July 29, 2003
by the Most Rev. Frank T. Griswold
My dear brothers and sisters: we have long anticipated
this moment, this privileged time during which we will seek, as
best we can - knowing we are fallible and finite human beings -
to discern God's desire for this curious yet wonderful household
we call the Episcopal Church. We come from various dioceses, and
congregations within those dioceses - each with their own particular
culture and point of view. And we need one another. We need the
gift of one another's perspective, one another's way of articulating
the Gospel and seeking to be faithful, because Christ is present
among us all, and each of us holds within the love of God's calling
to us, some aspect of God's truth that is seeking to be enlarged
in communion with others. What a solemn and hopeful moment this
is: full of possibility.
The first General Convention I attended was in
this very city in 1976. I was a new deputy from the Diocese of Pennsylvania.
Quite frankly, it was a profoundly disorienting experience. I had
never been with so many Episcopalians in one place possessed of
so many points of view. Furthermore, I was made a sergeant-at-arms
and told that my function was to discipline unruly members of the
assembly. One evening the members of the Pennsylvania deputation
presented me with a football helmet and a toilet plunger, thinking
that these particular items might be useful in some way as I performed
my duties.
More seriously, I remember a deputy from the
Diocese of Dallas: Ralph Spence, Sr. who had come, by his own admission,
to vote against the adoption of the new Prayer Book. You can imagine
my surprise when, in the course of the Convention, he stood up as
a member of the Prayer Book and Liturgy Committee and urged us to
adopt the very book he had come to defeat. This was for me a cautionary
tale. Many of us arrive at General Convention with fully formed
opinions and a clear sense of what we think ought to happen. And
yet, as we listen to one another, as our rough edges are knocked
off by one another, as we participate in various debates, and committee
meetings and random conversations, something larger than our own
perspective overtakes us. Possibly it is the larger vision of the
Spirit. And our attitude and perspectives, and indeed our firmly
held notions of what should happen, are enlarged.
After Mr. Spence had delivered his speech he
added that he didn't know what he was going to tell his wife about
this change of heart when he got home. John Coburn, the then president
of the House of Deputies, leaned into the microphone and, in his
wonderfully wry and gentle way, said: "Do give our regards to Mrs.
Spence," at which point the deputies burst into laughter, including
Mr. Spence. I have heard since from John Coburn that Mrs. Spence
loved that story.
So this is just one example of how important
it is for us to hold ourselves open to what God may be up to. Perhaps
the most important thing we can do is to lay down some of our certitude
in favor of the ever-unfolding truth of God, which comes to us from
the Spirit of truth, who is always guiding us more deeply into the
mystery of Christ and God's strange and unpredictable ways.
Let us not overlook the fact that the life of
this Convention is rooted and grounded in daily encounter with the
risen Christ in word and sacrament. And let us also be mindful of
the fact that we are being upheld in prayer by brothers and sisters
who are across this land, and in other parts of our Communion, and
very likely also by many saints in heaven and on earth.
As we come together we bring with us a number
of emotions. We bring with us hope and possibility, and also anxiety.
What some among us see as the discovery of God's larger purposes,
others see as threats to the integrity of the Gospel. It is therefore
extremely important, no matter what our point of view may be, that
we receive one another and the perspectives we bring with profound
respect, recognizing that each of us, whether we like it or not,
through baptism is a much loved member and limb of Christ's risen
body. None of us - to echo the words of St. Paul - can say to another
"I have no need of you." This is perhaps the greatest challenge
before us, and perhaps our greatest opportunity to receive the unimaginable
gifts of God's love for us through each other.
The focus of this Convention is engaging God's
mission. And what is God's mission? Our Prayer Book makes it quite
clear that the mission of the church, which is, of course, God's
mission, is to restore all people to unity with God and each other
in Christ. This work of reconciliation embraces all things and involves
us personally, as congregations, dioceses, a national church and
a worldwide Communion, and also focuses us on the world. The Son
of God came among us not to save the church but the world. Therefore
reconciliation, the mission of the church, God's work, is global
in scope and embraces the whole creation. Here I am put in mind
of Jesus' words in the Gospel of John: and I when I am lifted up
from the earth will draw all to myself.
As we come together, it is important that we
ask ourselves this question: what is our particular charism as Anglican
Christians at this moment in history? We might begin by looking
at how we find ourselves right now. In other words, what sort of
church is gathering? Looking at these questions might give some
indication of the shape, and spirit and potential fruit of these
next ten days. I have been the Presiding Bishop and Primate of the
Episcopal Church for nearly six years now, and I want to tell you
briefly something of what I have learned about who we are together
as limbs and members of Christ's risen body.
Everywhere I go I have seen what I like to call
graced confidence: the people of our church are focused on mission.
Amazing things are happening in the name of Christ all around our
church. And, more and more we are reaching out to share our tradition,
the truth as in Jesus, the story of how God is acting in our lives.
The 20/20 movement serves us well in naming the mission energies
all around the church, and in so doing I believe greater energies
are being released and we are further empowered to reach out to
a world crying out for repair. Episcopalians are actively engaged
in matters of public policy and social justice. We are committed
to overcoming the sin of racism within ourselves, within our church,
and within our society. We have also been on the forefront of work
on debt relief, on HIV/AIDS, environmental stewardship, ethical
decision making around matters of life and death, and peace making
in many of the troubled places around our world. Simply taking note
of the matters that will be before us over these next ten days gives
us an incredible indication of the breadth, and the depth, of our
concerns as a church.
And of course, not everyone has the same passions.
That is the wonder of it; we each have our own unique call and particular
gifts, and during this time we can inform and inspire one another
for the engaging of God's project.
It is also my sense that we want to do more.
I am very gratified and inspired by the stewardship of our dioceses
and congregations in support of the mission opportunities that surround
them. I might say here that, at the same time, I am concerned that
there is no national effort at fund raising to enhance the work
of dioceses and congregations. Further, we make very little effort
to cultivate the large gifts that are never received at local levels.
It is my sense that a national church has a particular responsibility
for this kind of endeavor.
By the time I leave office in 2006, I believe
we must be able better to support the mission we share by having
in place an ongoing, long term, development effort functioning at
the national level. This kind of effort needs to be part of the
consciousness of the church, last into the future, and help provide
for the future.
In this triennium, the Executive Council determined
the wisdom of beginning to look at a plan or process for mission
funding. I will ask the new Executive Council to enter a discussion
about how we might best explore the establishment of an ongoing
national development effort we now lack. As well, I am personally
going to test whether there are donors who stand ready to support
the national mission of our church.
We receive an important part of our identity
by being members of the worldwide Anglican Communion. I have traveled
to other parts of the Communion and have come to know our Anglican
partners in their own contexts with all the overwhelming issues
of life and death with which they live day by day. This has made
me value evermore the fact that we are not a church unto ourselves
but part of a worldwide fellowship called to bear one another's
burdens and, in the words of St. Paul, so fulfill the law the Christ.
With this in mind we are particularly blessed by the presence of
our guests from various parts of our Communion who are here with
us at this Convention. A very warm welcome to you all.
Professor David Ford of Cambridge University
has provided theological reflections for the past several meetings
of the primates of the Anglican Communion. During one of our gatherings
he said that we are in the process of becoming a communion. I see
more and more that communion is not a human construction but a gift
from God which involves not only our relationships to one another
on earth, but our being drawn by the Holy Spirit into the eternal
life of communion which belongs to the Holy Trinity. We are discovering
in fits and starts what it means to live in communion, and our communion
is always impaired, because of our limited understanding of God's
ways and because of our human sinfulness. However, we have been
baptized into one body and maintaining communion is therefore a
sacred obligation. In practicing the communion Christ has prepared
for us, we are opened ever anew to receive the endless mercy and
holiness of the Trinity. I say this knowing very well indeed that
living in communion is not always easy and requires of us all a
deep desire to understand the different ways in which we seek to
be faithful to the Gospel. Declarations of being "in" or "out" of
communion may assuage our own fears, or our angers, but they do
not reflect the gospel. They do not show our broken and needy world
that at the heart of the gospel there is a reconciling love that
seeks to embrace our passionately held opinions and transcend them
all. Christ, writes St. Paul, died for all, so that those who live
might live no longer for themselves, but for him who died and was
raised for them.
So, this is some of my sense of who we are and
who we are called to be as we engage God's mission and open ourselves
to further ways of articulating the good news of God in Christ.
At this particular moment, it might be also be
instructive to remember that we are inheritors of a theological
tradition born out of conflict. The 16th century was a difficult
time in which opposing theological points of view warred with one
another. On the one hand there were the values of the Catholic tradition,
and on the other the passions of zealous reformers. Each group was
sure that the truth was theirs. However, in the context of common
prayer, and a joint yielding to the yoke of Christ mediated by word
and sacrament, these opposing points of view found the place of
their reconciliation, and gave birth to the Anglican tradition.
This was not because either won over the other, but because God
graced them to step beyond their positions and recognize one another
as brothers and sisters in the breaking of the bread. The genius
of Anglicanism was to contain divergent and passionately held points
of view. This capacity to contain difference within a context of
common prayer is who we as Anglicans are called to be. And this
is the charism we bring to this present moment.
These Anglican sensibilities are particularly
needed in a world dominated by notions of winning or losing, yes
or no, either/or. Unfortunately we are not immune to the ways of
the world, and the thinking that so dominates our culture spills
over into our community of faith. And yet, I deeply believe that
having the mind of Christ means we are able to see reality not as
either/or but as both/and. Both/and thinking is reflected in Christian
orthodoxy at its best. Here I think of the classical doctrine of
the nature of Christ established in the fifth century when heresies
which held that Christ was either human or divine were overruled
by a church council that chose the route of both/and, declaring
Christ to be both fully human and fully divine. The logic of the
heretics was overruled by the paradox of orthodoxy.
Of course, practically speaking: we will say
yes or no on many matters over these next days. Some of them have
the potential to be very divisive. Predictably, the topic of homosexuality
has received the most media attention prior to our coming together,
and has also been a focus of some of our internal life. I am very
aware that there is a great deal of energy on the part of those
with various views of the question. Some perceive this as an absolutely
decisive moment, and the time for resolving all of the pertinent
issues about homosexuality in the life of the church. Here I think
it is important that we remind ourselves that the church is always,
in some sense, becoming the church, and is continuing to grow toward
maturity in Christ. Therefore, anything we do or decide is partial
and incomplete, though we hope and pray that it reflects something
of the truth into which the Holy Spirit is always seeking to guide
us. My prayer is that this Convention will be part of a continuing
process of discovery and growth.
I note here that the Theology Committee of the
House of Bishops produced a report called The Gift of Sexuality:
A Theological Perspective. The report was offered to the church
by the bishops for study and reflection. It does not seek to provide
an answer to the question of homosexuality in the life of the church.
Rather, it seeks to describe how the church behaves as the church
in the face of deeply held contrary points of view, both of which
perceive themselves as reflecting the mind of Christ.
It is my own conviction that different points
of view can be held in tension within the church without issues
of sexuality becoming church dividing. Others may disagree but this
is my firmly held point of view. This is also the view of the House
of Bishops Theology Committee and of the International Anglican
Conversation on Human Sexuality that I convened following the Lambeth
Conference of 1998 at the request of the Archbishop of Canterbury.
This international group included twelve bishops and primates who
represented a broad range of views and met over a three-year period.
Their conclusion was that if matters of homosexuality were to divide
the Communion, it would be, to quote from the report, "the ultimate
sexualization of the Church, making sexuality more powerful, or
more claiming of our attention, than God."
We have heard people on both sides of a number
of contentious questions say that their particular view is in accordance
with Scripture, whereas the opposing view is not. There is no such
thing as a neutral reading of Scripture. While we all accept the
authority of Scripture, we interpret various passages in different
ways. It is extremely dishonoring of the faith of another to dismiss
them as not taking the Bible seriously. Let us be clear that we
can all agree that, in the words of the ordination oath, "we believe
the Holy Scriptures of the Old and New Testaments to be the Word
of God and to contain all things necessary to salvation."
In addition, I think it is terribly important
that we keep our perspective large and focused on God's mission
for the whole church. It is easy for one or two issues so to dominate
the horizon that other aspects of what it means to be the people
of God, living the rigors of the Gospel, are overshadowed or lost.
Whenever we find our hearts and minds profoundly dominated by some
thought, it is often helpful to pause and test the spirits, as St.
John recommends. In this age of instant communication, and superficial
analysis that sometimes accompanies it, the possibility of the whole
landscape being taken over by what most tugs at emotions is even
greater. It is up to us all to make sure that this does not happen.
Be aware: we have that choice. We have that freedom. And I believe
we have that responsibility.
As I said at the outset, we have been provided
with a solemn and hopeful moment, full of possibility. Paul describes
the church in Corinth as "God's field," a field ripe with potentiality
and the possibility of fruitfulness. In a profound sense this General
Convention is God's field in which God not only sows but seeks to
produce a rich harvest.
I want to say a word here about the ministry
I exercise as your Presiding Bishop and Primate, and particularly
as your Chief Pastor. Mine is a ministry of encouragement in which
I call us all, including myself, to step beyond our deeply held
perspectives and fears and to risk a genuine encounter with Christ
in the other, in the full force of their otherness and contrary
perspectives.
I also see myself as being a minister of connection
and communion. I believe we are called to bring all voices together
in one conversation, acknowledging the fact that truth is discovered
in communion, in community, and none of us possesses the fullness
of Christ's truth. We need one another to enlarge, and in some instances
challenge, one another's more limited and often self-serving notions
of the truth.
I have my own points of view, to be sure, and
some have been disappointed that I have not expressed them more
forthrightly. I, however, have felt that I am called to be the servant
of the community as it struggles to discern evermore deeply the
truth as it is in Christ. Though I pray that I might be given the
mind of Christ, I am profoundly aware that, along with the apostle
Paul, now I see in a mirror dimly. Now I know only in part. That
in the face of this unknowing I must cling to the fact that faith,
hope and love abide, these three, and the greatest of these is love.
My deepest desire is to be in some small way a minister of the divine
agape which can overrule all our disagreements, all our sinfulness,
and make us one in the profound charity which is the inner life
of God the holy Trinity.
During these past months a prayer has crossed
my path from several sources, which made me feel that the prayer
was meant to become my own. It is the prayer of Philaret, a Russian
bishop of Moscow in the 19th Century, and I pray it now with you
at the beginning of this Convention.
Lord, grant me to greet the coming day in peace.
Help me in all things to rely on your holy will. In every hour of
the day reveal your will to me. Teach me to treat all that comes
to me throughout the day with peace of soul, and with firm conviction
that your will governs everything. In all my deeds and words guide
my thoughts and feelings. In unforeseen events let me not forget
that all are sent by you. Teach me to act firmly and wisely, without
embittering and embarrassing others.
Give me the strength to bear the fatigue of the
coming day with all that it shall bring.
Direct my will. Teach me to pray. Pray yourself
in me.
May God indeed guide us in the days ahead, and
may we be given the grace to act firmly and wisely without embittering
and embarrassing others. And in every hour of the day, and in every
decision we are called to make, may God in Christ through the agency
of the Holy Spirit reveal God's deepest desire and give us the courage
and strength to live it for the sake of the world. May we also emerge
from our time together strengthened in our own faith, renewed by
the power of God's reconciling love, and changed in ways that at
this point can hardly be imagined. May God's love ever more deeply
convert us. May Christ ever more fully engage us in the ongoing
work of reconciliation. And may God the Holy Spirit ever more completely
pray within us the joyful unity of Christ's risen life.
Thank you.
Episcopal News Service
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