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The Episcopal Church is a welcoming
Church. We do not ask anyone who comes into our doors if he or she
is "good enough," or the "right sort," or
"like us." We do not exclude anyone from the fellowship of
the Church who seeks God, or who seeks spiritual nourishment, or
just a safe community in which to touch the deeper parts of their
souls and lay down their burdens.
The Episcopal Church is a place
where the beauty of worship and the proclamation of God's Word are
the central values. We seek to know Christ and to make Him known. We
seek to follow Christ. And each in his or her own way is encouraged
to make a commitment, to listen and to learn, and to make a
wholehearted response to God.
The Episcopal Church is a place
where young and old, strong or weak, rich or poor may hear God's
Word read, and receive God's sacraments for their comfort,
strengthening, mercy, and peace.
The Episcopal Church is the place
where the apostolic teaching is the foundation of our common life;
where our unity with our brothers and sisters is not just a local
affair, but binds us to one another across our communities, our
nation and our world. We know ourselves to be rooted in a common
heritage, bound to a common commitment, called to a common future in
Christ. We are accountable to one another, no matter our color, our
place of origin, our language, our learning, our status in life, our
sex or our self-identity. In Christ we are called beyond all things
that divide us, and invited to surrender our very selves to become
like Him. In Christ, the doors of communion with the Father and
Creator of all are opened to us. And all that is required of us is
the willingness to trust in His person and follow in His way.
The General Convention of the
Episcopal Church this week has not been true to its calling to
"uphold and propagate the historic Faith and Order" of the
Christian Church. It has provoked a crisis in the larger Anglican
Communion to which we belong. It has exhibited to the world an all
too typical trait of American hubris, the sense that we know better
than anyone else where God is leading and how the Church may
respond.
But the General Convention is not
"the Church." Not even the Episcopal Church as a
denomination, whose traditions we love and cherish, is "the
Church." The Church is the Body of Christ. It is the community
of those who are centered on the apostolic teaching, It is the
communion of bishops and archbishops connected with each other and
committed to the common mission of proclaiming the biblical faith
and rightly and duly administering the sacraments of the Gospel. It
is the visible expression of those persons who bear faithful witness
to the teaching of Jesus, and are obedient to His commandments.
This General Convention has erred.
We will wait patiently and expectantly for the rest of the Communion
of which we are a part to render judgment on what we have done.
But for the moment, I ask each and
every one of you who have pledged your commitment to Christ in this
Church to consider this: Are you being fed with spiritual
nourishment in your parish family? Are you hearing the Word of God
proclaimed? Are you being challenged to give more of yourself to God
where you are? And are you finding the true and living God in your
prayers, in your worship, in your service, in your family, and in
yourself?
Do not concern yourself at this
point with whether or not the General Convention of the Episcopal
denomination has been faithful and true to the Gospel of Jesus
Christ. Ask rather whether you have been faithful and true. Each and
every one of you has found God in your local community of worship
and ministry. If that were not true, I suspect that you would have
moved on or out by now. But if it IS true, nothing the General
Convention has done or can do can change that.
I wait with expectation that our
brothers and sisters in the worldwide Anglican Communion, many of
whom have been wounded far more deeply than any of us has by this
recent action, will stand with us and render their judgment on the
action of the General Convention of 2003. We are tiny portion of a
vibrant and faithful body of Christians around the world who know
the living God, who live out His Word, and who speak the truth with
a love and power that is Spirit filled. They stand with us even now.
I have heard from many in the last many hours. And I am encouraged
by their call to remain faithful and steadfast.
I am reminded that St. Paul faced
conflict and division in the Church he founded at Galatia. Some of
his people began to reinterpret and twist the Gospel of Christ to
their own uses. What he wrote to them seems to speak particularly to
us in this hour:
"I am astonished that you
are so quickly deserting the one who called you by the grace of
Christ and are turning to a different gospel - which is really no
gospel at all. Evidently some people are throwing you into
confusion and trying to pervert the gospel of Christ. But even if
we, or an angel from heaven should proclaim a gospel other than
the one we preached to you, let him be eternally condemned."
(Galatians 1.6-8)
My brothers and sisters, the same
gospel which teaches us to love each other teaches us also to be
committed and obedient to the commands of Jesus our Lord and the
teaching of His apostles. When we depart from either, we do damage
to the communion we share with God and each other, and we endanger
our souls. The truth of God and of His Christ is not subject to a
vote, even in the General Convention.
In this moment I ask you to stand
firm in your faith, constant in your prayers, faithful to the
Scriptures, and open to the future which God has in store for us.
+James
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