Thread: Purgatory: "A Church Divided": Aftermath of Virginia Anglican/Episcopal Battle Board: Limbo / Ship of Fools.


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Posted by Mockingale (# 16599) on :
 
Hey guys,

As I was driving home from work last night, I heard the following piece on the radio about the aftermath of the fight between the Episcopal Diocese of Virginia and several parishes that broke away to the "continuing Anglican" movement over church property.

There are two interesting questions that the piece raised. First, Most Rev. Jefferts-Schori stated that churches that have no Episcopal parish to fill them may be leased or sold to Baptists or Methodists or other religious groups, but categorically not to any Anglican parish; her rationale for this, which I've never heard before but has a certain logic, is that she will not allow a diocese to "set up" any organization which seeks to harm or destroy the (Episcopal) Church.

Second, someone in the piece, I believe the diocesan bishop of Virginia, states that he guesses that "God is on everyone's side," rather uncomfortably to the question about whether the dispute between Episcopalians and Anglicans reflects a good example of Christian behavior. Is this a copout? Do you think that it might please God for both the Episcopal Church and the Anglican Church to exist?

[ 20. September 2012, 13:27: Message edited by: Barnabas62 ]
 
Posted by Mockingale (# 16599) on :
 
Sorry, the piece is here: A Church Divided
 
Posted by gorpo (# 17025) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mockingale:


There are two interesting questions that the piece raised. First, Most Rev. Jefferts-Schori stated that churches that have no Episcopal parish to fill them may be leased or sold to Baptists or Methodists or other religious groups, but categorically not to any Anglican parish; her rationale for this, which I've never heard before but has a certain logic, is that she will not allow a diocese to "set up" any organization which seeks to harm or destroy the (Episcopal) Church.

[/QB]

Makes me wonder if the destiny of all former EPCUSA buildings is to become mosques or pentecostal churches, then. [Roll Eyes] What an evil woman TEC has as their leader, I feel sorry for the 0,6% of the USA population that remains episcopalian. [Roll Eyes] She rather have her sheep becoming atheists or muslims then see them joining another church that is in full communion with the Anglican Communion.
 
Posted by Zach82 (# 3208) on :
 
You might feel sorry for us, gorpo, but you've clearly given little thought to how we might feel about schismatic priests preaching about how evil our primate is in our own churches.
 
Posted by CorgiGreta (# 443) on :
 
There's no need to waste your feelings of sorrow on me. Wild horses couldn't drag me out of TEC. I have been an Episcopalian for more than a handful of decades, and I am as devoted a member today as I have ever been.

"Evil woman"? Please!
 
Posted by Alogon (# 5513) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mockingale:
her rationale for this, which I've never heard before but has a certain logic, is that she will not allow a diocese to "set up" any organization which seeks to harm or destroy the (Episcopal) Church.

Boy, would William Stringfellow (of blessed memory) have a field day with that sentiment-- as much as he was an early advocate of women's ordination and would have rejoiced to see a female presiding bishop. Ultimately, institutions are interested in self-preservation and will stop at nothing to serve that end.

The best rationale I can see for property to remain with the diocese is that there's no guarantee that a group wishing to sever it independently has churchly intentions at all. A small parish could conceivably be infiltrated by developers wishing to tear the building down and put luxury apartments in its place. Professor Gaard at the University of Wisconsin (also a perpetual deacon) wrote a novel years ago portraying how something like that could happen.

But the same discrimination was shown by a nearby diocesan in the case of an exquisite little church in a small town not far from here, built according to the principles of the Cambridge Camden Society. It simply closed, perhaps partly due to ineffective clerical leadership. After some time, an appreciative continuing Anglican group expressed interest in buying it. The bishop not only angrily rejected the offer out of hand but threatened legal action if they were to approach him again. The building was sold to a congregation of holy rollers who must have proceeded immediately to gut it out of all recognition. That's the scorched-earth policy of a sore loser in my book.

I doubt that the continuing Anglican movement is, or at least should be, much of a threat. IMHO, those I know best could have continued in the Episcopal Church happily had not their own leaders and the bishop both been spoiling for a fight. They're leaving for the wrong reasons and will appeal to an even smaller niche market than TEC does.
 
Posted by Beeswax Altar (# 11644) on :
 
I have mixed emotions about this. TEC rightly fought for the right of parishioners who wanted to remain in TEC to stay in their churches. On the other hand, if the entire church wanted to leave TEC, TEC should have sold their buildings to them. Not doing so just seems pointless and vindictive.

KJS isn't evil. I have nothing against her as a person. As a PB, she's had tough choices to make and none of them were easy.

Unfortunately, I believe the churchmanship represented by KJS is slowly killing TEC. Most priests and bishops like KJS are good and well meaning people. However, TEC is in decline and they have misidentified the problem. Their cure for a problem TEC doesn't really have will only kill us faster.

Sadly, I worry that the Anglican parishes will survive TEC.
 
Posted by gorpo (# 17025) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Zach82:
You might feel sorry for us, gorpo, but you've clearly given little thought to how we might feel about schismatic priests preaching about how evil our primate is in our own churches.

Surely, if that was "your own church" there would be enough episcopalians to fill the pews. We are not talking about a divided congregation, with 50% wanting to stay with TEC and 50% wanting to go out... We“re talking about a whole community that doesn“t want to be in TEC anymore, with no TEC members left wanting to remain in the building, so they have to SELL the building.

And even if the church has to sell the building, why not sell it to the people who worshipped in there for years and contributed to build and maintain it? The fact that the church wants to sell it to ANYONE but the anglicans says something. Instead of blessing and wishing well those who go away, the primate wants revenge. Certainly, not a very christian way of dealing with things.

And as for the anglicans being schismatic - they are in communion with everyone else in the Anglican Communion, and they are professing the historic faith of the One Catholic Church.

Episcopalians, on the other hand, are on frozen relations with 80% of the anglican communion, and are DEAD as it comes to ecumenical relations with the Catholic Church, the Eastern Orthodox Church, and evangelical forms of protestantism (namely, more then 90% of global christianity). It has turned its back on the anglican communion and the whole christianity worldwide...
 
Posted by Zach82 (# 3208) on :
 
You and your fellows are not exactly wishing us well, gorpo, so save the sermons about the "Christian way of doing things." Indeed, it is precisely the sort of language you are using that makes it a bad idea to sell to the schismatics. Why sell to people that will only preach against us?

So long as we believe the Episcopal Church is the Church of God, as I do, then we have an obligation to do the best we can by her. And you don't rent to a tenant that goes about calling your mother a trollop.

Zach

[ 12. April 2012, 03:26: Message edited by: Zach82 ]
 
Posted by The Silent Acolyte (# 1158) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mockingale:
Do you think that it might please God for both the Episcopal Church and the Anglican Church to exist?

Of course not. Schism is a sin.
 
Posted by PataLeBon (# 5452) on :
 
KJS had/has the added problem of whole dioceses leaving as well as individual churches. Whether or not a one size fits all rule should have been put into place is what is of concern. I think probably not, but obviously YMMV.

As far as TEC being out of communion with the rest of the church, I'm not always so sure about that. Where do you get an 80% figure from??

As far as churchmanship, what is KJS promoting? We seem to be going up the candle here in this very low diocese. We also seem to be spending more and more time in prayer and fellowship with members from across the divide. I don't think either of those two things are bad, per se...
 
Posted by Zach82 (# 3208) on :
 
I go to a Roman Catholic seminary, and I know for a fact that gorpo's screed the Episcopal Church being "DEAD as it comes to ecumenical relations with the Catholic Church" is simply false. Certain Church leaders might have it out for us, but the rank and file, clergy and laity alike, continue to dialogue with us.
 
Posted by Beeswax Altar (# 11644) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by PataLeBon:
KJS had/has the added problem of whole dioceses leaving as well as individual churches. Whether or not a one size fits all rule should have been put into place is what is of concern. I think probably not, but obviously YMMV.

As far as TEC being out of communion with the rest of the church, I'm not always so sure about that. Where do you get an 80% figure from??

As far as churchmanship, what is KJS promoting? We seem to be going up the candle here in this very low diocese. We also seem to be spending more and more time in prayer and fellowship with members from across the divide. I don't think either of those two things are bad, per se...

What churchmanship? KJS promotes a form of broad churchmanship not seen since the Hanoverian church. I only hope we see the revivals that happened in the 19th century. The Anglican splinter groups could become our Methodists.
 
Posted by ToujoursDan (# 10578) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Beeswax Altar:

Unfortunately, I believe the churchmanship represented by KJS is slowly killing TEC. Most priests and bishops like KJS are good and well meaning people. However, TEC is in decline and they have misidentified the problem. Their cure for a problem TEC doesn't really have will only kill us faster.

Sadly, I worry that the Anglican parishes will survive TEC.

[Confused]

There isn't anything that is happening in TEC that isn't happening in every mainline Protestant denomination and (if it wasn't for immigration) the Roman Catholic Church.

There are identical patterns of declining birthrates, ageing congregations, apathetic younger people and shrinking membership across Christian denominations with all kinds of different leaders and polities. It's even started to affect conservative evangelical denominations like the Lutheran Church Missouri Synod and Southern Baptist Convention.

I can't think of any problem in the TEC that began with her tenure. The structures and systems that have caused our decline were long in place before she converted from Catholicism.

Seems a bit strange to blame her or her churchmanship for a demographic shift that has affected religious groups of all kinds of churchmanships.
 
Posted by PD (# 12436) on :
 
I do wish folks would not call the ACNA/CANA crowd continuing Anglicans. The defining issues for the Continuers were the 1928 BCP and the Ordination of Women, neither of which are of any practical interest to Bishop Duncan's crowd. They have already accepted the major tenants of liberalism, so I do not see why they have such a beef with TEC. They differ only in degree not kind!

PD
 
Posted by Alogon (# 5513) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by PD:
They have already accepted the major tenants of liberalism, so I do not see why they have such a beef with TEC. They differ only in degree not kind!

PD

We can deduce by a process of elimination that it's all about da gayz.
 
Posted by PD (# 12436) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by ToujoursDan:

I can't think of any problem in the TEC that began with her tenure. The structures and systems that have caused our decline were long in place before she converted from Catholicism.

Seems a bit strange to blame her or her churchmanship for a demographic shift that has affected religious groups of all kinds of churchmanships.

In some respects, the absolute worst thing anyone can say about +KJS is that she is a sympthom, not the cause, of TEC's decline.

The liberalization of the denomination and the demographic that supports it took place a generation, or more, before she was ordained. Indeed, you could say that PECUSA emerged as a relatively liberal denomination c.1900 with the decline of the old Evangelicals, and as "systemically" liberal in late 1960s and early 1970s. Basically, most of the Theological traditionalists were out of there by 2000, and I expect most of the social conservatives will be gone by 2015.

PD
 
Posted by Fr Weber (# 13472) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by PD:
I do wish folks would not call the ACNA/CANA crowd continuing Anglicans. The defining issues for the Continuers were the 1928 BCP and the Ordination of Women, neither of which are of any practical interest to Bishop Duncan's crowd. They have already accepted the major tenants of liberalism, so I do not see why they have such a beef with TEC. They differ only in degree not kind!

PD

For many of them, their problems with TEC would be solved if only the clock could be turned back to 5 minutes before +Robinson's election.

Which makes Alogon pretty much right.
 
Posted by Zach82 (# 3208) on :
 
quote:
In some respects, the absolute worst thing anyone can say about +KJS is that she is a sympthom, not the cause, of TEC's decline.

The liberalization of the denomination and the demographic that supports it took place a generation, or more, before she was ordained. Indeed, you could say that PECUSA emerged as a relatively liberal denomination c.1900 with the decline of the old Evangelicals, and as "systemically" liberal in late 1960s and early 1970s. Basically, most of the Theological traditionalists were out of there by 2000, and I expect most of the social conservatives will be gone by 2015.

TEC: finally diagnosed to death in 2015. [Roll Eyes]
 
Posted by gorpo (# 17025) on :
 
quote:
There are identical patterns of declining birthrates, ageing congregations, apathetic younger people and shrinking membership across Christian denominations with all kinds of different leaders and polities. It's even started to affect conservative evangelical denominations like the Lutheran Church Missouri Synod and Southern Baptist Convention.
Of course the trends of decline exist in every denomination that is mainly white/european because that demographic group tends to have a lower birth rate, which means there are more people dying then getting batpized. But when less then 50% of the kids who are confirmed remain church members in adulthood, and the denomination strongly believes that evangelization is anti-ethical, you can“t blame demographic trends alone for the decline. Indeed, the Missory Synod and the Baptist Convention are also declining, but nothing like TEC or even ELCA (who lost nearly 6% of its membership last year alone). TEC went from 3.6 million members in the 70“s to just 1.9 million as of last year. ELCA lost more then a million since the late 80“s and the rate of delcine is just getting bigger every year. Of course it“s not the case of the people getting old and dying and not enough children being born - it“s adult people who freely decide to leave which is causing the decline.

quote:
I can't think of any problem in the TEC that began with her tenure. The structures and systems that have caused our decline were long in place before she converted from Catholicism.

Seems a bit strange to blame her or her churchmanship for a demographic shift that has affected religious groups of all kinds of churchmanships. [/QB]

Me neither. I don“t blame her for the falling apart of the denomination. I just blamed her for the evilness of not letting people who left her church to remain worshipping in the buildings they have build and mantained with their own money.

Let“s no pretend here the problem is "schism". American christianity itself is a collection of thousands of protestant denominations, one more doesn“t make any difference at all for the "unity of the Church of Christ". The denomination itself is not the "Church Of Christ". The Church of Christ are the people inside of the denominations, not the burocratic hierarchy that we call the "denomination".

Let“s not forget anglicanism itself is a schism from the Catholic Church.
 
Posted by Beeswax Altar (# 11644) on :
 
quote:
originally posted by PD:
In some respects, the absolute worst thing anyone can say about +KJS is that she is a sympthom, not the cause, of TEC's decline.

A PB with a churchmanship such as hers is a symptom of the decline of TEC. +KJS is not responsible for the decline. If not +KJS then TEC would have another PB with the same churchmanship. I really don't have anything against Bishop Schorri as a person. What I have against her as a bishop, I will likely have against her successor who might also be a good and well meaning person.
 
Posted by Zach82 (# 3208) on :
 
We're evil for not giving them churches, Gorpo? We don't owe them squat.
 
Posted by Mary Marriott (# 16938) on :
 
A misapprehension in this thread.


TEC IS the only 'Anglican Church' in the US. They happen to use the synonym 'Episcopal' - like Scotland and other countries, rather than 'Anglican'.

The ministers and parts of congregations and other organisations calling themselves 'Anglican' are not Anglican,(i.e. not in Communion with Canterbury).They ARE trying to subvert TEC, and overthrown TEC's witness to equality.

They could have left and set up their breakaway meetings in public halls etc., but have deliberately chosen to seek to steal the property of TEC.

The Presiding Bishop has stood firm on this. Why oh why would she allow her denomination to be undermined in this manner ?

I have been encouraged by TEC's witness to a renewed Gospel. Few Anglican or Episcopal churches have this effect on me !

[ 13. April 2012, 01:31: Message edited by: Mary Marriott ]
 
Posted by SeraphimSarov (# 4335) on :
 
If it was the "witness to a renewed Gospel" , it would be prospering. It is dying as previous posters have pointed out
 
Posted by Fr Weber (# 13472) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mary Marriott:
A misapprehension in this thread.


TEC IS the only 'Anglican Church' in the US. They happen to use the synonym 'Episcopal' - like Scotland and other countries, rather than 'Anglican'.

The ministers and parts of congregations and other organisations calling themselves 'Anglican' are not Anglican,(i.e. not in Communion with Canterbury).They ARE trying to subvert TEC, and overthrown TEC's witness to equality.

They could have left and set up their breakaway meetings in public halls etc., but have deliberately chosen to seek to steal the property of TEC.

The Presiding Bishop has stood firm on this. Why oh why would she allow her denomination to be undermined in this manner ?

I have been encouraged by TEC's witness to a renewed Gospel. Few Anglican or Episcopal churches have this effect on me !

Surely "Anglican" refers to a religious tradition and orientation as much as (if not more than) a tenuous state of communion with Canterbury.

There are, by the way, continuing Anglicans on this board. Generally speaking, we try to play nice, and would appreciate that the favor be returned.
 
Posted by The Silent Acolyte (# 1158) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by PD:
Basically, most of the Theological traditionalists were out of there by 2000...

Not so fast there, buster. When I was going to my little Roman Catholic Schoolhouse, I was regularly accused by my fellow seminarians of being the most orthodox student in the class. I'm pretty typical for my parish and my parish is not alone.
quote:
Originally posted by Zach82:
I go to a Roman Catholic seminary, and I know for a fact that gorpo's screed the Episcopal Church being "DEAD as it comes to ecumenical relations with the Catholic Church" is simply false. Certain Church leaders might have it out for us, but the rank and file, clergy and laity alike, continue to dialogue with us.

Except for that most heinously verbed noun, I agree with Zach82: for many RCs of my acquaintance just talking with an Episcopalian gives them hope for their own church. Similarly, even Orthodox speak to me in envious wonder, "You are actually talking about women and gays! We can't even have the conversation!"
 
Posted by Sir Pellinore (ret'd) (# 12163) on :
 
Your thoroughly attested orthodoxy must give you great comfort in these difficult times, TSA.

Many would give their eye teeth for such certitude.
 
Posted by PataLeBon (# 5452) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Beeswax Altar:
quote:
originally posted by PD:
In some respects, the absolute worst thing anyone can say about +KJS is that she is a sympthom, not the cause, of TEC's decline.

A PB with a churchmanship such as hers is a symptom of the decline of TEC. +KJS is not responsible for the decline. If not +KJS then TEC would have another PB with the same churchmanship. I really don't have anything against Bishop Schorri as a person. What I have against her as a bishop, I will likely have against her successor who might also be a good and well meaning person.
Again I'm going to ask for your definition of "churchmanship". It's hard to understand what you are talking about without it. Are we talking about liturgy or theology? Can you give me an example?
 
Posted by sonata3 (# 13653) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by gorpo:

Episcopalians, on the other hand, are on frozen relations with 80% of the anglican communion, and are DEAD as it comes to ecumenical relations with the Catholic Church, the Eastern Orthodox Church, and evangelical forms of protestantism (namely, more then 90% of global christianity). It has turned its back on the anglican communion and the whole christianity worldwide...

gorpo, I think your final phrase needs to be reconsidered. On the issue of the ordination of non-celibate gays - clearly the main factor in the Virginia schism - TEC is on the same side of this issue as the Old Catholics, many of the continental Lutheran churches, and some of the continental Reformed churches; in the US, ELCA and the Presbyterian Church. Although the Moravian Church in North AMerica continues to discuss these issues, they remain in full communion with both ELCA and TEC. It has hardly turned its back on "the whole Christianity worlswide." The Anglican/Episcopal churches in New Zealand, Scotland, and Canada are, I believe, equally liberal on this issue.
 
Posted by CL (# 16145) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Zach82:
We're evil for not giving them churches, Gorpo? We don't owe them squat.

Maybe not but being purposely vindictive is another matter altogether, a case in point being the treatment of Matt Kennedy and his parish - they offered to purchase their church at full market value; not only were they refused, the building was instead sold cut price to Muslims and is now a mosque.
 
Posted by Zach82 (# 3208) on :
 
quote:
Maybe not but being purposely vindictive is another matter altogether, a case in point being the treatment of Matt Kennedy and his parish - they offered to purchase their church at full market value; not only were they refused, the building was instead sold cut price to Muslims and is now a mosque.
These people are going about calling themselves the legitimate Anglican Church of North America. It is their stated purpose to replace the Episcopal Church. Letting them continue on in these churches sure seems, to me, just a bad strategic decision. People will get the idea that they are a legitimate continuation of the former Episcopal parishes, and Lord knows that's how they present themselves.

It's not about revenge, though it must be flattering to the schismatics to imagine it must be so. It's only about what is best for the Episcopal Church.

Zach

[ 13. April 2012, 12:08: Message edited by: Zach82 ]
 
Posted by Beeswax Altar (# 11644) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by PataLeBon:
quote:
Originally posted by Beeswax Altar:
quote:
originally posted by PD:
In some respects, the absolute worst thing anyone can say about +KJS is that she is a sympthom, not the cause, of TEC's decline.

A PB with a churchmanship such as hers is a symptom of the decline of TEC. +KJS is not responsible for the decline. If not +KJS then TEC would have another PB with the same churchmanship. I really don't have anything against Bishop Schorri as a person. What I have against her as a bishop, I will likely have against her successor who might also be a good and well meaning person.
Again I'm going to ask for your definition of "churchmanship". It's hard to understand what you are talking about without it. Are we talking about liturgy or theology? Can you give me an example?
Both

TEC is so focused on being inclusive of everybody and being seen as welcoming we are neglecting to maintain anything very many people want to be included in or welcomed into in the first place. Some parishes do liturgy well. Most are too concerned with neither being Anglo-Catholic because Anglo-Catholic is old fashioned and fussy nor Evangelical which is too modern and pushy (don't want to be too much like a megachurch). In taking the middle ground between the two, we manage to embrace the strengths of neither.

Our theology of the sacraments is an incoherent muddle aimed primarily at not offending anybody but those with a traditional view of the sacraments. Baptism is full initiation into the life of the Church. What does that mean? I'm not sure we know. Are there any negative impacts for not being baptized? In the eyes of The Episcopal Church, a person who had water splashed on their foreheads as a child is really no different from one who hasn't. Confirmation? We don't have a clue. Does the confirmand receive the Holy Spirit at Confirmation? Of course not that happens at Baptism though if pushed, most of us will say a person doesn't have to be baptized to receive the Holy Spirit because we might hurt and offend the unbaptized by telling them they haven't received the Holy Spirit. Is Confirmation necessary to affirm our faith? Nope. In our view of Baptism, faith isn't really necessary. At least you have to be baptized to receive the Body and Blood of Christ, right? Technically, you do but we are working to change all that. Got to keep up with the times. Don't want to offend anybody by not welcoming them to the table. Our theology of the Eucharist is almost identical to our theology of coffee hour. I could keep going.

Theologically, our main focus seems to be about making Christianity about leftish (radical enough that you can feel good about yourself for having the opinions but not so radical as to demand major change in your own life) politics. A good sermon is one short and makes the congregation feel good about being politically progressive. Why? People doing the theology agree more with the Green Party Platform than they do with the Nicene Creed. All that stuff in the Nicene Creed is too exclusive and archaic. Nobody believes still believes that stuff. So say the priests over the age of 55 who attend clergy gatherings. Had they even a touch of awareness they would notice the large number of priest under the age of 40 who disagreed with them.

TEC is dying. Our leaders want to double down on what we've been doing. We need more theological innovation. We must strive to create an even more welcoming church experience where nobody but traditional Christians and Republicans could possibly be offended. The question our leaders aren't addressing is why anybody should care if we welcome and include them in the first place.

And before anybody asks, no, this has nothing to do with Gene Robinson. Gay and lesbian Episcopalians who hold orthodox beliefs and prefer traditional liturgy can have a hard time in most places. The few conservatives remaining in TEC reject them because they are gay. Liberals are offended at the audacity some gays and lesbians will not join them in supporting every theological or liturgical innovation anybody dreams up. How dare you support the orthodox and traditional view of anything?! We welcomed and included you!!! Bunch of ingrates. Think I'm exaggerating. I've watched it happen with my own eyes. I've listened to my gay and lesbian colleagues share their experiences of it happening.

Well enough inarticulate rambling on my part. Hard to explain what I mean in a single, concise post. I'll try to elaborate if you like.
 
Posted by ToujoursDan (# 10578) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by SeraphimSarov:
If it was the "witness to a renewed Gospel" , it would be prospering. It is dying as previous posters have pointed out

In many ways it is prospering. A church where approx. 30% of the membership grew up in other traditions and made a conscious decision to join it, must have something compelling to offer, otherwise this wouldn't be occurring.

It's just not enough to make up for the falling birthrate amongst the educated, mostly White base that makes up 80% of TEC's membership.

[ 13. April 2012, 12:57: Message edited by: ToujoursDan ]
 
Posted by SeraphimSarov (# 4335) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by ToujoursDan:
quote:
Originally posted by SeraphimSarov:
If it was the "witness to a renewed Gospel" , it would be prospering. It is dying as previous posters have pointed out

In many ways it is prospering. A church where approx. 30% of the membership grew up in other traditions and made a conscious decision to join it, must have something compelling to offer, otherwise this wouldn't be occurring.

It's just not enough to make up for the falling birthrate amongst the educated, mostly White base that makes up 80% of TEC's membership.

Something "compelling "? Or a convenient , temporary refuge. Any port in a storm
 
Posted by ToujoursDan (# 10578) on :
 
quote:
Theologically, our main focus seems to be about making Christianity about leftish (radical enough that you can feel good about yourself for having the opinions but not so radical as to demand major change in your own life) politics. A good sermon is one short and makes the congregation feel good about being politically progressive. Why? People doing the theology agree more with the Green Party Platform than they do with the Nicene Creed. All that stuff in the Nicene Creed is too exclusive and archaic. Nobody believes still believes that stuff. So say the priests over the age of 55 who attend clergy gatherings. Had they even a touch of awareness they would notice the large number of priest under the age of 40 who disagreed with them.

TEC is dying. Our leaders want to double down on what we've been doing. We need more theological innovation. We must strive to create an even more welcoming church experience where nobody but traditional Christians and Republicans could possibly be offended. The question our leaders aren't addressing is why anybody should care if we welcome and include them in the first place.

But walk into Roman Catholic churches in Europe, Canada, Argentina, Australia, etc. and you find a similar death rattle.

The only thing that has kept that from occurring in the U.S. is immigration from Latin America. But even in this country, there are far more Roman Catholics becoming lapsed- or ex- than people running out to join it. And in Latin America itself, the societies are becoming more Pentecostal and secularized at the same time.

It doesn't seem to suffer the problems you mention. If anything, they have doubled down on their theological conservatism, embraced more right-wing politics and drawn a line in the sand, yet it doesn't seem to be leading to the creation of many disciples (or keeping those that were in, active.)
 
Posted by ToujoursDan (# 10578) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by SeraphimSarov:
quote:
Originally posted by ToujoursDan:
quote:
Originally posted by SeraphimSarov:
If it was the "witness to a renewed Gospel" , it would be prospering. It is dying as previous posters have pointed out

In many ways it is prospering. A church where approx. 30% of the membership grew up in other traditions and made a conscious decision to join it, must have something compelling to offer, otherwise this wouldn't be occurring.

It's just not enough to make up for the falling birthrate amongst the educated, mostly White base that makes up 80% of TEC's membership.

Something "compelling "? Or a convenient , temporary refuge. Any port in a storm
A port is better than no port, wouldn't you say?

(And are you really making blanket judgments on the motivations of whole groups of people? Is that the best you can do?)
 
Posted by Zach82 (# 3208) on :
 
I think it's generally a bad idea to seek to assign blame for the present declines. The health and life of the Church is the grace of God alone. It falls to us to have faith and to pray, with the certainty that the gates of hell will never prevail.
 
Posted by Honest Ron Bacardi (# 38) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by ToujoursDan:
quote:
Originally posted by SeraphimSarov:
If it was the "witness to a renewed Gospel" , it would be prospering. It is dying as previous posters have pointed out

In many ways it is prospering. A church where approx. 30% of the membership grew up in other traditions and made a conscious decision to join it, must have something compelling to offer, otherwise this wouldn't be occurring.

It's just not enough to make up for the falling birthrate amongst the educated, mostly White base that makes up 80% of TEC's membership.

I don't think your maths works, toujoursdan.

The most recent fertility rate I can find for white US females is 1.84. Allowing for a replacement fertility rate being 2.1, that implies a lifetime church shrinkage rate of around 13% over a lifetime (say 75 years?) due to this factor alone. But your shrinkage rate is higher than that, and if you genuinely have 30% of your parishioners as joiners from elsewhere, that suggests your loss rate is pretty much more serious.

I'm just commenting on the stats, not offering anything beyond that.
 
Posted by Zach82 (# 3208) on :
 
Oh, there is absolutely no doubt that the present declines leave the Episcopal Church in a crisis, Ron. It will take a miracle to save the Episcopal Church.
 
Posted by Mary Marriott (# 16938) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by SeraphimSarov:
If it was the "witness to a renewed Gospel" , it would be prospering. It is dying as previous posters have pointed out

Evidence ?
 
Posted by Beeswax Altar (# 11644) on :
 
What Honest Ron said

Plus, churches are not in the same rate of decline in the United States as in Europe. The United States has churches many churches that are growing and thriving. The ones that are haven't embraced anything like the current paradigm of TEC.
 
Posted by Mary Marriott (# 16938) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Zach82:
quote:
Maybe not but being purposely vindictive is another matter altogether, a case in point being the treatment of Matt Kennedy and his parish - they offered to purchase their church at full market value; not only were they refused, the building was instead sold cut price to Muslims and is now a mosque.
These people are going about calling themselves the legitimate Anglican Church of North America. It is their stated purpose to replace the Episcopal Church. Letting them continue on in these churches sure seems, to me, just a bad strategic decision. People will get the idea that they are a legitimate continuation of the former Episcopal parishes, and Lord knows that's how they present themselves.

It's not about revenge, though it must be flattering to the schismatics to imagine it must be so. It's only about what is best for the Episcopal Church.

Zach

What Zach said.
 
Posted by Mary Marriott (# 16938) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by ToujoursDan:
quote:
Originally posted by SeraphimSarov:
If it was the "witness to a renewed Gospel" , it would be prospering. It is dying as previous posters have pointed out

In many ways it is prospering. A church where approx. 30% of the membership grew up in other traditions and made a conscious decision to join it, must have something compelling to offer, otherwise this wouldn't be occurring.

It's just not enough to make up for the falling birthrate amongst the educated, mostly White base that makes up 80% of TEC's membership.

What ToujoursDan said.

Very encouraging for those who were worried here.
 
Posted by ToujoursDan (# 10578) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Honest Ron Bacardi:
quote:
Originally posted by ToujoursDan:
quote:
Originally posted by SeraphimSarov:
If it was the "witness to a renewed Gospel" , it would be prospering. It is dying as previous posters have pointed out

In many ways it is prospering. A church where approx. 30% of the membership grew up in other traditions and made a conscious decision to join it, must have something compelling to offer, otherwise this wouldn't be occurring.

It's just not enough to make up for the falling birthrate amongst the educated, mostly White base that makes up 80% of TEC's membership.

I don't think your maths works, toujoursdan.

The most recent fertility rate I can find for white US females is 1.84. Allowing for a replacement fertility rate being 2.1, that implies a lifetime church shrinkage rate of around 13% over a lifetime (say 75 years?) due to this factor alone. But your shrinkage rate is higher than that, and if you genuinely have 30% of your parishioners as joiners from elsewhere, that suggests your loss rate is pretty much more serious.

I'm just commenting on the stats, not offering anything beyond that.

As the people that make up the TEC tends to be more affluent and attract more lifelong singles, gays and urban people, their fertility rates will be lower than the average for all whites nationwide. There is a Faith Communities Together (FACT) Study that estimated that the fertility rate for Episcopalians and Presbyterians is closer to 1.3 per couple, which would cause a 40% shrinkage per generation. When I have more time I can search for the link to it.

And I have no doubt that the TEC is in a crisis. My point is that it is only part of a a larger crisis that is affecting all of western oldline (viz., non-Pentecostal) Christiandom and that doing "X" or "Y" isn't going to be a magic bullet that will turn it around.

[ 13. April 2012, 13:55: Message edited by: ToujoursDan ]
 
Posted by Beeswax Altar (# 11644) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mary Marriott:
quote:
Originally posted by SeraphimSarov:
If it was the "witness to a renewed Gospel" , it would be prospering. It is dying as previous posters have pointed out

Evidence ?
I'd be happy if you could provide credible evidence that TEC is not in decline. I really would. No joke. Everybody familiar with the situation knows TEC is in decline. I'm not exaggerating. Everybody at every level of TEC (local, diocesan, and national) knows TEC is in decline. The only thing different is the spin.

[ 13. April 2012, 13:56: Message edited by: Beeswax Altar ]
 
Posted by Zach82 (# 3208) on :
 
I'm going to go out on a limb here and say that the "church of converts" line is actually a bad sign. For those who do still go to church, denominational loyalty is going out the window. I am not so sure that the people coming to TEC from other denominations makes up for all the people leaving for other denominations, and it certainly doesn't make up for the far larger group of people leaving for the "outer darkness."

We must not have illusions here. TEC, and whether they want to admit it or not practically every Christian denomination, is in a LOT of trouble. I really think a miracle is our only hope. The point not to be missed, however, is that this was ever the case. Maybe that's what God is trying to get us to realize.

Zach
 
Posted by Alogon (# 5513) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Zach82:
Oh, there is absolutely no doubt that the present declines leave the Episcopal Church in a crisis, Ron. It will take a miracle to save the Episcopal Church.

If so, it's in good company. It will also take a miracle to save the Philadelphia Inquirer and the Philadelphia Orchestra. Does that mean that the honorable thing for the Philadelphia Inquirer to do is to turn itself into the National Enquirer, or that the Philadelphia Orchestra members ought to become rappers?

I agree that the dizziness at 815 Second Ave. is not seemly, but IMHO the decline in the Episcopal Church has more to do with the ubiquity of cell phones and attention deficit disorder than with the consecration of Bishop Robinson. There's only so far one can jump into the whirling cesspool of pop culture without becoming part of the problem instead of the solution.
 
Posted by The Silent Acolyte (# 1158) on :
 
quote:
Among other things, Beeswax Altar sez this:
And before anybody asks, no, this has nothing to do with Gene Robinson. Gay and lesbian Episcopalians who hold orthodox beliefs and prefer traditional liturgy can have a hard time in most places. The few conservatives remaining in TEC reject them because they are gay. Liberals are offended at the audacity some gays and lesbians will not join them in supporting every theological or liturgical innovation anybody dreams up. How dare you support the orthodox and traditional view of anything?! We welcomed and included you!!! Bunch of ingrates. Think I'm exaggerating. I've watched it happen with my own eyes. I've listened to my gay and lesbian colleagues share their experiences of it happening.

Being in a flag-ship diocese that prides itself on all that he describes, all I can say is that Beeswax Altar drives that nail fully home. Call me if you want details.

There was nothing inarticulate or rambling about that post that isn't made up with fervor.

I do dissent from this notion of terminal decline, however. The sickness is bad, but not unto death.
 
Posted by Mockingale (# 16599) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by PD:
I do wish folks would not call the ACNA/CANA crowd continuing Anglicans. The defining issues for the Continuers were the 1928 BCP and the Ordination of Women, neither of which are of any practical interest to Bishop Duncan's crowd. They have already accepted the major tenants of liberalism, so I do not see why they have such a beef with TEC. They differ only in degree not kind!

PD

I thought it kinder and more politic than calling them what they are - schismatics.
 
Posted by Honest Ron Bacardi (# 38) on :
 
ToujoursDan wrote:
quote:
As the people that make up the TEC tends to be more affluent and attract more lifelong singles, gays and urban people, their fertility rates will be lower than the average for all whites nationwide. There is a Faith Communities Together (FACT) Study that estimated that the fertility rate for Episcopalians and Presbyterians is closer to 1.3 per couple, which would cause a 40% shrinkage per generation. When I have more time I can search for the link to it.
OK, thanks. If you could dig out the statistics it would be interesting.

Incidentally, it's right that a lower fertility rate produces a diminution in overall population of the same factor per generation, but not until about the third generation onwards, due to people living beyond their reproductive age. I had assumed the trend was new-ish, but if not, then it lends added credence to the thesis that population statistics being seen now are the result of actions taken around 50 to 60 years ago, and you are right to use the reduction per generation figure for the present.

As to the decline elsewhere, our experience here is that there has been a widespread decline in engagement across all organizations that could be classed as voluntary - not just churches. I can't really comment on how TEC is doing vs. other churches, but I'm sure there must be comparable stats. out there.
 
Posted by Honest Ron Bacardi (# 38) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mockingale:
quote:
Originally posted by PD:
I do wish folks would not call the ACNA/CANA crowd continuing Anglicans. The defining issues for the Continuers were the 1928 BCP and the Ordination of Women, neither of which are of any practical interest to Bishop Duncan's crowd. They have already accepted the major tenants of liberalism, so I do not see why they have such a beef with TEC. They differ only in degree not kind!

PD

I thought it kinder and more politic than calling them what they are - schismatics.
They are.

But so are we. Best not to forget this one, I feel.
 
Posted by Mockingale (# 16599) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Honest Ron Bacardi:
quote:
Originally posted by Mockingale:
quote:
Originally posted by PD:
I do wish folks would not call the ACNA/CANA crowd continuing Anglicans. The defining issues for the Continuers were the 1928 BCP and the Ordination of Women, neither of which are of any practical interest to Bishop Duncan's crowd. They have already accepted the major tenants of liberalism, so I do not see why they have such a beef with TEC. They differ only in degree not kind!

PD

I thought it kinder and more politic than calling them what they are - schismatics.
They are.

But so are we. Best not to forget this one, I feel.

Oh, sure. The inconvenient fact is that I find it hard to escape the judgment that the ACNA is a convocation of weasels and thieves who bolted because they just couldn't tolerate a difference in opinion when it came to the gays (theology, liturgy, church governance, sure. But not the gays). But I didn't want to say that. But now I have. Oops.

At least I'm honest.
 
Posted by Honest Ron Bacardi (# 38) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mockingale:
quote:
Originally posted by Honest Ron Bacardi:
quote:
Originally posted by Mockingale:
quote:
Originally posted by PD:
I do wish folks would not call the ACNA/CANA crowd continuing Anglicans. The defining issues for the Continuers were the 1928 BCP and the Ordination of Women, neither of which are of any practical interest to Bishop Duncan's crowd. They have already accepted the major tenants of liberalism, so I do not see why they have such a beef with TEC. They differ only in degree not kind!

PD

I thought it kinder and more politic than calling them what they are - schismatics.
They are.

But so are we. Best not to forget this one, I feel.

Oh, sure. The inconvenient fact is that I find it hard to escape the judgment that the ACNA is a convocation of weasels and thieves who bolted because they just couldn't tolerate a difference in opinion when it came to the gays (theology, liturgy, church governance, sure. But not the gays). But I didn't want to say that. But now I have. Oops.

At least I'm honest.

With a name like mine, I naturally approve of the latter. I can't attest to the weasels and thieves bit (we did a more impressive bit of church-nicking in our time), but as to the rest, it seems self-evidently true.

However (there's always a drawback, isn't there?) - it would be easy to cast the issue as a single-issue problem. It's about teh gayz. Well, it is, but to what extent? It's fair to say that it was a problem for those who left, but that probably varies between a huge insuperable problem, right down to a minor annoyance that nevertheless was the straw that broke the camel's back. I don't really have a feel for how that distribution plays out, save only to say that it appears to exist. And because it exists, nobody should be under any illusions that the Next Big Thing™ to come down the tracks won't almost certainly precipitate a repeat performance.
 
Posted by ToujoursDan (# 10578) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Beeswax Altar:
What Honest Ron said

Plus, churches are not in the same rate of decline in the United States as in Europe. The United States has churches many churches that are growing and thriving. The ones that are haven't embraced anything like the current paradigm of TEC.

The TEC has many churches that are growing and thriving as well - both liberal (All Saints, Pasadena and Beverly Hills) and conservative (St. Martin's Houston, etc.) as well as high church and low church. I'm not sure if this represents an increase due to the clustering of people fleeing smaller, deader churches for an experience with more spiritual vitality, or whether they are attracting people from outside the denominational community or probably, a mix of both, but it is happening. To say that all TEC churches are in crisis and dying isn't truer than saying that there isn't a problem at all.
 
Posted by Beeswax Altar (# 11644) on :
 
Yes, there are still large TEC parishes in urban areas. Your point? St. Martin's is the largest parish in TEC. It's not among the top 100 in the United States or even the top 5 in Houston.
 
Posted by Zach82 (# 3208) on :
 
I think his point may have been, Beeswax, that there might be hope for the Episcopal Church yet.
 
Posted by ToujoursDan (# 10578) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Honest Ron Bacardi:
ToujoursDan wrote:
quote:
As the people that make up the TEC tends to be more affluent and attract more lifelong singles, gays and urban people, their fertility rates will be lower than the average for all whites nationwide. There is a Faith Communities Together (FACT) Study that estimated that the fertility rate for Episcopalians and Presbyterians is closer to 1.3 per couple, which would cause a 40% shrinkage per generation. When I have more time I can search for the link to it.
OK, thanks. If you could dig out the statistics it would be interesting.

Incidentally, it's right that a lower fertility rate produces a diminution in overall population of the same factor per generation, but not until about the third generation onwards, due to people living beyond their reproductive age. I had assumed the trend was new-ish, but if not, then it lends added credence to the thesis that population statistics being seen now are the result of actions taken around 50 to 60 years ago, and you are right to use the reduction per generation figure for the present.

As to the decline elsewhere, our experience here is that there has been a widespread decline in engagement across all organizations that could be classed as voluntary - not just churches. I can't really comment on how TEC is doing vs. other churches, but I'm sure there must be comparable stats. out there.

The membership declines started about the time I was born - 1965 or so - so we are about 50 years into it, which would be about the second or third generation.

(This decline also coincided with the with the widespread use to the pill and introduction of affordable television, neither of which is coincidental IMHO.)

Here's a rather crappy graph of the growth and decline in the 20th Century: Episcopal Church Membership Trades 1925-2010. I'd give you something better but the TEC just redid the website (again!) and it's full of dead links. [Mad]

But you can see a rise through the Baby Boom generation that hit a peak around 1965 which roughly follows the national birthrate index. The decline first happened steeply and then slowly levelled off with year to year declines happening at slower rates each year (though I would imagine that the secession of entire dioceses in the 2005-2010 rate will change that trend...)

Of course, this is based on self reporting and there have been several canonical changes regarding the counting of members and gathering of statistics through the period which would affect numbers in either direction, so you'll have to take membership figures and the graphs with a grain of salt. Still, schism notwithstanding, it pretty closely matches the growth and decline found in all mainline denominations and in the RCC if one took immigration out of the picture.

So, again, I'd agree that the TEC is in crisis but still maintain that this is a societal demographic trend that is far larger than the TEC and can't be solved if we only do "X" or "Y". You'll find denominations that are already doing "X" or "Y" that are no healthier than we are.
 
Posted by ToujoursDan (# 10578) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Beeswax Altar:
Yes, there are still large TEC parishes in urban areas. Your point? St. Martin's is the largest parish in TEC. It's not among the top 100 in the United States or even the top 5 in Houston.

Not sure what your point is. I'm not talking about how many megachurches there are, but whether there are healthy growing TEC churches. There objectively are. Even when the TEC was its largest and most influential we were eclipsed by the Methodists and the Baptists.
 
Posted by Beeswax Altar (# 11644) on :
 
Our largest church is on the conservative fringe of TEC. I've met priests from St. Martins. They are all more conservative than I am. Where is the hope?
 
Posted by ToujoursDan (# 10578) on :
 
Then speak to the priests at All Saints Pasadena, or All Saints Beverly Hills... If you recall, I wrote that there are parishes on both ends of the spectrum that are experiencing healthy growth and community engagement. The ultimate size relative to other denominations isn't as important as their growth and mission and ministry.
 
Posted by ToujoursDan (# 10578) on :
 
And a good, long (84 page paper) on the institutional health of the TEC relative to other denominations (and what works and what doesn't) can be found here: Faith Communities Today: Report on the Episcopal Church USA

It concludes with a fairly balanced picture of TECs strengths and problems:

quote:
The Episcopal Church is unique among mainline Protestant denominations in that it has a clear identity which is celebrated by almost all of its churches and a large number of healthy, growing congregations... Despite these positive features, certain problems or "serious realities" are also apparent in the data contained in this report. Specifically, the Episcopal Church has many small, weak congregations that are attended and supported by an aging (and largely female) membership. The aging of the Episcopal Church and the weakening of smaller congregations in small towns and older urban neighborhoods can only be expected to worsen, given the demographics of the population, the minimal evangelism efforts of most Episcopal congregations, and the small numbers of new churches being started in expanding suburban areas.

The Episcopal Church has an advantage in that it could respond to its serious realities by expanding on its strong points, rather than trying to somehow turn weaknesses into strengths. Episcopal churches are known for their liturgy and for the fact that the Episcopal Church is a progressive denomination, populated (for the most part) by educated, open-minded people. The strongest Episcopal congregations do liturgy well and are able to project a moral presence in the community without resorting to a dogmatic theology. Episcopal congregations are attractive to unchurched and formerly churched adults who want to experience the sacred and grow in their faith in a context devoid of condemnation...

The whole thing is worth a read...
 
Posted by Beeswax Altar (# 11644) on :
 
How large is All Saints Beverly Hills? We are a church that appeals to affluent white people of a fashionably progressive bent. Beverly Hills has a bunch of affluent white people of a fashionably progressive bent. It is a part of the second largest metropolitan area of the country. Best I can tell, All Saints Beverly Hills is probably around half the size of St. Martins Houston.
 
Posted by ToujoursDan (# 10578) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Beeswax Altar:
How large is All Saints Beverly Hills? We are a church that appeals to affluent white people of a fashionably progressive bent. Beverly Hills has a bunch of affluent white people of a fashionably progressive bent. It is a part of the second largest metropolitan area of the country. Best I can tell, All Saints Beverly Hills is probably around half the size of St. Martins Houston.

Not sure what your point is. Best I can tell you seem to be saying that the only healthy congregations are megachurches. And that white people in large metropolitan areas don't have valid spiritual needs, so they shouldn't count. Strange.

[ 13. April 2012, 18:24: Message edited by: ToujoursDan ]
 
Posted by Mockingale (# 16599) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Beeswax Altar:
Yes, there are still large TEC parishes in urban areas. Your point? St. Martin's is the largest parish in TEC. It's not among the top 100 in the United States or even the top 5 in Houston.

I would think that the point is that growing parishes in certain locations shows that there's still health in the Church - it's clearly working in some places, for some people, and it's not uniformly dying off.

Heck, if a parish grows from 50 to 100 people, it's still a tiny parish, but it's definitely doing well. Who says we need 5000 member megachurches?

I think TEC will level off. There is a core of people who desire to worship and who find value in some form of the liturgical tradition. We won't be as large as we were in the early 20th century. We may never be again. We may have to consolidate 10 small parishes in a city into 2 or 3 larger parishes. But we'll survive. And it might be better to have 500,000 people that genuinely value the church and its mission than to have 5 million, 90% of whom just go because that's what' expected in their social sphere.

For better or worse, church attendance is no longer a social prerequisite for membership in the middle and upper classes. I think that accounts for a lot of the dropouts. But separating out the chaff isn't such a terrible thing, challenging as it may be.
 
Posted by Alogon (# 5513) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by ToujoursDan:
The strongest Episcopal congregations do liturgy well and are able to project a moral presence in the community without resorting to a dogmatic theology.

According to an old, friend thus it has always been, and this (or what's left of it) is a valuable role. Its yoke may be relatively easy and its burden light; but it used to be regarded as a requirement in circles whose members were able to do and get just about whatever they wanted, who could easily abandon all responsibility and become prodigal sons. The deal was, "if you want to be and remain part of Society, then you will put yourself under the guidance of the Episcopal Church".

A flock of such headstrong sheep is as prone to straying as any other. And the upper class is no longer distinct enough that a critical mass of Episcopalians remains to make this bargain. This is partly due to the cultural race to the bottom that seems to be an inevitable weakness of democracy: to be admired by a crowd nowadays, all one needs is a fabulous amount of money and glitz. Most of these idols do not bother subscribing to any church or its moral influence. We're all the losers.

[ 13. April 2012, 18:44: Message edited by: Alogon ]
 
Posted by ToujoursDan (# 10578) on :
 
quote:
There is a core of people who desire to worship and who find value in some form of the liturgical tradition... And it might be better to have 500,000 people that genuinely value the church and its mission than to have 5 million, 90% of whom just go because that's what' expected in their social sphere.
And my point all along is that this is happening throughout Christendom in developed countries. What is happening in TEC may be farther along and it may experiencing it more severely for a variety of reasons both within and outside of its control, but this is a religion-wide trend.

If the spiritual outlook of the Millenial generation holds, the U.S. is going to look a lot like post-Christian western Europe in 30 years time, where religion occupies a very small, fringe space in society.

We can flagellate ourselves for not being something we're not, or plan for it in a way that effectively meets the spiritual needs of those who still want to be in that small space.

[ 13. April 2012, 18:49: Message edited by: ToujoursDan ]
 
Posted by Beeswax Altar (# 11644) on :
 
I'm comparing apples to apples. Pointing to larger churches in urban areas proves nothing. Compared to other churches in the same area, TEC congregations are still small. I'm interested in how TEC parishes are doing compared to other churches in the same area. TEC parishes aren't doing very well. I've never lived in a place where that wasn't the case. I've never lived in a place where the large, growing church in the area was theologically liberal. Hell, I'd be tickled pink if TEC could manage the same rate of decline as the United Methodist Church or Southern Baptist Church.

Let's assume demographic decline is our problem. I believe the best estimates say it accounts for 70% of decline. This still leaves 30% of other issues such as the ability to retain members. What are we doing to attract people outside our traditional demographic of affluent, white, progressives? What do we really have to offer to those looking for something other than organ music, a social club, and validation of progressive political opinions?

I've seen the advertising we put together. The answer is not very much. TEC can still be a comparatively progressive church without jettisoning every last bit of traditional belief and practice. We have to move back to the middle or we won't have a chance of surviving.
 
Posted by Organ Builder (# 12478) on :
 
So what do you do to make it better where you are, BA?

Because I've never chosen to continue going to a church--or stop going to a church--because of what the Grand High Poobahs at National Headquarters of some denomination chose to do or say.

Like politics, it's always been local for me. Even if it shouldn't be, that's usually heavily influenced by the clerics involved. I actually chose to join in a local congregation once because the rector remembered my name when I returned two weeks later for a second visit!

They didn't have the best organ in town. They didn't have a great choir. But there was a sense that my presence was important to someone. I didn't know or care at the time, but that priest (now retired) happens to be theologically liberal, if by that you mean inclusive and progressive. Like most of the Christians I know who consider themselves liberal, though, he doesn't have to cross his fingers when he recites the Creed.

I suspect a lot of ministers and priests would be shocked and horrified if they knew what their parishioners actually believe. Most of them don't choose a church--or a megachurch--because of the theological stance. They choose it because it makes them feel at home.
 
Posted by ToujoursDan (# 10578) on :
 
quote:
I'm comparing apples to apples. Pointing to larger churches in urban areas proves nothing.
This doesn't make sense to me. Again, you seem to be asserting that unless the Episcopal Church has the kind of megachurches the Baptists and non-denoms do we're less healthy as a denomination. I think everyone who has responded to this thinks this is an odd assertion.

A healthy church (IMHO) is one with a balanced age range that is experiencing healthy growth. A church that has achieved 10% growth over a year's time even if it has gone from 200 - 220 people is extremely healthy.

We're not going to have the kind of megachurches the non-denoms or Baptists do. Episcopalians have never made up more than 3% of the U.S. population and we prefer to worship in smaller churches overall.

quote:
I've never lived in a place where the large, growing church in the area was theologically liberal.
I've given several examples and you keep moving the goalposts.

quote:
Hell, I'd be tickled pink if TEC could manage the same rate of decline as the United Methodist Church or Southern Baptist Church.
The UMC has lost 23% of their membership through the same period we lost 32%. Not much to be tickled pink about there. Source:Demographia - Religion membership 1960-2004 The Southern Baptist Convention expects to the 50% smaller by 2030. And that's with the advantage that they often double count their membership. Adherents.com: Anyway you slice it, fewer Southern Baptists
 
Posted by Beeswax Altar (# 11644) on :
 
I don't keep moving the goalposts. You make the point we have our largest churches in places with the most people. Big freaking deal. So does everybody else.

You've provided one example: All Saints Beverly Hills. I'll have to take your word for it. St. Martin's Houston is not the average Episcopal congregation. It is on the conservative fringe. How long before TEC becomes so liberal that St. Martin's and parishes like it decide to leave? I'd imagine the only thing keeping them in now is they are in a conservative diocese and find it easier to ignore the national church than lose their endowment and property leaving.

Like I said, I'd be happy to be in the same situation as the United Methodists and Southern Baptists. They had more people to start and they are losing them a lower rate. Assuming the Southern Baptist Convention continues its current rate of decline and loses half its membership by 2050, they'll still be nearly three times larger than TEC was at its largest. Frankly, I doubt their rate of decline continues. Southern Baptists are better at adapting.
 
Posted by ToujoursDan (# 10578) on :
 
quote:
You make the point we have our largest churches in places with the most people.
Try reading for comprehension next time. That isn't the point I made.

quote:
You've provided one example: All Saints Beverly Hills
Nope. Listed more than one. Try again.

[ 13. April 2012, 20:05: Message edited by: ToujoursDan ]
 
Posted by Alogon (# 5513) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Beeswax Altar:
I'm comparing apples to apples. Pointing to larger churches in urban areas proves nothing. Compared to other churches in the same area, TEC congregations are still small. I'm interested in how TEC parishes are doing compared to other churches in the same area.

I'm interested in how TEC parishes are doing compared to other churches with similar worship standards (if any). Otherwise it's not apples to apples. Show me some of these which are doing significantly better than TEC, and I'll pay attention.

quote:
TEC can still be a comparatively progressive church without jettisoning every last bit of traditional belief and practice.
I agree. But have we? I think that we actually keep more traditions than the brassy megachurches who brag about how conservative they are.
 
Posted by Beeswax Altar (# 11644) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by ToujoursDan:
quote:
You make the point we have our largest churches in places with the most people.
Try reading for comprehension next time. That isn't the point I made.

quote:
You've provided one example: All Saints Beverly Hills
Nope. Listed more than one. Try again.

Yes it was.
No you didn't.
 
Posted by Beeswax Altar (# 11644) on :
 
quote:
originally posted by Alogon:
I'm interested in how TEC parishes are doing compared to other churches with similar worship standards (if any). Otherwise it's not apples to apples. Show me some of these which are doing significantly better than TEC, and I'll pay attention.

What worship standards are those?

quote:
originally posted by Alogon:
I agree. But have we? I think that we actually keep more traditions than the brassy megachurches who brag about how conservative they are.

Traditional theology? No we haven't. Tradition as in liturgy? Sort of.
 
Posted by Zach82 (# 3208) on :
 
Bee, I know it's fun pitching the end of the world, but for pete's sake things are not that bad.
 
Posted by Organ Builder (# 12478) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by ToujoursDan:
Then speak to the priests at All Saints Pasadena, or All Saints Beverly Hills...

Surely this appears on everyone's screen?
 
Posted by ToujoursDan (# 10578) on :
 
In the Diocese of New York alone here are list of liberal churches that have a growing baptized membership, growing pledging amounts and at least a stable Sunday Average attendance. I chose Manhattan parishes because this isn't a quickly growing part of suburbia but an inner city area with a stable population.

(Warning - these are PDFs)

Church of the Transfiguration New York City

All Angels Church New York City

Trinity Wall Street (though they have been impacted by both 9/11 and the financial crisis of 2008)

Christ and Saint Stephens


And while we're at it, I'll throw in my parish which is in an inner city Brooklyn area...

Christ Church Cobble Hill Brooklyn

...and

Grace Church Brooklyn Hts.
 
Posted by BulldogSacristan (# 11239) on :
 
Just to interject more anecdotal evidence, the Diocese of Atlanta has several of the biggest parishes in the church. They are progressive, vibrant, and traditional for the most part. Saint Philip's Cathedral has around 6'000 member I believe.
 
Posted by ToujoursDan (# 10578) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Beeswax Altar:
quote:
Originally posted by ToujoursDan:
quote:
You make the point we have our largest churches in places with the most people.
Try reading for comprehension next time. That isn't the point I made.

quote:
You've provided one example: All Saints Beverly Hills
Nope. Listed more than one. Try again.

Yes it was.
No you didn't.

This is why it's hard to take you seriously and why I am contemplating calling you for hell because you pretend to engage in serious discussion but then put your fingers in your ears and say la-la-la when people contradict you. Stop bullshitting and either acknowledge that there are exceptions to your assertions or that you don't what to hear what others say.

My post read:

quote:
The TEC has many churches that are growing and thriving as well - both liberal (All Saints, Pasadena and Beverly Hills) and conservative (St. Martin's Houston, etc.) as well as high church and low church. I'm not sure if this represents an increase due to the clustering of people fleeing smaller, deader churches for an experience with more spiritual vitality, or whether they are attracting people from outside the denominational community or probably, a mix of both, but it is happening. To say that all TEC churches are in crisis and dying isn't truer than saying that there isn't a problem at all.
I listed All Saints BV and Pasadena which are 2 parishes. You even acknowledged ASC Pasadena once, for fuck sake.

Secondly, I didn't say that were healthy because they were large, I said they were healthy because they had vital ministries and were growing. I never even mentioned their size. I only picked them because I figured you'd know about them.

Now either read for comprehension or acknowledge that the heat is too much and get out of the fucking kitchen, asshole.

[ 13. April 2012, 20:35: Message edited by: ToujoursDan ]
 
Posted by Zach82 (# 3208) on :
 
I think you just need to come down out of panic mode, Beeswax. This is not the first time the Church has gone through a bust cycle, and it won't be the last. Have a little faith.

[ 13. April 2012, 20:43: Message edited by: Zach82 ]
 
Posted by Mockingale (# 16599) on :
 
One thing I find a little unnerving in that Episcopal Church trends report is the revelation that churches that add in "nontraditional worship elements" tend to be stronger. I'm not sure what to make of this. Perhaps churches that are more vibrant have more fresh blood and are more comfortable trying out new things. But I can't for the life of me imagine an Episcopal Rite II service with drums or a praise band and a projector. What would such an animal look like?

At the same time, the study notes that the stronger parishes "do liturgy well." Do we have churches with postmodern drum circles and interpretive dance that also do a solid Eucharist according to the Book of Common Prayer?
 
Posted by Beeswax Altar (# 11644) on :
 
quote:
originally posted by Tojours Dan:
I listed All Saints BV and Pasadena which are 2 parishes. You even acknowledged ASC Pasadena once, for fuck sake.


Oh, I'm sorry. You mentioned 2. [Roll Eyes]

quote:
originally posted by Tojours Dan:
Secondly, I didn't say that were healthy because they were large, I said they were healthy because they had vital ministries and were growing. I never even mentioned their size. I only picked them because I figured you'd know about them.

I don't doubt some episcopal churches mostly in large urban areas are showing modest growth. I'm concerned with the vast majority of Episcopal parishes that aren't. I'm concerned with ministering to a demographic other than just white, affluent, progressives.

Hell, I'd like to serve at a parish that had much of anything to offer people under 55 or was even seriously interested in trying. My wife's parish seemed to believe that because she is young that she should be able to be bring in tons of young families without any effort or inconvenience to them at all. Only so much she can do. She sleeps with me and I would never attend her parish regularly.

Problem is, Tojours Dan, we are coming at this from two different places. I'm sure they'll be an Episcopal parish in New York City with a well done liturgy catering to affluent, educated, progressives where you can worship for the rest of your life and even have a nice funeral. My concerns are broader and longer term than yours.
 
Posted by Organ Builder (# 12478) on :
 
So I'll ask again--what are you doing about it where you are?

At this point, I don't even care if you're having any success. You are a priest, and in most Episcopal parishes that still carries a certain cachet. You may not have the respect and power your 19th century predecessors had, but you aren't chopped liver.

You obviously see a problem. Are you trying to do anything to address it? Or are you spending all your time telling us how impossible the whole thing is in this quiet backwater on the internet?
 
Posted by Mockingale (# 16599) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Beeswax Altar:
I don't doubt some episcopal churches mostly in large urban areas are showing modest growth. I'm concerned with the vast majority of Episcopal parishes that aren't. I'm concerned with ministering to a demographic other than just white, affluent, progressives.

Hell, I'd like to serve at a parish that had much of anything to offer people under 55 or was even seriously interested in trying.

The urban parishes are usually the racially and economically diverse ones with a younger crowd, at least in my experience.

Rural parishes tend to be tiny, elderly and demographically stagnant.
 
Posted by Beeswax Altar (# 11644) on :
 
Everything I can. I have a relatively committed congregation but they likely don't have the resources or critical mass to survive grow and thrive. They love their building. It's a pretty building but it hinders their growth. Wouldn't matter if they were willing to give it up. They would need to join with other smaller episcopal congregations in the area.

Other smaller congregations in the area are fond of their building. Showing up to a particular old building, at the exact same time on Sunday morning, doing a familiar liturgy with hymns they know by heart, and then drinking coffee with the same people until they die are all very important to many Episcopalians. They give lip service to the church continuing after they die but that's about it. At least, the people interested in left wing politics care about something larger.

Hard to change in a couple of years a mindset that was decades in the making.
 
Posted by Beeswax Altar (# 11644) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mockingale:
quote:
Originally posted by Beeswax Altar:
I don't doubt some episcopal churches mostly in large urban areas are showing modest growth. I'm concerned with the vast majority of Episcopal parishes that aren't. I'm concerned with ministering to a demographic other than just white, affluent, progressives.

Hell, I'd like to serve at a parish that had much of anything to offer people under 55 or was even seriously interested in trying.

The urban parishes are usually the racially and economically diverse ones with a younger crowd, at least in my experience.

Rural parishes tend to be tiny, elderly and demographically stagnant.

I'm sure there are economically and racially diverse parishes in urban areas. I've seen some that are relatively so myself. This doesn't describe all episcopal churches in urban areas. Far from it. Younger people outside urban areas attend church. I know they do. I've seen them. I've talked to them. Just not episcopal parishes in any large number.
 
Posted by Alogon (# 5513) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Beeswax Altar:
What worship standards are those?

Let's try BCP MOTR Eucharistic, either Rite I or II, with acolytes who carry the cross down the aisle without weaving like drunkards and know how to assist with ablutions; congregational singing largely from the official hymnal; and a choir that tries to offer classical repertoire at least twice a month.

Or the equivalent in any other denomination.

quote:
Traditional theology? No we haven't. Tradition as in liturgy? Sort of.

We say the Nicene Creed every Sunday, as churches have done for centuries. Our so-wayward bishop insists on it, in fact, and wants an explanation in writing if ever it is omitted. Preaching generally addresses the assigned lections. I can't recall ever being a regular part of an Episcopal congregation where this was not the case. What else do you have in mind along "traditional" lines, and how would you know when you have obtained it?

When a Russian czar long ago decided that his people should have a new religion, he sent emissaries far and wide to visit other lands. They were to inquire first and foremost not what various religions believed, but how they worshiped. Nothing impressed them until they reached Constantinople, and the rites of the Orthodox made them feel as though they were given
a glimpse of heaven. So this became the church that the czar chose. I doubt that you have an objection to that denouement.

"How do you worship?" seems as good a starting point to me as anything else. No doubt a megachurch can attract crowds with cult of personality and glittering weekly productions inspired by Hollywood or Las Vegas, but I'm afraid that the connection to the Christian faith becomes tenuous: like a guttering candle flaring up shortly before it dies out.
 
Posted by Beeswax Altar (# 11644) on :
 
quote:
originally posted by Alogon:
Let's try BCP MOTR Eucharistic, either Rite I or II, with acolytes who carry the cross down the aisle without weaving like drunkards and know how to assist with ablutions; congregational singing largely from the official hymnal; and a choir that tries to offer classical repertoire at least twice a month.

You could find all that at about 6 places in my diocese. Maybe a few more depending on how many acolytes are necessary to meet your standard but perhaps a few less depending on how you define the "classical repertoire." Some of the churches who could do all that don't. Some of the churches would like to do that can't afford it.

quote:
originally posted by Alogon:
What else do you have in mind along "traditional" lines, and how would you know when you have obtained it?

In addition to the things I've already mentioned, I'd like to not routinely be in clergy gatherings where at minimum half of the participants have major problems with the Nicene Creed or by their own admission don't believe it to be all that important. Do I really know what they believe? Yep. They say as much. I'd like to participate in clergy bible study where nobody tried to introduce their pet political issue when none of the scriptures remotely addressed anything similar to it. You think I'm exaggerating? Do you think of water conservation on the Feast of the Baptism of Our Lord? I know those who do. Yes, I know...baptism...water...but really?

quote:
originally posted by Alogon:
"How do you worship?" seems as good a starting point to me as anything else. No doubt a megachurch can attract crowds with cult of personality and glittering weekly productions inspired by Hollywood or Las Vegas, but I'm afraid that the connection to the Christian faith becomes tenuous: like a guttering candle flaring up shortly before it dies out.

Yeah because that can't happen with the worship you describe. I note in my copy of the Saint Augustine's Prayer Book the definition of Sentimentality, "Being satisfied with pious feelings and beautiful ceremonies without striving to obey God's will." The member of the Order of the Holy Cross didn't have a glittering production inspired by Hollywood or Las Vegas in mind when he wrote about Sentimentality.
 
Posted by Zach82 (# 3208) on :
 
The denomination you think the Episcopal Church ought to be like doesn't exist, Bee, and won't exist until the last day.
 
Posted by Lietuvos Sv. Kazimieras (# 11274) on :
 
Beeswax, the good ol' St Augie's Prayer Book, of which I have long owned a couple of copies and found them very useful at Mass, can itself be the object of sentimentality, just as can the '28 BCP, all manner of traditional ceremonial, and indeed the whole notion of the "good ol' days in the Episcopal Church" when priests invariably had penises and teh gayz stayed quietly and hypocritically in their places (providing invaluable support without which the Church could hardly have functioned).

Please grow up. The Church ain't in our hands. In my perception, the Episcopal Church is still doing well wherever the people are present for the Eucharist and where the Bishop appears from time to time in their midst, where the Church makes its presence publically felt in its works and witness. Yes, I want things done properly and in order, and for some grasp of the range of sacramental theology in the Anglican patrimony to be taught (along with adherence to the doctrine and discipline of the Episcopal Church in our own day, as by General Convention - the assembled Bishops, representative Clergy and Laity of the whole national Church - established)in our parish churches. However, the Mass is the Mass; and there is but one Baptism into the One, Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church.

Don't be so anxious. All will be well, even,"though with a scornful wonder men see her sore oppressed," still,"she on earth hath union with God the Three in One, and mystic sweet communion with those whose rest is won."
 
Posted by PataLeBon (# 5452) on :
 
Thanks for answering the question. And no, the answer wasn't too long.

However, that kind of Episcopal church has been around since I was born, and I doubt it will end anytime soon. Or it might out of lack of growth.

The church I currently belong to started out that way, but gained a new priest who made the decision that the church wasn't going to be stagnant, but it also wasn't going to lose what made it unique. We had bumps and bruises along the way (meaning that we lost people who didn't like the idea of their comfortable little church changing), but now we are on a good path of growth.

What has made the difference is attention to liturgy and attention to outreach programs. We have two assistant priests. One of whom is reaching out to the immigrant community, the other likes wandering the streets to talk to the homeless and working at the homeless shelter. (In fact, there are days I think that if he could simply wander around and talk to people all day he would be ecstatic.)
 
Posted by Zach82 (# 3208) on :
 
My church back home is going broke maintaining the busiest food pantry in town and has group meetings for various addictions in the parish hall every other night. The priests have never crossed over into questionable orthodoxy in their sermons, and one of them is very active in encouraging greater participation in the parish by young people. It has only a very slow attrition of membership at the moment, though it is between rectors now.

Here in Boston my parish is booming. I think this is chiefly due to the rich life of worship, but the priests are also paragons of orthodoxy (though they could be a bit more Calvinist for my taste). Both of them are willing to preach the doctrines of the faith, and are good at make them accessible to non-theologians.

Both parishes have far fewer members than they did 40 years ago, so I am afraid they fit into the general trend of the rest of the Episcopal Church. But neither of them fit into Godless mold of yours, Beeswax. Neither is going to wink out of existence any time soon. I an confident that, so long as we keep the faith, God will restore the Episcopal Church again.
 
Posted by CL (# 16145) on :
 
Beeswax,

You're want a church that is traditional and orthodox, yet is liberal on Dead Horses? [Confused]
 
Posted by Zach82 (# 3208) on :
 
Believe it or not, CL, not everyone defines "traditional and orthodox" solely as "against the ordination of women and gays."
 
Posted by Beeswax Altar (# 11644) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by CL:
Beeswax,

You're want a church that is traditional and orthodox, yet is liberal on Dead Horses? [Confused]

Yes

Nothing in the Nicene Creed about Dead Horses.
 
Posted by QuietMBR (# 8845) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mockingale:
But I can't for the life of me imagine an Episcopal Rite II service with drums or a praise band and a projector. What would such an animal look like?

Come to my parish tomorrow morning at 9:00 and find out.
 
Posted by CL (# 16145) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Beeswax Altar:
quote:
Originally posted by CL:
Beeswax,

You're want a church that is traditional and orthodox, yet is liberal on Dead Horses? [Confused]

Yes

Nothing in the Nicene Creed about Dead Horses.

What you're looking for doesn't exist; it never has, and given the hermeneutic in which acceptance of the relevant Dead Horses necessarily exists, never can or will. I can understand, while not agreeing with, your desire and I sympathise that you find yourself in such an invidious position from conscience's point of view.
 
Posted by Zach82 (# 3208) on :
 
Well, that resolves every Dead Horse debate ever. Why didn't anyone think of that before? "The position you hold DOESN'T EXIST!" [Roll Eyes]
 
Posted by Alogon (# 5513) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Beeswax Altar:
Yeah because that can't happen with the worship you describe.

I never said it can't happen or that a liturgy is sufficient. My point is that it is necessary-- specifically, a Eucharistic liturgy (although I realize that Anglicans have disagreed on how often to celebrate it.) You know as well as I do, probably, that the sacraments are part of the Lambeth Quadrilateral, and that the Lambeth Quadrilateral reflects ancient criteria for a completely functioning church.

Hence there is no point in calling a comparison of a churche with these ingredients vs a body lacking a sacramental ministry a comparison of oranges with organges.

[ 14. April 2012, 17:20: Message edited by: Alogon ]
 
Posted by Mockingale (# 16599) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Zach82:
The denomination you think the Episcopal Church ought to be like doesn't exist, Bee, and won't exist until the last day.

I think the Episcopal Church is a lot of things in different places. I'm thankful for the differences in styles and congregations.

My ideal congregation would be a lot like the one I attend right now. It would have a moderately formal liturgy, no EOW, with a traditional choir and no guitars or drums. It wouldn't be Anglo-Catholic or particularly low church, but would instead have a reverent but relaxed form of Rite II (instead of doing the march up to the altar rail for communion, we gather around the altar for Eucharist and there's real bread instead of wafers)

I could do with more adult education opportunities and with fewer "children's sermons" during the month, and they let their kids get a little rambunctious in a side area in the sanctuary. But the most important thing the church has is the feeling of a tight-knit community. The rector remembered me on my second visit. The Peace lasts 5 minutes with people genuinely happy to reconnect. The coffee hours are festive.

It's a congregation that used to have a significantly larger attendance up until eight years ago, when the search committee hired an openly gay rector. They reinvented themselves from a fairly old-school, lily white, traditional worship congregation to a livelier, more diverse, gay-friendly parish. When you walk in you're struck by the fact that it's not overwhelmingly female, and people above 55 are a minority. There are many 30 and 40 something adults without children who regularly attend. They've suffered from a hit to their finances, but through the hard work of a lot of parishioners that love the parish, they're growing again.

Interestingly, they've managed to hang on to a more-or-less traditional liturgy and more-or-less traditional music program, but they still feel fresh and innovative and vibrant.
 
Posted by Alogon (# 5513) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Beeswax Altar:
quote:
Originally posted by CL:
Beeswax,

You're want a church that is traditional and orthodox, yet is liberal on Dead Horses? [Confused]

Yes

Nothing in the Nicene Creed about Dead Horses.

quote:
Mockindale writes:
My ideal congregation would be a lot like the one I attend right now. It would have a moderately formal liturgy, no EOW, with a traditional choir and no guitars or drums... gay-friendly

I must review this whole thread, because I no
longer have any idea why I've disagreed with either of you. [Hot and Hormonal]

[ 14. April 2012, 19:57: Message edited by: Alogon ]
 
Posted by jordan32404 (# 15833) on :
 
I'm new-ish to the Episcopal Church and a theological traditionalist and moderately, politically conservative. In my own Diocese of Albany, our Deanery has been growing as has my parish. Our parish priest started a theology class on the Articles of Religion which is full, in addition to the sanctuary, where salvation by faith through grace is taught and believed.

It might be out of vogue in TEC right now but it works.

[ 14. April 2012, 20:39: Message edited by: jordan32404 ]
 
Posted by Zach82 (# 3208) on :
 
"In vogue" is the perfect way to put it, Jordan. The problems of the Episcopal Church right now are severe, but no matter how terrible they become "This too shall pass."
 
Posted by Sir Pellinore (ret'd) (# 12163) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by The Silent Acolyte:
quote:
Among other things, Beeswax Altar sez this:
And before anybody asks, no, this has nothing to do with Gene Robinson. Gay and lesbian Episcopalians who hold orthodox beliefs and prefer traditional liturgy can have a hard time in most places. The few conservatives remaining in TEC reject them because they are gay. Liberals are offended at the audacity some gays and lesbians will not join them in supporting every theological or liturgical innovation anybody dreams up. How dare you support the orthodox and traditional view of anything?! We welcomed and included you!!! Bunch of ingrates. Think I'm exaggerating. I've watched it happen with my own eyes. I've listened to my gay and lesbian colleagues share their experiences of it happening.

Being in a flag-ship diocese that prides itself on all that he describes, all I can say is that Beeswax Altar drives that nail fully home. Call me if you want details.

There was nothing inarticulate or rambling about that post that isn't made up with fervor.

...

It may very well be true, but the bickering does sound very much like it's right out of 'The Life of Brian'.

Must make for interesting living.
 
Posted by CorgiGreta (# 443) on :
 
Among the various breakaway groups from the Episcopal Church during the last 40 years or so, I am inclined to think that there has been no lack of bickering and litigation and no lack of further breaking away among the original breakaways.
 
Posted by RuthW (# 13) on :
 
I'm at a loss to discover what it is you think TEC ought to be doing, Beeswax Altar.
 
Posted by PD (# 12436) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by CorgiGreta:
Among the various breakaway groups from the Episcopal Church during the last 40 years or so, I am inclined to think that there has been no lack of bickering and litigation and no lack of further breaking away among the original breakaways.

Plenty of bickering, but comparatively little litigation among ourselves, though certain bishops have made themselves pariahs within the movement by having their lawyer on speed dial. In this respect I do not think we have been any worse or better than the denizens of TEC. Much of the splitting has been due to the fact that the 1977 ACNA(E) was an alliance of incompatible groups.

Looking back at it from this distance, it would have been better if the 1977 'leavers' had joined the existing Continuing Church Movement, but it was too much of the old PECUSA Mk 2 for some of the sterner spirits. This set up a tension within the movement that spent twenty-five years expending its energies in a most destructive manner. Time was called on the "foot shooting fest" when much of the first generation was gone, and those who were left had finally grown up enough to play the elder stateman. The current situation is that we are trying to bring the bits back together. All of which rather echoes the early days of the REC and the Free Church of England, but with all the disadvantages of modern communications!

However, back in the 1980s there was a lot of rather silly litigation with TEC over buildings. A far better course would have been to hand TEC bishop the keys and walk away. The result of most of these tussles was the dissipation of the original vision energy of the congregation, and, ultimately, the failure of the congregation long term. I think ACNA/CANA is in the process of learning the same lesson the hard way.

All this brings us back to that old saw "Those who fail to learn from history are doomed to repeat it." As we know, Americans are inclined to be adverse to the study of history.

PD
 
Posted by Beeswax Altar (# 11644) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by RuthW:
I'm at a loss to discover what it is you think TEC ought to be doing, Beeswax Altar.

Why is that? I've written several long posts.
 
Posted by kiwimacahau (# 12142) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by gorpo:
quote:
Originally posted by Mockingale:


There are two interesting questions that the piece raised. First, Most Rev. Jefferts-Schori stated that churches that have no Episcopal parish to fill them may be leased or sold to Baptists or Methodists or other religious groups, but categorically not to any Anglican parish; her rationale for this, which I've never heard before but has a certain logic, is that she will not allow a diocese to "set up" any organization which seeks to harm or destroy the (Episcopal) Church.


Makes me wonder if the destiny of all former EPCUSA buildings is to become mosques or pentecostal churches, then. [Roll Eyes] What an evil woman TEC has as their leader, I feel sorry for the 0,6% of the USA population that remains episcopalian. [Roll Eyes] She rather have her sheep becoming atheists or muslims then see them joining another church that is in full communion with the Anglican Communion. [/QB]
What a remarkably offensive post.
 
Posted by Lietuvos Sv. Kazimieras (# 11274) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Beeswax Altar:
quote:
Originally posted by RuthW:
I'm at a loss to discover what it is you think TEC ought to be doing, Beeswax Altar.

Why is that? I've written several long posts.
Uh, because you've been vague about what exactly you believe TEC should be doing differently. Perhaps you could provide a list of specific recommendations. I understand you believe that TEC should assertively teach the "orthodox" faith, yet leave dead horsies be. Yet, a considerable number of Christians - especially outside TEC and the mainline magisterial reformation denomiations - believe that the defunt equines are integrally wrapped up with orthodox Christian doctrine.

My own view, BTW, is that the future of TEC lies in an AffCath direction, incorporating social progressivism, catholic liturgy and sacramentality, the orthodox historical doctrinal formularies of the Church Catholic but with respect for individual lattitude in the personal understanding and interpretation of these, and strong textual-cultural-historical biblical criticism. Also, as much cooperation with our ecumenical partners as possible, especially with the ELCA.

[ 15. April 2012, 13:26: Message edited by: Lietuvos Sv. Kazimieras ]
 
Posted by SeraphimSarov (# 4335) on :
 
Many would say that the latter prescription has been the recipe for the decline of TEC
 
Posted by Beeswax Altar (# 11644) on :
 
OK

1. Reclaim a more traditional understanding of the sacraments. Baptism is the beginning not the end. No traditional understanding of baptism neither Protestant nor Catholic teaches that baptism in and of itself is sufficient. More Protestant understandings hold that the child must come to a saving faith. The high church understanding rejects the Calvinist doctrine of perseverance of the elect. We need a coherent theology of confirmation. As it stands, only those seeking Holy Orders actually need to be confirmed. I think only confirmed members should be allowed to vote at annual meetings or hold positions of leadership. TEC should stop treating the Eucharist like coffee hour. Expecting only baptized Christians to receive the sacrament is not excluding people. If an unbaptized person leaves in a huff and never returns because he or she wasn't invited to receive communion, I'm fine with that.

2. Proclaim the orthodox faith. Tell the story. The story says God created the heavens and the earth. The story says Jesus was fully God and fully human. The story says Mary was a virgin. The story says the tomb was empty. Don't quibble about how much of it is historical or not historical or factual or not factual. We have no way of knowing one way or the other and never will. This isn't just one person's story. It's the story the Church has told for two thousand years. I don't care if members of the clergy think every last bit of it is a metaphor. They might be right. They might be wrong. However, priests who have taken ordination vows should stand up in the pulpit or wherever else they preach and tell the story as if they are sure of its happening as they are the contents of their last meal. Priests who can't do this should find something else to do. The Church could help by not ordaining people who have problems with the basics of Christianity in the first place. Same with the rest of scripture. Yes, I know there isn't much historical evidence for much of the events depicted in the Old Testament. Doesn't matter. Jesus took the events of the OT as historical. The story formed Jesus. Just tell the story. To an extent, the rationalizing and demythologizing of Christianity helped some who were raised in church and comfortable going to church find a reason to stay in church despite their skepticism. Plenty of the people left anyway. Right now, we need to focus on people who have never been to church. The same modernist approach to scripture and doctrine that was a comfort is now a hindrance. As fewer and fewer people attend church out of obligation, fewer and fewer people who attend church will be interested in our current approach to scripture and doctrine. If we can't tell the story with confidence and without embarrassment, we have nothing to offer seekers they can't find any service organization.

3. Stop with the politics. Passing a bunch of resolutions addressing left wing political concerns is pointless. Doesn't do any good. TEC is easily ignored by people in power. We are almost a joke. The only thing focusing on left wing politics does is alienate political conservatives. The concerns of a parish should be primarily local. Parishes should focus primarily on local issues. If there is a local issue which calls for a Christian response, then issue a response that is clearly grounded in scripture, tradition, and reason and preferably backed by other churches in the area. Besides that, we should focus on doing what we can do and less on talking. Even the most libertarian of libertarians, say churches should be heavily involved providing for those in need. Let's focus on doing what we can instead of passing resolutions about what others should be doing. Also, TEC needs to focus more on how what we really do have to offer those in need (Acts 3:6). The reason we don't is because it involves telling the story with confidence and many of us are too embarrassed to tell it.

I'm not saying Episcopalians can't organize around political issues. Organizations like The Episcopal Peace Fellowship can take political stances all they want. I'm willing to provide a meeting place for them. However, Episcopalians who are political conservatives should also be allowed to organize and I'd give them space as well. Priests should advocate for neither side from the pulpit. Most importantly, local churches should be places for dialogue about proper Christian responses to political issues.

4. Stop the silliness in liturgy. Scrap Holy Women, Holy Men and start from scratch. Not everybody who has a good idea or champions a cause we like needs to be made a saint. Bishops should demand churches stick to authorized sources and rubrics be followed. Whether we say so officially or not, we pray what we believe. Bishops are responsible for seeing that we do. Liturgies should strive to be as timeless as possible and based in tradition instead of cute and dated. Rather than liturgical innovations, TEC should make more of an effort to reclaim the richness of the past. Haven't the TEC leaders noticed the numbers of younger people fascinated with Anglo-Catholicism? Why not encourage that by authorizing resources for use by those wanting a resurgence in the Anglo-Catholic tradition? Why don't Anglo-Catholics get a volume of Enriching Our Worship?

5. Develop Anti-classism training. Snobbery is a bigger problem than all the isms. Many of our parishes would have no problem welcoming an affluent, highly educated, African American (or any other minority) lesbian.

6. Stop obsessing over old buildings and worship times.

7. Be more welcoming of families with children. Many parents look for a church that has something to offer their children. All TEC parishes need to put more effort and resources on Christian formation. In other words, the budget for Christian formation needs to be more than a few hundred dollars a year. We need to put as much care into the space we use for formation as we do for worship. Parents who want a place that has something for their children will not be attracted that trims the deficit by cutting Christian formation costs.

8. Focus on Christian spirituality. Our tradition has much to offer seekers. We have answers to the metaphysical questions if we are just willing to embrace the answers our tradition gives us. We have answers about how we should live and even answers about how we become better people. We have a rich spiritual tradition that really does have something for everybody. We have a beautiful understanding of sacred time and sacred space that I believe is very appealing in a society that is increasingly secular. In addition to being beautifully, it also practical. Our spiritual tradition is diverse and flexible. It really does contain something for everybody. We should do a better job of emphasizing it and teaching it. Leave Jung out of it.

This will do for a start. I'll list more if I think about it.
 
Posted by Gramps49 (# 16378) on :
 
I see Beeswax danced around the issues that have divided the church--probably to avoid going into dead horse material.

I recently read an article that said most schismatic movements eventually die out--usually within a generation--because they refuse to change with the times.

I have certainly seen this in my own denomination. As an example: some Lutheran synods split over the issue of slavery. It took a civil war here to settle the question, but once that was settled, Lutheran churches that were pro slavery disappeared.

We had a similar fight over predestination, but that issue died away after a generation had past--and we returned to the traditional Lutheran understanding of the doctrine.

Revisit this in 20 years and I think you will see the TEC stronger than ever and the splinter groups all but gone,
 
Posted by Beeswax Altar (# 11644) on :
 
I didn't dance around the Dead Horses. At this point, the Dead Horses are decided for TEC. If you can't accept that, you would probably be happier just leaving. Conservatives who choose to stay need to understand that some of their strongest allies going forward will often be ordained women as well as gays and lesbians. As for progressives, you won. Now it is time to be magnanimous in victory. We all need to move on.

And that's all I think needs to be said about Dead Horses.
 
Posted by jordan32404 (# 15833) on :
 
In relation to the original post, I think it's quite unwise for the Presiding Bishop to pursue an agenda that wastes so much Episcopal money. Perhaps, if there is a viable Episcopal congregation left after a parish secedes, then we could pursue litigation, but that group would have to be self-sustaining. The Episcopal Church does not have millions of dollars to waste on empty buildings. It's also somewhat ironic that litigation with the TEC is somewhat of a "glue" that holds together ACNA and other groups. The image of a common enemy holds the disparate groups together. If TEC were to drop all litigation cases and apologize for treating ACNA badly, the latter would fall apart in less than five years. Essentially, they are using TEC litigation as a way to avoid dealing with their own internal issues.

This comes from someone who came from ACNA into TEC and who largely agrees with their concerns about TEC. I can't support schism, though. (Just for perspective on my opinion).
 
Posted by Zach82 (# 3208) on :
 
I don't know if it's quite so bad an investment, Jordan, to send the lawyers after the silver the schismatics ran off with. Besides the Holy Spirit nothing is quite as sustaining to a diocese as millions of real-estate dollars.
 
Posted by Honest Ron Bacardi (# 38) on :
 
Gramps49 wrote:
quote:
I recently read an article that said most schismatic movements eventually die out--usually within a generation--because they refuse to change with the times.

I don't know what the article was looking at, so it would be a bit unfair to draw any conclusions directly from it. But indirectly, and relating to it -

- both Anglicans and Lutherans are members of schismatic movements and we haven't died out yet. That would appear to be a major minus for the theory. As to schismatics from Anglicanism, both the baptists, the methodists and various other reformed denominations all meet this criterion too - are they not larger? (In the USA I mean). I'm sure there are splinters that have expired after a generation or two, but I'm far from certain it is universal.

One final point is that schism is judged by history on the basis of who caused it. Most people would probably say that the great schism of 1054 probably had roots on both sides going back many years. But in the Johannine schism, it is generally held to be the main body of the Johannine church that spiralled out of control, claiming it had the Spirit, and not the minority.

If I had to make an overall comment, it would be for nobody to be complacent about this. History can be a lot tougher on us than we might like.
 
Posted by Beeswax Altar (# 11644) on :
 
9. Adopt Bishop Saul's non-proposal for downsizing the national church. He said it wasn't a proposal when people complained. Some people really like having meetings and serving on committees and commissions. Do any of the committee meetings ever produce anything worthwhile? Not really. Could we do without most of the commissions? You bet we could. But then people who like going to meetings and serving on committees wouldn't get to do that so...
 
Posted by The Silent Acolyte (# 1158) on :
 
What Beeswax Altar sez: #1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 7, 8, & 9, thought I'm not sure what's up with #5 and would want to hear more about #6.
 
Posted by Wyclif (# 5391) on :
 
Great commentary, Beeswax. Particularly your #1 and #2. I'm fairly certain we are not theologically on the same page, but I couldn't agree more with your analysis, esp. regarding "telling the story." There are far, far too many Episcopal priests who cannot, and therefore should not be in the pulpit. TEC has been far too unselective regarding the ordination of clergy. If you can't preach the Gospel of Jesus Christ but prefer the Gospel of Jung, please save these people the misery and find another profession (or another hobby, as it were).
 
Posted by Gramps49 (# 16378) on :
 
Honest Ron

I think the Anglican and Lutheran origins were different than those who want to hold on to the old ways.

The Lutheran movement started because there was a desire to restore the church to its original proclamation--and to get out from under the politically oppressive thumb of the Curia.

Likewise, the Anglican movement started as a means to get out from under the thumb of the papacy especially when it came to the question of divorce, simply put.

I would say the Reformation was a positive movement rather than a reactive movement the most recent schisms have been. Reactive splits are doomed to die.
 
Posted by Beeswax Altar (# 11644) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by The Silent Acolyte:
What Beeswax Altar sez: #1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 7, 8, & 9, thought I'm not sure what's up with #5 and would want to hear more about #6.

With 5, TEC has many parishes (ever diocese I've seen) that need to be combined. The diocese tries yoking parishes together. People complain the time of Eucharist changes or they can't have an early service. The diocese suggests combining the parishes into one larger and more viable congregation. People complain because they'll have to give up their building. So the parishes continue to decline separately. What's important? Coming to the same building at the same time and having coffee with the same people appears to be what its all about.

With 6, in many instances, I think our biggest hindrance to being welcoming and inclusive is class. What we expect church to be and how we treat others is based on class. This isn't the case in every place. However, I've witnessed and heard enough examples of it and from churches that have very little else in common (rural, suburban, urban, high church, low church, liberal, conservative).
 
Posted by jordan32404 (# 15833) on :
 
In regards to mergers, etc. I hope that TEC becomes less of a posh religion and more like the rest of the Communion in being a church for everyone (granted, Anglicanism in general has been more upper class). Perhaps it's past time for "Episcopal" to mean more than tat and a lovely service on Sunday morning but more about preaching the Gospel and being saturated with the Bible as Cranmer intended.
 
Posted by Beeswax Altar (# 11644) on :
 
A beautiful service and proclaiming the gospel aren't mutually exclusive. Being posh and proclaiming the gospel? Not so much.
 
Posted by Sir Pellinore (ret'd) (# 12163) on :
 
I think it's the faux posh you need to avoid, Beeswax Altar. They're the tattiest of the lot. A bit like Tatty Oldbit in that wonderful British newspaper cartoon the Perishers.

http://www.theauthenticperishers.co.uk/mainmenu/tatty.htm

Come to think of it, there should be a Tatty Oldbit in every Anglican parish everywhere. The show would increase the congregation. Tatty has character and authenticity. We desperately need that.

[ 16. April 2012, 03:23: Message edited by: Sir Pellinore (ret'd) ]
 
Posted by Matt Black (# 2210) on :
 
Beeswax Altar makes a number of good points above IMO.
quote:
Originally posted by ToujoursDan:
quote:
Originally posted by SeraphimSarov:
If it was the "witness to a renewed Gospel" , it would be prospering. It is dying as previous posters have pointed out

In many ways it is prospering. A church where approx. 30% of the membership grew up in other traditions and made a conscious decision to join it, must have something compelling to offer, otherwise this wouldn't be occurring.


What Zach82 said: a church which is dependent on other traditions/ churchmanships for 30% of its membership is not in a healthy place. I would hazard more than an educated guess that a large part of that 30% come from more conservative, more evangelical backgrounds and have moved higher up the candle liturgically and to the left theologically as they have 'grown up' spiritually (as they would doubtless see it); the irony here therefore is that TEC needs the more con-evo denominations/ non-denoms for a significant proportion of its membership!
 
Posted by Sir Pellinore (ret'd) (# 12163) on :
 
As an outsider - in Australia - Matt, I think whatever went on/is going on with the TEC has got many of its current members rattled. Really rattled. If you are badly enough rattled it often looks like you might be falling to pieces.

Being here I can only see it as an outsider. Whatever the truth of the matter is and what the outcome will be I really have no idea. It's a bit like watching a news clip from a war zone. The clip itself tells you very little. Analysts vary as to their insights and prognostications. Think tanks supposedly think. Foreign ministers make announcements. It's no clearer.
 
Posted by Matt Black (# 2210) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Zach82:
quote:
Maybe not but being purposely vindictive is another matter altogether, a case in point being the treatment of Matt Kennedy and his parish - they offered to purchase their church at full market value; not only were they refused, the building was instead sold cut price to Muslims and is now a mosque.
These people are going about calling themselves the legitimate Anglican Church of North America. It is their stated purpose to replace the Episcopal Church. Letting them continue on in these churches sure seems, to me, just a bad strategic decision. People will get the idea that they are a legitimate continuation of the former Episcopal parishes, and Lord knows that's how they present themselves.

It's not about revenge, though it must be flattering to the schismatics to imagine it must be so. It's only about what is best for the Episcopal Church.

Zach

Of course it's always The Other Lot™ who are the schismatics... [Biased]
 
Posted by aumbry (# 436) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by CL:
quote:
Originally posted by Zach82:
We're evil for not giving them churches, Gorpo? We don't owe them squat.

Maybe not but being purposely vindictive is another matter altogether, a case in point being the treatment of Matt Kennedy and his parish - they offered to purchase their church at full market value; not only were they refused, the building was instead sold cut price to Muslims and is now a mosque.
I never fail to be surprised at how vindictive so called "liberal" clerics can be. I do hope the congregation treated in this way flourishes and the church authorities are afflicted with piles.
 
Posted by Mockingale (# 16599) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by aumbry:
quote:
Originally posted by CL:
quote:
Originally posted by Zach82:
We're evil for not giving them churches, Gorpo? We don't owe them squat.

Maybe not but being purposely vindictive is another matter altogether, a case in point being the treatment of Matt Kennedy and his parish - they offered to purchase their church at full market value; not only were they refused, the building was instead sold cut price to Muslims and is now a mosque.
I never fail to be surprised at how vindictive so called "liberal" clerics can be. I do hope the congregation treated in this way flourishes and the church authorities are afflicted with piles.
I never fail to be surprised at how impertinent your responses are at nearly every opportunity.

We have a major problem with splitting congregations. It tears apart long standing church families over the politics of the day. One of the things causing splitters to consider a choice to leave carefully is the fact that they won't get church property. They'll be forced to meet in a school basement or a mini-mall on the other side of town until they can build the capital to construct their own sanctuary.

If we lease the building to them, we take away one of the deterrents of schism. If we make it a little harder to leave, maybe cooler heads will prevail.

I don't see it as a necessarily vindictive move, although it doesn't surprise me that the ACNA and people that sympathize with their "mission" would view the ECUSA as "evil." When your own propaganda teaches that we're not a real church but some soulless federation of libertines and atheists, it makes it hard to see attribute any positive or even neutral motives to our actions.

Most of those congregations have simply bought time. Parishioners will either rejoin the Episcopal Church when they realize that they've thrown in their lot with reactionary fundamentalists, or they or their families will drop out, like most in Christendom.
 
Posted by Lietuvos Sv. Kazimieras (# 11274) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Beeswax Altar:
A beautiful service and proclaiming the gospel aren't mutually exclusive. Being posh and proclaiming the gospel? Not so much.

IME, the posh parishes are usually MOTR to Low. High Church parishes are likely to have a wider distribution of varying socioeconomic circumstance, and more self-consciously Anglo-Catholic places are likely to have the least posh congregants overall. I have always gathered that the truly posh don't like heavy-duty ritualism.
 
Posted by Lietuvos Sv. Kazimieras (# 11274) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sir Pellinore (ret'd):
As an outsider - in Australia - Matt, I think whatever went on/is going on with the TEC has got many of its current members rattled. Really rattled. If you are badly enough rattled it often looks like you might be falling to pieces.

Being here I can only see it as an outsider. Whatever the truth of the matter is and what the outcome will be I really have no idea. It's a bit like watching a news clip from a war zone. The clip itself tells you very little. Analysts vary as to their insights and prognostications. Think tanks supposedly think. Foreign ministers make announcements. It's no clearer.

The thing is, on the ground much of TEC feels quiescent and business-as-usual. The current "situation" has been going on in one form or another since 1976, but most of the Church feels quite normal, even thriving. A lot depends on the diocese one is in and whether a mission plant was ever a viable thing in the first place. Some suburban plants never had much of a chance, never attaining parish status (i.e. never capable of full self-support and paying a normal diocesan assessment), maybe making it for some years to parish status before reverting back to mission status, or occasionally closing up shop. IMO, the latter hasn't happened nearly often enough. Many dinky litte TEC shacks need to be consolidated. There was a great deal of suburban mission planting in the late 1950s and early 1960s all over the country. Much of that was ill-advised even if well-intentioned.
 
Posted by Matt Black (# 2210) on :
 
What happened in 1976 that triggered this?
 
Posted by Zach82 (# 3208) on :
 
quote:
I never fail to be surprised at how vindictive so called "liberal" clerics can be. I do hope the congregation treated in this way flourishes and the church authorities are afflicted with piles.
How is taking back the church property which these congregations flat out stole vindictive again?

Parishes hold their church property in trust for the Episcopal Church. Everyone knew this before the schism. If a congregation wants to split, fine, but they cannot take the patrimony of the Church with them.
 
Posted by Lietuvos Sv. Kazimieras (# 11274) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Matt Black:
What happened in 1976 that triggered this?

An equine died in 1976, leading to the first significant defections from TEC and lawsuits over property. The next horse didn't die until the consecration of Gene Robinson during the past decade, although I'm sure the elevation of ++Katherine Jefferts-Schori to the Primacy of the national Church really got up the noses of people like +Jack Iker of Fort Worth. The secession of four dioceses, Iker's amongst them, has been most troubling but nonetheless really limited in scope. Taking Fort Worth as an example, several strong parishes remained in TEC and the TEC diocese there has been reconstituted so that it now expresses the ethos of the national Church and the progressives/loyalists who remained with TEC are no longer yoked to the arch-conservative reactionaries. The latter will most likely ultimately lose their property and their folk will have to make decisions as to whether to rejoin TEC, go to other established denominations, enter the Ordinariate (as quite a few of them are now already starting to do, to the loss of the secessionist diocese), or build/buy some tacky little worship-shacks of their own (which I actually don't think will suit many of the secessionists, who thus far have been able to stay in their own buildings and hold on to all their accustomed ecclesiastical ornaments, plate, etc).

[ 16. April 2012, 13:53: Message edited by: Lietuvos Sv. Kazimieras ]
 
Posted by Beeswax Altar (# 11644) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Lietuvos Sv. Kazimieras:
quote:
Originally posted by Beeswax Altar:
A beautiful service and proclaiming the gospel aren't mutually exclusive. Being posh and proclaiming the gospel? Not so much.

IME, the posh parishes are usually MOTR to Low. High Church parishes are likely to have a wider distribution of varying socioeconomic circumstance, and more self-consciously Anglo-Catholic places are likely to have the least posh congregants overall. I have always gathered that the truly posh don't like heavy-duty ritualism.
With one possible exception, I would agree. Anglo-Catholic parishes attract a variety of people from all over the geographical area. The posh must not like ritualism.
 
Posted by Zach82 (# 3208) on :
 
It's true- the two parishes that might be called the poshest in my diocese are low (Trinity Church Copley Square) and middle-low (Church of the Redeemer Chestnut Hill). I don't know about the poshitude of nose-bleed high Church of the Advent, Back Bay though.

Zach
 
Posted by Mockingale (# 16599) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Zach82:
It's true- the two parishes that might be called the poshest in my diocese are low (Trinity Church Copley Square) and middle-low (Church of the Redeemer Chestnut Hill). I don't know about the poshitude of nose-bleed high Church of the Advent, Back Bay though.

Zach

I went to Advent for Easter Vigil (I was in town for the weekend). If I had to guess, the population was mostly very wealthy, from the surrounding Beacon Hill/Back Bay area, with a significant contingent of students from maybe Harvard or MIT.

That said, it didn't feel like a country club parish. They didn't make decidedly middle-middle-class me feel unwelcome (or particularly welcome, either).
 
Posted by Lietuvos Sv. Kazimieras (# 11274) on :
 
I think a few of the old East Coast A-C parishes do have a considerable contingent of wealthy parishioners, but I don't think this is true of the majority of East Coast A-C shacks, nor at all the case for A-C parishes elsewhere in the USA.
 
Posted by aumbry (# 436) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Zach82:
quote:
I never fail to be surprised at how vindictive so called "liberal" clerics can be. I do hope the congregation treated in this way flourishes and the church authorities are afflicted with piles.
How is taking back the church property which these congregations flat out stole vindictive again?

Parishes hold their church property in trust for the Episcopal Church. Everyone knew this before the schism. If a congregation wants to split, fine, but they cannot take the patrimony of the Church with them.

But whose patrimony is it? Surely the moral argument is with the congregation and not necessarily the church hierarchy. The church must be made up of its people and not some sort of legal entity!

The example was one where the authorities preferred to sell the property to become a mosque than to let the original congregation buy it at market value.

Apparently commenting on this as vindictive is seen as impertinent by some!
 
Posted by Augustine the Aleut (# 1472) on :
 
Mockingale writes:
quote:
If we make it a little harder to leave, maybe cooler heads will prevail.
I assure you that, in my painful experience, this is a fantasy. If anything, it has the opposite effect.
 
Posted by Mockingale (# 16599) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Augustine the Aleut:
Mockingale writes:
quote:
If we make it a little harder to leave, maybe cooler heads will prevail.
I assure you that, in my painful experience, this is a fantasy. If anything, it has the opposite effect.
Well, at the very least, we're not rewarding their attempts at theft.
 
Posted by Zach82 (# 3208) on :
 
quote:
But whose patrimony is it? Surely the moral argument is with the congregation and not necessarily the church hierarchy. The church must be made up of its people and not some sort of legal entity!

The example was one where the authorities preferred to sell the property to become a mosque than to let the original congregation buy it at market value.

Apparently commenting on this as vindictive is seen as impertinent by some!

Not impertinent- just false. You might imagine any number of moral arguments, but Church canons are clear that the church property belongs to the Episcopal Church, and exists for the propagation and worship of the Episcopal tradition. The schismatics, at least the ones with a lick of integrity, knew full well this was the case beforehand.

When a congregation votes to disassociate with the Episcopal Church, so far as the Episcopal Church is concerned an Episcopal congregation ceases to exist and a non-Episcopal congregation comes into existence. We wish them all the best, but that doesn't change the fact that the congregation is no longer using Church property for the propagation of the Episcopal faith. We have an Episcopal building with no Episcopal congregation to put in it.

So, unless the Episcopal Church can find a use for it, up for sale it goes. While it would be nice to find another Christian congregation to buy it, that isn't always possible and sometimes the place goes into secular use, such as a mosque. Again, so long as the schismatics make it their mission to preach against the Episcopal Church and seek to replace the Episcopal Church as the legitimate expression of Anglicanism in the United States, the property cannot be sold to them.

There's nothing vindictive about it- it's all about doing the best by the faith of the Episcopal Church. You can have our prayers, but you can hardly expect a free church out of the deal.
 
Posted by Zach82 (# 3208) on :
 
I would also add that these legal disputes do not only involve physical property like land, buildings, or church plate. It also includes any endowments the congregations might have held, which often are very large.
 
Posted by Augustine the Aleut (# 1472) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mockingale:
quote:
Originally posted by Augustine the Aleut:
Mockingale writes:
quote:
If we make it a little harder to leave, maybe cooler heads will prevail.
I assure you that, in my painful experience, this is a fantasy. If anything, it has the opposite effect.
Well, at the very least, we're not rewarding their attempts at theft.
Without getting into the ten-year-long fight at S Vartan's, where I was of the minority that held out against the pirate crew takeover (those shipmates who know me IRL are aware of the viciousness and unpleasantness of it all), I would not characterize their efforts as attempted theft (in Canada, the in-trust-for-the-national-church doctrine is not pertinent, either in canon or civil law). Their intent is not criminal, but rather contrary to legal provisions for ownership.

A split is a split and, like a divorce, we must make it as tidy as possible to that people can proceed forward with the least damage. Our local arrangement was a complex buy-back scheme whereby the pirates bought one of the two seceding churches. This partition seemed to have a cooling effect on post-split passions, and the Diocese and the pirate crew now cheerfully ignore each other and go about their business.
 
Posted by Zach82 (# 3208) on :
 
quote:
Their intent is not criminal, but rather contrary to legal provisions for ownership.
"It's not criminal, it's just contrary to the law!" [Roll Eyes]

Again, we wish these people the best, but the primary concern of the Church must be the propagation of the Gospel as it understands it. How these parishes are to "get along" when they chose to leave is an ecumenical, and therefore secondary concern.

[ 16. April 2012, 17:18: Message edited by: Zach82 ]
 
Posted by CL (# 16145) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Matt Black:
Beeswax Altar makes a number of good points above IMO.
quote:
Originally posted by ToujoursDan:
quote:
Originally posted by SeraphimSarov:
If it was the "witness to a renewed Gospel" , it would be prospering. It is dying as previous posters have pointed out

In many ways it is prospering. A church where approx. 30% of the membership grew up in other traditions and made a conscious decision to join it, must have something compelling to offer, otherwise this wouldn't be occurring.


What Zach82 said: a church which is dependent on other traditions/ churchmanships for 30% of its membership is not in a healthy place. I would hazard more than an educated guess that a large part of that 30% come from more conservative, more evangelical backgrounds and have moved higher up the candle liturgically and to the left theologically as they have 'grown up' spiritually (as they would doubtless see it); the irony here therefore is that TEC needs the more con-evo denominations/ non-denoms for a significant proportion of its membership!
Actually I'd say most of that 30% is accounted for by former Catholics whether gay; divorced and remarried; or just plain theological liberal.

[ 16. April 2012, 17:20: Message edited by: CL ]
 
Posted by Mockingale (# 16599) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Augustine the Aleut:
quote:
Originally posted by Mockingale:
quote:
Originally posted by Augustine the Aleut:
Mockingale writes:
quote:
If we make it a little harder to leave, maybe cooler heads will prevail.
I assure you that, in my painful experience, this is a fantasy. If anything, it has the opposite effect.
Well, at the very least, we're not rewarding their attempts at theft.
Without getting into the ten-year-long fight at S Vartan's, where I was of the minority that held out against the pirate crew takeover (those shipmates who know me IRL are aware of the viciousness and unpleasantness of it all), I would not characterize their efforts as attempted theft (in Canada, the in-trust-for-the-national-church doctrine is not pertinent, either in canon or civil law). Their intent is not criminal, but rather contrary to legal provisions for ownership.

A split is a split and, like a divorce, we must make it as tidy as possible to that people can proceed forward with the least damage. Our local arrangement was a complex buy-back scheme whereby the pirates bought one of the two seceding churches. This partition seemed to have a cooling effect on post-split passions, and the Diocese and the pirate crew now cheerfully ignore each other and go about their business.

I understand that argument and its appeal. But it is the goal of the "Anglican Church of North America" and its leading bishops to usurp the Episcopal Church and destroy it, in effect remaking the Episcopal Church in its own image. I believe there are clergy and lay people who believe they are doing God's work, and that the church had gone too far. But I think the bishops recognize that they're trying to depose the Episcopal Church and put themselves in the place of the Presiding Bishop through a procedural Anglican Communion coup.

If it were merely a congregation or two that voted to go their own way and sought use of the sanctuary and their old bank accounts, I'd understand. But these churches are engaged in an insurrection. If they start using the old Episcopal church buildings, they further the perception that they are the legitimate continuation of Anglicanism in the United States and that TEC is dead or dying.

Not to mention how you'd feel if you were one of the congregants who voted to stay put in the church you grew up in, and watched your former friends take all the trappings of your church home with them. One of these remnant congregations was stuck worshipping in the living room of a rented house while the court battle was ongoing.

I don't blame the Presiding Bishop for playing hardball. The pleas by the ACNA for the Episcopal Church to "play fair" ring hollow, given their mission.
 
Posted by Augustine the Aleut (# 1472) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Zach82:
quote:
Their intent is not criminal, but rather contrary to legal provisions for ownership.
"It's not criminal, it's just contrary to the law!" [Roll Eyes]

Again, we wish these people the best, but the primary concern of the Church must be the propagation of the Gospel as it understands it. How these parishes are to "get along" when they chose to leave is an ecumenical, and therefore secondary concern.

I am sorry, Zach82 (and Mockingale as well), I must disagree with you very strongly. Any armchair lawyer can distinguish between civil dispute and criminal action. Again, I note that I was in the trenches for long years fighting against them, but I knew them and their intent was not criminal. They were also dead wrong from the start, but the Diocese through its sloppiness and ambiguity gave them more cause than I would have liked--- but this leads into a Diocese of Ottawa tangent.
 
Posted by Zach82 (# 3208) on :
 
quote:
I am sorry, Zach82 (and Mockingale as well), I must disagree with you very strongly. Any armchair lawyer can distinguish between civil dispute and criminal action. Again, I note that I was in the trenches for long years fighting against them, but I knew them and their intent was not criminal. They were also dead wrong from the start, but the Diocese through its sloppiness and ambiguity gave them more cause than I would have liked--- but this leads into a Diocese of Ottawa tangent.
Their intent is completely irrelevant. I am defending the integrity of the Episcopal Church. They don't have a right to a penny of the Church's patrimony, and the Episcopal Church is perfectly within its rights to throw them out of Episcopal buildings and to take back its own endowments.

Furthermore, even in a profoundly generous account of Christian charity, free churches and endowments can hardly be required of us.
 
Posted by Augustine the Aleut (# 1472) on :
 
Mockingale writes:
quote:
Not to mention how you'd feel if you were one of the congregants who voted to stay put in the church you grew up in, and watched your former friends take all the trappings of your church home with them.
Which was exactly the situation I was in. And without going into detail, the departers were not particularly couth or honest in how they dealt with things.

But I must disagree with Zach82 entirely: intent is entirely pertinent, and denying this (on both parts) means that the damage will be exacerbated, and long-lasting. While it moves into the realm of ecumenical relations rather than intra-Anglican life, ecumenical concerns are, given the dominical instruction, rather primary.
 
Posted by Zach82 (# 3208) on :
 
quote:
But I must disagree with Zach82 entirely: intent is entirely pertinent, and denying this (on both parts) means that the damage will be exacerbated, and long-lasting. While it moves into the realm of ecumenical relations rather than intra-Anglican life, ecumenical concerns are, given the dominical instruction, rather primary.
When little Johnny took candy from the drugstore, not knowing any better, his intent was not criminal. When he threw a temper tantrum after it was made clear to him that he could not take what wasn't his, he become culpable for stealing, whether he was willing to understand that fact or not.

Giving our patrimony over to people preaching against us is a little much for the sake of ecumenism.

Zach
 
Posted by Augustine the Aleut (# 1472) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Zach82:
quote:
But I must disagree with Zach82 entirely: intent is entirely pertinent, and denying this (on both parts) means that the damage will be exacerbated, and long-lasting. While it moves into the realm of ecumenical relations rather than intra-Anglican life, ecumenical concerns are, given the dominical instruction, rather primary.
When little Johnny took candy from the drugstore, not knowing any better, his intent was not criminal. When he threw a temper tantrum after it was made clear to him that he could not take what wasn't his, he become culpable for stealing, whether he was willing to understand that fact or not.

Giving our patrimony over to people preaching against us is a little much for the sake of ecumenism.

Zach

Zach82-- I do not know how you concluded that I favour surrendering property for ecumenism. I have re-read my post twice and find your interpretation quite singular. I am suggesting that we do not assume the worst of our Xn interlocutors in disputes, and that we look at solutions which bring us forward. That the other party is not being helpful is a fault with which we must deal, not a characteristic to emulate.

As far as your other comment, I will restate bluntly my previous position: my god-daughter's Grade XII civics class knows the difference between theft and a civil dispute over property. Crime and tort. Gee whillikers.
 
Posted by Zach82 (# 3208) on :
 
I will grant that this is a matter for civil courts, since I am not calling for anyone to be criminally prosecuted anyway, and I hardly care about their intent. We'll take back what's ours, forgive them their schism, repent out part in it, and thereon let all the ecumenism either side can stand commence.

It might get lost in the back and forth, but my intent here has been to argue that the Episcopal Church is not being vindictive in its pursuit of church property (which it has every right to) or in refusing to sell it back to the people that ran off with it (which would not be in the best interest of the Church). It has nothing to do with revenge.

Zach
 
Posted by Beeswax Altar (# 11644) on :
 
And, if it were that clear cut morally, you would have a point. Depending on the age of the churches in question, the parishioners leaving the parish might have paid for the building. The parishioners certainly paid for the upkeep. What did the diocese contribute? Not much. The churches in question have endowments because people gave money to those churches. Had they wanted to give money to the diocese they could have. Had they wanted to leave money to the national church they could have.

I'm also struggling with what view of the gospel holds that it is better for a church to become a mosque instead of remaining a church. Even if you say the gospel is all about Dead Horses and nothing else you still can't justify allowing the church to become a mosque. The standard Muslim view on Dead Horses is virtually the same if not less tolerant than that of the ACNA.

So what if the ACNA wants to replace TEC as the representative of TEC in the United States? Most progressives in TEC could care less about being a member of the Anglican Communion. TEC only wants to be a member of the Anglican Communion on its own terms. ACNA holds more in common with the rest of the Anglican Communion than TEC. The ACNA wouldn't even be the most conservative province in the Anglican Communion.

Personally, I don't care if TEC is a part of the Anglican Communion or not. I also don't care if the ACNA is in the Anglican Communion or not. For all I care, both TEC and ACNA can be in the Anglican Communion. Doesn't really impact me one way or the other.

Now, priests knew the nature of TEC when they took their ordination vows. Lay people should have known the nature of TEC when they decided to start giving their money. I say should have because most don't understand the nature of TEC. TEC is a hierarchical church. Don't join a church and start giving your money if you don't fully understand the name.

Like I said, if any of the parishioners want to remain in TEC, TEC should insist on keeping the building and the endowment. I can see keeping the endowments. Let's face most diocese can use the money. However, I cannot see any reason consistent with being a follower of Jesus Christ in refusing the sell the church back to the congregation. Not give it to them. Sell it to them. Allowing their church to become a mosque was both vindictive and insulting and the people responsible for it should be ashamed.

If the shoe was on the other foot, would the conservatives have behaved in a more gracious way than TEC?

Hell no
 
Posted by Beeswax Altar (# 11644) on :
 
10. Do a better job explaining the definition of Episcopal and the polity of TEC. It never ceases to amaze me how many Episcopalians think we are Congregationalists. This unfortunate mistake causes all sorts of problems for everybody involved.
 
Posted by Zach82 (# 3208) on :
 
quote:
Do a better job explaining the definition of Episcopal and the polity of TEC. It never ceases to amaze me how many Episcopalians think we are Congregationalists. This unfortunate mistake causes all sorts of problems for everybody involved.
Applied to the schismatics fighting to keep those parishes, that is a matter of vincible vs invincible ignorance.

I suppose, if I was bishop, I would sell the congregation their church back (though without a endowment they would be unlikely to afford it), so long as they changed their name to reflect the fact that they were not a legitimate continuation of the Episcopal parish there before. But I can't see that anyone is selling to icky Muslims just to score revenge against these people.
 
Posted by RuthW (# 13) on :
 
Thanks for the specificity of your numbered replies, Beeswax Altar. I don't have time to respond with particulars right now, but in general I think I agree with you.
 
Posted by Lietuvos Sv. Kazimieras (# 11274) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Zach82:
quote:
Do a better job explaining the definition of Episcopal and the polity of TEC. It never ceases to amaze me how many Episcopalians think we are Congregationalists. This unfortunate mistake causes all sorts of problems for everybody involved.
Applied to the schismatics fighting to keep those parishes, that is a matter of vincible vs invincible ignorance.

I suppose, if I was bishop, I would sell the congregation their church back (though without a endowment they would be unlikely to afford it), so long as they changed their name to reflect the fact that they were not a legitimate continuation of the Episcopal parish there before. But I can't see that anyone is selling to icky Muslims just to score revenge against these people.

I'm not sure it's anything to do with ignorance. I've recently run onto a nest of these creatures and ISTM that they simply choose to willfully disregard the reality of what TEC in 2012 is; they refuse to conform themselves to the doctrine and discipline of TEC as established by the bishops and representative clergy and laity in General Convention assembled. They want their little corner within TEC to be something other than a parish community in communion with its diocese and with the national Church. It's not ignorance, but rather denial, intransigence and incorrigibility.
 
Posted by Wyclif (# 5391) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Zach82:
[QUOTE]that doesn't change the fact that the congregation is no longer using Church property for the propagation of the Episcopal faith.

Not to be pedantic, but there is no such thing as "the Episcopal faith." Episcopacy is a particular form of government. There is only the Christian faith, full stop.

[ 17. April 2012, 01:18: Message edited by: Wyclif ]
 
Posted by Sober Preacher's Kid (# 12699) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Augustine the Aleut:
quote:
Originally posted by Mockingale:
quote:
Originally posted by Augustine the Aleut:
Mockingale writes:
quote:
If we make it a little harder to leave, maybe cooler heads will prevail.
I assure you that, in my painful experience, this is a fantasy. If anything, it has the opposite effect.
Well, at the very least, we're not rewarding their attempts at theft.
Without getting into the ten-year-long fight at S Vartan's, where I was of the minority that held out against the pirate crew takeover (those shipmates who know me IRL are aware of the viciousness and unpleasantness of it all), I would not characterize their efforts as attempted theft (in Canada, the in-trust-for-the-national-church doctrine is not pertinent, either in canon or civil law). Their intent is not criminal, but rather contrary to legal provisions for ownership.

A split is a split and, like a divorce, we must make it as tidy as possible to that people can proceed forward with the least damage. Our local arrangement was a complex buy-back scheme whereby the pirates bought one of the two seceding churches. This partition seemed to have a cooling effect on post-split passions, and the Diocese and the pirate crew now cheerfully ignore each other and go about their business.

That is explicitly how the United Church of Canada is organized and it is incorporated within the United Church Acts and the Trusts of Model Deed. Each congregation has a Board of Trustees who hold title to the property with reversionary interest to the United Church of Canada, through the Presbytery.

Identical provisions were incorporated in the Presbyterian Church Acts in 1875 and in the Methodist Acts in 1885. It certainly exists in civil law.

*Acts means one for the Federal Government and one for each province.
 
Posted by gorpo (# 17025) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by sonata3:
quote:
Originally posted by gorpo:

Episcopalians, on the other hand, are on frozen relations with 80% of the anglican communion, and are DEAD as it comes to ecumenical relations with the Catholic Church, the Eastern Orthodox Church, and evangelical forms of protestantism (namely, more then 90% of global christianity). It has turned its back on the anglican communion and the whole christianity worldwide...

gorpo, I think your final phrase needs to be reconsidered. On the issue of the ordination of non-celibate gays - clearly the main factor in the Virginia schism - TEC is on the same side of this issue as the Old Catholics, many of the continental Lutheran churches, and some of the continental Reformed churches; in the US, ELCA and the Presbyterian Church. Although the Moravian Church in North AMerica continues to discuss these issues, they remain in full communion with both ELCA and TEC. It has hardly turned its back on "the whole Christianity worlswide." The Anglican/Episcopal churches in New Zealand, Scotland, and Canada are, I believe, equally liberal on this issue.
It should be noted that "global christianity" is not the same as "euro-american christianity".

Mailine protestantism isn“t even a majority in the USA. People are leaving it.

What makes the 1.9 million member TEC more important then the 4 million member Church of South India? Or the church of Uganda? Just the fact that the 1.9 million in TEC are white??? Roman catholics and orthodox are nearly 70% of worldwide christianity. And the other 30% are overwhelmingly conservative on most issues, since the fastest growing religion in the world is pentecostalism.
 
Posted by gorpo (# 17025) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by CL:
quote:
Originally posted by Zach82:
We're evil for not giving them churches, Gorpo? We don't owe them squat.

Maybe not but being purposely vindictive is another matter altogether, a case in point being the treatment of Matt Kennedy and his parish - they offered to purchase their church at full market value; not only were they refused, the building was instead sold cut price to Muslims and is now a mosque.
The bishop was not happy to sell the building to a group of anglicans who don“t accept gay bishops. She sells it to a congregation that, instead of the Bible, will be reading a book that says its ok for men to spank their wives, and has a curse against "non-believers" every 5 verses... the irony.
 
Posted by gorpo (# 17025) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by ToujoursDan:
quote:
Originally posted by SeraphimSarov:
If it was the "witness to a renewed Gospel" , it would be prospering. It is dying as previous posters have pointed out

In many ways it is prospering. A church where approx. 30% of the membership grew up in other traditions and made a conscious decision to join it, must have something compelling to offer, otherwise this wouldn't be occurring.

It's just not enough to make up for the falling birthrate amongst the educated, mostly White base that makes up 80% of TEC's membership.

30% of the mebership growing in other traditions is not much in a country they are a minority, and there are hundreads of other protestant and christian traditions. In fact, it means that most episcopalians who marry someone from another denomination move to their spouses“s church, instead of bringing them to TEC.

And unless there is some mass suicide among whites in America, I don“t think it“s possible to go down from 3.6 million in the 70“s to 1.9 million in 2011 only because of low birth rates. Acording to most polls, the fastes growing segment of the USA population are the "non-religious" (including atheists and agnostic). Where are those people coming from? From the mainline denominations like TEC, it“s obvious. Non-religious people are also overwhelmingly white in the USA, and have low birth rates. They are growing in numbers exactly at the same proportion mainline churches are falling.
 
Posted by Zach82 (# 3208) on :
 
Gorpo, do you even know any Episcopalians in real life? Have you even met one?
 
Posted by Alogon (# 5513) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by gorpo:
Roman catholics and orthodox are nearly 70% of worldwide christianity. And the other 30% are overwhelmingly conservative on most issues, since the fastest growing religion in the world is pentecostalism.

What's your point? That TEC has deserved to die since 1970, or that the Church of England has deserved to die since the 16th century, so that Anglicanism should never have reached American shores?

If the latter, you'd have good company in John Henry Newman after he swam the Tiber.

But if the former, then I'll only be a good Anglican conservative in denying that these pentecostal groups are, or ever were, a complete and regular part of the church.

It's just a matter of what one finds it important to be conservative about, you see.
 
Posted by jordan32404 (# 15833) on :
 
On Episcopal polity... TEC is NOT hierarchical. The government of TEC was deliberately constructed to avoid hierarchy and association with a metropolitcal episcopacy. See Colin Podmore's "A Tale of Two Churches".
 
Posted by Lietuvos Sv. Kazimieras (# 11274) on :
 
I'd say, not quite. TEC was structured so that bishops do not have overweening authority, but governance is very much shared with the laity and with diocesan clergy. However, the Church is hierarchical in the sense that this signficantly lay-led and democratic polity invests the national Church with a great deal of ultimate authority and ownership streaming downward to diocesan and parish levels. The representative government is elected upward from the more local levels, but like the federal government of the United States, it then exercises the plenitude of authority downward to the more local levels from whence it was derived.
 
Posted by Fr Weber (# 13472) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Beeswax Altar:
10. Do a better job explaining the definition of Episcopal and the polity of TEC. It never ceases to amaze me how many Episcopalians think we are Congregationalists. This unfortunate mistake causes all sorts of problems for everybody involved.

I'm afraid this is a condition of being an American church. Regardless of the actual polity of the denomination, American Christians tend to behave like Congregationalists within their own building-based communities.

If I were in a position to offer advice to congregations (or percentages thereof) leaving TEC, it would be to pick up and leave with nothing. Just get out, and don't worry about the building or the stuff. It's just stuff. Leave it behind. Meet in a VFW or rent space from some other church and start up all over again. The rancor and stress caused by litigation is just not worth it.

These protracted disputes draw the wrong element, in any case. The continuing church has drawn more than its share of professional malcontents and other goofballs to its welcoming embrace. It is past time for the continuers to assert a positive identity rather than setting themselves up as "Not The Episcopal Church". We're getting there, slowly, I think, but there's a way to go yet.
 
Posted by aumbry (# 436) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Zach82:
Not impertinent- just false. You might imagine any number of moral arguments, but Church canons are clear that the church property belongs to the Episcopal Church, and exists for the propagation and worship of the Episcopal tradition. [/QB]

Sorry I was under the impression that the Episcopal Church had jettisoned tradition in its adoption of all things modish.

As a church it is doomed if it has given up on the hearts and minds of its fellow anglicans and sees the church as buildings and endowments.
 
Posted by Matt Black (# 2210) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Zach82:
I will grant that this is a matter for civil courts, since I am not calling for anyone to be criminally prosecuted anyway, and I hardly care about their intent. We'll take back what's ours, forgive them their schism, repent out part in it, and thereon let all the ecumenism either side can stand commence.

It might get lost in the back and forth, but my intent here has been to argue that the Episcopal Church is not being vindictive in its pursuit of church property (which it has every right to) or in refusing to sell it back to the people that ran off with it (which would not be in the best interest of the Church). It has nothing to do with revenge.

Zach

OK, since we are talking civil law then, there may be at the very least something of an implied or resulting trust (as defined in English law at least) arising in favour of the leaving parishioners: Beeswax Altar made the point that if the parishioners have financially contributed to the upkeep and repair of the building, then they morally as well as legally have some kind of stake in the worth of the building.

It's the same principle as is at work in the following example: a man owns a house in his sole name. He then gets married, wife moves in and pays towards the bills, maintenance and mortgage on the property. The courts will rule that she over time will acquire a financial interest in the proceeds of sale of the property.
 
Posted by Lietuvos Sv. Kazimieras (# 11274) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Fr Weber:
quote:
Originally posted by Beeswax Altar:
10. Do a better job explaining the definition of Episcopal and the polity of TEC. It never ceases to amaze me how many Episcopalians think we are Congregationalists. This unfortunate mistake causes all sorts of problems for everybody involved.

I'm afraid this is a condition of being an American church. Regardless of the actual polity of the denomination, American Christians tend to behave like Congregationalists within their own building-based communities.

If I were in a position to offer advice to congregations (or percentages thereof) leaving TEC, it would be to pick up and leave with nothing. Just get out, and don't worry about the building or the stuff. It's just stuff. Leave it behind. Meet in a VFW or rent space from some other church and start up all over again. The rancor and stress caused by litigation is just not worth it.

These protracted disputes draw the wrong element, in any case. The continuing church has drawn more than its share of professional malcontents and other goofballs to its welcoming embrace. It is past time for the continuers to assert a positive identity rather than setting themselves up as "Not The Episcopal Church". We're getting there, slowly, I think, but there's a way to go yet.

I agree with the final paragraph, but as someone who had flirtations with the early Continuers of the late 1970s/early 1980s, I would guess that the latest vintage of secessionists have been mindful of how unsuccessful many of the early leave-takers were, in significant measure because they left without buildings or much property of any kind. Many of the little Continuing start-ups in people's living rooms, in the chapels of existing churches, in motel spaces or in the rented halls of the ladies auxillary of the Masons disappeared in a relatively short amount of time. Even some of the Continuing congos who managed to get some sort of unattractive building didn't make it. Unless you have rich, generous benefactors, the fact is that you are likely screwed if you march out into the wilderness with no building. At least St Mary's Denver managed to finally reach a settlement with the Diocese of Colorado, in which they continued to occupy their building but ownership remained with TEC. Of course, that screwed the third of the congregation who had remained loyal to TEC and who were thus without their former church building and parish home. The general policy of TEC afterward has been not to engage in such settlements, a decision that I would endorse.
 
Posted by Zach82 (# 3208) on :
 
quote:
OK, since we are talking civil law then, there may be at the very least something of an implied or resulting trust (as defined in English law at least) arising in favour of the leaving parishioners: Beeswax Altar made the point that if the parishioners have financially contributed to the upkeep and repair of the building, then they morally as well as legally have some kind of stake in the worth of the building.
Not according to Church canons there ain't. And again- it really was very obvious the whole time, so it's a definite case of vincible ignorance.

quote:
It's the same principle as is at work in the following example: a man owns a house in his sole name. He then gets married, wife moves in and pays towards the bills, maintenance and mortgage on the property. The courts will rule that she over time will acquire a financial interest in the proceeds of sale of the property.
I can't see that a marriage metaphor is very apt. Who is married to who? The individuals? The parish as an organization? If you ask me a more accurate metaphor would be a tenant that feels that the landlord's house is his just because he's paid rent in the past. Which is why neither legal nor moral cases are usually based on metaphors. The principles that apply in the metaphor don't necessarily apply in the case itself.

Anything the individuals of the schismatic groups contributed for the upkeep of church buildings or towards endowments was a gift to the Episcopal parish, and the thing about gifts is that it isn't yours anymore once you've given it.

On the other hand, the parishes that these groups set up are not continuations of the Episcopal parishes they were part of before. I am no expert on property laws, but I can't see that an organization is reducible to any of the people or groups of people in it, even the majority of the people in it. When they choose to leave the organization, the organization remains and the custody of its assets goes to those who choose to stay. What happens when there is no one left is completely obvious in Church canons, and any ignorance about that is strictly vincible.
 
Posted by Mockingale (# 16599) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Augustine the Aleut:

As far as your other comment, I will restate bluntly my previous position: my god-daughter's Grade XII civics class knows the difference between theft and a civil dispute over property. Crime and tort. Gee whillikers.

It's a distinction without a difference in this case. I understand the difference between crime and tort, but the law does not allow a person to profit from either.
 
Posted by Matt Black (# 2210) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Zach82:
quote:
OK, since we are talking civil law then, there may be at the very least something of an implied or resulting trust (as defined in English law at least) arising in favour of the leaving parishioners: Beeswax Altar made the point that if the parishioners have financially contributed to the upkeep and repair of the building, then they morally as well as legally have some kind of stake in the worth of the building.
Not according to Church canons there ain't.
I'm talking not about canon law but about the law of property which presumably applies to the building and the land it is on
quote:
quote:
It's the same principle as is at work in the following example: a man owns a house in his sole name. He then gets married, wife moves in and pays towards the bills, maintenance and mortgage on the property. The courts will rule that she over time will acquire a financial interest in the proceeds of sale of the property.
I can't see that a marriage metaphor is very apt. Who is married to who? The individuals? The parish as an organization?
OK, they don't have to be married for a resulting trust to arise; it applies equally to co-habitees.
 
Posted by Mockingale (# 16599) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by aumbry:
quote:
Originally posted by Zach82:
Not impertinent- just false. You might imagine any number of moral arguments, but Church canons are clear that the church property belongs to the Episcopal Church, and exists for the propagation and worship of the Episcopal tradition.

Sorry I was under the impression that the Episcopal Church had jettisoned tradition in its adoption of all things modish.

As a church it is doomed if it has given up on the hearts and minds of its fellow anglicans and sees the church as buildings and endowments. [/QB]

Why don't you just admit that you have nothing of value to add to the conversation and leave it at that? The Episcopal Church is not in the business of soothing and appeasing those who seek to destroy it. Not ever.

Assuming that you're a continuing Anglican, from your attitude, your childish insults speak volumes.
 
Posted by Zach82 (# 3208) on :
 
quote:
Why don't you just admit that you have nothing of value to add to the conversation and leave it at that? The Episcopal Church is not in the business of soothing and appeasing those who seek to destroy it. Not ever.
Don't mind aumbry, Mockingale. As my old father used to say, "Sometimes it's best to just let pointless dogs lie." Or something like that.

quote:
OK, they don't have to be married for a resulting trust to arise; it applies equally to co-habitees.
Again, the metaphor isn't apt, since it simply doesn't accurately describe the relationships involved. I imagine one would have to look at Church canons to determine just what the relationship was between the parish, the Church, and the individuals in the parish, and the individuals making a break for it.

They do say, and there is a clear prenuptial agreement therein, if you must.

Just a quick question. Do you know much about property laws yourself? Or are we both arguing from what we imagine the laws to be?

Zach

[ 17. April 2012, 14:06: Message edited by: Zach82 ]
 
Posted by Augustine the Aleut (# 1472) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mockingale:
quote:
Originally posted by Augustine the Aleut:

As far as your other comment, I will restate bluntly my previous position: my god-daughter's Grade XII civics class knows the difference between theft and a civil dispute over property. Crime and tort. Gee whillikers.

It's a distinction without a difference in this case. I understand the difference between crime and tort, but the law does not allow a person to profit from either.
Given that posts used the term theft freely and without precision, I felt that the distinction was important to make. A property dispute resulting from internal political differences does not constitute a crime. Having been publically addressed with opprobrium (Tool of Satan) during the disputes up here, I feel strongly that we need to bring light, not heat, to what needs to be done.
 
Posted by Matt Black (# 2210) on :
 
Zach, property law is my specialism [Smile] , admittedly English and Welsh jurisdictions only, but I am endeavouring to apply the principles here to the situation under discussion, nevertheless.
 
Posted by Mockingale (# 16599) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Zach82:
[QUOTE]Why don't you just admit that you have nothing of value to add to the conversation and leave it at that? The Episcopal Church is not in the business of soothing and appeasing those who seek to destroy it. Not ever.

Don't mind aumbry, Mockingale. As my old father used to say, "Sometimes it's best to just let pointless dogs lie." Or something like that.

quote:
OK, they don't have to be married for a resulting trust to arise; it applies equally to co-habitees.[/quote

Again, the metaphor isn't apt, since it simply doesn't accurately describe the relationships involved. I imagine one would have to look at Church canons to determine just what the relationship was between the parish, the Church, and the individuals in the parish, and the individuals making a break for it.

Just a quick question. Do you know much about property laws yourself? Or are we both arguing from what we imagine the laws to be?

Zach

A resulting trust (I am a lawyer) arises when you give someone money with the instructions that they purchase property for you. The person then purchases property in his own name and refuses to turn it over to you. If you can prove to the court that the arrangement was that he, as your agent, was instructed to purchase property for you, then the court will find an implied or "resulting" trust with the agent as the trustee and you as the settlor/beneficiary. The court will then order that the agent convey title over to you.

A resulting trust can be disproven with writings or behavior to the contrary. If the Church canons and constitution clearly state that parishes hold real estate and endowments in trust for the Episcopal Church with instructions to turn them over to the church when the parish dissolves, then the argument that the Episcopal Church holds those properties in a resulting trust for parishioners is a non-starter.

Equity (the parallel to "law" that deals with trusts) also requires that a person trying to claim a trust be innocent and deserving of an extraordinary remedy like disgorging funds from the Church - these parishes knew or should have known if they'd paid attention to the Church canons that their land and monies were not theirs to take with them if they decided to quit the Church.

If they were so concerned, they could have formed an independent congregation or a congregation of a different denomination that gives property rights to individual parishes. But they accepted the rules of the church and for decades reaped the benefit of Episcopal affiliation. The court is not going to rule that they were somehow hoodwinked or ignorant of the rules and that it's unjust that they should not be able to take the building.
 
Posted by Zach82 (# 3208) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Matt Black:
Zach, property law is my specialism [Smile] , admittedly English and Welsh jurisdictions only, but I am endeavouring to apply the principles here to the situation under discussion, nevertheless.

I'll have to take your word for it then, and clarify that I do not begrudge the schismatics taking what they actually have a right to. It is just obvious, even to one who does not know much about property laws, that they have a right to very little, and are not being very gracious about it.
 
Posted by aumbry (# 436) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mockingale:
quote:
Originally posted by aumbry:
quote:
Originally posted by Zach82:
Not impertinent- just false. You might imagine any number of moral arguments, but Church canons are clear that the church property belongs to the Episcopal Church, and exists for the propagation and worship of the Episcopal tradition.

Sorry I was under the impression that the Episcopal Church had jettisoned tradition in its adoption of all things modish.

As a church it is doomed if it has given up on the hearts and minds of its fellow anglicans and sees the church as buildings and endowments.

Why don't you just admit that you have nothing of value to add to the conversation and leave it at that? The Episcopal Church is not in the business of soothing and appeasing those who seek to destroy it. Not ever.

Assuming that you're a continuing Anglican, from your attitude, your childish insults speak volumes. [/QB]

As a matter of fact I am not a Continuing Anglican - I am a somewhat half-hearted member of the Church of England - but I would have hoped that a Christian denomination would have treated church property in a way congruent with Christian Ethics and not Property Law. The Church of England, for all its many faults, does not act in this vindictive sort of way.

Pardon my impurtenance.
 
Posted by Matt Black (# 2210) on :
 
What about an implied trust, then, Mockingale (the 'couple' example I gave above)?
 
Posted by The Silent Acolyte (# 1158) on :
 
quote:
Some assert that Augustine the Aleut is a:
Tool of Satan

Tool of Satan?!

Nobody's ever called me a Tool of Satan! You must be doing something right Mr. Aleut. And, I need to work harder.
 
Posted by Mockingale (# 16599) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by aumbry:
As a matter of fact I am not a Continuing Anglican - I am a somewhat half-hearted member of the Church of England - but I would have hoped that a Christian denomination would have treated church property in a way congruent with Christian Ethics and not Property Law.

How is it that you suppose the Episcopal Church to have acted unethically? Did they hide the trust rules in dusty code books in the cellar of headquarters, only to be viewed upon completion of 1000 pages of paperwork in triplicate?

Did they do something they promised not to do?

Are parishioners entitled to take back contributions to the Church?

Did the Church in any way covet, steal, bear false witness?
 
Posted by aumbry (# 436) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mockingale:
quote:
Originally posted by aumbry:
As a matter of fact I am not a Continuing Anglican - I am a somewhat half-hearted member of the Church of England - but I would have hoped that a Christian denomination would have treated church property in a way congruent with Christian Ethics and not Property Law.

How is it that you suppose the Episcopal Church to have acted unethically? Did they hide the trust rules in dusty code books in the cellar of headquarters, only to be viewed upon completion of 1000 pages of paperwork in triplicate?

Did they do something they promised not to do?

Are parishioners entitled to take back contributions to the Church?

Did the Church in any way covet, steal, bear false witness?

Oh I am sure TEC has been scrupulous in its keeping to the letter of the law. But to this party stopping an anglican congregation from purchasing their church (not taking it) and preferring it to become a mosque instead hardly seems like the actions of a christian church, more like those of a rapacious corporation.
 
Posted by The Silent Acolyte (# 1158) on :
 
Pointless dog, posting pointlessly.
 
Posted by aumbry (# 436) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by The Silent Acolyte:
Pointless dog, posting pointlessly.

Clearly you are incapable of defending the actions of TEC. Which I suppose is in your favour.
 
Posted by Augustine the Aleut (# 1472) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by The Silent Acolyte:
quote:
Some assert that Augustine the Aleut is a:
Tool of Satan

Tool of Satan?!

Nobody's ever called me a Tool of Satan! You must be doing something right Mr. Aleut. And, I need to work harder.

Yes, and at the annual vestry. The topic of much correspondence, all available to church historians sometime hence. The incident was even stranger than you can imagine. So much for my attempts to help bridge differing perspectives.
 
Posted by Lietuvos Sv. Kazimieras (# 11274) on :
 
The fact is that the case law over the last 30+ years has been quite consistent in ultimately finding in favour of TEC in these disputes. The leave-takers are really throwing good money after bad. Of course, lawyers will be quite willing to take their cases, represent them in litigation, and develop theories contrary to the most pertinent established case law. That doesn't mean these cases ultimately having the hopes of a snowball in hell.
 
Posted by aumbry (# 436) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Lietuvos Sv. Kazimieras:
The fact is that the case law over the last 30+ years has been quite consistent in ultimately finding in favour of TEC in these disputes. The leave-takers are really throwing good money after bad. Of course, lawyers will be quite willing to take their cases, represent them in litigation, and develop theories contrary to the most pertinent established case law. That doesn't mean these cases ultimately having the hopes of a snowball in hell.

So as far as you are concerned the moral argument and the legal argument are one and the same?
 
Posted by jordan32404 (# 15833) on :
 
As I've said before, the best thing for TEC to do is drop the lawsuits, pray for ACNA, and apologize for any wrongdoing. The only thing holding ACNA together is a dislike of TEC. Beyond that, they don't agree on anything, Prayer Books, WO, churchmanship, polity, anything really. I wish them well but I don't see how it's going to last. They've already created a "no-compromise" culture so it's bound to fall apart, soon.
 
Posted by Zach82 (# 3208) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by jordan32404:
As I've said before, the best thing for TEC to do is drop the lawsuits, pray for ACNA, and apologize for any wrongdoing. The only thing holding ACNA together is a dislike of TEC. Beyond that, they don't agree on anything, Prayer Books, WO, churchmanship, polity, anything really. I wish them well but I don't see how it's going to last. They've already created a "no-compromise" culture so it's bound to fall apart, soon.

I believe it was Chesterton that said something along the lines of "It was previously understood that compromise meant half a loaf was better than no loaf, while today it seems to mean that half a loaf is better than a whole loaf."
 
Posted by GreyFace (# 4682) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mockingale:
Are parishioners entitled to take back contributions to the Church?

I don't have any particular stake in this fight but this looks more like a case of schism so the analogy doesn't really hold. Perhaps it's that I'm more interested in church history than civil law but it seemeth to me that those former-Episcopalians could make a credible argument that they have not changed their faith, TEC has (I make no comment on the substance of the dead horse but this would be undeniably a credible claim), and therefore along with the fact that they're there on the ground, they have some claim to the property of the pre-schism entity that originally owned it.
 
Posted by Zach82 (# 3208) on :
 
quote:
Perhaps it's that I'm more interested in church history than civil law but it seemeth to me that those former-Episcopalians could make a credible argument that they have not changed their faith, TEC has (I make no comment on the substance of the dead horse but this would be undeniably a credible claim), and therefore along with the fact that they're there on the ground, they have some claim to the property of the pre-schism entity that originally owned it.
The faith and polity of TEC is dictated legitimately, according to the rules they previous accepted, by the General Convention, so saying they hold the true Episcopal faith in the face of the General Convention has very weak ground.
 
Posted by RuthW (# 13) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by GreyFace:
it seemeth to me that those former-Episcopalians could make a credible argument that they have not changed their faith, TEC has (I make no comment on the substance of the dead horse but this would be undeniably a credible claim)

Contrary to what some would have you believe, the gospel is still preached in TEC. At least it is by the very orthodox priest who leads the parish I belong to, as well as by the assistant. And both the retired priests (one gay, one a woman) who volunteer their services.

quote:
and therefore along with the fact that they're there on the ground,
Huh? And the rest of us are up in the air?

quote:
they have some claim to the property of the pre-schism entity that originally owned it.
If I get fed up and leave the parish I've been contributing to for almost two decades, how much of the property do I get to take with me?
 
Posted by Anglican_Brat (# 12349) on :
 
Here's a thought:

If the dissidents claim that they are the "true-blue" Christians who have the right answer, then there is nothing stopping them from buying land and building their own church buildings. If they are God's special people, then they will undoubtedly attract more and more followers, enabling them to receive more money to fully pay off that investment. They don't need to keep or take away Episcopal church property. If they are the elect, then God will prosper them once they leave.
 
Posted by Mockingale (# 16599) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by GreyFace:
quote:
Originally posted by Mockingale:
Are parishioners entitled to take back contributions to the Church?

I don't have any particular stake in this fight but this looks more like a case of schism so the analogy doesn't really hold. Perhaps it's that I'm more interested in church history than civil law but it seemeth to me that those former-Episcopalians could make a credible argument that they have not changed their faith, TEC has (I make no comment on the substance of the dead horse but this would be undeniably a credible claim), and therefore along with the fact that they're there on the ground, they have some claim to the property of the pre-schism entity that originally owned it.
You must have different definitions of "undeniably" and "credible" than we in the States.
 
Posted by Augustine the Aleut (# 1472) on :
 
Out-of-USA posters are not always conscious that TEC polity is different from that of many other Anglican churches, which have explicit limits on their decision-making powers (e.g., Canada with its Solemn Declaration of 1893) and even on the application of decisions (Oz and Canada, where many decisions need to be received in dioceses to have effect).

Differing sets of trust and association laws (e.g., the absence of similar patterns in Canada -- to being with, we have two sets of civil legal culture--led most Canadian churches to have enabling legislation passed by parliaments as equity practice was insufficient to deal with property or pension issues) in other parts of the world help to confuse the issue.

Greyface assumes that no-change is the default viable position, and this does fit with a strong tradition in Anglicanism. The TEC's structure is such that any change it makes in accordance with procedures thereby becomes the orthodox position. This left USA no-changers in an untenable position when they felt unable to move with the majority. When we join this with some cultural politics and the overwhelmingly congregational self-perception of most US Xns (even the RCs and Orthies are challenged by this), the resulting frustration and demonization is perhaps more understandable, even if not desireable.

Apologies for the ramble, but I'm trying to understand the disconnect in much of this thread.
 
Posted by Mockingale (# 16599) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Augustine the Aleut:
Out-of-USA posters are not always conscious that TEC polity is different from that of many other Anglican churches, which have explicit limits on their decision-making powers (e.g., Canada with its Solemn Declaration of 1893) and even on the application of decisions (Oz and Canada, where many decisions need to be received in dioceses to have effect).

Differing sets of trust and association laws (e.g., the absence of similar patterns in Canada -- to being with, we have two sets of civil legal culture--led most Canadian churches to have enabling legislation passed by parliaments as equity practice was insufficient to deal with property or pension issues) in other parts of the world help to confuse the issue.

Greyface assumes that no-change is the default viable position, and this does fit with a strong tradition in Anglicanism. The TEC's structure is such that any change it makes in accordance with procedures thereby becomes the orthodox position. This left USA no-changers in an untenable position when they felt unable to move with the majority. When we join this with some cultural politics and the overwhelmingly congregational self-perception of most US Xns (even the RCs and Orthies are challenged by this), the resulting frustration and demonization is perhaps more understandable, even if not desireable.

Apologies for the ramble, but I'm trying to understand the disconnect in much of this thread.

Even so, the church Canons did not speak to the sexuality of a candidate for Bishop as a disqualifying factor. There is nothing in the Book of Common Prayer, which is incorporated by reference, disqualifying a candidate for episcopal ordination. The General Convention did not hold a vote to change canon law in order to allow a person in a same-sex relationship to stand for episcopal office, because it did not need to.

The Episcopal Church did not change its theology or its church laws or structure. Rt. Rev. Robinson was nominated as a candidate for bishop and he was duly voted according to the rules of the Convention and the Episcopal Church.

The only thing that changed was that before, the conservative parishes and dioceses assumed that an openly gay man would never be seriously considered as a candidate; and they learned that this assumption was unwarranted.
 
Posted by Augustine the Aleut (# 1472) on :
 
I'm sorry, Mockingale; I was not referring to this or to a specific incident. There is a very obvious canonical riposte, but I'm afraid this leads into dead horse land.
 
Posted by GreyFace (# 4682) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by RuthW:
Contrary to what some would have you believe, the gospel is still preached in TEC.

Never doubted it for a second. My argument is that TEC changed a teaching, rightly or wrongly, and that this changed teaching has caused a schism. Whether you were right to change it or not isn't my point and I'm sympathetic to your position if the truth be known. My point is rather that you can't essentially just say (as some seem to be here) to people who don't accept the change, you knew the powers that be in the TEC had the authority to change what they wanted and you still signed up so stop whining. Faith in the infallibility of the decision-making structures of the Church isn't the primary characteristic of Anglican Christianity.

quote:
Huh? And the rest of us are up in the air?
I thought we were talking about situations where whole congregations had... what's the word? Schismated? Schizzed? Buggered off without moving? Help me out here.

quote:
If I get fed up and leave the parish I've been contributing to for almost two decades, how much of the property do I get to take with me?
I don't know, would you be seriously claiming that you getting fed up constituted a schism?
 
Posted by Honest Ron Bacardi (# 38) on :
 
Greyface wrote:-
quote:
My point is rather that you can't essentially just say (as some seem to be here) to people who don't accept the change, you knew the powers that be in the TEC had the authority to change what they wanted and you still signed up so stop whining.
Perhaps I have misread the contributions so far, but I understood that was exactly what could be and had been done. (I didn't think it was appearing to be said - it actually was being asserted).
 
Posted by Fr Weber (# 13472) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Lietuvos Sv. Kazimieras:
I agree with the final paragraph, but as someone who had flirtations with the early Continuers of the late 1970s/early 1980s, I would guess that the latest vintage of secessionists have been mindful of how unsuccessful many of the early leave-takers were, in significant measure because they left without buildings or much property of any kind. Many of the little Continuing start-ups in people's living rooms, in the chapels of existing churches, in motel spaces or in the rented halls of the ladies auxillary of the Masons disappeared in a relatively short amount of time. Even some of the Continuing congos who managed to get some sort of unattractive building didn't make it. Unless you have rich, generous benefactors, the fact is that you are likely screwed if you march out into the wilderness with no building.

On the other hand, there were also several high-profile cases where litigation went on for a decade or so, leaving everyone involved broke and exhausted at the end of the fight. That's not good for anyone, spiritually or materially.

All that I said above is contingent on commitment and perseverance from the people doing the leaving. If the church represents nothing to them but a pleasant and nostalgic way to spend an hour and a quarter on Sunday mornings, they won't stay long with a church meeting in a private home, or motel room, or chapel of an existing church. But in general, these are the sorts of people who will not tithe, who will never show up for a weekday service, and whose interest in the BCP 1928 is primarily aesthetic anyway.

[ 17. April 2012, 22:05: Message edited by: Fr Weber ]
 
Posted by CorgiGreta (# 443) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by GreyFace:
quote:
Originally posted by RuthW:


[QUOTE]Huh? And the rest of us are up in the air?

I thought we were talking about situations where whole congregations had... what's the word? Schismated? Schizzed? Buggered off without moving? Help me out here.


It's very,very seldom the whole congregation. The faithful remnant (usually 10% to 15%) is definitely left up in the air. After my formerly beloved parish broke away (by way of help, that's my preferred description), it took years of wandering for me to find one I valued as highly, and it happened only because a formerly snake belly parish went rocketing up the candle.
 
Posted by CorgiGreta (# 443) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by GreyFace:
quote:
Originally posted by Mockingale:
Are parishioners entitled to take back contributions to the Church?

Perhaps it's that I'm more interested in church history than civil law but it seemeth to me that those former-Episcopalians could make a credible argument that they have not changed their faith, TEC has (I make no comment on the substance of the dead horse but this would be undeniably a credible claim)...
That's a claim that no court in the US would accept. From the start, courts here have adamantly and wisely refused to adjudicate doctrinal issues.
 
Posted by gorpo (# 17025) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by GreyFace:
quote:
Originally posted by RuthW:
[qb]Contrary to what some would have you believe, the gospel is still preached in TEC.

Never doubted it for a second. My argument is that TEC changed a teaching, rightly or wrongly, and that this changed teaching has caused a schism. Whether you were right to change it or not isn't my point and I'm sympathetic to your position if the truth be known. My point is rather that you can't essentially just say (as some seem to be here) to people who don't accept the change, you knew the powers that be in the TEC had the authority to change what they wanted and you still signed up so stop whining. Faith in the infallibility of the decision-making structures of the Church isn't the primary characteristic of Anglican Christianity.
~
This. When someone is baptzied and confirmed in a church, its main compromise is with the christian faith, not with whatever the next generation of bishops believe. Otherwise, this church would look much more like the Jeovah Witness“ Watchtower or the Latter-Day Saints Church.

The reason why the christian church has creeds, and most protestant churches have their confessions, is exactly to avoid the church beliefs to swim acording to the preferences of the current authorities. If there are bishops in a certain denomination that don“t subscribe to the church articles of faith, they should leave and create their own denominations. But if they remain there, members who remain faithful to what they promissed on baptism or confirmation have no obligation to remain there and pay the stipends of people who seek to destroy their faith. Schism is justifiable when the mother church commits apostasy. That“s what Martin Luther did in the 16th century. I“m not sayng this is the case with TEC/ACNA, cause I would have preferred the schism not to happen. But I do understand those who don“t want to remain payng the stipends of bishops who preach a faith completely different then theirs. If I was one of the members or clergymen of TEC, I“d rather join one of the other existing protestant denominations instead of creating a new one.
 
Posted by Mockingale (# 16599) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by gorpo:

The reason why the christian church has creeds, and most protestant churches have their confessions, is exactly to avoid the church beliefs to swim acording to the preferences of the current authorities.

I challenge you to identify any sentence of any of the Apostle's, Nicene, or Athanasian Creeds which the Episcopal Church contravened by installing Gene Robinson as a bishop.
 
Posted by Augustine the Aleut (# 1472) on :
 
I do not know if a Canadian theological study applies south of the world's longest undefended border, but the Saint Michael's Report indicates that it would be indicative of a doctrinal change, albeit not of a "core doctrine" nature.

Then again, as a retired clerical acquaintance noted, a core doctrinal change means that one is "no longer Xn and has become a Muslim or a Mormon or something like that."
 
Posted by Sober Preacher's Kid (# 12699) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Augustine the Aleut: I would not characterize their efforts as attempted theft (in Canada, the in-trust-for-the-national-church doctrine is not pertinent, either in canon or civil law). Their intent is not criminal, but rather contrary to legal provisions for ownership.
I still don't understand your assertion that the in-trust-for-the-national-church doctrine doesn't apply in Canada. It is a standard feature of Canadian church private parliamentary acts. I found that the Diocese of Ontario states that Churchwardens are Trustees under the Anglican Church Act, 1979. Walks like a duck.

Canadian legal history has been very clear that when a church is organized with a reversionary interest a congregation can't secede without permission.

The United Church's property is locked up tighter than a drum (by design) but still.
 
Posted by Augustine the Aleut (# 1472) on :
 
Equity isn't sufficient. That's why we have the acts. That's why they're necessary.
 
Posted by Wilfried (# 12277) on :
 
This news just broke today:

Truro Anglican Church, Virginia diocese reach property settlement

The Episcopal diocese will allow the departing Truro congregation to stay in the church until June of next year rent free, and they're working out other terms of the separation. As I recall, this was one of the more vitriolic conflicts. It seems even in this case, it seems some rapprochement is possible, and the Episcopal Church can be gracious in victory.

quote:
An important feature of this settlement is that both sides have agreed to enter into a covenant of mutual charity and respect. This document will frame the way the Diocese and Truro Anglican will deal with one another and speak of one another. The covenant is being drafted by the Rev. Baucum and Bishop Johnston.

“This is an important step for the Diocese of Virginia and Truro Anglican,” said Bishop Johnston. “What the Diocese has sought since the court’s ruling has been a ‘witness’ and not merely an ‘outcome.’ The parties have carried on a public dispute for five years and it is important that we publicly begin to make peace.” As I recall, this was one of the more vitriolic conflicts, and even in this case, it seems some rapprochement is possible, and the Episcopal Church can be gracious in victory.

Bishop Johnston and the Rev. Baucum have been meeting together for prayer and conversation for over a year. “Bishop Johnston and I have become friends,” said the Rev. Baucum. “In spite of our significant theological differences, we care for and are committed to each other as brothers in Christ.”


 
Posted by Augustine the Aleut (# 1472) on :
 
Apologies for the double-post but there is another reason for serious obscure legality geeks to take ecstatitic pleasure. Establishment and semi-establishment of the RCC, ACC & Presbyterians, according to at least one constitutional prof at the U of Ottawa Law School, may not have been entirely quenched by secularization laws over the years, and trust theory is irrelevant for state churches. The various private and public acts (to which both SPK & I have referred) are necessary to avoid competing claims by the Crown and ecclesiastical corporations (this latter bunch mainly under the French Crown-- see the mess of the Jesuit Estates legislation of the 1800s as well as the mysterious and phantom-like peculiar status of the Ursulines in Québec City).
*end of Canadian ecclesiastical law hyper-geek tangent*
 
Posted by Sober Preacher's Kid (# 12699) on :
 
But the Acts explicitly state that the in-trust-for the-national-church doctrine is the one to be used. You Anglicans may have it stated that it is in-trust for the diocese, but it still comes to the same thing. And the courts will treat it the same way.
 
Posted by Augustine the Aleut (# 1472) on :
 
What will the poor US folk think as we ramble into an area only 9 human beings care about?

According to Doe's commentaries and as debated at a Canadian history conference I attended three years ago, the situation before the acts were not subject to any notion of trust beyond that of the rector and wardens of legal parishes for the fabric and limitations on their right to dispose of it-- and with secularization of Upper and Lower Canada, bishops were unable to discipline annoying, misbehaving, or heretical clergy.

(important bit follows) The acts created corporations and obligations of trust, certainly for the individual RC and Anglican dioceses-- I do not know the UCC or Presbyterian legislation. Aside from the fabric of the parish, it was not clear if obligations of trust survived distestablishment. Therefore, we needed the acts. The acts also resolved several anomalies stemming from the erection of Anglican dioceses by letters patent and the decrees both of the Sovereign Council of New France as well as of the Parlements of Paris and Rouen which registered the papal erection of Québec. I mentioned the Jesuits and Ursulines as further anomalies, the latter of which apparently has never been thoroughly resolved. Lucien Lemieux' L'établissement de la première province ecclésiastique au Canada, 1783-1844 can provide you with many happy hours on these topics.

Pre-legislation, the Anglican situation was quite close to that of the CoE, but possibly not in some provinces; and that of the RCC was either of pre-revolutionary Franch in Lower Canada, and the same as Methodist conventicles elsewhere.

(seoond really important bit) What is relevant for this discussion is that they were not denominational in nature. Whether or not the Diocese of Moose Falls is true to its Anglicanism is neither here nor there (I am leaving out the Solemn Declaration of 1893 on this because it has canonical but not civil status) so nobody can legally secede or separate on any grounds at all. Doctrine and doctrinal changes are totally irrelevant under the legislation. The building of the altar of Baal is entirely appropriate under the Diocese of Ottawa Act. I am reliably informed that this was one of the bases of a certain diocese's position: we've got the title papers and everything else is impertinent.

I have a feeling that this entire tangent may be irrelevant to the thread.
 
Posted by Mockingale (# 16599) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Augustine the Aleut:
What will the poor US folk think as we ramble into an area only 9 human beings care about?

Canada's got their own deal. I'm sure it matters to some people, and I wouldn't call it unimportant, but I have been to Canada for a grand total (total grande?) of 9 hours. I'd love to visit our neighbors to the North.

Is the church-stealing as much of an issue up there as it is in the States? That new group is called the Anglican Church in North America, but I wonder if that's not like naming baseball's championship "The World Series" because there are a couple of teams in Canada.

I know little about Canadian law and even less about Canadian churches. Does Canadian statute address church politics? The courts here are hesitant to even wade ankle deep into church doctrine.
 
Posted by CorgiGreta (# 443) on :
 
I may not be one of the 9, but I am aware of this Canadian property dispute.
 
Posted by GreyFace (# 4682) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by CorgiGreta:
That's a claim that no court in the US would accept. From the start, courts here have adamantly and wisely refused to adjudicate doctrinal issues.

But isn't it the case that the court's refusal to accept the claim would be based entirely on the wisdom of keeping the secular courts out of doctrinal disputes, and not on the credibility of the claim were it to be made in an appropriate context?

Your point about the proportion of the congregation schizzing (I invented that word so I'm going to use it) is well taken. My only experience with this kind of thing round these parts is of a place that jumped to the Ordinariate leaving behind maybe 20% of the congregation. I don't think there was ever any question of them taking the building but then again, the realities in England of thousand year-old stonework, leaky roofs, damaged pipe organs, listed building legislation and so on might mean the priorities are a lot different from those in the US and Canada.
 
Posted by CorgiGreta (# 443) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by GreyFace:
quote:
Originally posted by CorgiGreta:
That's a claim that no court in the US would accept. From the start, courts here have adamantly and wisely refused to adjudicate doctrinal issues.

But isn't it the case that the court's refusal to accept the claim would be based entirely on the wisdom of keeping the secular courts out of doctrinal disputes, and not on the credibility of the claim were it to be made in an appropriate context?

Your point about the proportion of the congregation schizzing (I invented that word so I'm going to use it) is well taken. My only experience with this kind of thing round these parts is of a place that jumped to the Ordinariate leaving behind maybe 20% of the congregation. I don't think there was ever any question of them taking the building but then again, the realities in England of thousand year-old stonework, leaky roofs, damaged pipe organs, listed building legislation and so on might mean the priorities are a lot different from those in the US and Canada.

Yes to both points.

Also,I like the word 'schizzing'.
 
Posted by Mockingale (# 16599) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by GreyFace:
quote:
Originally posted by CorgiGreta:
That's a claim that no court in the US would accept. From the start, courts here have adamantly and wisely refused to adjudicate doctrinal issues.

But isn't it the case that the court's refusal to accept the claim would be based entirely on the wisdom of keeping the secular courts out of doctrinal disputes, and not on the credibility of the claim were it to be made in an appropriate context?
No. The property that the parish used over the years are deemed to be contributions by members to the organization of the church.

The law views the church no differently from any other non-profit organization. Imagine if a 10% contingent of the lifetime members of the World Wildlife Federation, or Amnesty International, or Oxfam were disgruntled at what they perceived as an intolerable shift of mission or policy, and those members decide to break off and form a new parallel organization that they claim represents the values of the original before they were corrupted.

No court anywhere is going to say that the new non-profit has a right to take 10% of the operating funds and real estate, or that they have a right to sublease space from the old organization, or that the old organization will have to liquidate its property to satisfy the percentage representing the contributions of the old members.
 
Posted by Lietuvos Sv. Kazimieras (# 11274) on :
 
There is some indication that TEC policy will treat the Ordinariate differently than "Continuing" Anglican schismatics. Mount Calvary, Baltimore is apparently being permitted to leave with their building and other property, going to the Roman Catholic Church/Ordinariate of the Chair of St Peter. I assume that all or virtually all of their congregation decided to depart for the Ordinariate along with their clergy. IIRC, the Episcopal Diocese of Maryland has first right of refusal in any future sale of Mount Calvary's property -- IOW the TEC diocese would be able to buy the property back on favourable terms. As I understand, the thought is that the Ordinariate is not in competition with TEC or actively trying to subvert TEC, whereas the Anglican schismatics are seen as taking that course. However, I must disagree with that assessment. IME there are some Anglo-Papalists who would be disposed to foment a sort of coup in their parishes, aimed at taking the parish into the Ordinariate and retaining its property. This will fail, of course, as long as such elites are strongly opposed by a majority of the congregation, but where they are able to sew confusion, demoralisation, and general discord - driving TEC loyalists out - such efforts at a grab-and-run might well succeed. Thus, I think TEC ought to investigate the membership roles and transfers-out of parishes seeking to leave for the Ordinariate with their property, and only settle on generous terms with any such parish if it is reasonably clear that there has been near-complete unanimity of sentiment amongst parishioners and parish clergy for a move to the Ordinariate.
 
Posted by GreyFace (# 4682) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mockingale:
The law views the church no differently from any other non-profit organization.

You're making my case for me. The reason that the law does this is that it (wisely, as has been said) keeps out of doctrinal arguments. If on the other hand, we as Christians consider doctrinal issues to be pertinent and the Church to be something more than other non-profit organisations, even determined by faith (such that possibly heresy* and certainly apostasy* would cause the organisation to cease in fact to be the Church whatever its legal status) then the law will not necessarily give us a just outcome.

* I'm not claiming this is the case here and I don't in fact think it's so, but it seems indisputable that the schizzers™ are actually following the doctrine taught by the vast majority of the wider One Church across the globe and through the centuries and therefore my humble opinion is that it would be fair to cut them some slack.
 
Posted by GreyFace (# 4682) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mockingale:
Imagine if a 10% contingent of the lifetime members of the World Wildlife Federation, or Amnesty International, or Oxfam were disgruntled at what they perceived as an intolerable shift of mission or policy, and those members decide to break off and form a new parallel organization that they claim represents the values of the original before they were corrupted.

No court anywhere is going to say that the new non-profit has a right to take 10% of the operating funds and real estate, or that they have a right to sublease space from the old organization, or that the old organization will have to liquidate its property to satisfy the percentage representing the contributions of the old members.

On considering this again, maybe I can extend the analogy. What would the legal position be if, for example, the trustees or executive or whoever they are of the WWF decided their charity is now in favour of the extermination of pests like lions and tigers, publicly supported the ivory trade and began to advocate the destruction systematic destruction of animal habitats across the world? What if Amnesty's leadership one day turned round and said actually we've changed our minds, sod those political prisoners, they should have known better and kept their mouths shut, we're using what we have in the bank to fund internment camps for big-mouthed idealists? What if Oxfam's bosses had a rethink and began redirecting its efforts away from disaster relief and sustainable development programmes into, I don't know, you get the point.

Now clearly these are ridiculous examples and I'd have to ask somebody who actually had a clue with legal matters but I'm reasonably certain the bodies which oversee charities in this country would have a few words to say if something like this happened and I don't think people who'd given donations to these organisations would simply shrug their shoulders and say "Oh well, I gave a donation to the structure of the organisation, what they do with it is up to them." Where you draw the line between a shift of tactics and a large change of purpose I can't say and I've made my personal opinion of TEC's changes clear I think, but some acknowledgement that there is a line to be drawn would be welcome.
 
Posted by Leprechaun (# 5408) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Honest Ron Bacardi:
Greyface wrote:-
quote:
My point is rather that you can't essentially just say (as some seem to be here) to people who don't accept the change, you knew the powers that be in the TEC had the authority to change what they wanted and you still signed up so stop whining.
Perhaps I have misread the contributions so far, but I understood that was exactly what could be and had been done. (I didn't think it was appearing to be said - it actually was being asserted).
Well yes, this is how Anglican polity works. You can send your representatives to Synod but in the end the denomination makes the decisions. Theologically I would be far more with the conservatives, but I don't get on with them bleating about the denomination not respecting their congregation's dissent etc. You sign up for Episcopal church government and you abide by the structures of your church or you leave, and don't expect the denomination to share the assets. One of the reasons I'm a convinced congregationalist.

Mind you, what TEC has to gain by selling the building to Baptists or Muslims rather than the congregation is also a mystery to me. It seems silly to sell to those groups because the Schizzers (good word Greyface) will say bad things about you. What do you think that the average Baptist (or Muslim!?) is going to be saying about TEC in the building? That it IS the one true church? Hardly!
 
Posted by Mockingale (# 16599) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Leprechaun:

Mind you, what TEC has to gain by selling the building to Baptists or Muslims rather than the congregation is also a mystery to me. It seems silly to sell to those groups because the Schizzers (good word Greyface) will say bad things about you. What do you think that the average Baptist (or Muslim!?) is going to be saying about TEC in the building? That it IS the one true church? Hardly!

The difference is that the Anglicans portray themselves as the true expression of what the Episcopal Church supposedly use to be. To the extent that they have any unifying doctrine, it's that the Episcopal Church is apostate and they are the true proprietors of "orthodox" "Bible-believing" "traditional" Anglican Christianity in the United States and Canada, and that TEC and ACC are illegitimate imposters. The Baptists and the Muslims make no such claim, and although they have their own interests and compete with us in a way, they are not seeking to attempt a coup.

Letting the "Anglicans" use centuries-old church properties only serves to further their claims and allows them to appropriate the "brand," if you will. It gives them the appearance of being a legitimate remnant of the true faithful in the Episcopal Church, rather than a ragtag group of homophobes that have conspired with GAFCON to destroy The Episcopal Church and remake it in their own image.
 
Posted by aumbry (# 436) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mockingale:
quote:
Originally posted by Leprechaun:

Mind you, what TEC has to gain by selling the building to Baptists or Muslims rather than the congregation is also a mystery to me. It seems silly to sell to those groups because the Schizzers (good word Greyface) will say bad things about you. What do you think that the average Baptist (or Muslim!?) is going to be saying about TEC in the building? That it IS the one true church? Hardly!

The difference is that the Anglicans portray themselves as the true expression of what the Episcopal Church supposedly use to be. To the extent that they have any unifying doctrine, it's that the Episcopal Church is apostate and they are the true proprietors of "orthodox" "Bible-believing" "traditional" Anglican Christianity in the United States and Canada, and that TEC and ACC are illegitimate imposters. The Baptists and the Muslims make no such claim, and although they have their own interests and compete with us in a way, they are not seeking to attempt a coup.

Letting the "Anglicans" use centuries-old church properties only serves to further their claims and allows them to appropriate the "brand," if you will. It gives them the appearance of being a legitimate remnant of the true faithful in the Episcopal Church, rather than a ragtag group of homophobes that have conspired with GAFCON to destroy The Episcopal Church and remake it in their own image.

That will be the gay-friendly mosques TEC will be flogging (oops!) their churches to?
 
Posted by Mockingale (# 16599) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by GreyFace:
On considering this again, maybe I can extend the analogy. What would the legal position be if, for example, the trustees or executive or whoever they are of the WWF decided their charity is now in favour of the extermination of pests like lions and tigers, publicly supported the ivory trade and began to advocate the destruction systematic destruction of animal habitats across the world? What if Amnesty's leadership one day turned round and said actually we've changed our minds, sod those political prisoners, they should have known better and kept their mouths shut, we're using what we have in the bank to fund internment camps for big-mouthed idealists? What if Oxfam's bosses had a rethink and began redirecting its efforts away from disaster relief and sustainable development programmes into, I don't know, you get the point.

Now clearly these are ridiculous examples and I'd have to ask somebody who actually had a clue with legal matters but I'm reasonably certain the bodies which oversee charities in this country would have a few words to say if something like this happened and I don't think people who'd given donations to these organisations would simply shrug their shoulders and say "Oh well, I gave a donation to the structure of the organisation, what they do with it is up to them."

Some would have a say by means of a vote in the internal affairs of the organization. These organizations have bylaws for voting or removing officers and boards of directors, and for passing certain amendments. If you have a vote in this mechanism, then you are free to have your say there. If the majority vote the other way, well, that's democracy.

The same applies with the Episcopal Church. I understand that the Church of England is not organized in this way, but the Episcopal Church is mostly democratic, with a General Convention (one chamber is made up of bishops, and one chamber of laity, priests and deacons) and a local convention for each diocese. Each parish sends delegates to the diocesan convention, usually by a vote of the parish at their annual meeting. So the laity and nonepiscopal clergy do get a voice in church governance. The conservatives can and did vote against the ordination of Gene Robinson, and against further recognition of same-sex relationships, and did move for resolutions to adopt the more traditional view of homosexuality as official church doctrine. They made these motions in a democratic body, were heard, and their arguments rejected by a majority of the body. You don't get to scream "It's not fair!" when you lose a vote. Well, technically, you could, but everyone else will look at you like you're a five-year-old.

Any assets contributed to such an organization belongs irrevocably to the organization. There was no fraud. There were no assurances by the organization that the money or property would be returned if the church changed its position on certain controversial issues.

It's similar with profit companies, as well. Most corporations or limited companies do not have publicly traded stock, and there are not ready buyers for minority shares in such businesses. Let's say that you and three of your friends each contribute 1/4 to start a company that makes environmentally friendly cleaning products. But one day, the chairman of the board decides that the company needs to change its focus to coal mining, and the other three owners agree. They hold a vote according to the bylaws and change the purpose and structure of the business to coal mining. You vociferously object, because you wanted to start a green business and think coal is evil. Unless there's something in the by-laws to the contrary, you can't just pull out and demand that they give 1/4 of the company's assets to you. You can't claim one quarter of the office space or one quarter of the company's operating account. You're stuck with skin in the game until someone decides to buy you out or it goes bust. You bought into the company understanding that there was a risk that the majority might want to take the company in a direction you don't approve of.

If they wanted a church body where the conservatives get a special veto, that's too bad. They joined the Episcopal Church, and we have never done that. Maybe they'll be better off with the Catholics. The Catholics might even set them up with shiny new churches.
 
Posted by Mockingale (# 16599) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by aumbry:
That will be the gay-friendly mosques TEC will be flogging (oops!) their churches to?

I've ceased trying to decipher your nonsense.
 
Posted by aumbry (# 436) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mockingale:
quote:
Originally posted by aumbry:
That will be the gay-friendly mosques TEC will be flogging (oops!) their churches to?

I've ceased trying to decipher your nonsense.
I've ceased to be interested in your turgid efforts - Yah Boo!
 
Posted by Matt Black (# 2210) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mockingale:
quote:
Originally posted by aumbry:
That will be the gay-friendly mosques TEC will be flogging (oops!) their churches to?

I've ceased trying to decipher your nonsense.
It's called irony, I believe. I got it.
 
Posted by Leprechaun (# 5408) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mockingale:
quote:
Originally posted by Leprechaun:

Mind you, what TEC has to gain by selling the building to Baptists or Muslims rather than the congregation is also a mystery to me. It seems silly to sell to those groups because the Schizzers (good word Greyface) will say bad things about you. What do you think that the average Baptist (or Muslim!?) is going to be saying about TEC in the building? That it IS the one true church? Hardly!

The difference is that the Anglicans portray themselves as the true expression of what the Episcopal Church supposedly use to be.
If it's about how you are portrayed, I'd have thought TEC have much more to lose by being portrayed as materialistic property grabbers via the courts and the media. A nice quiet friendly settlement might even mean that the leavers say relatively nice things about you in the building as per the Truro example above. The person on the street doesn't give a fig who is the authentic Anglican, but is very likely to be put off your church by a very public legal battle.
What's more, ISTM one of Anglicanism's great selling points to the non-Christian is that they often seem to avoid the public spats and splintering of independent churches. It has (until recently) been the calm stable and moderate religion lots of people are looking for. Pique that the people might say nasty things about you in a building you used to own but have now sold seems to me to be a very weak reason to give up that very important USP.
 
Posted by GreyFace (# 4682) on :
 
I understand all this Mockingale, I really do. But with respect you're not answering the point I'm raising. Or are you saying that there are no possible doctrinal changes whatsoever that would legitimise a schism in your eyes?
 
Posted by Lietuvos Sv. Kazimieras (# 11274) on :
 
Leprechaun, you seem to imagine that very many people pay attention to the TEC-Schimatic Anglicans stuff, know about or care about it at all. It ain't the CofE: there's little media attention. The conflicts are relatively invisible even to the vast majority of people within TEC.
 
Posted by Leprechaun (# 5408) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Lietuvos Sv. Kazimieras:
Leprechaun, you seem to imagine that very many people pay attention to the TEC-Schimatic Anglicans stuff, know about or care about it at all. It ain't the CofE: there's little media attention. The conflicts are relatively invisible even to the vast majority of people within TEC.

The thread began with someone saying they heard it being discussed on NPR.

Anyway, if what you say is true, then it really isn't important at all who is "portrayed" as the real Anglican, as no one will notice.
 
Posted by Organ Builder (# 12478) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Leprechaun:
If it's about how you are portrayed, I'd have thought TEC have much more to lose by being portrayed as materialistic property grabbers via the courts and the media. A nice quiet friendly settlement might even mean that the leavers say relatively nice things about you in the building as per the Truro example above.

As I recall, though, the court cases in Virginia were first filed by the breakaway churches--I suppose as a strategic pre-emptive strike. While the agreement means they are saying relatively nice things now, it certainly has NOT been that way over the past few years.

I've always suspected the presence of another 800 pound gorilla in the room that no one seems to acknowledge. If I were a long-time parishioner with no really strong feeling about the gay issue, my resolve would be to come to my church every Sunday and listen to whomever happened to be in control, whether that was TEC or ACNA. There seems to be a perception among a significant portion of the laity that much of the controversy is clergy-driven and clergy-perpetuated. Is that fair? I don't really know, but people base their actions on their perceptions.

So it is possible no one really knows or trusts where the true loyalties of the laity lie. This makes holding the property more important. Naturally, when properties are returned to TEC, TEC will hope that this is a sizable portion of the congregation while ACNA will hope it is a negligible portion... It probably won't be the same in every church, but it will be interesting to see if this is really a factor.
 
Posted by RuthW (# 13) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Organ Builder:
So it is possible no one really knows or trusts where the true loyalties of the laity lie. This makes holding the property more important. Naturally, when properties are returned to TEC, TEC will hope that this is a sizable portion of the congregation while ACNA will hope it is a negligible portion... It probably won't be the same in every church, but it will be interesting to see if this is really a factor.

If the building is pretty, it will be a factor. The experience of communal worship is the main draw of the Episcopal Church and the appearance of the building contributes to that for a lot of people, so that's not all idolatrous building-worship. It's easy to pooh-pooh the faith of those who dropped out of splitter groups because they ended up worshipping in unattractive spaces, but we're physical beings, worship is something we do with our whole selves, including our bodies, and appearances matter. Claiming otherwise is Manicheistic dualism and contrary to incarnational theology.
 
Posted by Mockingale (# 16599) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by GreyFace:
I understand all this Mockingale, I really do. But with respect you're not answering the point I'm raising. Or are you saying that there are no possible doctrinal changes whatsoever that would legitimise a schism in your eyes?

That's not what you were asking, or if that was what you intended to ask, you asked in a roundabout way. You were asking if a schism, under certain circumstances, entitles the spinoff church to a share of the parent church's property (i.e. Does a breakaway parish have a viable legal argument for terminating the Episcopal Church's beneficial interest in parish property in circumstances where the Episcopal Church has materially departed from church doctrine?) That's what the discussion was about. I can't discuss schism under law because American law does not get involved in church doctrine.

No court in the United States is going to say "Oh, well, the Episcopal Church once had an implicit doctrine that same-sex activity was sinful and disqualified a person from becoming a bishop, but in 2005 they changed church doctrine, so they ceased really being The Episcopal Church, or Anglican, or Christian, and therefore Truro Anglican Parish is entitled to take its former parish buildings and bank accounts with it." It's not a decision over which federal or state courts have any jurisdiction.

As to whether certain theoretical doctrinal change "legitimizes schism in my eyes," I suppose. If the Episcopal Church were to undertake a doctrinal change declaring that Jesus was not divine or not human in nature, or denying the Trinity, or declaring that God does not exist, or denying the resurrection, I could see a decision by dissenters to leave as a "legitimate schism," to the extent that schism can exist in an organization that is no longer a Christian church. I'd be among the "schismatics" in that case. Each one of those doctrines is part of the creeds. They're what make us Christians. But that would still not justify the remnant from claiming church property.

I distinguish such things from doctrinal changes about ancillary matters. If the church were to declare that suicide is not a violation of the commandment against killing, and not a sin, but merely a product of mental illness or legitimate concerns about prolonged pain and suffering, it would be a doctrinal change of sorts, but it's not the sort of thing that would cause the Episcopal Church to cease to be Christian.
 
Posted by Mockingale (# 16599) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Leprechaun:
quote:
Originally posted by Lietuvos Sv. Kazimieras:
Leprechaun, you seem to imagine that very many people pay attention to the TEC-Schimatic Anglicans stuff, know about or care about it at all. It ain't the CofE: there's little media attention. The conflicts are relatively invisible even to the vast majority of people within TEC.

The thread began with someone saying they heard it being discussed on NPR.

Anyway, if what you say is true, then it really isn't important at all who is "portrayed" as the real Anglican, as no one will notice.

NPR is a sleepy, loosely affiliated network of donation-supported college radio stations that is listened to regularly by maybe 500,000 yuppies on their way to work. 300,000 of those are probably Episcopalians. It's not exactly big media.

I still don't see why the Episcopal Church should bend over backwards for people that hate us.
 
Posted by Sober Preacher's Kid (# 12699) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mockingale:
quote:
Originally posted by Augustine the Aleut:
What will the poor US folk think as we ramble into an area only 9 human beings care about?

Canada's got their own deal. I'm sure it matters to some people, and I wouldn't call it unimportant, but I have been to Canada for a grand total (total grande?) of 9 hours. I'd love to visit our neighbors to the North.

Is the church-stealing as much of an issue up there as it is in the States? That new group is called the Anglican Church in North America, but I wonder if that's not like naming baseball's championship "The World Series" because there are a couple of teams in Canada.

I know little about Canadian law and even less about Canadian churches. Does Canadian statute address church politics? The courts here are hesitant to even wade ankle deep into church doctrine.

No church stealing is not an issue in Canada, for reasons I have been trying to make clear. Though Augustine is correct that the Anglicans, Roman Catholics, and Presbyterians/United Church have property peculiarities stemming from their former established status, those have been overridden by varies private Church Acts for each denomination. That's why that UofO prof's analysis was irrelevant, it was rendered irrelevant by legislative action. History has given way to the present.

The standard formula for such Acts (repeated over various Acts for different mergers) was to declare that congregational property was held in trust by the Trustees (a separate board, or the churchwardens) with oversight by the diocese/Presbytery and the property would revert to the national church (through the diocese/presbytery) if the congregation ceased to exist. It is a further standard that you cannot dispose of property without the diocese/presbytery's permission.

The United Church, since we merged three churches with three different property regimes in 1925 and those churches were themselves mergers, and that The Great Dead Horse debate in 1988 has the longest history of property litigation. The statue and case law states that a congregation's buildings and its financial accounts are owned by the Board of Trustees and cannot be transferred or disposed of without Presbytery's permission. A congregation cannot secede and take its property with it, that is impossible according to both case and statute law.

In the United Church's case property is held under a standard Trusts of Model Deed that creates the Trustees and forms an annex to the United Church Act for each province.

Much as a history of establishment is interesting, the United Church Acts overrode that concern. United Church congregations have a uniform property regime. The Anglican Acts very, very likely did the same. Which is why Augustine's point is moot and church secession doesn't hardly happens at all here.

Though unlike the Anglicans, the United Church does not limit the authority of church courts in the Basis of Union itself, except that congregation's have the the freedom to maintain their existing worship practices (Rights for the Congregationalist). Any Court decisions can be appealed to a higher court (Session, Presbytery, Conference, General Council) and each court has plenary and extensive authority to regulate the affairs of its lower courts. Further higher court regulations (the Manual, for instance) apply to lower courts without question, the only reservation is that General Council decisions have to be sent out on Remit if they meet certain criteria.
 
Posted by Mockingale (# 16599) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by aumbry:
quote:
Originally posted by Mockingale:
quote:
Originally posted by aumbry:
That will be the gay-friendly mosques TEC will be flogging (oops!) their churches to?

I've ceased trying to decipher your nonsense.
I've ceased to be interested in your turgid efforts - Yah Boo!
Nyah!
 
Posted by John Holding (# 158) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by RuthW:
quote:
Originally posted by Organ Builder:
So it is possible no one really knows or trusts where the true loyalties of the laity lie. This makes holding the property more important. Naturally, when properties are returned to TEC, TEC will hope that this is a sizable portion of the congregation while ACNA will hope it is a negligible portion... It probably won't be the same in every church, but it will be interesting to see if this is really a factor.

If the building is pretty, it will be a factor. The experience of communal worship is the main draw of the Episcopal Church and the appearance of the building contributes to that for a lot of people, so that's not all idolatrous building-worship.
With respect to Ruth's comment, there's an excellent example (going in the other direction) in this diocese -- one of the two congregations which voted to leave the ACC. We have many friends there. THe presenting issue in the parish's vote was homosexualty ( in a parish, oddly enough, that had benefitted substantially through the years from the work and contributions of gay men and, I suppose, gay women). We have pro-gay friends in that parish who voted with the anti-gay faction to preserve the community they loved and could not contemplate living without. And that was in an ugly building (I can say that because I was a churchwarden in that parish for a number of years when we could simply have let the place fall down) -- the Lord only knows how many more people who actually disagreed with the separators would have voted with them if the building had been pretty.

John
 
Posted by The Man with a Stick (# 12664) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mockingale:
[QUOTE]Originally posted by GreyFace:
That's not what you were asking, or if that was what you intended to ask, you asked in a roundabout way. You were asking if a schism, under certain circumstances, entitles the spinoff church to a share of the parent church's property (i.e. Does a breakaway parish have a viable legal argument for terminating the Episcopal Church's beneficial interest in parish property in circumstances where the Episcopal Church has materially departed from church doctrine?)

I must admit my understanding (at an Atlantic-sized distance) is that the main question at issue in most of the ongoing Court cases (and what the Supreme Court may be asked to opine on) is whether the national Episcopal Church legitimately obtained a valid beneficial interest in the propert in the first place.

The Dennis Canon was passed at National Convention declaring it so, but most states' law on the creation of trusts requires a written declaration of the legal owner for this to be effective.

To make a poorly thought out ad absurdam analogy - I'm a member of my local soccer club, with a vote to elect committee members (so am democratically represented on the club's legislative body). If the Committee passed a resolution that my house is held in trust for the club, I'd be (a) pretty unhappy and (b) unlikely to consider it valid.

According the Anglican Curmudgeon blog, there's 9 or so states where TEC is 'winning' and 8 where the schizzers are 'winning', so it would not appear to be as cut and dried as some appear to be representing here.
 
Posted by PD (# 12436) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Matt Black:
quote:
Originally posted by Mockingale:
quote:
Originally posted by aumbry:
That will be the gay-friendly mosques TEC will be flogging (oops!) their churches to?

I've ceased trying to decipher your nonsense.
It's called irony, I believe. I got it.
So did I.

Actually at the end of the day what the courts tend to see is the following situation.

1. The sitting congregation has gotten pissed at the hierarchy and wants to leave with the property

2. TEC has a Property Canon - the infamous Denis Canon of 1979 - which makes the congregation the trustee for the national Church, even though the congregation bought and paid for the building. This effective reverses the previous position where the deeds to the building controlled the ownership - which is why some congregations were able to escape with their property c.1980.

I is a 'no-brainer' that the pissed off congregation is going to loose for two reasons.

Firstly, they have acquiesed to the Dennis Canon for the last 33 years and have therefore tacitly ackowledge the denominations right to the property, and

Secondly, in hierarchical churches, the secular courts usually rule in favour of the hierarchy, unless there is a damn good reason not to. They are not interested in theology, and the property case is pretty open and shut.

PD

[ 19. April 2012, 00:20: Message edited by: PD ]
 
Posted by Beeswax Altar (# 11644) on :
 
quote:
originally posted by Mockingale:
I still don't see why the Episcopal Church should bend over backwards for people that hate us.

Me either

Good thing Jesus didn't say something stupid like, "Love your enemies."
 
Posted by SeraphimSarov (# 4335) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Beeswax Altar:
quote:
originally posted by Mockingale:
I still don't see why the Episcopal Church should bend over backwards for people that hate us.

Me either

Good thing Jesus didn't say something stupid like, "Love your enemies."

It seems to me there Is enough hatred and people up on their high horses in both sides liberal and conservative or what passes for those positions
 
Posted by Augustine the Aleut (# 1472) on :
 
@SPK. I was likely not clear on two counts. First, the Anglican and RC acts were not denominational-- they relate to dioceses and: a) all property went to the name of the diocese or b)(frequently for the RCs) to the bishop as corporation sole. This means that the national church and any antics were irrelevant. This is a point which I made to the pirates at S Vartan's but which they did not like-- they rambled on about pre-diocesan title, which had ceased to exist in Victoria's Day, if it had ever existed. The fires of Moloch can be kindled but as long as they're lit with the permission of the Bishop of Ottawa, it's totally kosher (some of us would put the erection of projection screens in the same league, but that's another discussion).

As SPK notes, that is one of the reasons why secession never happened; the parishes rarely had any legal existence in their own right (some exceptions but that's another tangent, and those rights were ended with legislation). It would be like a flowerbed declaring independence of the rest of the garden.

Second, the acts were needed as dis-establishment
vitiated trusts which characteristic of establishment--(rector and wardens) which attended the 12+ prerogative rectories. Other parishes sometimes but not all the time (ah Dylan!) had private acts from colonial assemblies (as did some of the cemeteries) and those that didn't started to reap lawsuits. The RCs had more trouble with this, including a ten-year schism in Halifax.

So the acts cleared up the mess. SPK's description of the UCC and Presbyterians show how their denomination-based approach resembles that of TEC. Anglicans and RCs benefitted/suffered from the mediaeval corporatist approach. And this meant that any discussions over church title were political in nature (as in "Let's talk" as the courts would have treated the title question as an open and shut case.

This was the case in the Diocese of British Columbia (Vancouver Island) in Victoria's time, where there was a local schism resulting in the establishment of several REC parishes. They sued and did not get the properties. It's been like that ever since.

The Ottawa situation, referred to above, was an attempt to maintain the legalities but address the reality and bend over backward for the secessionists. The pirates, in a buy-back arrangement, got one of the two churches. In return, they had to make it clear in signing that this was not part of the Anglican Church of Canada or the Diocese of Ottawa. As John Holding points out, they retained some ACoC parishioners who were attached to the community and did not interest themselves in the label attached. This is a reality understood more readily by laity, who are congregational in consciousness, than by clergy.

I've done a little more reading and I think that the Ursulines maintained their peculiarity in spite of the acts. However, as they don't care to exercise it at all, it's very moot. The exception is that they allow a male Governor General into the enclosure as visitor and representative of the founder (Louis XIV of France).

This is likely more than anyone wanted to know.
 
Posted by Sober Preacher's Kid (# 12699) on :
 
Thanks Augustine, that clears that up.

As I'm an insufferable pedant, the Minister in a United Church charge is ex-officio chair of the Board of Trustees, the only body with any corporate existence in a United Church congregation. Frequently the minister delegates this to someone else, our Minister has taken this responsibility over directly this year.

The minister is not and has never been a corporation sole, he/she is an employee. The Minister has many legal and spiritual roles as the representative of the wider church to a congregation, that's why she chairs the Trustees, to represent and safeguard the wider church's interest in our property.

A United Church can happily get along without a minister, Presbytery simply appoints one of its own members as Pastoral Supervisor to take over the oversight role.

The legal restrictions on the Trustees are that they cannot sell, mortgage, pledge or do anything other than maintain the real property without permission of Presbytery, and most importantly that they ensure that the property is used "in a manner consistent with the doctrine of the United Church of Canada". Hehehe. [Snigger]

Doctrine = 20 Articles of Faith, contained in the Basis of Union. Questions about doctrine go to the Judicial Committee of General Council. We can change our doctrinal statements so long as the matter is proposed by General Council, submitted to Presbyteries and Congregations as a Remit under the Barrier Act, approved and reconfirmed by the next General Council.

This is in part why secession is rare in Canada.
 
Posted by Golden Key (# 1468) on :
 
{Catching up on this thread. Apologies if this has been covered.}

From what I remember of the situation of several years ago, I suspect KJS is trying to keep the schismatics from getting a foothold again--so the buildings stay with the TEC. Makes sense to me. AFAIK, the buildings belong to the TEC.

I can't fathom calling KJS "evil", even if you're anti-women's ordination.
[Ultra confused]
 
Posted by Matt Black (# 2210) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mockingale:
quote:
Originally posted by GreyFace:
I understand all this Mockingale, I really do. But with respect you're not answering the point I'm raising. Or are you saying that there are no possible doctrinal changes whatsoever that would legitimise a schism in your eyes?

That's not what you were asking, or if that was what you intended to ask, you asked in a roundabout way. You were asking if a schism, under certain circumstances, entitles the spinoff church to a share of the parent church's property (i.e. Does a breakaway parish have a viable legal argument for terminating the Episcopal Church's beneficial interest in parish property in circumstances where the Episcopal Church has materially departed from church doctrine?) That's what the discussion was about. I can't discuss schism under law because American law does not get involved in church doctrine.

No court in the United States is going to say "Oh, well, the Episcopal Church once had an implicit doctrine that same-sex activity was sinful and disqualified a person from becoming a bishop, but in 2005 they changed church doctrine, so they ceased really being The Episcopal Church, or Anglican, or Christian, and therefore Truro Anglican Parish is entitled to take its former parish buildings and bank accounts with it." It's not a decision over which federal or state courts have any jurisdiction.

As to whether certain theoretical doctrinal change "legitimizes schism in my eyes," I suppose. If the Episcopal Church were to undertake a doctrinal change declaring that Jesus was not divine or not human in nature, or denying the Trinity, or declaring that God does not exist, or denying the resurrection, I could see a decision by dissenters to leave as a "legitimate schism," to the extent that schism can exist in an organization that is no longer a Christian church. I'd be among the "schismatics" in that case. Each one of those doctrines is part of the creeds. They're what make us Christians. But that would still not justify the remnant from claiming church property.

I distinguish such things from doctrinal changes about ancillary matters. If the church were to declare that suicide is not a violation of the commandment against killing, and not a sin, but merely a product of mental illness or legitimate concerns about prolonged pain and suffering, it would be a doctrinal change of sorts, but it's not the sort of thing that would cause the Episcopal Church to cease to be Christian.

Does that mean that the Catholics should be given all our medieval Anglican parish churches back, then, by us naughty Anglican schismatics?
 
Posted by Leprechaun (# 5408) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mockingale:


I still don't see why the Episcopal Church should bend over backwards for people that hate us.

But it's the Baptists/Muslims you're bending over backwards for! If you let the secessionists buy the building, TEC gets a load of money (could probably charge over the market rate) to start or build something new. My guess is the buildings will end up being sold at a good deal less than market value to other religious groups who also hate you. Anyway, far be it from me to hope the success of the Episcopal Church.
 
Posted by GreyFace (# 4682) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Matt Black:
Does that mean that the Catholics should be given all our medieval Anglican parish churches back, then, by us naughty Anglican schismatics?

Apart from the ones built before 1054, of course, which should belong to The Plot™ [Biased] . Of course, the older it is, the more likely it is that the roof leaks...

I was wondering when somebody would point out this particular elephant in the room.
 
Posted by Honest Ron Bacardi (# 38) on :
 
I skirted round it myself a couple of times...

Actually, I'm not sure it is an elephant in the room, as the Catholic church is not after them. They specifically rejected attempts to include physical assets in the ordinariate setup. So honestly, the USA situation is pretty much sui generis (a thing of its own kind).
 
Posted by Matt Black (# 2210) on :
 
I'm not sure the fact that the Catholic Church isn't specifically claiming title alters the moral principle being advicated by some on this thread, namely that schismatics should return church property.
 
Posted by Mockingale (# 16599) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Matt Black:
Does that mean that the Catholics should be given all our medieval Anglican parish churches back, then, by us naughty Anglican schismatics?

Not at all. Adverse possession, and what not - I think the statute of limitations has run.
 
Posted by Mockingale (# 16599) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Matt Black:
I'm not sure the fact that the Catholic Church isn't specifically claiming title alters the moral principle being advicated by some on this thread, namely that schismatics should return church property.

I've neither claimed that it's moral or immoral for the Episcopal Church to maintain their property. I *have* claimed that it is their right to do so, and the courts have thus far agreed.
 
Posted by Mockingale (# 16599) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Leprechaun:
quote:
Originally posted by Mockingale:


I still don't see why the Episcopal Church should bend over backwards for people that hate us.

Anyway, far be it from me to hope the success of the Episcopal Church.
I'll pray for you.
 
Posted by Mockingale (# 16599) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Beeswax Altar:
quote:
originally posted by Mockingale:
I still don't see why the Episcopal Church should bend over backwards for people that hate us.

Me either

Good thing Jesus didn't say something stupid like, "Love your enemies."

We're commanded to love our enemies. We're even commanded to turn the other cheek. But we're not commanded to load the gun that our enemy is pointing at our face.
 
Posted by jordan32404 (# 15833) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mockingale:
quote:
Originally posted by Matt Black:
I'm not sure the fact that the Catholic Church isn't specifically claiming title alters the moral principle being advicated by some on this thread, namely that schismatics should return church property.

I've neither claimed that it's moral or immoral for the Episcopal Church to maintain their property. I *have* claimed that it is their right to do so, and the courts have thus far agreed.
I advocate their right to do so, as well. And it makes sense, if there is a viable congregation of Episcopalians to sustain the building but, to me, it doesn't make sense to spend millions of dollars on litigation and the building if there is no remaining TEC congregation and no guarantee of the ability to sell the building to another Christian body (I'm completely opposed to denying a Christian congregation the ability to worship in a church and selling it to be a mosque or something else, a la Binghamton).
 
Posted by Augustine the Aleut (# 1472) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mockingale:
quote:
Originally posted by Matt Black:
Does that mean that the Catholics should be given all our medieval Anglican parish churches back, then, by us naughty Anglican schismatics?

Not at all. Adverse possession, and what not - I think the statute of limitations has run.
I think that English civil law is complex on statutes of limitations. In any case, the Holy See accepted compensation in the early 1700s in consideration of any claims it might have.
 
Posted by CL (# 16145) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Lietuvos Sv. Kazimieras:
There is some indication that TEC policy will treat the Ordinariate differently than "Continuing" Anglican schismatics. Mount Calvary, Baltimore is apparently being permitted to leave with their building and other property, going to the Roman Catholic Church/Ordinariate of the Chair of St Peter. I assume that all or virtually all of their congregation decided to depart for the Ordinariate along with their clergy. IIRC, the Episcopal Diocese of Maryland has first right of refusal in any future sale of Mount Calvary's property -- IOW the TEC diocese would be able to buy the property back on favourable terms. As I understand, the thought is that the Ordinariate is not in competition with TEC or actively trying to subvert TEC, whereas the Anglican schismatics are seen as taking that course. However, I must disagree with that assessment. IME there are some Anglo-Papalists who would be disposed to foment a sort of coup in their parishes, aimed at taking the parish into the Ordinariate and retaining its property. This will fail, of course, as long as such elites are strongly opposed by a majority of the congregation, but where they are able to sew confusion, demoralisation, and general discord - driving TEC loyalists out - such efforts at a grab-and-run might well succeed. Thus, I think TEC ought to investigate the membership roles and transfers-out of parishes seeking to leave for the Ordinariate with their property, and only settle on generous terms with any such parish if it is reasonably clear that there has been near-complete unanimity of sentiment amongst parishioners and parish clergy for a move to the Ordinariate.

Mount Calvary and St. Luke's, Bladenburg negotiated lease deals with options to buy. The TEC dioceses have not just handed the properties over. Both parishes had almost complete unanimity about joining the Ordinariate.

[ 19. April 2012, 13:34: Message edited by: CL ]
 
Posted by Mockingale (# 16599) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by jordan32404:
quote:
Originally posted by Mockingale:
quote:
Originally posted by Matt Black:
I'm not sure the fact that the Catholic Church isn't specifically claiming title alters the moral principle being advicated by some on this thread, namely that schismatics should return church property.

I've neither claimed that it's moral or immoral for the Episcopal Church to maintain their property. I *have* claimed that it is their right to do so, and the courts have thus far agreed.
I advocate their right to do so, as well. And it makes sense, if there is a viable congregation of Episcopalians to sustain the building but, to me, it doesn't make sense to spend millions of dollars on litigation and the building if there is no remaining TEC congregation and no guarantee of the ability to sell the building to another Christian body (I'm completely opposed to denying a Christian congregation the ability to worship in a church and selling it to be a mosque or something else, a la Binghamton).
Truthfully, if I were Presiding Bishop (heaven forbid), I would lease to the breakaways in the event that no other Christian church wanted the space. I would require them to take certain actions to make clear on their signage that they were part of the Anglican Church in North America and not the Episcopal Church. I would also retain the right to terminate the lease with adequate notice if an Episcopal congregation wished to take over the property.
 
Posted by Zach82 (# 3208) on :
 
quote:
I advocate their right to do so, as well. And it makes sense, if there is a viable congregation of Episcopalians to sustain the building but, to me, it doesn't make sense to spend millions of dollars on litigation and the building if there is no remaining TEC congregation and no guarantee of the ability to sell the building to another Christian body (I'm completely opposed to denying a Christian congregation the ability to worship in a church and selling it to be a mosque or something else, a la Binghamton).
What you have been refusing to understand for 6 pages of thread now is that TEC is not wasting money getting this property back. Part of the litigation is endowments, often worth millions of dollars. Real estate is also worth money, and in most of these cases TEC is sending money after a sure bet. TEC is, furthermore, going after assets it has every right to. If anything it's the schismatics wasting money.

Your fraught logic about "selling to filthy moors," or whatever, forgets the fact that the cash from such sales is invested in TEC, where it is used for the propagation of the Gospel, according to Church canons, anyway.

[ 19. April 2012, 14:08: Message edited by: Zach82 ]
 
Posted by BulldogSacristan (# 11239) on :
 
That does sound reasonable, but what then about endowments, plate, vestments, and other things like that which are very important as well. Should they be held in trust for a future Episcopal Parish?
 
Posted by Zach82 (# 3208) on :
 
That all depends on the situation. Even the Gospel has to rely on pragmatism sometimes. It's always a sad day when churches are forced to sell their plate. A church here in Boston was forced to sell its Paul Revere plate to the Museum of Fine Arts to fund a renovation of its building.
 
Posted by Mockingale (# 16599) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by BulldogSacristan:
That does sound reasonable, but what then about endowments, plate, vestments, and other things like that which are very important as well. Should they be held in trust for a future Episcopal Parish?

I'd say that any pre-schism endowments belong to the Episcopal Church. If the breakaway parish wants to keep vestments and small items of property like candles, books, and eating utensils from the parish hall, I say let them take them.
 
Posted by Lietuvos Sv. Kazimieras (# 11274) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by CL:
quote:
Originally posted by Lietuvos Sv. Kazimieras:
There is some indication that TEC policy will treat the Ordinariate differently than "Continuing" Anglican schismatics. Mount Calvary, Baltimore is apparently being permitted to leave with their building and other property, going to the Roman Catholic Church/Ordinariate of the Chair of St Peter. I assume that all or virtually all of their congregation decided to depart for the Ordinariate along with their clergy. IIRC, the Episcopal Diocese of Maryland has first right of refusal in any future sale of Mount Calvary's property -- IOW the TEC diocese would be able to buy the property back on favourable terms. As I understand, the thought is that the Ordinariate is not in competition with TEC or actively trying to subvert TEC, whereas the Anglican schismatics are seen as taking that course. However, I must disagree with that assessment. IME there are some Anglo-Papalists who would be disposed to foment a sort of coup in their parishes, aimed at taking the parish into the Ordinariate and retaining its property. This will fail, of course, as long as such elites are strongly opposed by a majority of the congregation, but where they are able to sew confusion, demoralisation, and general discord - driving TEC loyalists out - such efforts at a grab-and-run might well succeed. Thus, I think TEC ought to investigate the membership roles and transfers-out of parishes seeking to leave for the Ordinariate with their property, and only settle on generous terms with any such parish if it is reasonably clear that there has been near-complete unanimity of sentiment amongst parishioners and parish clergy for a move to the Ordinariate.

Mount Calvary and St. Luke's, Bladenburg negotiated lease deals with options to buy. The TEC dioceses have not just handed the properties over. Both parishes had almost complete unanimity about joining the Ordinariate.
That is not my understanding, per several published reports on the internet, such as this one. The property was deeded to Mount Calvary and TEC retained first right of refusal in the event of future sale of the property -- as I stated.
 
Posted by Lietuvos Sv. Kazimieras (# 11274) on :
 
I should add that Mount Calvary was at the time of its vote to leave TEC, a parish of 45 souls, with a total of 26 attending the meeting at which the vote was taken to withdraw from TEC. Of those voting, all but three or four voted to leave TEC. It wasn't the most viable parish in the world, which may be another reason the Diocese of Maryland let them go on very favourable terms.
 


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