Friday, November 2,
2007
"...the Lord knows how to rescue godly men from
trials and to hold the unrighteous for the day of judgment, while
continuing their punishment."
2 Peter 2:9 NIV
- A Message
from Bishop-elect Anderson
- Christ Church of Atlanta
launches second Sunday Service
- All Eyes On
Pittsburgh
- Pennsylvania
Bishop Inhibited
- Executive
Council comments on House of Bishops' statement
- South
Carolina Bishop-elect Mark Lawrence receives necessary consents
- Ontario
priest disciplined for marrying same-sex couple
A Message from
Bishop-elect Anderson
Dearly Beloved in Christ Jesus,
Around the world, more and more observers are realizing how
seriously the American House of Bishops (HOB) missed the mark in
their response to the Dar es Salaam Communique. At the same time the
HOB has upset many liberal revisionists within TEC who feel that the
HOB should have been bolder in defending TEC's right to chart their
own course on the gay and lesbian agenda for the church. These times
are truly interesting!
As many of you are aware, some months ago the Anglican Church of
Nigeria's House of Bishops elected four new bishops for CANA
(Convocation of Anglicans in North America) and the consecration of
those four is scheduled for December 9, a Sunday afternoon, at 2 PM
at the Church of the Epiphany in Herndon, Virginia.
This will be a great celebration in many ways. It will provide CANA
and the Church of Nigeria with additional bishops to minister to the
growing flock of Anglican Christians in CANA who are part of the
growing orthodox realignment within the larger communion. A second
way this celebration is significant is that these consecrations will
be (by permission of His Grace Peter J. Akinola) not in Nigeria as
is the custom, but in Northern Virginia, in the heart of where one
of the great battles for Christian Anglican orthodoxy is underway.
Many former Episcopal Churches have left the liberal and revisionist
Episcopal Diocese of Virginia, and in an important theological and
practical division have formed new churches under various overseas
provinces. Even now the Episcopal Diocese of Virginia and the
national Episcopal Church are involved in a massive litigation
offensive, suing these faithful churches who have left the heresy of
TEC's Virginia diocese.
These CANA consecrations build on the ones recently done in Kenya
and Uganda and look forward to the ones in January with AMiA/Rwanda.
All are a part of the orthodox family of God equipping the army to
go forth and spread the Good News. It is appropriate therefore that
in the heart of the Virginia battleground the faithful church
gathers to consecrate four new bishops to carry on the defense of
the faith.
There will be a five day spiritual retreat for the
soon-to-be-bishops and their wives preceding the consecration, and
as one of the bishops-elect, I look forward to it as a chance to
catch my breath and center in on the entirely new life and task
before us.
The division in the
church over faith and morality is spreading from parishes to
dioceses and even to the provincial level. As we have seen parishes
leave TEC to realign with other faithful provinces, now several TEC
dioceses are preparing to do the same. Within the global Anglican
family severe divisions on the provincial level are also developing,
and the Archbishop of Canterbury is approaching the time when he
also will have to choose which path he will walk: one of orthodoxy
and faith or one of heterodoxy and accommodation. Even now leaked
memos from secret Lambeth meetings mention the possibility of
officially sanctioning foreign overseas bishops to come into English
bishops' dioceses and perform episcopal acts for specific inviting
congregations, with or without the explicit permission of the local
bishop. If that is approved it would likely avoid the litigious and
contentious scene that we see in the USA.
Speaking of
contentiousness, there is breaking news within the American
Episcopal Church. The Presiding Bishop of the Episcopal Church has
finally acted on complaints against Bishop Charles Bennison of
Pennsylvania, complaints that go back many years, pertaining to his
purported complicity in keeping the sexual molestation of a child in
his church by Bennison's own brother quiet and the information
suppressed. It is further alleged that Bishop Bennison, knowing his
brother was being ordained a deacon and then a priest, did not
divulge the information or cause it to be known.
Why has Jefferts Schori waited until now to inhibit Bennison and
start his trial process? The most probable answer is to convey a
picture of evenhandedness - for having signed the Bennison papers
she wrote Bishop Duncan of Pittsburgh a threatening letter, letting
him know that unless he stopped his diocese from passing a change in
their canon law allowing Pittsburgh's departure, she would inhibit
and depose him (although she says it in formal language: "If your
course does not change, I shall regrettably be compelled to see that
appropriate canonical steps are promptly taken to consider whether
you have abandoned the Communion of this Church - by actions and
substantive statements, however they may be phrased - and whether
you have committed canonical offences that warrant disciplinary
action.")
This threat to Bishop
Duncan on the eve of his diocesan convention was, I would assert,
the reason why Bennison was inhibited at THIS time, so she can say,
"See, I am fair - I discipline the bad boys on both sides equally."
What this actually says is fairly horrendous, however. What she is
actually saying is that there is parity between being an orthodox,
faithful bishop and being involved in child molestation.
In reality Bennison was
a convenient sacrificial lamb for Jefferts Schori to use in her
attack on Bishop Robert Duncan, and by extension on Bishop Jack Iker
and Bishop John-David Schofield, whose dioceses will be taking votes
in the near future on their continued relationship with TEC.
I have a mental picture
of Captain Schori of the ship TEC Titanic, brandishing an armload of
writs, inhibitions and threats, trying to drive people away from the
life boats and proclaiming "you must go down with the ship!"
Pittsburgh's diocesan
convention is this weekend. Pray most earnestly for Bishop Duncan
and all other orthodox leaders.
It is a historic time we are living in. Each night as I say my
prayers and close my eyes I wonder "What will tomorrow bring, and
what will God do next?"
In Christ,
Bishop-elect David C. Anderson
President and CEO, American Anglican Council
| Christ
Church of Atlanta launches second Sunday Service
Christ Church of
Atlanta is launching a second Sunday morning service featuring
the Lord's Supper and the breadth of Anglican liturgy within a
contemporary setting. Join us from 8:30 am - 9:15 am beginning
on Sunday, November 11, 2007. For more information, contact Jeff
Taylor (404) 275-5226.
|
All Eyes On
Pittsburgh
Source: The
Tribune-Democrat
Date: November 1, 2007
Episcopalians nationwide
are watching as leaders and delegates of the Episcopal Church’s
Pittsburgh Diocese converge on Johnstown today to consider
separating from their national affiliation...
The 142nd convention for
the Pittsburgh diocese, whose leaders have spoken in favor of a more
conservative church, meets today at the Pasquerilla Conference
Center in Johnstown to consider an amendment to its constitution to
allow its separation from the Episcopal Church of the United States.
The diocese’s parishes then could join a more conservative group,
the worldwide Anglican Communion, rather than its American arm.
If the resolution passes, the pullout would have to be ratified at a
second convention.Pittsburgh is one of at least four Episcopal
dioceses out of 110 – along with Fort Worth, Texas; Quincy,
Illinois; and San Joaquin, Calif. – that are taking steps to break
away...
In a letter sent
Wednesday to Pittsburgh Bishop Robert Duncan, Schori threatened
disciplinary action if Duncan does not change his direction.
"I call upon you to recede from this direction and to lead your
diocese on a new course that recognizes the interdependent and
hierarchical relationship between the national Church and its
dioceses and parishes," Schori said in the letter, published by the
Episcopal News Service at
http://episcopalchurch.org.
The letter accompanies a
story that centers on multimillion-dollar litigation about church
fights over real estate across the country.
A spokeswoman for the national church declined to comment.
Peter Frank, spokesman
for the Pittsburgh diocese, said the letter is meant to intimidate
and influence today’s vote. "This is not an effective technique,"
Frank said. "In past situations where the church has made threats,
it tends to galvanize people to support their leadership. Certainly
this will be a watched convention across the country..."
Read the rest of the
article by
clicking here.
Pennsylvania
bishop inhibited from ordained ministry
Source:
Episcopal News Service
Date: October 31, 2007
Presiding Bishop
Katharine Jefferts Schori on October 31 inhibited Episcopal Diocese
of Pennsylvania Bishop Charles Bennison from all ordained ministry
pending a judgment of the Court for the Trial of a Bishop.
The Title IV Review
Committee issued a presentment for conduct unbecoming a member of
the clergy against Bennison on October 28.
The two counts of the
presentment center on accusations that Bennison, when he was rector
of St. Mark's Episcopal Church in Upland, California, did not
respond properly after learning sometime in 1973 that his brother,
John, who worked as a lay youth minister in the parish, was having
an affair with a 14-year-old member of the youth group. John
Bennison was also married at the time, according to the presentment.
Read the rest of the article by
clicking here.
Executive
Council comments on House of Bishops' statement
Source:
Episcopal Church
Date: October 28, 2007
As it concluded its
three-day fall meeting at the Hyatt Regency hotel in Dearborn,
Michigan, the Executive Council of the Episcopal Church thanked the
House of Bishops for its efforts that resulted in a statement to the
Anglican Communion issued in September.
However, Council
Resolution NAC026 said that where the bishops' statement called
"particular attention to the application of [General Convention]
Resolution B033 to lesbian and gay persons, it may inappropriately
suggest that an additional qualification for the episcopacy has been
imposed beyond those contained in the constitution and canons of the
church."
Resolution B033, passed
by General Convention in June 2006, calls upon diocesan standing
committees and bishops with jurisdiction "to exercise restraint by
not consenting to the consecration of any candidate to the
episcopate whose manner of life presents a challenge to the wider
church and will lead to further strains on communion."
Read the rest of the article by
clicking here.
South Carolina
Bishop-elect Mark Lawrence receives necessary consents
Source:
Episcopal News Service
Date: October 29, 2007
Presiding Bishop
Katharine Jefferts Schori announced October 29 that the Very Rev.
Mark Lawrence had received the consents needed for him to become the
next bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of South Carolina.
The consecration will be
held January 26, 2008 at the Cathedral Church of St. Luke and St.
Paul in Charleston, South Carolina.
Read the rest of the article by
clicking here.
Ontario priest
disciplined for marrying same-sex couple
Source: Anglican
Church of Canada
Date: October 29, 2007
A priest in the diocese
of Ontario has been disciplined and had his licence to marry
cancelled after officiating at the wedding of a same-sex couple last
August in a church in rural Ontario, where he is the incumbent.
Rev. Michael Bury,
rector of St. John the Evangelist church, in Stirling, Ont., a small
village located about 190 km east of Toronto, confirmed in an
interview that his licence to perform marriages has been cancelled.
Read the rest of the
article by
clicking here.
|