September 27, 2006 By Linda Bloom
COLUMBUS, Ohio – Members of the United Methodist Church's
ecumenical commission put a new agreement with the Episcopal Church into practice
by participating in a communion service led by a bishop from each denomination.
The service opened the Sept. 21-23 annual meeting of
the United Methodist Commission on Christian Unity and Interreligious Concerns.
United Methodist Bishop Bruce Ough, based in the Columbus
area, and the Right Rev. Phillip Duncan II, Episcopal bishop of the Central Gulf
Coast in Pensacola, Fla., served as the co-celebrants. Ough is a former member
of the commission and Duncan is a current member, representing Churches Uniting
in Christ. In May 2005, the United Methodist Council
of Bishops approved separate interim agreements for sharing the Eucharist with
the Episcopal Church and the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America. United
Methodist Bishop William Oden, ecumenical officer for the Council of Bishops,
and the Rev. Larry Pickens, the commission's chief executive, both spoke at the
2006 Episcopal General Convention in June, where delegates overwhelmingly passed
the agreement. "We're now at the point of moving into
a time of working with the bishops of both communions on the guidelines of this
sharing," Oden told commission members. The Commission
on Christian Unity and Interreligious Concerns will provide guidance and resources
on carrying out the new agreement. "We would like to see groups of United Methodists
and Episcopalians studying together and learning about each other's history and
polity," Pickens said. He hopes the agreement will encourage
a joint commitment to mission and ministry as well as the sharing of communion.
For the agreement to be significant, Pickens added, "it
has to really impact us on the local level." Long-running
dialogues On an international level, dialogue between
the Anglican and Methodist denominations began in 1990, culminating in a document
on sharing the Eucharist. British Methodists then began a dialogue with the Church
of England and "are fast moving toward a covenant," according to Oden. In
2000, the Episcopal General Convention asked the United Methodist Church to enter
into dialogue, said the bishop, who has been involved in both the international
and U.S. dialogues. A summary of the six years of conversation
is being edited into a booklet entitled "Make Us One." A draft of the booklet
was presented this year to the General Convention. "As
we move from interim sharing to full communion, of course, the (United Methodist)
General Conference has to give its approval," Oden noted. Struggles
on the way to full communion range from the use of grape juice versus wine as
an element of communion to the concept of the "historic episcopate." The
Episcopal Church uses apostolic succession, or the consecration of bishops by
bishops, while Methodists trace their ordination to John Wesley, an Anglican priest.
"To me, the historic episcopate speaks to the way in
which we order the life of the church and how we understand the role of bishops,"
Pickens told United Methodist News Service. Other
action In other business, the Commission on Christian
Unity and Interreligious Concerns: • Decided to ask
the Commission on General Conference to include "a confession of white privilege
and a commitment to work toward dismantling it" as part of the ecumenical service
at the 2008 General Conference. A DVD would be developed as a resource tool and
sent to each annual conference. • Approved an overall
4 percent increase in the Interdenominational Cooperation Fund, which includes
funding for both ecumenical and Methodist-related organizations and projects,
for 2008-2012. The recommendation goes to the General Council on Finance and Administration.
• Acknowledged the resignation of Don Hayashi, staff
executive, effective Oct. 15, and thanked him for his service to the commission.
United Methodist News Service Linda Bloom is a
United Methodist News Service news writer based in New York. |