As the article notes, this is the same ploy that the bishop used unsuccessfully against another priest, Fr. David Bollinger. He also used it against Fr. Terry Johnson, forcing Johnson into retirement. It's interesting that Canon Karen Lewis accuses the writer of bias. It must be because Moyer reported the facts in the Bollinger case. Canon Lewis has also accused me of misrepresenting the facts, but whenever she was asked for what she perceived to be the facts she went silent, just as she is doing with Moyer. I would hope that those in the DCNY understand who they are dealing with in the present regime in Syracuse. ed.
Good Shepherd notified of diocesan investigation
By William Moyer • wmoyer@gannett.com • Staff Writer • May 25, 2009
BINGHAMTON - The rector of an Anglican church is "surprised and baffled" by a judge's decision that a regional diocese investigate whether a local parish mishandled money after it withdrew from the Episcopal denomination.
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"The judge's statement is absolutely not true," said the Rev. Matthew Kennedy, pastor of Church of the Good Shepherd in Binghamton. "We have nothing to hide. I want to answer their questions."
Supreme Court Judge Ferris D. Lebous, who earlier this year ruled the central New York diocese was entitled to Good Shepherd's property, said diocesan allegations the parish misused an endowment should be investigated.
Lebous said the diocese has "every right" to investigate and directed Kennedy and the church's treasurer to appear for deposition.
Kennedy said the diocese advised him of its intent to investigate.
A diocesan official in Syracuse refused to comment in reply to a reporter's question for specific information.
Instead, the Rev. Karen C. Lewis wrote in an e-mail, "I'm not sure if we want to do anything with this inquiry - this guy (reporter) is not known for his accurate and fair reporting."
Neither Lewis nor Bishop Gladstone Adams replied to a subsequent e-mail requesting specific information about the Press & Sun-Bulletin's reporting.
This isn't the first time the diocese has accused a local rector of financial misconduct.
In July 2007, an Episcopal court cleared the Rev. David G. Bollinger of all charges related to diocesan allegations while he was rector of St. Paul's in Owego.
Bollinger, who is retired, claimed the investigation was retaliation for telling the diocese about a former rector's sexual misconduct with a teenager in the 1970s.
After a five-month investigation, the former rector, Ralph E. Johnson, then 79, voluntarily renounced his credentials in May 2006, without admitting guilt.
The Church of the Good Shepherd withdrew from the Episcopal church in November 2007 in a dispute over the ordination of a homosexual as bishop and differences in scriptural interpretation.
The congregation, which aligned itself with the Anglican Church of Kenya, vacated a building on Conklin Avenue and has settled into the former St. Andrew Catholic Church, also on Conklin Avenue.
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