The 219th General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) — The Build-up Begins

Yes, you read that title correctly.  I hope you have caught your breath from the last General Assembly and all the amendment voting because the cycle for the next GA begins… NOW!

The 219th General Assembly (2010) of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) will meet from July 3-10, 2010.  It will be hosted by the Presbytery of the Twin Cities Area at the Minneapolis Convention Center and the Committee on Local Arrangements (COLA) has put out the call for volunteers. (I have not found the COLA web site yet.)  And as we found out from the ELCA this past summer, watch out for the tornadoes.

The sure sign that GA was coming was the change in the default setting on the electronic business tracker, PC-Biz, from the 218th to the 219th GA.  No business, including overtures, has been posted to the system yet.

However, there are overtures waiting in the wings to be posted and one, two, maybe three of them, are floating around on web sites.  And it would probably surprise no one that the visible ones are all related to ordination standards in general and G-6.0106b in particular.

While the Office of the General Assembly has no GA 219 web page yet, at least that I can find, if they keep naming conventions consistent I would expect to find it here.  They have however announced the scriptural theme, “Rivers of Living Water” based on John 7:38, and have presented the logo.

I know that entities are working hard to get their assigned tasks completed and the one that has now released its product is the New Revised Form of Government Task Force.  Remember that their report came to the last Assembly and raised so many questions and concerns that the Assembly decided a more extensive input process was needed and so continued the process for another two years while adding a few of the Assembly commissioners to the nFOG Task Force.  Well, the new report was released last week and the church is invited to study it.  In fact, there is a letter from Task Force member Elder Carol Hunley specifically addressed to fellow elders explaining some of the motivation for the revision and encouraging them to study the new report and to take it seriously.  I have too much on my plate at the moment to digest that report but I’ll study it myself in the next month or two.  You can have a look at the full report or each of the new sections, Foundations of Presbyterian Polity and Form of Government, separately.  For comparison, the report to the previous GA is still available on-line, or should that disappear it will be available in a less-readable form on PC-Biz.

I think that covers all the signs of the next GA that I have found.  As I have time and more overtures and reports appear we will begin again the analysis of the upcoming business.

5 thoughts on “The 219th General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) — The Build-up Begins

  1. Steve

    It will be interesting to see. Minnesota has the reputation, deserved or not, for being Lutheran. So in Lutheran country would a Jewish senator show up at a Presbyterian General Assembly? I suspect we will only see a few local politicians.

    Reply
  2. Robert H Wright Jr

    I wonder what would happen to our church if all the lay members were required to take and pass with a 90% grade the Bible Content Exam and the Exegesis exam–The same exams that minister candidates are required to pass. In our case as lay people, we would have to take both exams each time that they are given and pass both with a 90% grade. What would happen to our church? Our church would grow.

    Reply
  3. Steve

    Robert-
    I think you are on to something about letting the non-clergy in the church know what is required of the clergy to get ordained.

    Concerning the Bible Content Exam, I would encourage everyone to take the practice exams that are available on-line at:
    http://www.whitneyhq.com/biblecontent/

    (My kids have take a couple of those practice exams and my seventh grade son did not get the 90% but cleared 70%.)

    Exegesis is a bit more difficult since it expects knowledge of the original languages and as an essay is alleged to be more subjective in the grading. (Including by a couple of friends that just got their grades and did not pass.) But as you point out, and I concur, biblical exegesis including some intro knowledge of the original languages should be familiar to a well-rounded believer.

    (In case anyone thinks I am going too far with the original language thing, check out the classes at
    http://www.kidsgreek.com
    which my above-mentioned son is doing this year.)

    Reply

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *