Live from Columbus - June 15, 2006
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Volume 2, No. 5
Today's audio: Bishop Gary Lillibridge explains
some of the differences between the House of Bishops and House of
Deputies and gives an overview of Day Three.
Reed passes House of Deputies
The ordination and consecration of the Rev.
David M. Reed as bishop suffragan of the Diocese of West Texas was
consented to by the General Convention House of Deputies on
Thursday. The resolution of consent now goes to the House of Bishops
for its approval. That action may happen as early as Friday.
Women
celebrate women
The Episcopal Church Women (ECW), meeting for
their Triennial concurrently with the General Convention, celebrated
the thirtieth anniversary of the ordination of women to the
priesthood on June 14. More than 300 women representing 93 of the
Episcopal Church's 111 dioceses are attending the Triennial, whose
primary purpose is fellowship, spiritual growth, and education.
The celebration included worship, song and
dance, and three reflections by clergywomen. It was wrapped up with
the women making paper prayer chains containing the names of the
ordained women in each diocese. The names will become a part of the
Episcopal Women's History Project and then become part of the
Episcopal Church archives.
Not Your Father's College Ministry
Testimony from students and chaplains bent on raising the profile
of young adults in decision-making bodies throughout the Church
energized Evangelism Committee hearings June 15. One of the
resolutions (A041) to come before that committee calls for campus
ministries to be given canonical status as mission congregations
whenever appropriate.
Kate Ketcham, assistant chaplain at Washington University, St.
Louis, Missouri, supports that. "I came out of a campus ministry at
William and Mary [in Virginia] and I know campus ministry fosters
leadership . . . It would be a dream to be a mission congregation
and have voice and vote at diocesan convention. We are now unable to
respond," she said.
Several students from the Episcopal Campus Ministry (ECM) at
Washington University were present to offer testimony. Reynolds
Whalen, an ECM member, joked about the early hour with committee
members who remarked that college students being present at 7:30
a.m. certainly demonstrated their commitment. Whalen brought the
point of representation to bear when he said he had to change his
church membership to a parish near campus in order to stand for
election as a deputy. Whalen is an alternate for the Diocese of
Missouri.
While mission status would bring up the issue of diocesan
assessments, the Rev. Mary Hileman, a committee member from
Oklahoma, said the group also considered campus ministries as
potential locations for church planting. The Very Rev. Martin I.
Yabroff, Northern Indiana, took exception to the concept of church
plant because they would never be self-sufficient "as is the
strategic plan for plants."
In other legislation, the committee considered a substitute
resolution for A038: "Diocesan Development Initiative" that would
direct the office of mission at the Church Center to develop new
resources, endorse existing programs and encourage dioceses to share
best practices in organizational development and leadership
training.
-- Carol E. Barnwell for Episcopal News Service
Budget committee hears requests
More than three dozen people asked the Joint
Standing Committee on Program, Budget and Finance (PB&F) to fund
projects ranging from ministry to the deaf to a pilot program for
ministry in New Orleans in their committee hearing on June 14. The
proposed budget, which will be presented to a joint meeting of the
House of Deputies and House of Bishops on Monday, June 19, is nearly
$152 million over the next triennium.
Speakers made appeals to restore funding for
ministry to the deaf, three historically black colleges, ministry in
Appalachia and Navajoland, and dioceses that make up the Domestic
Mission Partnerships. Others spoke on behalf of new or increased
funding for youth ministry, prison ministry, non-violence training
and world mission programs.
The United Nations Millennium Development
Goals, which Convention added to one of its mission priorities on
June 13, were the focus of several requests for funding to help the
Church address issues of poverty.
Bishop Duncan Gray of the Diocese of
Mississippi requested funding for what is believed to be the only
Katrina-related resolution to come before General Convention. It
would create a pilot project to gather data about ministry taking
place in New Orleans that could later be translated to other
locations around the country.
-- Melodie Woerman for Episcopal News Service.
Reflections from The Rev. Ram Lopez
A Goodly Fellowship
Tuesday was a pretty dull day from what I
experienced.
Parliamentary organization of each House was
what I witnessed, and it was deadly dull. The biggest controversy
was that some felt there were not enough trash and recycle cans in
the room. Some folks just love a microphone!
The best part of the day came during lunch when
our deputation gathered and recounted our day so far and planned out
the rest of the day. At the end of lunch, one of our clergy
deputies called us all to lay hands and pray over our bishop
suffragan-elect before he had to endure the questioning of the
Consent to Bishop's Elections committee.
So, we gathered in prayer and we prayed.
Silently and aloud we prayed. We prayed for him. We prayed for his
wife. We prayed for his children. We prayed for the Church. We
prayed for each other. We prayed for the General Convention.
We prayed.
Later, as we were awaiting the word of the
Consent committee, we prayed for another member of the diocese who
is standing for election as president of Episcopal Church Women.
This time we prayed in the hallways of the legislative meeting
rooms.
We prayed again.
And, you should have seen the looks on the
faces of the other deputies and people in the hallway.
It occurred to me that we, the brothers and
sisters in Christ of our diocese, made a witness that day. In spite
of all the things that we could choose to take sides on and be
divided over, we are making conscious decisions to be the people of
God together. We are a diverse group of people who, I have no
doubt, have differing opinions on any number of topics. But, we
choose not to live in the world of differences. We choose to live
in the world of the common call to mission extended to us by our
Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. We are showing our amazing fellowship
in Christ Jesus to others in the legislative meeting room, in the
hallways, at restaurants and in elevators.
Someone asked our bishop suffragan-elect what
his vision is for his episcopacy. He stated that we in the diocese
have something positive to share with the rest of the Church.
He is right. And, we are sharing it right
now. By our prayers, by our fellowship, by our friendship and in
many other ways, we are sharing the transforming love of Jesus
Christ with each other and modeling how that love can be shared with
others across diocesan lines. In fact, a party is rumored to be in
the making with another diocese with whom we share a boundary and,
more importantly, a number of personal relationships.
"What a fellowship," the old gospel hymn says.
And indeed, that is the best part of my time here: to be with my
brothers and sisters in the diocese sharing this time that God has
given to us and sharing the love of Jesus with each other in ways
that I wish we all could experience personally.
-- The Rev. Ram Lopez
News Briefs from Episcopal News Service
Convention considers ecumenical relationship
General Convention will be asked to ratify
Episcopal Church membership in "the broadest ecumenical table that's
ever existed in this country," according to Bishop Christopher
Epting. It has the potential of "really being a breakthrough in
conciliar ecumenism," said Epting, who is Presiding Bishop's Deputy
for Ecumenical and Interfaith Relations.
"The Roman Catholic, Orthodox, Evangelical
and mainline Protestant churches are all together at one table for
the first time," said Epting.
In September 2001, church leaders
throughout the United States began to consider forming an
organization that would bring together leaders from a variety of
Christian denominations. After several years of conversations and
meetings, the Episcopal Church became a founding member of Christian
Churches Together in the USA (CCT-USA), by decision of Executive
Council in February 2005. The Standing Commission on Ecumenical and
Interreligious Relations is asking Convention to ratify that
decision with resolution A053.
The CCT-USA steering committee met in
Chicago May 30-31; the annual meeting will be held in Los Angeles
February 6-9 and will include the first public launch of the
organization. Membership dues in CCT-USA will come from the existing
budget for the Office of Ecumenical and Interfaith Relations.
The House of Bishops adopted the membership
resolution (A053) June 13; the resolution is currently in committee
with the House of Deputies.
Peace in Isreal/Palestine is focus of committee
A public hearing on resolutions A011, A012
and A013 addressed the stance of the Church on the Palestine/Israel
peace process and investment in Palestine during a June 15 morning
session in the National and International Concerns committee.
During the last triennium, the Episcopal
Church has been involved in issues relating to Israel and Palestine
through its Social Responsibility in Investments (SRI) committee,
the Anglican Peace and Justice Network (APJN), and the Anglican and
International Peace with Justice Concerns (AIPJC), the standing
commission which proposed the resolutions.
Episcopal Church support of the "rightful
existence" of the State of Israel and the State of Palestine as two
nations is reaffirmed in Resolution A011. The legislation also calls
for an end to all violence and its "crippling impact on Israeli and
Palestinian societies," and the withdrawal by Israel from its
settlements in the West Bank.
Resolution A012 advocates for five points:
an end to the isolation of East Jerusalem and Bethlehem from the
West Bank; removal of the Wall; assurance of human rights for
Palestinians; support for the return of sovereign control of Gaza to
the Palestinian people; and assurance that no U.S. tax dollars will
be used to finance the Israeli Occupation of Palestinian
territories.
Resolution A013 asks for the consideration
of investments that would support an economically viable Palestine.
Targeting investment is vital to helping Palestinians create a
viable state said Mary Miller, an AIPJC member who spoke in favor of
the resolutions, "which allows them to work with dignity as children
as God." She added, "This is not happening right now."
Reparations resolutions begin moving through process
The Committee on Social and Urban Affairs,
during its June 15 hearing, heard passionate testimony on four
resolutions focused on slavery and reparations.
"We hope to embark on a new journey, one
that involves the Episcopal Church as an institution, confronting
its institutional racism," said John Vanderstar, deputy from the
Diocese of Washington, and a member of Executive Council. "I'm
talking specifically about the church's participation in the ugly
sin of racism."
Discussion was centered around four
resolutions; A123 focusing on slavery and reconciliation; A124
studying the "complicity" of the church in the Institution of
slavery and how "recompense" can be made; C005 from the Diocese of
New York requesting the establishment of a commission to research
the history of any complicity of the church and several dioceses in
slavery and any necessary steps to make reparations; and C011
proposing a task force of the Executive Council to study, document
and report on the enslavement of Africans and their descendants.
The committee was also asked to consider
resolution A127, which would endorse the concept of restorative
justice as a "fresh means" of achieving "wholeness" in the church.
For other stories,
http://www.episcopalchurch.org/gc2006news.
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