Archive for June, 2008

Clerical errors

An editorial worth reading on the Global Anglican meeting currently going on in Jerusalem appeared in the UK online paper, The Guardian, yesterday.

It  said in part:

The issue on which all of this currently hinges is the status of openly gay people. Over the past half century, civil society in many parts of the world, including ours, has broken free from the long tradition of hostility and discrimination against gay people – and both society and individual lives are immeasurably the better for it. Now, inevitably and rightly, the same process is taking place in the churches, with pressure for the election of openly gay clergy and bishops and the blessing of same-sex unions. In the past, the church has managed such issues by covering them up. But on this issue in these times, that is no longer possible.

The Archbishop of Canterbury, Rowan Williams, has battled to hold both his church and the wider communion together in the face of these pressures. That is one of his jobs – and it has not been a dishonourable effort. Yet it seems clear that it has only delayed an inevitable – and ultimately necessary – confrontation over this issue. Dr Williams has not, contrary to the views of Archishop Akinola, led the church into this. But, now that it is coming, he has a profound responsibility to lead the church out of it, happily and without fear. The question facing Anglicans – and facing other religious groups too – is whether theirs is a faith that is loving enough to treat gay people as equals. If the communion cannot hold together in the face of this question, then so be it. Unity matters as long as the cause is a good one. If the cause is not good, then maybe nor is the unity.

The whole thing can be found here.  Read the comments, which while disturbing are a keen reminder of how the non-church world is viewing Anglicanism right now – from continuing denunciations of homosexuality, to visions of a more just future, to calls for the Archbishop of Canterbury to resign, to my favorite: “Tick tock, tick tock, tick tock, ti”.

New CD from the St. Thomas’ Parish Choir

ST. THOMAS’ PARISH CHOIR: NEW CD — “One Thing Have I Desired”

One Thing I Have DesiredThe CD features anthems, spirituals and psalms. There are four anthems by Herbert Howells that are suitable for Christmas or spiritual contemplation. The spirituals include “Balm in Gilead”, and “My Lord, What A Mourning”.

The CD can also be purchased online at St. Thomas’ website for $25 plus shipping. All earnings go directly to the Parish Capital Fund Campaign.

Order One Today!

Maximal minimalism

The genius of Anglicanism, as Episcopalians have understood it for at least the past 120 years is what I call “maximal minimalism” – that is to say, the maximal statement of faith can be best conveyed by the minimal number of core convictions.

The Lambeth Conference of 1888 stated it far better in Resolution 11 than any lengthier Anglican Covenant will ever do, when it said “That, in the opinion of this Conference, the following Articles supply a basis on which approach may be by God’s blessing made towards Home Reunion”:

(a) The Holy Scriptures of the Old and New Testaments, as “containing all things necessary to salvation,” and as being the rule and ultimate standard of faith.”

(b) The Apostles’ Creed, as the Baptismal Symbol; and the Nicene Creed, as the sufficient statement of the Christian faith.

(c) The two Sacraments ordained by Christ Himself–Baptism and the Supper of the Lord–ministered with unfailing use of Christ’s words of Institution, and of the elements ordained by Him.

(d) The Historic Episcopate, locally adapted in the methods of its administration to the varying needs of the nations and peoples called of God into the Unity of His Church.

  • In its wisdom the church didn’t try to impose one reading of Scripture on everyone, or set up a tribunal for settling whose interpretation is correct;
  • The church didn’t try to say what the creeds meant or exactly how one should understand them before becoming a Christian;
  • The church affirmed baptism and holy communion as the central sacraments of the church, but didn’t try to set out who could and couldn’t be baptized or celebrate or receive holy communion; and
  • The church left the central symbol of the Episcopal Church – the episcope, or bishop — to be “locally adapted in the methods of its administration to the varying needs of the nations and peoples called of God into the Unity of His Church.”

This “maximal minimalism” was not the result of believing too little. It was the result of believing too much to let any single interpretation, or understanding, or teaching, or doctrine, or church body or structure or person have sole authority over how God can and cannot be understood to be alive and at work among God’s people at any given time.

Sometimes less is more. Like now.

Anglican Covenant – a bad idea whose time has come?

Dr. Wayne Whitson Floyd, a lay theologian, chairs
the Education and Formation Committee
at St. Thomas’ Parish, Dupont Circle, Washington, DC

One of the recommendations of the 2004 Windsor Report, written in response to reaction against the consecration of Gene Robinson as Bishop of New Hampshire, was that the Anglican Communion move towards the adoption of a so-called Anglican Covenant. Despite many gallant attempts to make Windsor into a statement of the beauty-of-unity that is the Anglican Communion, I remain unconvinced. As the old Southern saying goes: “You can put lipstick on a pig, but it’s still a pig.” I say this because I am convinced that such a document — however nuanced its wording — would in effect state the means by which official condemnation of the Episcopal Church’s full inclusion of gay and lesbian Christians at all levels of church life could be justified. It also would define the Episcopal Church’s action in consecrating Bishop Robinson as having removed TEC from the fellowship of the Anglican Communion. Dress it up however you want, but IMHO it’s still a pig.

To its credit, the response of the Episcopal Church up to now has been far from enthusiastic about such a Covenant — “it would be a bad idea that I do not support” Washington’s Bishop John Chane was overheard to say recently. Our bishops and Executive Council and General Convention deputies have agreed, however, to study the idea and make recommendations about the Covenant (the official study guide can be found here), which is in its second draft (the full text can be found here).

The Diocese of Washington’s Episcopal Cafe recently commissioned a series of articles on the Covenant, which give you an idea of how it is being approached officially by the Episcopal Church. And the General Theological Seminary’s Desmond Tutu Center, following its April 2008 conference on the proposed Covenant, has posted on its website more html, mp3, and pdf resources and responses to this than most Episcopalians will ever have the patience to absorb.

I realize I betray my own heterodox Episcopalianism — and poor Southern manners — by having lost already most of my patience to participate in what already is a several years long extended series of debates among our bishops, Executive Council members, General Convention deputies, seminary faculty and all manner of cogs in the complex machinery that is the Episcopal Church. This will continue past this summer’s Lambeth Conference, into the 2009 General Convention, and certainly beyond.

From the outset, I must say that I simply think the whole endeavor is a bad idea, but a bad idea whose time appears to have come.

It’s a bad idea for some fairly simple reasons: More >

Archbishop of Canterbury criticizes London same-sex blessing

“We have heard the reports of the recent service in St. Bartholomew the Great with very great concern. We cannot comment on the specific circumstances because they are the subject of an investigation launched by the Bishop of London.”On the general issue, however, the various reference points for the Church of England’s approach to human sexuality (1987 Synod motion, 1991 Bishops’ Statement — Issues in Human Sexuality, Lambeth motion 1:10, House of Bishops’ 2005 statement on civil partnerships) are well known and remain current.”Those clergy who disagree with the Church’s teaching are at liberty to seek to persuade others within the Church of the reasons why they believe, in the light of Scripture, tradition and reason that it should be changed. But they are not at liberty simply to disregard it.”

The statement by the archbishops of Canterbury and York was in response to the civil blessing of the partnership of two gay priests in London.

[Episcopal News Service] Two gay clergymen who had their partnership blessed in a London church and the priest who led the ceremony have received both criticism and praise for the move which conservatives say is at odds with the Church of England’s policies and more progressive Anglicans believe is long overdue.

According to reports, the Rev. Peter Cowell and the Rev. Dr. David Lord “exchanged vows and rings in front of hundreds of guests” on May 31 at St. Bartholomew the Great Church in the City of London.

The Rev. Martin Dudley, who led the service, said he didn’t have any regrets and he did not seek permission from London Bishop Richard Chartres.

Dudley said that the ceremony didn’t resemble a marriage and was “quite simply the blessing of a civil partnership.” He said the church’s guidelines don’t prohibit such blessings, “but ask me to respond pastorally and responsibly to what I’m being asked to do.”

Meanwhile, Chartres has ordered an investigation to take place, saying that services of public blessings for civil partnerships are not authorized in the Church of England or the Diocese of London. Civil partnerships have been legal in England since December 2005.

More >

Authentic Anglicanism?

[Episcopal News Service] Conservative Anglicans and former Episcopalians started to arrive in Jerusalem June 19 in anticipation of the Global Anglican Future Conference (GAFCON), a controversial summit regarded by some critics as a rival to the 2008 Lambeth Conference.The GAFCON event, set for June 22-29, is expected to draw 1,000 participants, including former Episcopal priests, some of whom are currently engaged in litigation concerning Episcopal Church property.

A closed-door pre-conference consultation in Amman, Jordan, was promptly wrapped up June 18 after key participants, including Archbishop Peter Akinola of Nigeria, were denied entry for lacking the necessary diplomatic paperwork, according to news reports.

GAFCON has come under fire from local Church leaders, including Anglican Bishop in Jerusalem Suheil Dawani, who expressed his concern that the conference would “import inter-Anglican conflict” into his diocese. Dawani previously called on organizers to move the conference, but his requests have not been honored.

The Most Rev. Mouneer Hanna Anis, primate of the Province of Jerusalem and the Middle East, also has raised concerns about the event and acknowledged that his advice to the organizers — that this was neither the right time nor place for such a meeting — had been ignored.

Anis has declined an invitation to attend the conference.

Bishop Robert O’Neill of the Diocese of Colorado has traveled to Jerusalem at Dawani’s invitation.

On June 19, GAFCON’s organizers released a document, “The Way, The Truth and the Life,” which, according to a news release on the conference website, “sets out to define authentic Anglicanism, discuss what is at stake in the conflict, and what the future holds for orthodox Anglicans.”

In the document, which is critical of recent developments in the Episcopal Church, Akinola writes: “We have made enormous efforts since 1997 in seeking to avoid this crisis, but without success. Now we confront a moment of decision.”

“There is no longer any hope, therefore, for a unified Communion,” he adds.

GAFCON is being held one month prior to the Lambeth Conference when more than 700 of the Anglican Communion’s bishops are expected to gather at the University of Kent in Canterbury, England, for more than two weeks of study, prayer, learning, sharing and discerning.

More >

Mel White & Gary Nixon Wed

Many members of St. Thomas’ Parish will be interested in the news of the marriage of LGBT activists Mel White and Gary Nixon this past week at All Saints Church in Pasadena. 

[Episcopal News Service] The Rev. Dr. Mel White and Gary Nixon, cofounders of the LGBT activist organization Soulforce, were married on June 18 at All Saints Church in Pasadena, California, where they met and fell in love 27 years ago.

The ceremony, both joyful and tearful, was the first same-gender wedding performed at the Pasadena church since the California State Supreme Court struck down as unconstitutional a voter-passed law defining marriage as the union only of a man and a woman.

More >

Are You Church Curious?

What’s summer without a little shopping? You can start at the St. Thomas’ Store at Cafe Press –for Gifts or T-Shirts (for you or your four-legged friend) or Notecards or a Calendar.

If you’d like something more serious and lots of fun at the same time, why not order a Gene Robinson DVD?

gene-robinson-dvd.jpg

Located at 18th and Church Streets NW, St. Thomas’ Parish, one of Washington’s most historic Episcopal churches, has long been a landmark in the Dupont Circle neighborhood since the laying of its cornerstone in 1894. Today, the church serves a diverse congregation representative of the eclectic demographics in the Greater Washington area.capital-pride-st-thomas.png

That’s one of the reasons we’re proud to be an active supporter of Capital Pride each year– including our favorite part — THE PARADE!

bishop-at-parade.JPGCome see us and learn about our welcoming, diverse, and flourishing congregation offering God’s all-inclusive hospitality. St. Thomas’ offers you numerous opportunities for worship, service and spiritual enrichment including outreach to young adults, ongoing servant ministry and social activities.

Are you shopping for something money just doesn’t seem to buy? Are You Church Curious? We hope you’ll join us sometime at St. Thomas — a place to find, and be found by, God. Come just as you are. But plan to leave changed. Love does that to us all.