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+Steenson’s Report from Camp Allen

Friday, March 23, 2007 • 2:25 pm


Report from the House of Bishops (Spring 2007)

March 21, 2007

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ,

Greetings to you from the House of Bishops meeting at Camp Allen, Texas, on this feast day of Thomas Ken.  The House of Bishops has, much to my surprise, decided to make a response to the Primates’ Communiqué.  We were told this would come at our September meeting, but the majority evidently believed that they needed to speak now.  I will try to keep this letter brief, and for further background, please see the most recent issue of Together.

The words that seemed to recur most often in our discussions were: “We need to say who we are.”  The majority believed that the Primates misunderstood the democratic nature of the Episcopal Church and that they were trying to impose on us a hierarchical structure from outside that was contrary to our polity.  Three resolutions were passed: (1) a brief statement rejecting the creation of a Pastoral Council that would have given the Primates a role in ministering to those alienated from the Episcopal Church’s leadership; (2) a letter to the Archbishop of Canterbury requesting an emergency meeting with him and the Primates’ Standing Committee; (3) a longer statement asserting the Episcopal Church’s independence and its commitment to the inclusion of homosexual persons.

Three conclusions can reasonably be drawn from these resolutions:

(1) The House of Bishops has effectively rejected a key element in the Primates’ Communiqué (the Pastoral Council).that had been designed as an interim measure to hold together all Anglicans in the USA until the Anglican Communion Covenant could be considered by all the member churches.

(2) The House of Bishops has sent a clear message to the Primates that these interventions are unwelcome and improper.  The formal response to the Primates two specific requests of us (regarding the consecrations of bishops living in same-sex relationships and the liturgical blessing of same-sex unions) will almost certainly come at our September meeting, before the Sept. 30 deadline in the Communiqué.  Rejection, in my opinion, is now a foregone conclusion.

(3) The request to meet with the Archbishop of Canterbury and the Primates’ Standing Committee is obviously an attempt to find a friendlier forum to discuss the Episcopal Church’s future place in the Anglican Communion than the Primates Meeting as a whole, where there is fierce criticism of the Episcopal Church.

One might now expect that the Episcopal Church’s presence at the 2008 Lambeth Conference of Anglican Bishops will be severely limited.  But there may also be a complicating factor, the practical difficulty of convening the Lambeth Conference at all, because of financial shortages.

Thus, the Windsor process so many of us placed our hopes on to hold together and even strengthen the Anglican Communion is in serious trouble.  Our call, as difficult as that might be, is to hear what direction may be suggested by the Archbishop of Canterbury and the Primates before we take counsel together.  Archbishop Rowan has already said that the response was discouraging and needs further clarification.  Our own Standing Committee and Diocesan Council have previously planned a joint retreat for mid-May, and this may be the place where a direction will begin to emerge for consideration by the Diocesan Convention in the autumn.

Unfortunately, it now appears that a divorce may be unavoidable.  One of the more insightful speeches here at Camp Allen came from Bishop Christopher Epting, our Ecumenical Officer, who was one of the additional special delegates to the Primates Meeting in Tanzania in February.  There he suggested that the Communion ought to take careful note of three principles that guide our ecumenical conversations:

- we are not willing to place the best of our tradition against the worst of another - because we have learned how destructive that can be for dialogue and eventual communion;

- we have learned to honor difference and to look for common ground where it can be found;

- we have learned to respect one another and to assume that - even in disagreement - both partners are seeking to be faithful to God in their own context. Never in ecumenical conversations do we describe ourselves (as we have heard here) as being of ‘two faiths.’ We share one Christian faith!

These norms may prove to be a helpful guide for how we might relate to one another in all this.

It was difficult to follow the arguments in the House of Bishops that the Episcopal Church has an absolute right to define itself, even if it means differentiating from the rest of the Anglican Communion. I hope to be able to contribute modestly to that argument, since I have been named to the House of Bishops Theology Committee.  We have been charged with developing a Study Guide to the Communiqué and the Covenant process for use throughout the Episcopal Church by the beginning of summer.

The majority of the House of Bishops is very anxious to protect the property claims of the Episcopal Church.  There seems to be no willingness to suspend civil litigation, as the Communiqué called for, but, to the contrary, the resolve to pursue such litigation is strengthening.  I for one have no interest in fighting a spiritual battle on these grounds, but, consistent with church law, I continue to believe that provision needs to be made for those congregations and clergy whose consciences will permit them to go no farther.  Here the work our task force on communion did last year may yet prove to be a useful foundation.

We are in high Lent and about to remember those decisive events of Jesus’ last week, in obedience to the Father, for the salvation of all.  I do not intend to lose sight of this primary work of the Gospel, and I ask you to exercise great care as well to keep these temporal matters out of the pulpit.  It seems ironic that we have finished our work here on the feast day of the non-juring Thomas Ken; his life seems especially appropriate for reflection at the conclusion of this difficult and painful meeting, but it is the doxology for which he is chiefly remembered.  The praise of God remains all of our chief business as well.

Yours faithfully,
+Jeffrey Steenson


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Comments:

Now that is what I’m talkin’ about!

To Matt K., this is what I mean by hearing from a bishop who is of a like mind with +Iker but who was actually present at the HOB meeting.  His reflections carry much more weight because he actually went into the den and still came out unscathed.

Bravo, bishop!

[1] Posted by Vintner on 03-23-2007 at 03:37 PM • top

Compare this one to ++Parsley’s.

What still puzzles and disappoints me is Howe’s sponsorship of a resolution calling for a meeting with the AOC and standing committee. This gentleman sees it for what it is, a desire for a friendlier forum where a better deal can be cut.  ++Howe should not want a better deal to be cut.  He is doing the revisionists bidding by asking for such a meeting.

[2] Posted by Going Home on 03-23-2007 at 03:47 PM • top

We have been charged with developing a Study Guide to the Communiqué and the Covenant process for use throughout the Episcopal Church by the beginning of summer.

I sincerely hope +Steenson can have substantial input to this Guide, but in the past, “Study Guides” on various issues have been uniformly propaganda pieces from the Left using the most sophisticated PR techniques available to wear down the conviction of ordinary congregants.  (ELCA has also played this game, and I believe PCUSA has, too.)

I hope that AmericanAnglican (the AAC) is also preparing a “Study Guide” ...

[3] Posted by Craig Goodrich on 03-23-2007 at 03:47 PM • top

Re “There he suggested that the Communion ought to take careful note of three principles that guide our ecumenical conversations”

Bishop Epting and the HOB ought to take equally careful note that there is no jurisdictional exclusivity in ecumenical relationships.  They should be careful what they wish for.  They are about to get ecumenical relationships with the vast bulk of the Anglican Communion.

[4] Posted by wildfire on 03-23-2007 at 03:54 PM • top

What study guides have been prepared before? Are they distributed to parishes or just clergy? I’ve missed this. If it’s going to be one-sided, someone needs to get the orthodox view out there.

[5] Posted by oscewicee on 03-23-2007 at 04:00 PM • top

In such a time as this, I am very thankful to be a priest serving in the Diocese of the Rio Grande.

[6] Posted by Bob Maxwell+ on 03-23-2007 at 04:12 PM • top

Why is it that anyone thinks they can choose their own bishop or primate if they are in a hierarchial church.  If you are an Episcopalian you are under a chain of authoriety from the pew, to priest, bishops, PB, COE and ABC.  Either they are in the apostolic succession or not.  If they are not fit to be subject to then you need to leave and go to a church that is correct or else the AC needs to throw them out.  All this alternate oversight seems to me to be another way of not dealing with the apostacy of the whole Anglican church.  There are islands of orthodox people, priest, bishops and provinces but they need to get lined up in order and not be in some jerry- rigged side chain or parallel non anglican or non scriptural contrivance.  You sound like a bunch of baptist!  IMHO

[7] Posted by PROPHET MICAIAH on 03-23-2007 at 05:55 PM • top

Hey, take a time out prophet boy.  I got “saved” as a Baptist and right now a Baptist (American Baptist) with a fetish for vestments sounds pretty darn good.  If anyone can give me a referral to such a creature, please let me know.

[8] Posted by ama-anglican on 03-23-2007 at 06:04 PM • top

You go, Prophet Micaiah:  the problem arises under obedience, not theology.  For example I can respect and love Matt+ even though I find some of his theology extreme.  If he were my priest I would find a way to obey. On the other hand, GBLT politics cares not for either obedience.  Our problems arises because the politicians’ attitude (both sides) is “damn the consequences, we know what’s Right.”  Obedience and communion die under Right.

[9] Posted by terebinth on 03-23-2007 at 06:08 PM • top

Prophet & terebinth:

When the Hierarchy is in a state of apostasy then you must and should reject them. Your first and foremost duty is to God. It says that in the Decalogue, Jesus said it, and the apostles in the epistles said it. I worship God not the Episcopal Church.

I will pray that you will be able to tell the difference.

[10] Posted by Marlin on 03-23-2007 at 06:58 PM • top

“-we have learned to respect one another and to assume that - even in disagreement - both partners are seeking to be faithful to God in their own context. Never in ecumenical conversations do we describe ourselves (as we have heard here) as being of ‘two faiths.’ We share one Christian faith!”

So it doesn’t matter what you believe, we are all “just” Christian?

ARRRRRRRRRRGH!

[11] Posted by Anglican Paplist on 03-23-2007 at 07:03 PM • top

MICAIAH wrote:

Why is it that anyone thinks they can choose their own bishop or primate if they are in a hierarchial church.  If you are an Episcopalian you are under a chain of authoriety from the pew, to priest, bishops, PB, COE and ABC.

What makes you think that “The Episcopal Church®” is a “hierarchial church?” The “bishops” contend that they have no authority to do (or not to do) anything, but must always defer to the Deputies. Oh, I guess they do have the “authority” to tell the Archbishop of Canterbury to go to Hell.

Oh, that’s right. “Words mean what we say they mean.” Thank you Lewis Carroll; but he knew he was writing fantasy.

[12] Posted by Ken Peck on 03-23-2007 at 07:11 PM • top

There is another, much more blunt, piece by +Steenson dated today and posted on VOL and Anglican Mainstream.  He calls TEC a “de facto Integrity organization” and says the Pastoral Council will go forward, although probably with only three members.  Does anyone know where this came from?

[13] Posted by wildfire on 03-23-2007 at 08:46 PM • top

Marlin, you make my point.  Since they are apostate you are required to reject them, but the only way I know that you can do that is to get out and under orthodox authoriety somewhere else.  If you stay in you don’t have the option of picking and choosing who will be your bishop, primate, ABC, etc.  It is a package deal.  Baptist don’t have that problem.  They hive off and hop churches as needed.  I appreciate the prayers anyhow.  It is frightening to have terebinth agree with me sort of.

[14] Posted by PROPHET MICAIAH on 03-23-2007 at 09:28 PM • top

Marlin & A. Papist:  Just as God is One in communion of 3, so are we all.  Communion requires different individuals, in a very special and unique relationship: the Trinity.  So also our communon requires both separateness and togetherness.  What so often is missing from these theological based comments is the separateness; what so often is missing from the political based comments is the togetherness.  God will provide.

[15] Posted by terebinth on 03-23-2007 at 09:36 PM • top

I have heard a lot of comments about Bishop Howe and his resolution.
I would submit that there may be an alternative explanation to what seems to be that he has somehow sold out or aided the liberal cause by asking for the ABC to meet with the HOB. Howe was there and could hear what the consensus was which is that the rest of the communion seemed to be ignorant of TEC’s polity and that the Primatial Vicar, as stated by the Communiqué, needed to be nipped in the bud now, before it was established. Prior to the meeting everyone assumed there would be the expected stonewalling till September when some last minute fudge might get TEC to Lambeth.
They still had to face the real possibility that the fudge would be rejected outright and having an alternative structure in place to supplant TEC looked especially dangerous. The resolutions then became mandatory. After buying into this idea the Bishops of course as they are wont became quite gung-ho about the whole thing.
The purpose of all of course is to continue the strategy of talking past the primates and not directly addressing the issues.

A smart conservative Bishop at this point might say to himself that maybe this desire for clarity is, shall we say, good. Why not encourage all in their idea that the world is ignorant of our polity and needs it explained to them. Demand a meeting with the ABC! The ABC is now left with no choice but to respond to this. Without the demand for a meeting the ABC could have easily continued to talk past the HOB and proceed with the Pastoral scheme while considering the HOB resolutions. The Primatial vicar scheme would never have been fully in place by September anyway, it’s meant to care for orthodox while the Anglican Covenant is worked out not to be an emergency rescue mission.

The supreme irony of all this is that, after Susan Russell’s letters especially, there is little doubt as to whether there is anyone who isn’t familiar with TEC’s polity, especially the primates. If they weren’t why would they have asked the GC to make a statement in the first place? There is nothing in the Communiqué that violates the polity of TEC, although there is much that a Bishop might say violates his prerogatives. The Canons do not for the most part say what a Bishop must or must not do, they allow or disallow. Anything else is up to the discretion of the Bishop. When a Bishop denies the ability to do something which is not disallowed it is for one reason only, he doesn’t wish to do it and does not wish to admit so. The Communiqué asks that the HOB allow some things which are not disallowed and disallow some things which are allowed. The Communiqué asks that the HOB allow for the Pastoral scheme by delegating their authority. The authority is theirs to do with as they wish, they are allowed to delegate it, they do not wish to. The Communiqué asks that they disallow gay bishops and same sex blessings, again there is nothing in the canons which require that these things be done, they just do not wish to stop.

The ABC is now required to either meet with the HOB and point out this simple fact to them or refuse to meet on the grounds that it is already well known. In either case the question of TEC’s polity will be out of the equation and off the table as an excuse when the HOB deals with their real problems in September.

[16] Posted by Rocks on 03-23-2007 at 11:45 PM • top

Wow, thanks Bishop Epting for reminding us about the three guidelines:
1 - we are not willing to place the best of our tradition against the worst of another (because we have learned how destructive that can be for dialogue and eventual communion);
2 - we have learned to honor difference and to look for common ground where it can be found;
3 - we have learned to respect one another and to assume that - even in disagreement - both partners are seeking to be faithful to God in their own context. Never in ecumenical conversations do we describe ourselves (as we have heard here) as being of ‘two faiths.’ We share one Christian faith!

And also for coming right out to suggest:
These norms may prove to be a helpful guide for how we might relate to one another in all this.

Amen.  May these three guidelines empower and inform the Windsor Bishops and all of the rest of us in TEC.  Is it already looking too late for the rest of the communion?  Well, the jury is still out on Canada, CoE, Brazil, South Africa, New Zealand, Scotland, ...?

Will not most conservative realignment folks focus on the first sentence from Bishop Epting, about a split looking inevitable?

And ignore the remainder of his quoted remarks?

If Windsor and the process it is alleged to have identified had more carefully observed the three guidelines for relating across faith differences?

If the several audiences reading Windsor had glossed over its hamartias and focused instead on the best that remained per these three guidelines?

Maybe, maybe, maybe, maybe we would see a less heated and fractious conversation?

Still.  Do the three guidelines make any sense inside the realignment frames?  Those working guidelines for Anglican conservative realignment appear to be more like:
(1) always put the best of a conservative or evangelical realignment approach, next to the worst of every other possible approach;
(2)Identify differences in order to quickly judge them, and understand all important differences as occasions of choosing between good and bad, right and wrong, etc. It is the gaps that matter, and most perceptions of commonality across key church life differences - especially when it comes to sex and bodily life - are promptings to heresy and/or heterodoxy;
(3)Only one partner - the conservative or evangelical realignment one - in any possible church life conversation is faithful.

The other partner(s) are probably or most certainly:
unfaithful,
nasty,
brutish,
neo-pagan,
worse than pagan (Hat tip to Moot),
libertine,
deluded,
demon-possessed (personal communication in the ER one night when a conservative patient over heard a nurse asking about my partner and my weekend),

Anything Goes Hedonists,
lower than dogs (Akinola of Nigeria),
secular and humanist,
anti-Christian,
Unitarians in Anglican clothing,
non-Christians,
liars,
fraudsters,
moderately to highly dangerous people,
overly litigious-disordered,

people I can work with if I absolutely must for the time being to get a paycheck but also people I would never ever want to have to worship with,

people who better not ever be reported to have spoken with any of my children,

people who ...

I am certain that other realignment posters will assist us to fill in all the possible remaining negative blanks.

Once all the liberals or progressives have been kicked out of realigned parishes, can we return to Eptings three guidelines for conversations across our differences?  In interfaith forums?

[17] Posted by drdanfee on 03-24-2007 at 11:56 AM • top

drdanfee, very smug here, but I don’t see any indication that you really care. Let’s see, the folks on the other side are:

homophobes
bigots
rednecks
ignorant
mean-spirited
judgmental
backwards

oh, fill in your own blanks,as I am sure you have on many occasions. Pot or kettle?

[18] Posted by oscewicee on 03-24-2007 at 12:22 PM • top

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