According to Episcopal News Service, there is a resolution, approved today by Executive Council, that will now automatically become an 'A' resolution in the General Convention "Blue Book." It thanks those who participated in the development of the Anglican Covenant, but states that the Episcopal Church is unable to subscribe to the covenant in its present form.
The effect of this is that, unless somebody else submits another resolution that actually makes it to the floor, deputies and bishops will not have an opportunity to vote for the adoption of the covenant. The way it is framed, even if Executive Council's 'A' resolution is defeated (an unlikely event, IMO), TEC would still not be adopting the covenant.
This should certainly come as no surprise to anyone. It is nonetheless sobering to see the machinery for our rejection of the covenant taking concrete form.
I am an ardent supporter of both the idea of an Anglican covenant and the particular text of the covenant that has been developed. It lights the approach path for a quantum leap in Anglicanism's "coming of age" as a wordwide communion with a particularly ecumenical vocation.I would like to have the opportunity to cast my vote in its favor, even in a losing effort.
That said, I must confess that Council's resolution is probably an accurate representation of the center of gravity of opinion in the church. Regrettable, but accurate. There is a great work of teaching and winning of hearts and minds to be done.
Carioca: Anyone born in the city of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Confess: to acknowledge one's belief or faith in; declare adherence to, to reveal by circumstances.
Monday, October 24, 2011
Friday, October 21, 2011
Diocesan Synod Address, 2011
I have to begin by telling you how completely thrilled I am
to be standing before you at this moment doing what I’m doing. A year ago, I
got to speak to you briefly as your Bishop-elect. There was an air of cautious
optimism in the room, and I was very excited about what lay ahead. But we
didn’t know each other well then, so there was a certain reserve in our embrace
of one another. Now I have some nine months on the ground in the diocese. I’ve
logged about 20,000 miles on the vehicle you all own, and I’ve visited all but
a handful of our churches. So I’m overjoyed to be able to tell you: I still go
to bed every night and say a prayer of thanksgiving that I have the best job in
the entire world, so I thank you and I thank the Holy Spirit for the trust that
has been placed in me!
There is a great deal that I could talk about. But my
remarks this afternoon are an exercise in triage—omitting much that is good and
worthy of being said in order to focus on the one thing needful. So I would
like to tell you a story. I believe it’s a true story, though I can’t be
certain because it takes place in the future. And I’m not really going to tell
you the whole story, I guess, but pretty much just the ending, because it’s
important that we all know that the story does have a happy ending, since the
chapters leading up to the last one … well, they are a little scary! Oh … and I
should probably mention that we are all characters in this story. Only the
names have been changed to protect the unsuspecting.
Lisa and Jeff live outside of Sharpstown in Jones
County—check me out, there are no such place names in Illinois; I told you the
names had been changed—about 14 makes from the county seat city of Pinehurst.
Jeff works in his father’s retail farm implement business, and will one day own
it; Lisa works in a local beauty parlor. They have two kids in high school,
which can get a little expensive, so a couple of years ago they found
themselves in nearly $50,000 of revolving credit card debt. It seemed that they
just weren’t very good at managing their finances. Through one of Lisa’s
clients, they heard about a series of seminars being held down at the VFW Hall.
They were feeling just vulnerable enough that they were willing to accept help
from just about any direction, so they attended the meetings.
Doing so not only turned their financial life around—now
their debt is less than $20,000, they’re living within their means, and they’re
looking forward to actually opening a savings account—not only is their financial
life turned around, but they made some new friends who were also part of the
group. Lisa and a couple of the other women are talking about starting a
support group for mothers of teenagers. What she and Jeff learned about halfway
through the financial management series was that it was sponsored by St
Gabriel’s Episcopal Church in Pinehurst. Lisa’s client, in fact, the one who
told her about the seminar, is a member of St Gabriel’s.
Now, Lisa’s parents were Methodists when they were kids, and
Jeff’s were Catholics. But neither Lisa nor Jeff ever had any experience with
any church, except for the occasional wedding or funeral, where the religious
talk never made any sense to them. But a couple of their new friends invited
them to a come to a group meeting in their home, right there in Sharpstown.
There was some good food, good fellowship, some conversation about the big
issues of life, and always a short prayer at the end, led by the host couple,
Julie and Mark. Jeff and Lisa were a little skeptical at first, but they really
liked the people, and found that they enjoyed exploring the spiritual dimension
of their lives, which they had never done before.
After about three months of coming to these week night home
group meetings, there was a special visitor. Julie introduced him as Father
Cliff, the priest from St Gabriel’s. Over dinner, Lisa and Jeff learned that Fr
Cliff actually had a day job as an administrator at Pinehurst High School, and
took care of St Gabriel’s in his “spare time.” At the discussion time, Fr Cliff
informed the group that he had rented the VFW Hall on every other Sunday night
beginning the following month, and wanted to know whether anyone in the group
would be interested in joining him for a simple service of worship and instruction—a
little music, some prayers, and a time of teaching about the basics of
Christian faith, and, of course, some food. For those who continued to be
interested, this could lead to baptism. On their way home that night, Jeff and
Lisa agree that they would begin to attend those services.
So they do. And they find that they actually enjoy the
experience. Much to their surprise, they begin to pray, on their own, at home.
Not too much, but some. They also find that their relationship with their kids
begins to be a little less stormy, and is sometimes even a little sweet. Nobody
knows quite why, but both parents and kids are happy about it. The kids begin
to join their parents at the VFW Hall on Saturday nights.
This goes on for a couple of years. The VFW Hall meetings
are now held every week. The oldest child is now away at one of the state
universities. It’s fall, and Fr Cliff begins to gently raise the question: Who
feels ready for baptism? By this time, there are over 20 adults in the group,
none of whom had any previous ties to a church. To Fr Cliff’s delight, the
response is, “We thought you’d never ask!” So the instruction becomes a little
more intense. They begin to read more scripture in their worship. By this time,
both Jeff and Lisa have each gotten hold of a Bible for their own personal use,
so they notice that the passages of scripture that are read are not chosen
randomly, but follow a pattern. Some people from St Gabriel’s quietly begin to
show up and assist Fr Cliff with the teaching by leading small group
discussions. New songs are introduced in their worship—songs with unfamiliar language
and vocabulary that the catechists need to explain the meaning of—and the group
is taught to give responses to various things the leader might say.
At the beginning of December (or, as the group is told,
“Advent”), each of the candidates for baptism is paired with a sponsor from St
Gabriel’s, someone who listens to them and prays for them and emails them and
talks by phone at least weekly. About ten weeks later, at the beginning of Lent
(which Jeff remembers his Catholic grandmother talking about, though he never
knew what it was), the 20 candidates solemnly sign their names in a special
book that has been prepared for that purpose, as their sponsors vouch for the
fact that they have been faithful in attending worship and instruction, and
have lived in the world in a manner worthy of a follower of Jesus. Fr Cliff and
the other catechists begin to mention something called the Eucharist, though
whatever they say about it is kind of vague, and they never teach about it
directly. But Jeff and Lisa and their other friends get the distinct impression
that it’s pretty important, and that, after they are baptized, it will be a
regular part of their experience.
Around the middle of Lent, everyone is given a special
hand-calligraphied copy of the Apostles’ Creed and the Our Father, and told to
memorize them. Then, on the night before Easter, a bus appears in the VFW Hall
parking lot, which takes everyone to Pinehurst, and St Gabriel’s Church.
They’re ushered into the back of the church and given a hand candle. It’s very
dark. A lot of scripture is read, and the passages are very long. But the
catechumens have heard them all before. It is in these stories that the gospel
has been explained to them: the Creation, the Flood, Abraham’s Sacrifice of
Isaac, the Exodus, the Valley of the Dry Bones. Then their sponsors present
them to Fr Cliff, who is dressed up in a way they’ve never seen him before! He
asks them if they renounce the ways of this world, and if they promise to
follow Jesus as Lord. Then the whole congregation says the Apostles’ Creed with
them and answers some more questions. Then, one by one, Fr Cliff baptizes them, and pours oil over them—generously—and
tells them that they have been sealed by the Holy Spirit in baptism and marked
as Christ’s own forever. Then, for the first time, they give and receive the
Sign of Peace, and finally, are actively present as heaven and earth are joined
and death and life become indistinguishable from one another, and they dine on
the Body and Blood of him whose true members they have now become.
The next Sunday, they gather for the Eucharist once again,
only this time back in the familiar VFW Hall in Sharpstown. The Bishop is
there, somebody they’ve only heard rumors about until this point! He leads them
in a discussion about becoming their own Eucharistic Community, and, together,
they decide on a name: the Church of the Advent, Sharpstown. The Bishop goes on
to tell them that they are now part of an entity known as Jones County Parish,
which is now comprised of two Eucharistic Communities: St Gabriel’s, Pinehurst
and Advent, Sharpstown. Members from both Eucharistic Communities will be
elected to serve on a single Mission Leadership Team, which is responsible for
planning and advancing the mission of the Diocese of Springfield in Jones
County.
Soon thereafter, Lisa and Jeff make plans to host a home
group of their own. Their hope is to conceive and give birth to yet another
Community-in-Formation in Jones County Parish, since there’s a new bio-fuel
plant set to open in the community of Larkspur, about 17 miles north of
Sharpstown. And so it goes.
In the meantime, a hundred miles to the northwest, in Gibson County, a more urban area, two long-established Eucharistic Communities in the city of Parkerville, Incarnation and St Margaret’s, have reconfigured themselves into Gibson County Parish, merging their vestries into a single Mission Leadership Team. This is not yoking, in the sense in which we have used that term. This is getting organized for effective coordinated and collaborative mission in Gibson County. Sunday services will continue at both Incarnation and St Margaret’s, both in the distinctive styles to which they have become accustomed. But now they’re working together to find ways of serving a growing immigrant population, many of whom seem to be sitting lightly to their traditional religious heritage. They’re talking about establishing a literacy program for parents and advocating on their behalf with the local school system. Serving the marginalized openly in the name of Christ, announcing good news to the poor and recovery of sight to the blind—the people of St Margaret’s and Incarnation, who only a little while ago thought of themselves as rivals, are energized by their participation in fundamental Christian mission.
Across the state laterally now, the people of Fawcett County
Parish, meeting for worship in historic St David’s Church in the county seat
town of Reedsport, have done a sophisticated demographic survey of their
parish, and discovered a significant population of unchurched, and economically
marginal, households living in mobile home parks tucked away in various corners
of the county. So they picked one, and got permission to hold a Vacation Bible
School in the park’s community building. Nearly 40 children showed up, which
enabled them to established relationships with their parents. One of these
parents, a single mother, agreed to host a bible study in her trailer if
somebody from St David’s would come and lead it. There is hope that a
Community-in-Formation might soon be established in that area.
And so the church’s mission is pursued across the diocese.
It’s not done exactly the same way in any two places. There’s a huge amount of
trial and error … especially error! More attempts at mission fail than
succeed, but there’s a sense that, at least we’re “failing forward.” More to
the point, there’s a sense that we’re all doing this together. We’re mutually
accountable. The people at Reedsport in Fawcett County are vitally interested
in what’s happening down in Jones County, and both are keeping tabs on how the
Eucharistic Communities in Parkerville are pursuing the whole church’s mission
in Gibson County. They are interested in one another’s mission because they
know themselves to all be members of one church—the Diocese of Springfield.
My brothers and sisters, about six weeks ago the members of
our Department of General Mission Strategy met in working retreat over a Friday
night and a Saturday up in Springfield. I met with them. Naturally, we talked
about … mission strategy! With the able assistance of Mr Mark Waight of St
Michael’s, O’Fallon, we emerged from that meeting with a draft Vision Statement
for our diocese. I haven’t read it to you yet. But you already know it, because
I’ve just described it to you. But here it is anyway:
The Diocese of Springfield in one
church, organized for mission into geographic parishes, manifested in
Eucharistic Communities and communities-in-formation, with a goal of being
concretely incarnate in all of the 60 counties of central and southern
Illinois.
“The Diocese of
Springfield is one church…” That’s
not a novel concept. It’s what our basic Anglican theology tells us about any
diocese, because the diocese is the fundamental unit of the church. Anything
either smaller than that or larger than that is just a matter of expediency.
Within our diocese, we have everything we need to effectively pursue our
mission. Everything. That may not be the way we’re accustomed to thinking. But
it’s time we claim who we know we are, and begin to live that way.
“…organized for
mission into geographic parishes.” In the Episcopal Church, we use the word
“parish” synonymously with “church” or “congregation.” But that’s not what the
word means. Traditionally, it refers to a specific piece of geography; a parish
has clear boundaries. This vision statement allows us to reclaim that heritage,
and use it as a way of being accountable to one another for mission. Within a
geographic area, who is responsible for organizing and pursuing the church’s
mission in that area? The congregations in that area! This is just a “back to
the future” thing.
“…manifested in Eucharistic
Communities…” Notice that the ‘E’
and the ‘C’ at the beginning of ‘Eucharistic’ and ‘Community’ are capitalized.
This suggests that we’re not just being descriptive here, but floating the idea
that Eucharistic Community might be a more useful formal term by which to speak
of the people who habitually worship together at the same altar week by week,
the people who make up what we presently would call the “congregation” of a
Parish or Mission. In the terms of this proposed Vision Statement, there will,
at first, usually be a one-to-one correspondence between Parishes and
Eucharistic Communities. But if this vision grows wings, we will many instances
of two or more Eucharistic Communities in the same parish.
“…and
communities-in-formation…” In my story, the group that eventually became
the Eucharistic Community in Sharpstown, the Church of the Advent, was for a
couple of years a Community-in-Formation. The Eucharistic Community of St
Gabriel’s in Pinehurst, acting through their Mission Leadership Team (formerly
known as the Vestry) of the mission of the diocese in Jones County Parish,
conceived a new Community-in-Formation when they rented the VFW Hall for the
personal finance seminar, and gestated that new community through the home
group hosted by Julie and Mark, and gave birth to that Community-in-Formation
when the Saturday night worship and teaching sessions began. Simply put, a
Community-in-Formation is the child of a Eucharistic Community, and when that
child grows up, it becomes a Eucharistic Community in its own right.
“concretely incarnate
in all 60 counties” Did you know that 60 out of the 102 counties in
Illinois are within the territory of the Diocese of Springfield? At present, we have 37 churches at which the
Eucharist is regularly celebrated on Sunday. But four of those are in Madison
County, three are in Sangamon County, and two each are in McLean, St Clair, and
Marion counties. So do the math: This means that we have no mission work
established in 31 of our 60 counties. I realize, of course, that some people
cross county lines to go to church, but I think you see my point. One of the
fruits of pursuing our mission more effectively will simply be that we are
visible in more places.
I hope your head is spinning right now. I hope you’re
disturbed. I hope you’re apprehensive about what I’m saying. Because if you’re
not all those things, then you’re probably not grasping that the vision I’m
laying out is a many times more serious challenge to the status quo of the way
we “do church”—in this diocese or elsewhere—than anything we’ve ever
encountered in our lives. We could spend the rest of today, and all of
tomorrow, and not even begin to tease out all the implications. Unfortunately,
we’ve got other stuff we need to do. But make no mistake: This is a
game-changer.
And I’m more than aware that, at this point, everything I’m
talking about is only a trial balloon. Before any of it can happen, there needs
to be a very deliberate process of conversation and buy-in. If it’s just my
vision, or just the vision of the DGMS, it won’t get to first base. There’s
enough here to make everyone in this room hugely uncomfortable, at the very
least. But nothing less drastic than this is called for at this hour in our
life together. I, for one, am scared to death. But I’m also excited beyond
words. What an opportunity to be on the cutting edge of the Lord renewing his
church, and through the church being renewed, having the world be renewed. As
the Lord tells us, “Behold, I make all things new.”
Tuesday, October 11, 2011
The Point of Christianity
I don't know that, on my own, I would naturally use an expression like "the point of Christianity." It's just not my style. But over on the listserv that is operated for members (and recent former members) of General Convention, somebody else did today, and it struck me as one of those rare lucid moments when a bright light is inadvertently shined on why many members of the same church frustrate one another so much, and talk past one another so much.
It's because of vastly divergent views on ... well ... the point of Christianity.
The commenter queried, "Do we believe that the point of Christianity is to love one another, shun violence and hatred and care for the poor and needy. Or does it exist to get people to believe in Jesus so they won't go to hell?"
To be honest, if I had to choose, I would opt for the latter, though I don't think the alternatives are really quite that starkly opposed. Of course, I have no problem with love, non-violence, disavowal of hatred, and caring for the poor and needy. Those are important--yea, necessary--components of faithful Christian witness and ministry. But they are not themselves the "one thing needful", and I believe we are in error if we see them as "the point of Christianity." And while I would not choose to use language about the avoidance of hell to express "the point of Christianity" either, it is, I believe, less far from the mark.
Using affirmative terms, I would suggest that "the point of Christianity" is to make people fit to live in heaven, to be in the unfiltered presence of God without being vaporized by the sheer weight of divine glory. This is a process called sanctification (in the west; our eastern friends are apt to say theosis--deification). The process is fueled by grace, and grace, while generally ubiquitous, is found surely and certainly in the sacraments.
For my money, this is a lot more exciting than just trying to make the world a better place.
It's because of vastly divergent views on ... well ... the point of Christianity.
The commenter queried, "Do we believe that the point of Christianity is to love one another, shun violence and hatred and care for the poor and needy. Or does it exist to get people to believe in Jesus so they won't go to hell?"
To be honest, if I had to choose, I would opt for the latter, though I don't think the alternatives are really quite that starkly opposed. Of course, I have no problem with love, non-violence, disavowal of hatred, and caring for the poor and needy. Those are important--yea, necessary--components of faithful Christian witness and ministry. But they are not themselves the "one thing needful", and I believe we are in error if we see them as "the point of Christianity." And while I would not choose to use language about the avoidance of hell to express "the point of Christianity" either, it is, I believe, less far from the mark.
Using affirmative terms, I would suggest that "the point of Christianity" is to make people fit to live in heaven, to be in the unfiltered presence of God without being vaporized by the sheer weight of divine glory. This is a process called sanctification (in the west; our eastern friends are apt to say theosis--deification). The process is fueled by grace, and grace, while generally ubiquitous, is found surely and certainly in the sacraments.
For my money, this is a lot more exciting than just trying to make the world a better place.
Thursday, October 06, 2011
Low Country Rumblings
I am hesitant to weigh in on the news coming out of the Diocese of South Carolina. I have been enjoying an extended period of low political drama as I try to settle in to my new ministry. But I'm also hesitant to say nothing, and my insights have indeed been solicited.
Bottom line: I don't think it's time to sound any alarms, or presume the activity of any malign conspiracies. Not yet, at least. It is well-known that there is a small minority of Episcopalians in the diocese who are disappointed that the majority, including Bishop Mark Lawrence, are not on board with the general drift of the larger Episcopal Church on the controverted issues of sexuality. Some of them, evidently, have initiated a process under the section of Title IV that governs the discipline of bishops, alleging that, by action and inaction, Bishop Lawrence has "abandoned the doctrine, discipline, and worship of the Episcopal Church."
The canons specify that the matter now rests with a Review Committee, consisting of bishops, priests, and lay persons, headed by Bishop Dorsey Henderson, retired diocesan of Upper South Carolina (and a lawyer). In broad terms, this group is like a grand jury. Its job is to determine whether there is sufficient substance in the allegations to merit a trial.
I could be wrong, but my suspicion--and, of course, my hope--is that the panel will respond in the negative, and the matter will be laid to rest for the time being. I'm not going to take the time to "fisk" the allegations and the supporting documentation--that is no doubt being done elsewhere in cyberspace--but it is clear to me that that all but one are entirely specious and deserving of summary dismissal. To cite South Carolina's endorsement of the Anglican Covenant and its disavowal of TEC's association with the Religious Coalition for Reproductive Choice as evidence of abandonment of the Episcopal Church beggars belief.
The only "charge" that is even worthy of discussion, in my opinion, has to do with the diocese's removal from its constitution its accession to the canons (not the constitution) of the Episcopal Church. This stems from a very particular issue. The convention of the diocese (and many others) believe that a particular canon (ironically, the one one under which Bishop Lawrence is being charged) is itself unconstitutional. Like I said, this is at least worthy of discussion, but it strains credulity to see it as in any way damning.
So I am hopeful that the Review Committee will see these charges for the nonsense they are. In the meantime, inflammatory rhetoric about grand conspiracies is ill-advised, unhelpful, and, at the very least, premature. Let's calmly let the process play out and see what happens.
I know a little bit about being the victim of unfounded allegations, so my heart goes out to Bishop Lawrence and all the people of the Diocese of South Carolina. May sanity, charity, and grace prevail.