Archbishop Carey Dedicates Hispanic Mission in Diocese
of Chicago
November 6, 2002
by David Skidmore
CHICAGO The public ministry of the 103rd Archbishop of Canterbury
ended in a Northern Illinois blue-collar town on the shore of Lake Michigan
October 19 with Dr. George L. Carey doing what he loves best celebrating
the emergence of a vigorous faith community.
Joined by Bishop William Persell and Assistant Bishop Victor Scantlebury
of the Diocese of Chicago, Carey helped consecrate the church building
and furnishings of the diocese's newest mission: Nuestra Senora de Guadalupe
(Our Lady of Guadalupe) in Waukegan, and welcome its members to the worldwide
Anglican Communion.
Despite a raw wind and temperatures in the high 40s, over 300 people
attended the outdoor liturgy, many of them from Nuestra Senora's partner
parish, Church of the Holy Spirit in Lake Forest, and Christ Church, Waukegan
where the Latino congregation worshipped for its first 10 years. Also
on hand were diocesan staff and clergy from the local deanery. Waukegan's
Mayor Richard Hyde, who arranged the staging, seating and sound system
for the service, attended along with local Christian clergy and a dozen
SWAT team members who maintained a tight security cordon around the event.
Carey offered some comfort to the wind-whipped crowd by thanking church
members and visitors "for laying on some very good English weather
here this afternoon. I am sure that this church is going to warm many
hearts in the days ahead."
For members of Nuestra Senora, Carey's prediction comes true each Sunday
when over 200 people fill the pews for the Spanish-language service. The
turnout, a testimony to the pastoral gifts of Nuestra Senora's vicar,
the Rev. Narciso Diaz, is a reminder of the need and opportunity for the
church's outreach to Latinos, the fastest growing community in the Chicago
metropolitan area. In Waukegan, the Hispanic community has more than doubled
in the past 10 years now standing at 40 percent of the 90,000 residents
and similar growth is occurring in other suburbs and Chicago neighborhoods.
This mission opportunity figured prominently in Scantlebury's sermon.
The Anglican Communion, he noted, has always regarded itself as a missionary
church. "We have always followed Christ's command to be a mission
of love to the world," he said. "More than being on a mission,
more than merely carrying out a mission, we are the mission."
Paying forward a favor
That principle has been taken to heart by members of Church of the Holy
Spirit in neighboring upscale Lake Forest. For their centennial year celebration,
parishioners realized they had a golden opportunity to pay forward the
favor from a century ago when Trinity Episcopal Church in Highland Park
started a mission church in Lake Forest that eventually grew to become
the diocese's largest parish. Holy Spirit's rector, the Rev. George Councell,
suggested a special fund to help purchase a former Lutheran church and
daycare center in Waukegan that would become Nuestra Senora's permanent
home.
With assistance from bishop and trustees the real estate management
agency of the diocese Church of the Holy Spirit negotiated a lease-purchase
of the five acre site on North Butrick Street, and in late May members
of Nuestra Senora celebrated their first service in the cinder block building.
The once stark space was transformed into an Anglican church using pews,
altar vessels and linens, and the baptismal font from the former Christ
Church, Harvard.
Facing a narrow window of opportunity Carey would be in Lake
Forest in just five months Holy Spirit launched a spirited fund
drive that by the end of the summer had netted over $700,000 for the purchase
of the Waukegan property. Just a week before Carey's arrival, Holy Spirit
completed the purchase.
The team effort was noted by Carey in comments to reporters after the
service. "It's a wonderful story, isn't it?" he said. "A
wonderful story of cooperation and partnership in the church."
Stay rooted in the historic faith
During his three-day visit to the diocese his final visit as
archbishop of Canterbury to an Anglican Communion province Carey
joined members of Church of the Holy Spirit in celebrating its centennial,
preaching at both the Sunday morning Eucharist and a Choral Evensong.
In his sermon at Evensong, Carey urged the congregation to stay "rooted
in the historic faith of the church." While this would seem self-evident
to most Christians, he said, it has surprised him how often he has to
stress this point in his travels. No longer is it liturgy or churchmanship
that sparks divisions, but how we understand foundational beliefs like
the Trinity, he said.
"For instance do we or do we not truly believe that God Revealed
himself as Father, Son and Holy Spirit? Whether or not the Christian revelation
is for everybody? Whether or not the Scriptures are the final revelation
of God? Whether or not the same scriptures declare God's moral demands
about how we should live and conduct ourselves?" said Carey.
What he has found in his ecumenical contacts lately has been the "wonderful
discovery" of common understanding of foundational beliefs among
Catholics, Evangelicals, Charismatics and Anglicans. But this is not to
say that "Godly liberalism" should be ignored, he said. "Indeed,
the Episcopal, the Anglican, tradition has always given a welcome to a
Godly liberal middle church tradition that accepts the faith of the church,"
said Carey.
Where he has difficulty is with "radical liberalism that denies
the truth the church has born witness to down the centuries." That
approach, said Carey, is at odds with the broad church, and undermines
the authority of Scripture, the source of our faith's foundational truths.
"And we depart from them at our peril," he warned.
Carey also urged the congregation to be wary of succumbing to the prevailing
culture. While the church must be rooted in the culture and common life,
we must "never be controlled or shaped by it," he said. Instead,
he noted, the Gospel "seeks to shape culture according to the norms
and values of our faith." There may be times ahead, he added, "when
the church will be an alternative culture, and an alternative community."
Drawing a comparison with Augustine, England's first archbishop of Canterbury,
Carey said when he is asked how he wished to be remembered, his answer
increasingly is as a missionary archbishop. "I found that story of
Augustine very inspiring indeed," he said "because it says to
each one of us that however weak, fallible and ordinary we may feel, we
are special in God's sight."
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