January 18, 2007 By Mary Frances Schjonberg
The Executive Board of the Episcopal Diocese of Virginia January 18 authorized
Bishop Peter Lee to "take such steps as may be necessary to recover or secure
such real and personal property" of 11 congregations where a majority of the members
and leaders have left the Episcopal Church. The authorization
came after the Executive Board declared the property to be abandoned under the
diocese's canonical definitions (Canons 15.1, 15.2, 15.3), according to a statement
posted on the diocese's website (at http://www.thediocese.net/press/pressroom.shtml).
Lee has not taken any immediate actions, diocesan spokesperson
Patrick Getlein said. According to the Constitution and
Canons of the Episcopal Church, dioceses are created or dissolved only by acts
of General Convention (Articles V and VI) and dioceses create or dissolve Episcopal
congregations in their midst. Congregational property is held in trust for the
diocese, and the diocese holds property in trust for the wider church (Canon I.7.4
of the Episcopal Church). Virginia's diocesan canons concur with the national
canons. Also on January 18, the diocese's Standing Committee,
during its regular monthly meeting, took up the issue of the status of the clergy
attached to these congregations and "will communicate its determination to the
Bishop according to the Canons," the news release said. Lee,
in a letter to the diocese, also released January 18, wrote that when the majority
of the congregations' membership agreed to leave, "they left remaining Episcopal
congregations in those places without vestries, without clergy and without their
churches, whether the remaining congregations numbered one or 100 souls." "The
spiritual abandonment of their Episcopal brothers and sisters of the past, the
present and the future, is perhaps the greatest offense for which there is no
redress under our tradition," he wrote. Lee outlined
the efforts of Episcopalians in Heathsville, Herndon and Falls Church to re-group,
writing that "there is life springing from these dry bones." The
bishop also described steps he and diocesan leadership took to accommodate those
members who disagreed with decisions of the Episcopal Church. Those efforts included,
Lee wrote, diocesan money for church planting, access to diocesan medical and
dental insurance programs, many meetings that attempted "to find common ground
on matters of theology," rejection of efforts to deny the congregations a vote
at diocesan convention despite their refusal to fund the diocese's budget, and
three invitations to retired Archbishop of Canterbury George Carey to conduct
confirmations "when my episcopal presence was either specifically refused or would
have been a source of tension for the membership." "I
endured being told that the parents of confirmands would not want me to lay hands
on their children at confirmation and I have received other personal attacks including
death wishes in letters, reports and public statements," he wrote. Lee
said that all the work was done in an attempt to accommodate the dissidents and
to resolve the issue outside of the secular court system, but to no avail. The
diocese has already been engaged in legal actions with the congregations as they
attempt to retain the congregations' property. "These
differences are not about property but about the legacy we have received for the
mission of Christ and our obligation to preserve that legacy for the future,"
he wrote, urging the diocese toward prayer for each other. "I urge us to remember
that in their call away from the Episcopal Church, they may be responding to a
genuine call to new ministry in a different place and in a different way," Lee
wrote of those who have left. "The Episcopal Church and
the Diocese of Virginia will mourn their loss. We will suffer from their absence
in ways we cannot know at this time in our life. I believe that they, too, will
know times when our absence from their life will be a source of great sorrow for
them. "My dear brothers and sisters, the Church in these
communities may look different moving forward. We will look different as a Diocese.
And the road ahead will be long and filled with opportunities to lose heart. We
must always have our eyes fixed on God, not be anxious, and trust in the reliability
of God's promises. For even in this, God is doing a new thing." The
full texts of Lee's letter and the diocese's news release are available here.
The 11 congregations (of the 195 in the diocese) where
property has been declared abandoned are: Church of the Apostles, Fairfax; Church
of the Epiphany, Herndon; Church of Our Saviour, Oatlands; Church of the Redeemer,
Chantilly; Church of the Word, Gainesville; Potomac Falls Church, Sterling; St.
Margaret's, Woodbridge; St. Paul's, Haymarket; St. Stephen's, Heathsville; The
Falls Church, Falls Church; and Truro Church, Fairfax. The
majority of the laity and clergy of those congregations voted to sever ties with
the Episcopal Church and affiliate with the Anglican Church of Nigeria by way
of the Anglican District of Virginia, part of the Convocation of Anglicans in
North America (CANA). The members number about 8,000 of the diocese's roughly
90,000 Episcopalians. The Episcopal Church includes some 7,200 congregations in
its 100 domestic dioceses, and about 150 in its 10 overseas dioceses and one convocation.
Episcopal News Service The Rev. Mary Frances Schjonberg
is national correspondent for the Episcopal News Service. |