On another note, I got an email from my fellow commissioners to GA -- we'll be doing a 1/2 hour report on our GA experiences at our upcoming July 27 Presbytery Meeting. For this meeting we won't be voting on any of the Book of Order changes for ordination, but we will be reporting on what happened in our committees, and our overall general experience at GA -- 3 minutes each. Should be easy for me to report on my committee experience since my committee was neither controversial nor particularly interesting. As for my overall general experience, I may keep mum, or I may express my disappointment. Who knows. Will let you know.
In the meantime, I found this wonderful letter via the MLP facebook page, and wanted to share it here. So well said, and gives me back some faith in some of my fellow Presbys again.
http://pastorofdisaster.wordpress.com/2010/07/13/open-letter-to-the-219th-general-assembly/
OPEN LETTER TO THE 219TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY
July 13, 2010, 8:22 pm
Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ,
In the last year, the District of Columbia’s City Council and Congress approved same gender marriages as legal for the District. Many of us applauded the hard work of many who testified, agitated, and bent history’s arc toward justice. It was due to the strong work of the city council, human rights advocates, LGBTQ organizations, and a committed core of ministers called The D.C. Clergy United. I am deeply proud to have played a small part in the work to make a positive move in this essential civil rights issue of my generation.
When I found a haven within the Reformed family almost twenty years ago, it was as a battered ex-fundamentalist/evangelical who saw love and affirmation within its walls. Many of my gay and lesbian friends had already abandoned the church because it was a place where they felt excluded. Yet, I felt mentored in my beliefs and deeply supported by friends in the PC(USA). They helped restore me to a faith that had been so deeply damaged and broken by legalistic moralists. I grieve when I think of those church leaders who related that this was a denomination where my conscience could be free and that there was a place for me. I am glad that they have passed on and do not have to endure the pain that some of us face these days. Unfortunately, our pews and clergy have become more aged, so when we discuss the approval of same gender marriage in the Presbyterian Church (USA), our church has resorted to becoming that same legalistic church of old.
On the issue of same gender marriage, I stand with the teaching of Pauline Christology when he claims to the uncircumcised gentiles of Galatia and Rome “against such things there is no law.” I do not believe that our 219th General Assembly, or anyone for that matter, has the authority to bind the conscience on matters that the Spirit of God is directing portions of her church. I therefore cannot follow the definition of marriage set out by our current Book of Order. Through prayer, careful study of Scripture and discernment, I believe that this definition is unnecessarily restrictive to our members whom we claim have full membership rights within our churches.
I believe the inaction of the General Assembly, the abdication for fear of losing some of our most conservative elements, and the culture of disciplining only progressive ministers unfairly constitutes a betrayal of the “true liberty of conscience” spoken of in the Westminster Confession. The complicity of our governing bodies in unjust actions against progressive and liberal ministers who have scruples and endeavor to hold fast to their Presbyterian system is the true definition of injustice. All this while those who cry and wail “apostasy” at our church get what they want and stay uncomfortably as living schisms. Absolute and blind obedience to this type of governing is of destruction to some of our liberties in Christ. True love casts out fear, so let us not govern our church within it.
Since the General Assembly refuses to give any concrete guidance on issues of marriage equality, those of us who work in locations where it is legally permitted to marry those of the same gender are left in a quandary. The idea of claiming scruples set out by the Peace, Unity and Purity report has not stemmed Evangelicals’ desires to convict people of conscience in church court, and it appears that you have abdicated your responsibility as a governing body to give direction to church courts. Rather than allowing us to discuss specific proposals in the democratic forum of our presbyteries you have given us a much more amorphous two years of discussion, thought, and prayer, which is odious and stifling of the democratic principles our church was founded upon.
What you have left liberals and progressives is the terrible choice of lying or hiding their actions of conscience, binding their conscience and losing their liberty in Christ, or to face the emotionally, spiritually and psychologically draining possibility that evangelicals will use church courts to sell their ideology in the name of “purity.”
For too long my denomination has been more than willing to cede their view as “people of the middle way” to the threats of Biblical literalists. It has slowly eroded the character of what it means to be a historic Presbyterian in the United States and insults an expanding history of the Reformed tradition. Some of us refuse to agree out of scruples with something that binds our conscience against the things that the Spirit of God is calling us. It is time for us to be a “big tent” denomination in allowing all of our ministers to practice their full gifts, discernment and direction in which the Spirit is calling them, and not merely excluding a few so that the majority “may” feel comfortable.
In Christ,
Rev. Brian Merritt
The Palisades Community Church
Washington D.C.
The Palisades Community Church
Washington D.C.
AMEN! And now, back to reading Karen Armstrong ...
Glad for Kayla and for you, also. Back to normal (so to speak).
ReplyDeleteGreat letter. I will copy it and give it to some of my friends. Thanks much for sharing it. pd
Kayla is one touch cookie, with the heart of Jesus and the Zen of ... well, a dog. A good role model for us all. (I see you are tweaking your blog layout...!)
ReplyDeleteNot tweaking my layout, just gave myself a description finally! And she is one tough and touch cookie! Vet says she has a bladder of steel.
ReplyDelete