Category Archives: PC(USA)

Upcoming PC(USA) General Assembly — Mid-April Update

The process continues as we move towards the 218th General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) which begins on June 21, 2008, in San Jose, California.  This week the big event was the release of the Moderator Booklet with the statements by each candidate and responses to questions from the four Moderator candidates.  Just to remind you, the four candidates are (in order of their inclusion in the booklet) Rev. Carl Mazza, Rev. Bruce Reyes-Chow, Elder Roger Shoemaker, and Rev. William “Bill” Teng.

I will have to take some more time to review the answers and see if I want to make any comments on the answers, but it is interesting to note which questions the candidates chose to answer.  The Office of the General Assembly provided a list of ten questions and the candidates were to chose five questions to answer in 500 words or less for each question.  What I found interesting was which questions the candidates answered and which they did not.  For example, all four candidates chose to answer the first question:

1. Our church’s Ecumenical Vision Statement reminds us that, “The unity of the Church is both God’s real gift and God’s effective calling.” How would you work for unity within the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.), and how would this contribute to the unity we seek with other churches and Christian communities?

Three of the four answered thee questions:

5. What suggestions do you have for identifying new directions for partnership between congregations, presbyteries, seminaries, and the General Assembly in preparation for ordained ministry?

6. In what new ways can the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) and its congregations place a focus on ministry to and with youth and young adults to ensure a church for future generations?

7. What is your sense of where God is leading the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) at this time in its history?

Carl and Bruce answered all three of these, Roger answered 5 and 7, and Bill answered number 6.

Three questions were answered by two of the candidates.  Roger and Bill answered both

2. The 208th General Assembly (1996) affirmed the goal of increasing racial ethnic membership to 10 percent by the year 2005, and to 20 percent by the year 2010. How do you assess the Presbyterian Church’s progress toward the fulfillment of this goal and what would you do during your moderatorial term to move the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) closer to realizing or exceeding this goal?

8. What should be the role of the Moderator during times of deep disagreements in the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) about matters of faith and practice?

While Bruce and Bill answered the Form of Government question:

10. The Form of Government Task Force was created by the 217th General Assembly (2006) to propose a revised polity that would be more flexible, more foundational, and more appropriate for a missional Reformed Church in the 21st century. What do you think about these proposals?

There was only one solo answer and that was for Carl for

9. We are living in a war-torn world. What might the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) and its congregations do to strengthen its ministry of peacemaking at this time?

Finally two questions went unanswered:

3. The General Assembly Committee on Ecumenical Relations held a Consultation on the Ecumenical Stance of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) and identified ten priorities for our ecumenical commitment in the next ten years. What do you understand to be the greatest ecumenical challenge and ecumenical resource before the church in the next decade?

4. The General Assembly will be asked to act on a proposal to take the first step toward adding the Belhar Confession to The Book of Confessions. How do you think this addition to The Book of Confessions would impact the confessional and spiritual life of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.)?

So, a quick conclusion is that all the candidates place a high priority on Christian Unity (question 1) and lower priority on ecumenical relations (question 3) and adding to the Book of Confessions (question 4).  As I have talked with commissioners and delegates to the GA these are themes that I have been hearing from them.  Also, the interest in partnerships between governing bodies and institutions as well as reaching out to youth and young adults is a pretty strong theme.  So it is not surprising that these four individuals have matched their priorities to the major themes in the PC(USA) today.  (Quick and dirty probability says that there is one chance in sixteen of all four choosing the same question and of nobody choosing a question if the choices are random so it appears that their selections are not random.)  I would also point out that Bruce was the only candidate to not answer the questions in the same order they are numbered.  And Bruce and Carl used one page per question, pretty much filling up the page, while Roger and Bill’s answers to any single question generally did not fill up a page.

Well, that is enough reading tea leaves for now.  I’ll probably have more comments about the individual responses later this weekend.  I’m taking my class on a field trip to the San Andreas fault and I’ll have a bus ride home to do some reading.  (Happy California Earthquake Day by the way. (102nd anniversary of the 1906 San Francisco quake and fire))

The other item of note in the candidates’ booklet is the announcement that the Rev. Teng has selected the Rev. Tamara Letts as his nominee for Vice-moderator.  Rev. Letts is an Associate Pastor at Trinity Presbyterian Church in Anchorage, Alaska and from her bio in the booklet appears to have worked with Rev. Teng on the board of Presbyterians for Renewal.  She has also worked with the Network of Presbyterian Women in Leadership (NPWL) and is listed in their speakers bureau.

Tamara joins the Rev. Byron Wade and the Rev. Peter C. deVries as the Vice-moderator nominees.  I searched the booklet several times and I hope that I am not missing it, but I don’t see the Vice-moderator nominee for Rev. Mazza.  And of these seven individuals, I would point out that Roger Shoemaker remains the only Elder in the group and Tamara Letts is the only women.  (Is there a COR in the house?)

With the processing of business on PC-biz following overtures has become a moving target since they get changed to committee items and lose their clear overture label.  The last time I addressed overtures we were at 86.  The numbering is now up to at least 98.

Since we are beyond the constitutional changes deadline most of the overtures deal with social justice issues.  These include Overture 87 from the Denver Presbytery “On Equal Rights for Families of Same-Gender Partners” which appears to be about the same as Overture 83.  There are a couple that address the Middle East.  These include 88 from National Capital Presbytery on  “Being a Voice for the Victims of Violence in Israel and Palestine,” and 93 from Newark Presbytery “On Supporting Israel’s Right to Exist, But Calling for Temporary Suspension of Military Aid to the State of Israel” that address the Israel/Palestine situation.  There is also 96 from Heartland Presbytery “On Ending the War in Iraq.”  Regarding Iraq overtures, Toby Brown has commented on the Mission Presbytery debate of a similar overture in his Classical Presbyterian blog.

Some of the more local social witness issues include overture 89 from National Capital Presbytery “On Addressing the Tragedy of America’s Gun Violence,” overture 95 “On Peaceful Relations Between the Christian and Muslim Communities” from Chicago Presbytery, and 98 “On Supporting Those Who Feel Called to Seek Status as Conscientious Objectors” from San Francisco Presbytery.  And there are a couple of other overtures like 91 from Scioto Valley Presbytery titled “Overture on War, Mercenaries, and Profiteering” and 94 “On Peacemaking in Columbia” from Chicago Presbytery.  I will generalize that these all call for some combination of raising awareness in the church, maybe studying the issue, and the Stated Clerk writing letters to politicians advocating on behalf of the church.

The remaining three overtures have more direct implications for the PC(USA).  Overture 90, from Beaver-Butler Presbytery, is titled “On Advocating and Funding Either Both Sides of the Abortion Issue or Neither.”  The title pretty much says it all and it would direct GA agencies to do one or the other in compliance with the 1992 abortion policy.  There are two related and some-what similar overtures from its neighbor Pittsburgh Presbytery (Mister Rodgers pun intended):  Overture 55 about the “Relief of Conscience Plan” and Overture 63 also about advocating both sides.

San Francisco Presbytery proposes an added office or agency in Overture 97 “On Creating a Presbyterian Office for the Prevention and Healing of Minister of Word and Sacrament Mis-conduct and Abuse.”  The overture asks for an ongoing presence that would be in the Office of the Stated Clerk and the General Assembly Council (GAC).  These are two different branches of the national structure and so it would be a rather unique presence if it does indeed cross between the two.  In addition, how does this fit into the reorganization of the GAC?  The overture specifies that oversight would be by the GAC.

And finally, there is overture 92 which is another call, this time from Newark Presbytery, for a “corrected” translation of the Heidelberg Catechism.  This joins overtures 36 from North Kansas Presbytery and 45 from Boston Presbytery which also request “Restoring the Heidelberg Catechism to its Historic Form.”

Well, that is plenty for now and I’m putting in way to many off-topic side comments.  This probably should have been two posts but I was on a roll so I just plowed through.  And there are a couple things hanging out there so I expect to be posting another update early next week with those items.  Have a good weekend.

Upcoming PC(USA) General Assembly — Another Early April Update

Coming so close to my previous update I won’t update the business coming before GA, except to say that more items are being assigned to committees on PC-biz and to note that Kay Moore, the Manager of General Assembly Business at General Assembly Meeting Services, has been added as the sole committee member to all the committees.

The news today is the announcement that GA Moderator candidate Elder Roger Shoemaker has chosen the Rev. Peter C. deVries as his Vice-moderator nominee.  My hat tip to Bruce Reyes-Chow on this since none of my other feeds or alerts have picked this up yet, and in fact Roger Shoemaker’s web site, which I watch closely, does not have it there either.  But Rev. deVries does have his blog up and going so this is more of announcement by the selectee than by the selector.  I suspect that Bruce just got the word out faster than anticipated and that Roger’s site will be updated with the official news shortly and they just wanted all their ducks in a row first. 

Peter has put up a nice blog with four posts last Thursday on his background, mission, the Bible, and conflict.  There is a general overseas mission theme going here because Rev. deVries is the convener of the Ghana Mission Network; remember that Elder Shoemaker has been  in leadership in the Czech Mission Network.  Peter is the pastor of Old Union Presbyterian Church in Mars, Pennsylvania, in Beaver-Butler Presbytery.  He is working on a Ph.D. at the University of Pittsburgh Department of Religious Studies (note not Pittsburgh Seminary).  He describes his research as “His dissertation uses the hermeneutic theory of Paul Ricoeur to advance
an understanding of Jesus’ apocalyptic discourse of Mark 13.”  I did find it interesting, as you can tell from that quote, that his about post is written in the third person.  The other posts nicely outline his view of the other three areas.  In particular, he writes in the conflict post that:

The PC(USA) is not in a crisis. Christianity has experienced discord and conflict from its very inception. While
the intensity of our disagreements and the things we disagree about may
distress us, God calls us to persevere in our struggle together to
discern his way forward.

These posts also reflect his mission emphasis and academic perspective.  And the motorcycle picture is a nice touch.  Now wonder it got Bruce’s attention.

So, we await the remaining two Vice-moderator nominees.

Upcoming PC(USA) General Assembly — Early-April Update

I was targeting my next update on the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) General Assembly for about April 15, but within the last couple of days there have been two interesting developments worth mentioning.

The first is that the workers on the back side of PC-biz, the GA business web site, are now assigning action items to committees.  But in the on-line system there is an up-side and a down-side to this.  The positive is that we now see which committees will be dealing with what business, barring changes by Committee 2 – Bills and Overtures.  In particular, the “man behind the curtain” has been moving several items over to Committee 3 – General Assembly Procedures, and Committee 4 – Church Polity.  The problem is that in the assignment, while the back-end ID number seems to remain the same, the more user-friendly overture number or recommendation number gets removed and replaced with a committee item number.  For instance, Overture 86 on creating the Truckee Lutheran Presbyterian Church is now Committee item 04-10.  If you do the digging to look at the sponsor, it is then clear it came from a Presbytery, therefore it must be an Overture.  But there appears to be no reference kept to its overture number. C’est la vie

The second item of news is that Moderator candidate Bruce Reyes-Chow has announced that his Vice-moderator nominee is Dr. Rev. Bryon Wade.  Rev. Wade is the pastor of Davie Street Memorial Church (CitySearch calls it Davie Street Presbyterian Church as does the Presbytery congregations page) in Raleigh, NC, New Hope Presbytery.  While Bryon does not appear to match Bruce in “on-line presence,” (I’m now sure how many of us could) Bruce does list a Facebook page for him.  Rev. Wade is originally from Los Angeles and has served the denomination in a number of positions, including service on General Assembly Council.  Bruce comments that they have been friends for a couple of decades and share not only a history with the denomination but similar visions for it.

We can expect more Vice-Moderator information coming from the other candidates in the next few weeks.  At the latest, the Vice-Moderator nominees and the official bio and statements book will be out no later than May 7, the 45 day deadline before GA begins.

A few other developments:

Over on Presbyblog Bob Davies has his comments on many of the issues faced by General Assembly this year.  And Rev. Davies is taking these item by item so there is significent detail on several of them.  With so many significant pieces of business coming up we will see how many he gets through before GA begins.  However, one of the items he has commented on is the proposed General Assembly Council Mission Work Plan, currently knows as Recommendation 31.  Another fellow blogger, Michael Kruse, is on the GAC and is one of the authors of that work plan and has some comments on Bob’s discussion.

Finally, the PC(USA) General Assembly site has posted a Prayer for the General Assembly from the Book of Common Prayer on the GA Worship page.  Usually a couple of other organizations prepare prayer guides leading up to GA so we will keep watching for those.

Official PC(USA) Blogs

I have previously mentioned a couple of the official Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) blogs.  These are hosted on Typepad.  I have stumbled upon a list of several more blogs on the sight, one of them fairly new.  Here is a rundown:

Main blog:
http://presbyterian.typepad.com/
When I first saw this it struck me as a “proof of concept” because it only had a couple of posts all from September, 2006.  Checking again, I find that it is still sort of a trial, or minimal site, but it now has two videos about the work of General Assembly Council and the church mission structure posted back in February.  They are several minutes each, but well done and a good intro to the national church.  However, with a name like “Test Video” it still appears “not ready for prime-time.”

Linda Valentine
http://www.presbyterian.typepad.com/lindavalentine/
Since the debut of this blog for Ms. Valentine’s trip to Asia last fall she has continued to post to it about once a week.  It provides a nice connection to the Executive Director of the General Assembly Council.

A more expansive view — Encounters with Presbyterians and our Seminaries
http://presbyterian.typepad.com/seminaries/
This blog, written by Lee Hinson-Hasty, Coordinator of Theological Education and Seminary Relations, appears to have been started at the beginning of November 2007 shortly after Linda started her blog.  As the blog title, and Mr. Hinson-Hasty job title, suggest, it is about the interface of PC(USA) seminaries with the wider church.  It is from his side-bar that I found a couple of the new blogs.  And Lee got tagged and participated in the recent Presbyterian meme that went around, including an intellectual discussion of its origin.

Food and Faith
http://presbyterian.typepad.com/foodandfaith/
This appears to be the first regular blog on this site.  It is maintained by the Presbyterian Hunger Program and has entries dating back to March 2007.  It also is the only one with widgets in the side bars.

Swords into Plowshares
http://presbyterian.typepad.com/peacemaking/
This is a blog that I have previously referred to as well and has been written by representatives of the Presbyterian Peacemaking Program since February 2008.

Reclaiming the Gospel
http://presbyterian.typepad.com/erichoey
This is one of the blogs I had not found before.  It is written by Eric Hoey, the Director of Evangelism and Church Growth for the General Assembly Council and I wish I had found it earlier because I appreciate Eric’s candor, freshness, and insights.  It also has entries back to February, 2008.

Vital Signs — Changing Churches for Changing Times
http://presbyterian.typepad.com/vitalsigns
This is a brand new blog with one entry dated March 24.  The author is Phil Tom is the associate for the Small Church and Community Ministry Office.  I look forward to reading more from this timely blog.

So, what next?  Will we start to see most of the program areas represented by blogs?  Will the next Moderator of General Assembly have an “official” blog?  Stay tuned.

PC(USA) Stated Clerk Nominating Committee Selection — Rev. Gradye Parsons

The Presbyterian News Service has just broke the news that of the fourteen applicants for the job of Stated Clerk of the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) the choice of the nominating committee is current Associate Stated Clerk Rev. Gradye Parsons.

While we did not know the list of applicants, I think that most GA Junkies would figure Rev. Parsons to be the odds-on favorite if he wanted the job.  He has been in the Stated Clerk’s office for eight years and is presently the director of operations.  If you apply “kremlinology” to this choice, he is frequently seen seated close to outgoing Stated Clerk Clifton Kirkpatrick and at several events I have been to he has been the Stated Clerk’s representative to the event or meeting.  (Want to try it yourself?  Zoom in on this very high resolution image or note that Gradye is in the Stated Clerk’s seat in this picture.  Both are from the 217th General Assembly.)

To his credit, he has a great deal of experience in the office which will be helpful.  Some may view that experience and the hiring from within as a negative as well as Rev. Parsons’ participation with the governing board of the National Council of Churches of Christ.  I am encouraged that the article mentions one of Gradye’s goals is to do more to develop the ministry of elders and in my time with him I have found him very knowledgeable, friendly, and good natured.

But this is only the choice of the nominating committee and it is now time to wait and see if any of the other 13 applicants will chose to also run for election making this contested.  They have until May 7 to announce.  The election will be held on the Friday of General Assembly, June 27.

One interesting thing is that this was a coordinated web roll-out from the PC(USA) headquarters.  Within a short period of time this announcement appeared on the main PC(USA) web page, the Stated Clerk Nominating Committee web page, and the PC News service site as the highlighted article.  One has to wonder if it would have found as much penetration if the choice was an outside nominee.

Upcoming PC(USA) General Assembly — Late-March Update

Things continue to move forward towards the 218th General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.).  There has been little “news” but enough changes since my last update that I think it is time for another one.

First some “fluff” items:
The General Assembly web site has changed it’s “look and feel” so it is now unique in the PC(USA) domain.  It no longer fits the standard design you see on most other pages but has its own style with the navigation bar across the top, a wider area for content, and a gray “motif” with less contrast than the main pages.  I don’t see a change in the content though.  One thing that is gone is the prominent link to the Committee on Local Arrangements (COLA) and the COLA web site still has a style based on the PC(USA) main page.

The second item is that my son finally got registered on-line for the assembly.  The process was slow and threw back server errors a couple of times, but worked in the end.

Finally, there is now a detailed schedule of events posted for the GA, 26 pages worth, listing not just the business sessions and worship, but all the special meals you can buy tickets for and the speakers or awards at those meals.  My son looked at that and asked “but what would I be interested in?”  I pointed him to a couple that are up his alley.   I’ll return to a couple of interesting items on the schedule at the end of this post.

Over the last couple of weeks the number of overtures has only grown slightly, but the number of recommendations listed on PC-biz has started explode.

For the overtures, there are six new ones, bringing the total to 86.  Of these, there is one more about the FOG report (Overture 81)  from the Presbytery of Western North Carolina to receive the report, have officers and Governing Bodies study it, get back to the Stated Clerk by Jan. 1, 2010, and refer the business to the 219th GA in 2010.  Overture 86 is fairly routine business to establish Truckee Lutheran Presbyterian Church as a union church in Truckee, Nevada.  There is also a social witness overture, 82, from Twin Cities Area Presbytery, challenging the denomination to work for shalom in the world.  The overture singles out no specific geographic area or particular conflict, but does oppose the doctrine of preemptive war as well as torture while supporting the promotion of human rights.

The other three overtures are more unique, have some nuance, and have interesting implications for Presbyterian politics.

The first is Overture 83, “On Equal Rights for Families of Same-Gender Partners” from New Brunswick Presbytery.  This overture touches both sides of the PC(USA)’s seemingly paradoxical stand on same-sex relationships.  As the rational of the overture points out, the PC(USA) has a history of social witness promotion of the civil rights of same-sex couples.  At the same time the denomination has been embroiled in the controversy over the ban on the ordination of active homosexuals and on same-sex unions.  Some, on both sides, see these opposite stands as contradictory while many in the center do understand the differing social and polity stands to be perfectly compatible with our Reformed theology.  This overture is interesting because it touches both parts and blurs the difference.  Point 1 is pretty clear on renewing the commitment to civil rights.  But Point 2 asks for a special committee to report to the next GA on the relationship between our two positions.  Specifically it asks for a report on:

a.The history of the laws governing marriage and civil union, including current policy debates.
b. How the theology and practice of marriage have developed in the Reformed and broader Christian tradition.
c. The relationship between civil marriage and Christian marriage.
d. The effects of current laws on same-gender partners and their children.
e. The place of covenanted same-gender partnerships in the Christian community.

The final point in the overture is to support congregations as they “extend pastoral care to same-gender couples and their families.”

Overture 84 is a request from the Flint River Presbytery to change the standing rules so that amending the standing rules or suspending the standing rules only requires a majority vote rather than a super-majority of 2/3.  We will see how far this gets because one of our subordinate standards (just kidding!) is Robert’s Rules of Order which has a 2/3 vote to suspend the rules.  All that the overture rational says is that the current 2/3 imposes an “unrealistic constraint.” I have seen the GA amend and suspend the rules several times so it can be done for good reason.  Somebody who wants to look for “conspiracy theories” might find something in this change.  I’ll have to reread the minutes from the last GA to see what business was related to a failed suspension of the standing rules.

Finally, overture 85 proposes a change in the investment restrictions on General Assembly Council (GAC) allowing them to invest with organizations other than the Presbyterian Foundation.  The rational is that the GAC is the only PC(USA) entity required to use the Foundation exclusively and it points out that the Board of Pensions has done better elsewhere.  This overture was brought by the Synod of the Southwest.

As I mentioned above, the number of recommendations to the Assembly is growing, currently up to 26 beginning with the Report of the Form of Government Task Force as Recommendation 1.  In this post I’m not going to do a item-by-item analysis of the recommendations.  Some are routine approvals of a new seminary president (7), seminary trustees (6), Historical Society and Mountain Retreat Association Board members (20 and 26).  Some are the official wording or the items from the Advisory Committee on Social Witness Policy that I discussed in February.  Many of the remaining are recommendations from the General Assembly Council.  Let me highlight a couple:

Recommendation 19 is unique, so far, in that it is the only recommendation with proposed changes to the Book of Order.  This is unusual to come from an agency, but this is the result of the referral to the GAC of an overture to the 217th GA in 2006 to create a non-geographic Korean language sy
nod.  Following a consultation in December 2006 the GAC is recommending that a non-geographic synod not be authorized, but is suggesting changes to the Book of Order that would allow a church in a synod without a non-geographic language presbytery be able to join a non-geographic presbytery in another synod.  This does have interesting polity implications since Overture 10 is asking for a general flexibility in presbytery and synod membership.

Another document suggested for change is the Open Meeting Policy in recommendation 18.  This is more of a change for clarification saying that observers may not only attend, but have copies of the documents, and that cases under the Rules of Discipline also fall under the category of closed meetings.

There have been some new items among groups affiliated with the PC(USA) related to GA.  On the schedule I mentioned earlier, you will find that on any given day you can have a briefing by Presbyterians for Renewal at lunch time.

Also at every lunch break will be “Something Happening for Love Justice and Jesus” by That All May Freely Serve (TAMFS).  The description is:

Come out to celebrate the ALL of the Church’s future. Music? Art? Theater? Something Else? Watch for signs, check www.tamfs.org for where to gather for these daily events.

This appears to be linked to their advocacy at GA this year titled “New Church (R)evolution!”  Their web site describes it as:

Young adults and seminarians – our New Church (R)evolution team – will
claim their birthright as members of a just and inclusive church.
Through positive, life-giving action, the New Church (R)evolution will be the church we seek, as we invite the PCUSA to have the courage to join us in living into freedom and justice! [emphasis in the original]

With the mention of “young adults,” and the descriptions on the associated brochure, the target audience is clearly the same as has been the concern in the various discussions of Web 2.0 and the future of the church.  As the brochure says in one box, “Studies consistently show that people under 35 have heard the gospel message and support the inclusion of all believers, LGBTQ or otherwise. So while some people continue to use tactics to ensure exclusion, the next generation has already decided for the full equality of all people.”

Clearly TAMFS has a strategy for connecting with the younger generation in ways familiar to that culture.  It will be interesting to see if it does connect, if there are enough younger generation present to connect with, and if any conservative/evangelical leaning groups will have a similar presence.

This will be interesting so stay tuned for GA.

Remedial Case Filed Against Presbytery of the Twin Cities Area Over Restoration of Ordination

The Presbytery of the Twin Cities Area yesterday posted on their web site and blog the announcement that a remedial case has been filed with the Synod of Lakes and Prairies claiming that the vote of the Presbytery at a special meeting on January 26 was irregular.  That vote, in the affirmative, was to approve a non-essential departure in beliefs therefore restore the Rev. Paul Capetz to the exercise of ordained office.  According to the announcement the claim was filed by the Rev. David Bierschwale, the Rev. David Lenz, and Elder Carol Shanholtzer.  Here are the claimed irregularities from the Presbytery announcement:

“Complainants believe that the action was irregular in the following
particulars and/or the governing body exceeded its authority and failed
to act as constitutionally required in the following particulars:

The PTCA determined that compliance with the behavioral requirements of G-6.0106b is non-essential;

and,

The PTCA restored to the ministry of Word and Sacrament a person who
admits and declares that he will not lead his life in conformity to the
historic confessional standards of the church, specifically the
requirement contained in Section G-6.0106b.”

While I don’t think that this filing was unexpected in light of the Presbytery’s actions, at this point in time it also must be viewed through the lens of both the recent GAPJC decision and any possible action by the 218th General Assembly that begins three months from today.

The announcement was that a claim has been filed so we must now wait for the process to work as the Synod investigates and the Synod PJC prepares to do its work.  Stay tuned.

More from the Stewardship Conference: Stewardship as a Spiritual Discipline

If you read my post discussing the first news article about the Stewardship Conference you know that I found those speaker’s comments to reflect a fairly narrow, “follow the money,” understanding of stewardship.  We now have a news story with the comments of the Rev. Karl Travis, senior pastor of First Presbyterian Church of Fort Worth, TX, that reflect a much richer understanding of stewardship as a spiritual discipline. This new story, also by Evan Silverstein from the Presbyterian News Service, is titled “Transforming the Understanding of Stewardship.”

The idea is not that the institution needs us to give, but that we need to give for our own spiritual well being.  As the article says early on:

Now the time has come for the emphasis to shift from preserving and promoting the institution to furthering the well-being of its parishioners, especially when it comes to worshipers growing personally and spiritually through disciplined financial giving to their church.

In other words stewardship is not about the church’s need to receive. Stewardship is first about the individual’s need to give.

Just to remind you, Paul considers giving a spiritual gift:

6. We have different gifts, according to the grace given us. If a man’s gift is prophesying, let him use it in proportion to his faith. 7. If it is serving, let him serve; if it is teaching, let him teach; 8.if it is encouraging, let him encourage; if it is contributing to the needs of others, let him give generously; if it is leadership, let him govern diligently; if it is showing mercy, let him do it cheerfully.  [Romans 12:6-8, NIV]

Rev. Travis talked about stewardship as a lifestyle choice.  He is quoted as saying “Stewardship is about the joyous discipline of thanking God with the
way we live our lives and spend our money and share our money.”  This gets closer to the stewardship of “time, talents, gifts, and service” that I am used to.

The article has a couple of other good quotes from Rev. Travis about stewardship:

If you’ve come to this conference because your church is in rough financial waters and you’re wondering how to increase its budget to pay the light bill, fair enough. But take note: If that’s your initial theological pitch, you’re going to remain in the dark.

and

I have grown tired of the stewardship pitch beginning with the church hat-in-hand. People want now to speak first of joy, grace, the individual benefits of disciplined generosity.

In his presentation Rev. Travis, like Mr. Easley, made reference to Dr. Walter Brueggemann’s “Liturgy of Abundance, Myth of Scarcity” article.

So stewardship is not about perpetuating a particular church as an institution or preserving a denomination.  It is about our relationship to God as a member of a covenant community that is the Body of Christ.

One final closing quote from the article:

Stewardship is an exuberant conversation within which we step
toe-to-toe with the idolatries of this age and declare with a loud and
clear and resonant voice, ‘I am not your slave! I am a child of God,
sealed by the Holy Spirit, marked as Christ’s forever, and nothing you
can ever say or do can ever make that not true.’

Better Mission Funding Through On-Line Social Networking?

You may have seen yesterday’s article from the Presbyterian News Service of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) by Evan Silverstein titled “Fresh approaches to stewardship needed, Easley says.”  The Easley is General Assembly Council Vice-chair Charles F. Easley and he was speaking to the Presbyterian Stewardship Conference in Fort Worth, Texas.

The article, while associated with the conference, mainly covered Mr. Easley’s plenary speech.  He is quoted as saying that “We have got to devise new ways to tap into the passions of people.”  And the goal?  He pointed out that in the next two years $50 to $60 trillion dollars will change hands from one generation to the next which will “give rise to a new generation of wealthy donors — ages 40 to 50 — who will demand to see ‘measurable results’ for their money before agreeing to contribute to the mission of their churches or other charities.”  In addition, Elder Easley reminded the audience that the pattern in the church today is designated  giving and that the church can not depend on the average person attending church because they have stopped coming.

Mr. Easley outlined programs the PC(USA) might implement to raise awareness and interest in mission giving and a final report will be made to the upcoming General Assembly.  The objective is to “bring resources into the church” once you learn about the passion of its members.  One of the tools proposed in the new mission funding system will be a “season of interpretation.”  This sounds like the mission worker visit we had last fall which was interesting but penetration into the churches in our presbytery was weak.  No further details are given except that the goal is to make this an annual event and that members could chose what they have a passion for.  Another component to the report is encouraging not just the transfer of wealth, but the transfer of stories and knowledge about mission from older to younger generations.  Finally, there are ideas about using on-line social networking sites to promote mission giving through relationship building.

The article concludes with Mr. Easley discussing the ideas of Walter Brueggemann about the “Liturgy of Abundance, Myth of Scarcity” and how much abundance Americans have.

Commentary Mode:  Based on these comments it appears that Mr. Easley is sending the message that “people are not coming to the PC(USA) therefore we need to pursue, court, and build relationships with high net worth individuals to support our world-wide mission because the few left in the pews can’t or won’t do it.”  Sorry if I got that wrong, but that is a major attitude I got from this article.  And I hate to say it but if this is the message that we are sending to the “average person in the pews” they will once again wonder what is up in Louisville and where is my money going?

[In case you want to argue with me here is the quote copied from the article:  “And he said forget about bringing in enough money by depending on those
coming to church. ‘It’s just not going to happen because they don’t
come,’ Easley said.”  Yes, I’m pulling one line out, but there is a strong message sent in that line.  Don’t believe me?  I read it to my wife and her response was “That’s kind of scary.”]

Apart from the emphasis on the “high net wealth” individuals in preference to the “average person in the pews” I think that Mr. Easley is starting down the right track.  Storytelling, interpretation, relationship building are all important aspects of responsible (I will avoid the word “increased”) mission giving.  My congregation is a prime example:  While we do still contribute some money each year to “undesignated” mission giving at all levels of the denomination, far more goes into specific mission projects, several not PC(USA) or of any denomination, that we have a specific relationship with.  And for most of these missions our church usually sends people on mission trips to supply some sweat as well as money and to bring back stories and experience.

This brings me to one of my major concerns about Mr. Easley’s comments and what I can tell about this conference.  (Note: I have come to respect the reporting of Mr. Silverstein so I am going to attribute these to the speaker and not the reporting or editing.)  From his comments, and the list of workshops at the conference, it is pretty clear that this conference was about Stewardship of Money.  In and of itself that is not necessarily a bad thing.  But I believe that Jesus calls us to Stewardship of Our Whole Lives, so that means we need to be responsible about our “time, talents, gifts, and service.”  If giving is down is it because we are only asking for their money?  And with the proposed new Form of Government, how does this approach to stewardship fit into the new Missional Polity.

So, I would encourage the approach of relationship building.  Go the Facebook and MySpace route because one paragraph or one sentence in the Mission Yearbook for Study and Prayer is not enough to build the relationship, and barely enough to give us something to pray over.  I hope the season of interpretation catches on, because we do need to feel connected with those we support.  While the Mission Yearbook is nice it often feels like drinking from a fire hose; find ways for congregations and individuals to effectively connect one-on-one with mission workers.  And figure out more ways that we can also use our “time, talents, and service” as will as “gifts.”  Look at the enthusiasm and participation that the PC(USA) has had in the Gulf Coast through Presbyterian Disaster Assistance and the impact it has had on both the area and those who have gone there to work.  And maybe if the average person in the PC(USA) does learn about and own the mission program you won’t have to emphasize high net wealth individuals for mission funding.

Upcoming PC(USA) General Assembly — Mid-March Update

As the 218th General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) gets closer the overture process is winding down, but lots of other things are winding up.

On the official web pages, my observation in my last post was correct and the GA Business page has been generalized, the overtures removed, and all information shifted over to PC-biz.  Also, the two previously unlisted overtures, 62 and 68 have appeared in the list now.

One can understand why overture 68 was being worked on for so long.  Foothills Presbytery has put together an extensive overture, both in recommendation and rational, that does some major word-smithing of the Form of Government Task Force (FOG) proposed text for the new Foundations of Presbyterian Polity and Form of Government sections of the Book of Order.  I should note right up front that the task force might have rearranged the first four chapters into three new chapters of Foundations, but this overture rewrites a lot of text in both sections to change the theological focus.  The overture runs almost 16,000 words in length and if pasted into a word processor comes to 38 pages.  Just some more light reading for the commissioners.

To quote the overture the intent of this theological redirection is:

1. Ensure that any revised Form of Government (and Foundations) approved by the General Assembly shall give pre-eminence to the Reformation marks of the true Church, with due consideration of their inner dynamics.

2. Ensure that any revised Form of Government (and Foundations) approved by the General Assembly shall give preference to the church participating in the mission of the triune God in contrast to the church as the delegated/ instrumental bearer (or provisional
demonstration) of God’s mission to the world.

To put it another way, from the Rational, “the marks of the true Church are participatory—where Christ is, there is the Church (ubi christus, ibi ecclesia). The marks are not instrumentalist—where the church is, there is Christ (ubi ecclesia, ibi christus).”  So this is about making the constitutional language reflect the initiative of God and that the church participates in the mission of God.  Much of the language in the General Rational section of this overture closely parallels the Missional Polity document the task force worked with and this overture appears to be proposing changes to the FOG that would more closely align the two in theological perspective.

As I read through the proposed language I find no changes in church operations, although the argument can be made that the FOG Task Force has removed operations from the new Form of Government anyway.  In some cases the word-smithing does not really change any language but places things into more readable forms, like creating bulleted lists, or splitting items in a list into more exclusive bullet points.  But there are a lot of changes in language placing new emphasis on the Triune God and the mission of God (missio Dei).  Some of the changes are linguistically subtle.  Some of these strike me as just some “clean-up” editing.  For example (added text in italics)

G-1.02 A congregation in the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) can be organized and dissolved only by the authority of a presbytery and shall function under the provisions of this Constitution.

Some, while subtle word-wise, are theologically more important.  An example of this:  A line in G-1.0301 would change from

One becomes a member of the church through faith in Jesus Christ as Savior and acceptance of Christ’s Lordship in all of life.

to

Believing that Jesus Christ is Savior and Lord over all of life makes one a member of the church.

This is a good example of one consistent change in the overture where the language of “faith” in Jesus Christ seems to be uniformly replaced with “believing.”  Change like this are intended to place a greater emphasis on participating, as opposed to call and response.

As I read through this overture it strikes me that this seems to be somebody or some group’s idea of what the task force report should be if it is to be truly missional.  Looking at the members of the task force there is no one from Foothills so it did not come directly from a member who wanted to see more.  The overture is so complete and so extensive there has to be a “rest of the story” on this one.  It would be interesting to know how long the presbytery commissioners wrestled with this overture since it is so extensive.  And being this extensive, it will give the commissioners on the GA Form of Government Revision Committee even more to do.  I look forward to listening to, and maybe talking with, the GA overture advocate for this one.

Well, what else is new?  Maybe the most high-profile of the remaining overtures is 80 from Peace River Presbytery which complains about the Evangelical Presbyterian Church “actively pursuing a strategy to persuade Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) churches to disaffiliate.”  One interesting twist on this overture is that it asks for an investigation by the Executive Office of the World Alliance of Reformed Churches (WARC) into the EPC’s actions.   Remember that the current president of WARC and presumably the head of the Executive Committee is the Rev. Dr. Clifton Kirkpatrick.  (Have I heard that name before?)  If it were to go to WARC he would obviously recuse himself from any investigation.  A similar overture that complained about the EPC was proposed, but not approved, by Mississippi Presbytery.

The remaining overtures are directed at social witness policy, or closely related topics.  Some that impact PC(USA) entities: 76 on Directing GAC to produce Adolescent Human Development Resources since the 217th General Assembly discontinued the human sexuality resources; 78 on Directing PDA (Presbyterian Disaster Assistance) to continue nurturing relationships with presbyteries affected by the storms of 2005; 79 is another request to reinstate the Office for Environmental Justice, similar to overture 24; and finally 77 is a request that this GA celebrate “Living Waters for the World.”  The remaining new overtures are 73 – “On the use of non-disposable food service items,” 74 – On addressing the violence and suffering inflicted on Iraqi women…, and 75 – On temporary suspension of military aid to the State of Israel.

That does it for the major new business that I have seen published.  I would note that there will be a meet and greet with all four Moderator candidates at the Presbyterian Church of Lawrenceville, NJ, on April 25.  And the Witherspoon Society has gotten their GA web site started.