From the Executive Council
March 4, 2007
Dear Sisters and Brothers in Christ:
We, the members of the Executive Council, met in Portland, Oregon
on March 2-4, 2007. We are elected to represent the whole church
between General Conventions.
We are conscious that this is the first meeting of a major
deliberative body of the church in the wake of the Primates’
Meeting in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania. We are in a process of
discerning what it means to be members of a global and multicultural
Anglican Communion, autonomous yet interdependent, diverse yet
living a common life as a family of churches.
At this meeting of Executive Council, the following actions were
taken:
- Fulfilling a mandate from the 75th General Convention (Resolution
A166), we created a process to allow for the full
participation of all Episcopalians in the response to a draft
text for a possible covenant for the Anglican Communion, as
envisioned in the Windsor Report. Responding to the draft
covenant does not presuppose agreement with the terms and
principles advanced in the draft.
- Executive Council recognizes that the requests made by the
Primates, directed to the House of Bishops and the Presiding
Bishop, raise important and unresolved questions about the
polity of the Episcopal Church and its ecclesiology. We have
authorized the appointment of a work group to consider the role,
responsibilities and potential response of the Executive Council
to the issues raised by the Primates. The work group will make a
report and recommendations at the June 2007 meeting of the
Council.
- We wish clearly to affirm that our position
as a church is to welcome all persons, particularly those
perceived to be the least among us. We wish to reaffirm to our
lesbian and gay members that they remain a welcome and integral
part of the Episcopal Church.
- Further, we offer our prayerful affirmation to all who
struggle with the issues that concern us: those who are deeply
concerned about the future of their Church and its place within
the wider Communion, and those who are not reconciled to certain
actions of General Convention. We wish to reaffirm that they too
remain a welcome and integral part of the Episcopal Church.
It is our common baptism into the death and resurrection of Jesus
Christ that binds us together. We promise in our Baptismal Covenant
to respect the dignity of every human being. As we engage in
conversations about these issues, may we “be eager to maintain the
unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace” (Ephesians 4:3).
In so doing, may we “continue in the apostles’ teaching and
fellowship, in the breaking of bread, and in the prayers.”
The Executive Council is especially thankful for the thoughtful
leadership of Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori and Bonnie
Anderson, President of the House of Deputies, and for their wisdom
and patience.
We rejoice in the ministries of Province VIII and the Diocese of
Oregon, about which we learned much during a presentation on
Saturday night.
We also acted to:
- designate the line item in the Church’s 2007-2009 budget for
the Millennium Development Goals (MDG) to seed, along with
Episcopal Relief and Development (ERD) and Jubilee Ministries,
an “MDG Inspiration Fund” to assist in eradicating malaria
and other diseases; and encourage individuals, congregations and
dioceses to contribute;
- express continuing deep concern for peace with justice for all
peoples in the Middle East;
- urge the closing of the military prison at Guantanamo Bay, and
the end of secret detention centers and “extraordinary
rendition”;
- urge the US government to grant asylum to lesbian, gay,
bisexual and transgender individuals, or those advocating for
their civil rights, who seek such protection, and commit the
Episcopal Church to aid in their resettlement;
- urge that future General Conventions will not be held in
states that prohibit domestic partnerships;
- reaffirm asking congregations to commit to funding the
seminaries of the Episcopal Church; and
- pass a budget for the Episcopal Church for 2007.
The Council will meet again in June in Parsippany, New Jersey.
Comment: While it is great to publicly proclaim that all are
welcome it is sad that it is news. The Mission Statement of Trinity Manassas
remains the proclamation that: