Since the New Wineskins Association of Churches Convocation about a month ago now I have commented on the response from other bloggers as well as the articles from the Network of Presbyterian Women in Leadership about the role of women in leadership and the response it drew from the NWAC and the Witherspoon Society. There have been some other comments, reports and analysis coming out that I’ll point to now.
The first official response was a follow-up letter from NWAC co-moderator Garrit Dawson. In this letter he sets forth his summary of the convocation, the action taken, and a list of “what’s next.”
There was also official comment from Dr. Jeremiah, the State Clerk of the Evangelical Presbyterian Church who was part of the delegation the EPC sent to the convocation. In his message Dr. Jeremiah emphasizes the global mission emphasis the two groups share.
There has not been official reaction from the PC(USA) to the NWAC Convocation. It was covered in two articles from the PCUSA News Service (Feb. 9, Feb. 14) and mentioned in passing in the recently published interview with Stated Clerk Clifton Kirkpatrick. There was also the letter from Rev. Kirkpatrick and General Assembly Council Executive Director Linda Valentine that came out before the Convocation that has the appearance of a preemptive strike.
The most recent comment is a series of articles posted on the Witherspoon Society web site that provide news and analysis of the gathering and the NWAC organization. (From the frequent references to the Presbyterian Outlook article by Leslie Scanlon it would appear that none of these writers were at the convocation. But neither was I.)
The first article by Gene TeSelle is a brief summary of the meeting and some brief analysis that includes the following:
When there is talk about withdrawal by anyone – right, left, or center – there will be at least the passing thought that it would be “good riddance.” But this is likely to be followed by the feeling that, no matter how much we disagree, we have grown accustomed to each other and may even like each other. Departure is always interpreted as a sign of failure – somewhere, somehow.
But let’s notice that departure to the Evangelical Presbyterian Church would not be to a group that is alienated from the PC(USA) to the extent of anathematizing it. The EPC is in communion with us. We might think of those who withdraw to it as being in a “holding tank,” an interim situation while they think things over. They might even decide to return to the PC(USA), especially if the EPC gets tangled up in debates over women’s ordination. When you think you’re escaping to a purer and more homogeneous communion, you may find that you are only increasing the number of disputes to be worried about.
The second article, also by Gene TeSelle, looks at the NWAC theological heritage and the church order that they have outlined.
The third article, “New Wineskins or Simply Whining?” is an opinion piece by John E. Harris. In it he takes the NWAC to task for being a very small but vocal minority that is now concerned with ordination issues for women when they deny the same arguments for sexually-active homosexuals.
Finally, Berry Craig, a history teacher, has a commentary likening the NWAC transitioning to the EPC with the secession of the Confederate States. He said that just as northerners had varying opinions in the 1860’s, so PC(USA) liberals are similarly split between “good riddance” and “the union must be preserved.”
So far I have seen a response to the Witherspoon articles from one person, Bill Crawford, who was at the NWAC Convocation. Mr. Crawford’s comments can be found in his blog Bayou Christian in an entry titled “Feel the Love.”
A couple of comments of my own:
When Mr. Harris talks about how small the NWAC minority is he uses a percentage of congregations in the PC(USA). While I do not deny that the number is small, I suspect that the number of members is actually higher. The membership numbers for NWAC are not published (that I know of) but I would suspect that the average NWAC church is larger than the average PC(USA) congregation. I know it is for this corner of the world (Southern California).
Second, Mr. Harris talks about the progressive organizations never advocating departure from the PC(USA). That to my knowledge is true, but I do know that high-profile progressive congregations have discussed it.
Finally, several of these articles in the end seem to reduce this discussion to money. That is, are the big churches trying to leverage or force governing bodies to do certain things under threat of losing giving, and the churches that are leaving wanting to take their property with them?
We will see what else gets published and posted in the coming weeks.