Saturday, October 16, 2010

From Thinking Anglicans

Friday, 15 October 2010

Two bishops write about TEC polity

First, the Bishop of South Carolina, Mark Lawrence wrote this article in the Living Church: A Conservationist among Lumberjacks

…There is much axe swinging these days in the Episcopal Church. I have grown sad from walking among the stumps of what was once a noble old-growth Episcopalian grove in the forest of Catholic Christianity. It may surprise some, but I write not to bemoan the theological or moral teaching that is in danger of falling to the logger’s axe. I have done that elsewhere. My concern here is that as the church’s polity is felled only a few bother to cry “timber.”

I have space to raise three concerns, and these briefly: the presiding bishop’s threat to our polity —litigious and constitutional; the revisions to the Title IV canons; and, finally, a passing word about inhibitions and depositions to solve our theological/spiritual crisis…

Second, the Bishop of San Diego, James Mathes wrote a response for Daily Episcopalian: Nullification revisited

…Bishop Lawrence feigns great sorrow at the changing landscape of the Episcopal Church. He writes, “I have grown sad from walking among the stumps of what was once a noble old-growth Episcopalian grove in the forest of Catholic Christianity.” Donning the mantle of ecclesial conservationist, Bishop Lawrence even quotes environmentalist, Aldo Leopold, “a conservationist is one who is humbly aware that with each stroke [of the ax] he is writing his signature on the face of his land.” The bishop adds, “far too many leaders in our church have never learned this lesson.” Indeed.

All of this is prelude to his main premise that the presiding bishop is threatening the polity of the Episcopal Church. He wants you to believe that the threat is manifested in three ways: because her chancellor has retained a South Carolina attorney to represent the wider Episcopal Church’s interests should they diverge from the Diocese of South Carolina’s interests; through the Title IV revisions from the 2009 General Convention; and by the manner in which the House of Bishops has dealt with bishops who have left the Episcopal Church…

Posted by Simon Sarmiento on Friday, 15 October 2010 at 3:47pm BST | TrackBack
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Comments

Bishop Lawrence says in so many words: Save yo' confedit moneh boyz, the South shall rahz agin'!

I think many already regret consenting to this man's election as Bishop of South Carolina.

Posted by: Deacon Charlie Perrin on Friday, 15 October 2010 at 5:32pm BST

If only Mark Lawrence had stuck with 'being a lay reader'.

Yet, with his blending of psalms, conservation writing, and his own creative imagination, and feeling for the PB he certainly spins a good yarn.

Posted by: Laurence Roberts on Friday, 15 October 2010 at 5:43pm BST

Looking from the outside in; This newly-ordered bishop (Mark Lawrence) would seem to be the one who is swimming against the tide of prophetic Anglicanism in North America. If he surmised all this while yet un-bishoped, why did he bother struggling to get nominated?

Crying 'foul' against one's own fellow bishops is hardly the Godly way of episcope. And what danger will he himself be doing to the soul of the Episcopal Church while swinging the axe against the episcopal leadership in TEC? Surely this is the time for his impeachment?

Posted by: Father Ron Smith on Friday, 15 October 2010 at 7:34pm BST

Same old same old from S.C. And I do hope those who consented are thinking sackcloth and ashes.

Posted by: Cynthia Gilliatt on Friday, 15 October 2010 at 8:41pm BST

Mark Lawrence seems to serve himself and forget the many glbt Anglicans and their struggle for dignity in the Christian community. I find very little love in his words. Hypocrisy is a constant issue with people who like to exclude others. Mark Lawrence is one of those hypocrites and his attacks on the Presiding Bishop are both misplaced and ignorant.

Posted by: Chris Smith on Friday, 15 October 2010 at 9:10pm BST

Should anyone be surprised that Lawrence is now attempting to destroy TEC? Did anyone really believe he and the other snakes in SC would not weasel their way out of their half-baked lies about adhering to the worship and doctrine of TEC?

Posted by: pete on Friday, 15 October 2010 at 9:35pm BST

I suspect that Lawrence is contemplating his own next bully moves, especially if somehow the global communion does not clearly and swiftly police/punish KJS and TEC for existing, as dirt, as danger?

Stay tuned. Lawrence is far from done with stirring up trouble and strife and ill will, aimed at anybody who dares to disagree with his closed and sacred conservative religious understanding of things.

His current preferred Status Quo hermeneutic is consistent with an earlier one, insofar as all of the readily identified difficulties mainly involve what is wrong with abolitionists; not slavers?

Posted by: drdanfee on Friday, 15 October 2010 at 9:36pm BST

(x)Mark Lawrence has been taking an ax to TEC's Catholic order since his DioSanJoaquin days, and now *he* is a "conservationist"? O_o Give me a break! (And God bless TEC!)

Posted by: JCF on Friday, 15 October 2010 at 9:36pm BST

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