blessing of a Marriage and The Blessing of a Civil Marriage for use with all couples who seek the church’s support and God’s blessing in their marriages; and be it further

Resolved, That in order to build a body of experience for the benefit of the church, each bishop in those dioceses where this pastoral practice is exercised provide an annual written report on their experience to the House of Bishops each March and to the Standing Commission on Liturgy and Music for its report to the 77th General Convention.

EXPLANATION

There are now six states (Connecticut, Iowa, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire and Vermont) where the civil marriage of same gender couples is legal, and other states may follow in the coming triennium. This has created unique pastoral challenges for The Episcopal Church because the definition of marriage held by these states and the language used in the Canons and the Book of Common Prayer of The Episcopal Church is not the same. In all six states, faithful Episcopalians are asking that their church provide the pastoral support and blessing of the church for their marriages. Clergy in those same states are caught between the authority given them by the state and the discipline of The Episcopal Church as it’s currently described. The rubrics of the BCP require that “marriage conform both to the laws of the state and the canons of the Church (BCP, 422).”
This situation requires a generous and flexible response that offers clergy the ability to make appropriate pastoral decisions in consultation with the bishop and their members. There may be many clergy and congregations that have no desire to participate in the blessing of a civil marriage. But in those places where there is such a will, the freedom to explore that option is vital.
The Book of Common Prayer makes provision for special devotions that may be used when services in the Prayerbook do not address the needs of the congregation (BCP, 13). Such devotions are subject to the direction of the bishop.
There is also a need for the Church to hear the experience of those dioceses and congregations where good faith efforts are being made to respond to the pastoral needs of faithful same sex couples. This resolution would create annual reporting to the House of Bishops, with a summary report to be made to the 77th General Convention.
While this resolution addresses the special circumstances in states with full marriage equality, there is also a need to support other efforts to provide pastoral care (including blessings) to same sex couples in all dioceses of The Episcopal Church.

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, * Culture-Watch, --Civil Unions & Partnerships, Episcopal Church (TEC), General Convention, Law & Legal Issues, Marriage & Family, Same-sex blessings, Sexuality, Sexuality Debate (in Anglican Communion)

Living Church–Deputies Approve ”˜Facilitated Communication’ on B033

Deputies told The Living Church Wednesday that they welcome the chance to discuss the volatile issue without the pressure of a pending vote during the same session.

“Hopefully that will provide a more open discussion,” said the Rev. Stephen Schafroth, a new deputy from the Diocese of Eastern Oregon. “I think that’s a stroke of genius by someone, because this is a church of many different opinions. That’s one of the beauties of this church.”

The Rev. Canon Neal Michel of the Diocese of Dallas also welcomed the discussion’s less pressured setting.

“It’s important to have conversation without trying to convince people,” said Canon Michel, who serves as Bishop James Stanton’s canon to the ordinary. “That’s what I encourage congregations to do all the time.”

Read the whole thing.

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, Episcopal Church (TEC), General Convention, Same-sex blessings, Sexuality Debate (in Anglican Communion)

Living Church–Gene Robinson: 'You Bet We Are' the 'Gay Church'

Speaking to about 75 deputies and visitors to General Convention at an event sponsored by the Consultation, an association of progressive church-related advocacy groups, Bishop Robinson spoke to the issue of whether “LGBT Equality is a Matter of Justice?”

Answering in the affirmative, Bishop Robinson urged the deputies to follow their consciences and disavow 2006 General Convention Resolution B033 that pledged that the Episcopal Church would refrain from consecrating gay bishops or authorize public rites for the blessing of same-sex unions.

Bishop Robinson predicted that the 2009 Convention “will be one of those conventions, like 1976 and 2003, where history is made.” He urged his audience to watch how their diocesan deputies and bishops voted and see that they “stand up for what is right.”

Read it all. I am going to try to leave comments open on this thread for now but ask people to stay on topic and remain civil and respectful. Thank you.

Update: Well, alas, that didn’t work. So I now will take comments on this submitted by email only to at KSHarmon[at]mindspring[dot]com.

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, Episcopal Church (TEC), General Convention, Same-sex blessings, Sexuality Debate (in Anglican Communion), TEC Bishops, TEC Conflicts

ENS on Yesterday's General Convention Global Summit

[Rowan] Williams, who is attending General Convention for the first time, said that the “task before us as people of faith is to name this as a crisis of truthfulness and to challenge ourselves about the truth and above all to live in the truth.”

He underscored the importance of transparency and the building of relationships. “Trust doesn’t happen simply because someone says ‘trust me,'” he said. “Trust happens almost when you’re not noticing it — when the relationship is such that you know the quality of the person you’re dealing with, and that takes time.”

Williams concluded his address by underscoring the need for human beings to grow together “in liberty and communion [which] is at the heart of what we want to say to world that is indeed in crisis.”

Read it all.

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, * Economics, Politics, Archbishop of Canterbury, Economy, Episcopal Church (TEC), General Convention, Presiding Bishop

Steve Wood of South Carolina's Blog Entry on Yesterday at General Convention

Silly me, I thought that a committee entitled “world missions” might actually talk about the proclamation of the Gospel message to the ends of the earth. And, maybe they will. But not just yet. Instead, here is a sampling of the resolutions set to appear before this committee: equal access to discernment process for transgendered persons; several resolutions seeking to overturn or supersede resolution B033 (a moratorium on same-sex blessings/ordinations passed in 2006); affirmation of full participation in the Anglican Communion for all Lesbian/Gay/Bi-sexual and Transgendered persons. And, that’s just the appetizer. I’ll keep you appraised on these as they move through committee and onto the floor. The only connection I can make between these topics and world missions is that passage will effectively END any credible efforts at world mission.

One side note: Interestingly, when the Archbishop of Canterbury walked into this legislative session the topic under consideration immediately shifted to Resolution D057: “Five Marks of Mission”. When members of committee objected as to the reordering the agenda and questioned the chair as to the rationale for the out-of-order consideration of the this particular resolution, the chair responded by saying, “I thought the ABC might rather hear us discuss the mission commitment of the Episcopal Church”. I’d like to hear someone around hear discuss, and affirm, that Jesus it THE way, THE truth and THE life.

Read it all.

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, * South Carolina, Archbishop of Canterbury, Episcopal Church (TEC), General Convention

Saint George and the Dragon Offers some Reflections

Nothing caused St. Augustine of Canterbury to cease from consecrating bishops among the Celts where Celtic bishops already were in place; and nothing stopped Samuel Seabury from receiving consecration from non-juring Scottish bishops in Scotland in defiance of the English Church. One might be tempted to cry foul at offences to courtesy in the incursion of African bishops in the United States, but that is not nearly the moral equivalent of the defiance of some in the leadership of The Episcopal Church regarding what has been believed always, everywhere, and by all; not only in some of the General Convention Resolutions of 2009, but more importantly in the clear, continual disavowal of the authority and teaching of Scripture and two thousand years of Christian tradition and history.

The revisionists in the Episcopal Church have been told quite clearly that they are in defiance of Scripture and tradition. I don’t think stupidity is the issue, but rather willfulness. They know what the large majority of the Anglican Communion thinks about these things, but they really don’t care.
Theirs is the deliberate twisting of truth in favour of their own self-satisfaction; they suffer the disintegrity of the intellect, the justification to oneself of error and evil. As St. Paul says, “Though they know God’s decree that those who practice such things deserve to die, they not only do them but give approval to those who practice them.” They willingly and gladly believe the lie that they have made because it is their lie and precious to them….

What complicates things is not the incursion of African bishops in an increasingly apostate church, nor even the flight of the faithful from dioceses where they are clearly not welcome unless they apostatize. But while that extreme circumstance does exist in some dioceses, it is not reflected everywhere in The Episcopal Church. What we do see, even in a basically conservative and orthodox diocese is the flight of some, but not all Evangelicals, Charismatics, and Anglo Catholics, from the faithful Body of Christ of which they were previously a part. This new but by nature shallow coalition signals the rising of an old, but perhaps lesser heresy in a new garb. It is the failure to understand the nature of the Church, the Body of Christ; and this failure and flight may well be a departure from the Head Who will not Himself be separated from His Body. On the surface this new conservative coalition confesses the words of a common faith, but a serious question must be raised as to whether or not they all understand those wonderful words in the same way; certainly they don’t when they confess that they “believe in one holy catholic and apostolic church,” and at the same time in practice take an essentially congregationalist stance on a practical level. That is to say they confess one holy catholic and apostolic church and immediately break it up into pieces that agree, or don’t agree with their views. Even conservatives need to hear Jeremiah, “Thus says the LORD: ”˜Stand by the roads, and look, and ask for the ancient paths, where the good way is; and walk in it, and find rest for your souls.’ But they said, ”˜We will not walk in it.’”

Read it carefully (yes, and the footnotes) and read it all.

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, - Anglican: Commentary, Episcopal Church (TEC), General Convention

John Burwell from South Carolina's General Convention Report from Yesterday

This was the highlight for me:

We opened with Holy, Holy, Holy! Wow! It was Rite II by the book with the Bishop of Springfield as celebrant. Fr. Terry Sweeny preached a fine homily. By the end of the service I was in heaven and away from every care and concern. It was a blessed event. These worship opportunities will feed the soul and gird me for all else. I thank God for them.

Read it all.

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, * South Carolina, Episcopal Church (TEC), General Convention

Baby Blue Liveblogged Last Night's General Convention Summit

Rowan Williams has now come to the podium to talk about the current economic crisis. “As providence would have it,” Rowan says, referring to the publication of Pope Benedict’s own publication on the same topic, Love in Truth, and quotes the Pope. “Truth needs to be sought, found, and express in … charity … and charity needs to be practiced in the light of truth.”

What we’ve seen in our world in the last six to nine months is a crisis of truthfulness. We have suddenly discovered that we’ve been lying to ourselves, says Rowan Williams.

In three different ways.

1. Crisis in Ordinary Truthfulness and Trustworthiness – breakdown in truth telling in our financial world. Now will say openly, a steady and drastic erosion of the mutual values of trust. Our word has not been our bond, we have learned to tolerate high levels of evasion and anti-relational practices….

Read it all.

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, * Economics, Politics, Archbishop of Canterbury, Economy, Episcopal Church (TEC), Ethics / Moral Theology, General Convention, Presiding Bishop, Theology

Anglican congregation in California to continue fight for St. Luke's

Attorneys for the Anglican congregation at the St. Luke’s of the Mountains Church said they intend to appeal a June 9 court decision affirming the Episcopal Diocese’s ownership of the property.

Attorney Daniel Friedman Lula, who represents the Anglican congregation, said he would file a petition for review with the California Supreme Court on Aug. 10.

St. James Anglican Church in Newport Beach pursued a similar course, but lost its case before the state high court.

Read it all.

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

The Leaders of Ecuador Central and New Hampshire Vote Yes on Northern Michigan

Read it all.

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, Episcopal Church (TEC), General Convention, TEC Conflicts, TEC Conflicts: Northern Michigan

Episcopal dispute lands in Rock Island County court

A split between local…[Episcopal] churches earlier this year has resulted in a legal dispute over church assets that will be heard today in a Rock Island County Circuit Courtroom.

Last week, Christ Church of Moline filed the suit against The Episcopal Church, its presiding bishop and a chancellor to the bishop. According to the suit, the defendants sent a letter to First Midwest Bank last month in which they claimed to have “legally enforceable interest” in the funds held for Christ Church.

Christ Church then demanded The Episcopal Church withdraw its demand, which the suit claims it did briefly before re-submitting it to the bank a day later.

Read it all.

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

The Niagara Rite of Blessing of Civil Marriage

The Niagara Rite is intended for the voluntary use of priests who wish to offer a sacrament of blessing regardless of the gender of the civilly married persons who wish to receive the blessing of the church and wish to affirm their life commitment to each other before God in the community of the church.

As such it does not imply nor is it intended to suggest that those who do or do not make use of this rite are excluded from the economy of God’s salvation. The rite is a means for the church to extend affirmation, support, and commitment to those who present themselves seeking a sign of God’s love in response to the love and commitment they express for each other and have already affirmed in a civil ceremony.

Read it all.

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, * Culture-Watch, --Civil Unions & Partnerships, Anglican Church of Canada, Anglican Provinces, Marriage & Family, Same-sex blessings, Sexuality, Sexuality Debate (in Anglican Communion)

Episcopal Diocese of Massachusetts: Ecumenical relations”¦so far

Last evening the Ecumenical and Interreligious Relations Committee held a hearing on three resolutions, concerning relations with the Methodist and Presbyterian churches and the Church of Sweden. According to Massachusetts deputy Rebecca Alden, who is marking her third General Convention on the committee, things “got quite involved.” The upshot is that she and two fellow deputies will be filing a new resolution today to replace the proposed A072, “Interim Eucharistic Sharing with the United Methodist Church.”

Read it all.

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, * Religion News & Commentary, Ecumenical Relations, Episcopal Church (TEC), General Convention

Mark Crawford of Texas on General Convention Day One

The theme of the 76th General Convention is “Ubuntu” derived from the African Bantu meaning, “I am because we are. We share in order to prompt others to hear the call to action”. General Convention really is more than elections, adopting budgets and passing resolutions. We hope and pray that the leadership of our church will receive a new inspiration for mission and ministry. Martin Luther King, Jr. referred to his times as “the fierce urgency of now.” We are faced with a similiar challenge in our world.

Read it all.

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, Episcopal Church (TEC), General Convention

General Convention Daily

It is a 16 page pdf found here.

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, Episcopal Church (TEC), General Convention

Big role for small churches, says New Primus of Scotland

“The Scottish Episcopal Church has a very rich history,” Chillingworth, who is bishop of St. Andrews, Dunkeld and Dunblane, told Ecumenical News International. “We need to review that rich history and become more certain and confident about our place in Scottish society today.”

He explained that his Anglican Communion denomination is a small church compared to the much larger (Presbyterian) Church of Scotland and the Roman Catholic Church in Scotland.

“[The Scottish Episcopal Church] has felt acutely its status as a ‘minority’ church. We need to learn to engage with the whole of Scottish society in partnership with other churches,” said the bishop.

Read it all.

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, Anglican Provinces, Scottish Episcopal Church

Massachusetts sues feds over definition of marriage

Massachusetts, the first state to legalize gay marriage, sued the U.S. government Wednesday over a federal law that defines marriage as a union between a man and a woman.

The federal Defense of Marriage Act interferes with the right of Massachusetts to define and regulate marriage as it sees fit, Massachusetts Attorney General Martha Coakley said. The 1996 law denies federal recognition of gay marriage and gives states the right to refuse to recognize same-sex marriages performed in other states.

Read it all.

Posted in * Culture-Watch, * Economics, Politics, --Civil Unions & Partnerships, Law & Legal Issues, Marriage & Family, Politics in General, Sexuality, State Government

TEC Denies Media Credentials for Matt Kennedy

I find this very strange.

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, * Culture-Watch, Episcopal Church (TEC), General Convention, Media

The General Convention 2009 Intercessors Blog

Check it out.

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, * Christian Life / Church Life, Episcopal Church (TEC), General Convention, Spirituality/Prayer

Lionel Deimel Offers some Thoughts on General Convention 2009

But the Church must change if it is to survive, adapting its understanding and message so that it remains compelling in changed circumstances to modern people. I actually believe that lack of central authority in the Anglican Communion is one of its strengths, as the autonomy of individual churches provides the freedom to experiment with doctrine and liturgy without the entire Communion’s having to endorse it. (A loose Communion structure also gives churches unsympathetic to innovation credible deniability when confronted with complaints about innovations elsewhere in the communion.) As I said in “Saving Anglicanism,”

Is it not as likely that catastrophic conflict can be avoided””as it has been avoided for the past three centuries””not by getting more engaged in one another’s business, but by becoming more tolerant and less engaged? To interpret the current conflict in psychological terms, the Episcopal Church did not make traditionalists unhappy, they chose to be unhappy. They could have made a different choice. Perhaps the salvation of the Anglican Communion lies in less communication, less consultation, and less caring for one another.

This is really the only way forward that I can see if both the Anglican Communion and the integrity of the churches of the Communion are to be preserved.

I hope, then, that the General Convention will adopt a strategy that preserves the ability of The Episcopal Church to live out the Gospel as we understand God’s call to us in 21st-century America. This is a higher goal than preserving peace within the Anglican Communion or even than preserving the Anglican Communion itself.

Read it all.

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, Episcopal Church (TEC), General Convention, Same-sex blessings, Sexuality Debate (in Anglican Communion)

Nicholas Knisely on the First full day of General Convention 2009

In terms of the mood of Convention – I have no idea. Things are spinning up so fast I’ve not really had time to have more than briefest of conversations with folks about anything other than the weather. The one thing I’m hearing from folks is that they are recognizing the crisis moment facing the Episcopal Church. (In terms of membership and money.) What I’ve not heard is any coherent response. Hopefully that will emerge.

But I’m not particularly worried. If it doesn’t emerge from General Convention (and I’m not optimisitic), I think is emerging now from the grassroots of the Church.

Read it all.

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, Episcopal Church (TEC), General Convention

Kendall Harmon on General Convention 2009 (I): Watch the Distance Between the Two Houses

I think the most interesting dynamic heading in to this General Convention is the distance between the two Houses. In the House of Deputies, there is little question of the majority’s desire to overturn B033 (the restraint resolution) and pass a resolution placing the blessing of same sex unions in the Book of Occasional Services. I say this based on the tragic departures of numerous reasserters as well as the shifts in deputations like those from the TEC remnant dioceses of Fort Worth and San Joaquin. I also base it on my overall feel of the deputations.

The Bishops is another matter altogether. Many of them got an earful at Lambeth 2008 about the damage they have caused around the communion. Even more important in my view, the bishops are presiding over many dioceses in which there is much conflict, financial struggle, membership loss, morale depletion, and on and on. The Bishops as a whole do not want to provide a further explicit means for even more controversy. I think they want to bypass B033 and pass a resolution with some kind of circuitous wording trying to state where TEC is now. They also seem to wish to pass a resolution on the same sex blessing matter which allows the current situation of the increasing embrace of the practice to continue, without explicitly adding more fuel to the divisive fires.

That’s a pretty big gap between the two Houses. We’ll see how and if it can be bridged. Right now, based on where things are, I think the institutional reappraisers among the bishops have the upper hand in the very short term. Therefore a more probable outcome is for the overall desire of the bishops to prevail.

But this is the General Convention of the Episcopal Church we are speaking about. Anything can happen. You can only speak in terms of probabilities.

If I were there, I would definitely want B033 on the floor of the House of deputies so it can be overturned. B033 is one of the sadder chapters in the recent history of the Episcopal Church. The way it was handled was shameful in both Houses, in Deputies where at a minimum the spirit of the House was trampled upon, and in the House of bishops where both the spirit and the letter of the law of that House were sacrificed on the altar of expediency. B033 never was even an accurate view of where the Episcopal Church stood, and it misled many in the Anglican Communion to think the situation was other than it was (in other words it was a lie). Many of us””both reasserters and reappraisers by the way””were maligned for voting against B033 at the time, but in retrospect I believe our concerns have been more than vindicated–KSH.

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, * By Kendall, Episcopal Church (TEC), General Convention

Lent and Beyond: A Confessions

O Lord,

We stand in Manasseh! We have forgotten You.

We have cast aside Your truths for The-Right-to-Choose truths.

The-Right-to-Choose has distracted us with distractions upon distractions. Our schedules are oppressed under its yoke. The-Right-to-Choose has appropriated our Sabbaths.

Read it all.

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, * Christian Life / Church Life, Episcopal Church (TEC), Spirituality/Prayer