Tuesday, July 24, 2012

Toward a Positive Vision of Liberal Christianity

Can the problems of the Episcopal Church be summed up with one silly t-shirt? That may be an overstatement, but New York Times columnist Ross Douthat got me thinking about it in his recent column, “Can Liberal Christianity be Saved?” Douthat argues that recent decades declines in mainline Protestant church membership and attendance is related to the church’s engagement in the divisive cultural debates of our day, principally but not exclusively the role of LGBT
people in society and the church.


Douthat cites two principal factors behind this. One is the influence of thinkers like retired Bishop John Shelby Spong, whose work eviscerates the core of orthodox Christian doctrine. The second is the failure of the church to articulate religious backing to its concern for social justice that in any way distinguishes the church from secular voices advocating similar positions. He's wrong on the first, and correct enough on the second that it's worth talking about. That's where the t-shirt comes in.

But let's deal with Spong first. I think Douthat vastly overestimates the influence of people like him within the church. Spong is not an instigator of where the Episcopal church finds itself today. His work is a last gasp of a line of inquiry that included Bishop John A. T. Robinson’s Honest to God and Leslie Weatherhead’s The Christian Agnostic. The latter book concluded that it’s ok to be a Christian and deny the gospel miracles and the virgin birth, as long as you’re still on board with the physical resurrection of Jesus. Spong does Weatherhead one better and dispenses with the resurrection, too.
What all of these books have in common is a struggle to identify what is true about scripture and the creeds in the face of scientific discoveries about evolution, medicine, cosmology, and the like. Weatherhead’s book, alas, credulously relies on some junk science about spiritualism to support some of its conclusions. The debates contained in these books were perhaps necessary as the church grappled with the discovered world and chose not to be a faith that denies the facts in front of it. This is a good thing. But these authors erred in allowing discovery to constrain revelation, rather than expanding their understanding of revelation to accommodate discovery.

As quickly as I dismiss Spong and his intellectual forbears, I should acknowledge that the conversations they started opened up my own understanding of the claims of scripture and the creeds and gave me a vocabulary to express my own views. The idea of the virgin birth, the resurrection and second coming of Jesus, etc. do not require us to deny objective scientific reality, but they do live in tension with it. There is our daily lived reality, and a deeper real reality. We experience that real reality as if it is on the other side of a veil: close, but often invisible,
occasionally seen, only once in a great while truly breaking through. I cannot quantify how many other Episcopalians see things in this or a similar way, but I’d guess that it’s a greater proportion than those who say the Nicene Creed with their fingers crossed. It’s also not a unique or new idea, as I recently learned when I chanced upon a fascinating lecture on Jewish scholar Franz Rosenweig while driving the other night, but it's one that members of the church may not feel comfortable articulating.


Douthat’s second critique – that Episcopalians have failed to articulate a religious reason for their positions is worth spending more time on. It’s easy to get defensive on this point, to say, as some have, that if Douthat comes to any Episcopal church on a Sunday, he’ll find a congregation at prayer as sincere as Douthat’s own Roman Catholic parish. One might also reasonably argue that there’s some heavy-duty theological work behind the rite for blessing same sex relationships approved at the recent General Convention. Both of these things are true.

But these objections do not negate Douthat’s observation. To experience the church as a praying community, one must first walk in the doors. There’s no question that in our denomination, though certainly not in every parish, over the last couple decades, more people have been walking out than in. Heavy duty theological discussion deep in the pages of the Blue Book may be wonderful, but it’s no good if few within the church can restate them. Indeed, in the House of Deputies at the recent General Convention, just about the only folks expected to read the many hundreds of pages of documentation underlying all manner of legislation, referenced theology and the Bible rarely enough to make much of the debate in the house indistinguishable from what might occur at any other organization of humanists unusually well-versed in parliamentary procedure.

(On the other hand, perhaps we shouldn't judge the deputies too harshly for this, because one alternative to the status quo is some horrific proof-texting extravaganza. But I digress.)
Moreover, the Episcopal church has a problem not just in stating its reasons grounded in faith for the prominent social stands it has taken in recent years. It also has difficulty defining its reason for being in terms that involve God, or for that matter, positive terms of any type.

Take, for instance, what is perhaps the Episcopal Church’s most visible vehicle for attracting believers, the “Top 10 Reasons to be anEpiscopalian” t-shirt. The reasons are apparently derived from a Robin Williams HBO special a decade or so ago. They are:

10. No snake handling.
9. You can believe in dinosaurs.
8. Male and female God created them; male and female we ordain them.
7. You don’t have to check your brains at the door.
6. Pew aerobics.
5. Church year is color coded.
4. Free wine on Sunday.
3. All of the pageantry, none of the guilt.
2. You don’t have to know how to swim to get baptized.
1. No matter what you believe, there’s bound to be at least one other Episcopalian that agrees with you.
I’m going to set the question of whether t-shirts are an effective means of evangelism to one side (I think they can be helpful, but they shouldn’t be at the top of anyone’s list), and focus on whether this is really how we want to define ourselves as a church. Reasons 10, 9, 7, 3, and 2 all define the church in negative terms. Rather than saying what the Episcopal Church is, these reasons just define us in opposition to other Christians and they're smug to boot. Number 6 and number 5 don’t mean anything to outsiders. Number 3 and number 2 manage to demean what should be one of our top selling points, our sacramental life together. Number 2 further discredits immersion baptism, which is a perfectly valid and meaningful option. Number 1 simply reinforces the popular point that Episcopalians don’t really believe anything. Number 8 may be the only one worth saying in the
way it’s presented: it says something positive about our church and articulates a reason grounded in faith for it.


None of this is a judgment on Robin Williams’ comedy routine, by the way. I’ve never seen it; it may be very funny, though one certainly hopes there's more to it than these 10 lines. And there’s certainly no harm in making jokes about our church – that, too, is one of our selling points. But I emphatically do not think that these top 10 reasons should be adopted as any kind of official statement by the church, and the fact that these t-shirts were on sale at the national church’s booth at General Convention and are sold by a church affiliate certainly seems to indicate that they are.
I wouldn’t bother attacking this defenseless t-shirt if it were not broadly indicative of how we talk about ourselves as a church. We have a hard time saying who were are. Too often we define ourselves in the negative. It’s my bad habit, too. This is particularly perilous in a post-Christian culture. Trying to define ourselves this way implies that our evangelism strategy is to engage in a market share game, where we try to pick off converts from the Catholic church or our more fundamentalist brothers and sisters. Meanwhile the proportion of unchurched Americans is steadily rising, and we need to act as if we have something to offer those who do not yet believe. How do we tell our story?

To that end, the Bible study we undertook at the second evening gathering of the Acts 8 Moment (summarized here), is instructive. 30 or so people spent some time as a group reflecting on the story of Philip and the Ethiopian eunuch from (you guessed it) the eighth chapter of Acts. Here it is:

Then an angel of the Lord said to Philip, ‘Get up and go towards the south to the road that goes down from Jerusalem to Gaza.’ (This is a wilderness road.)So he got up and went. Now there was an Ethiopian eunuch, a court official of the Candace, queen of the Ethiopians, in charge of her entire treasury. He had come to Jerusalem to worship and was returning home; seated in his chariot, he was reading the prophet Isaiah.Then the Spirit said to Philip, ‘Go over to this chariot and join it.’So Philip ran up to it and heard him reading the prophet Isaiah. He asked, ‘Do you understand what you are reading?’He replied, ‘How can I, unless someone guides me?’ And he invited Philip to get in and sit beside him.Now the passage of the scripture that he was reading was this: 

‘Like a sheep he was led to the slaughter,
and like a lamb silent before its shearer,
so he does not open his mouth.
In his humiliation justice was denied him.
Who can describe his generation?
For his life is taken away from the earth.’ 

The eunuch asked Philip, ‘About whom, may I ask you, does the prophet say this, about himself or about someone else?’Then Philip began to speak, and starting with this scripture, he proclaimed to him the good news about Jesus.As they were going along the road, they came to some water; and the eunuch said, ‘Look, here is water! What is to prevent me from being baptized?’ He commanded the chariot to stop, and both of them, Philip and the eunuch, went down into the water, and Philip baptized him.When they came up out of the water, the Spirit of the Lord snatched Philip away; the eunuch saw him no more, and went on his way rejoicing.But Philip found himself at Azotus, and as he was passing through the region, he proclaimed the good news to all the towns until he came to Caesarea. 

We talked about all kinds of aspects of this story (there's a whole lot in here -- what about that wilderness road?), but I just want to focus on one of them as a starting point. Philip's conversation with the eunuch starts not with the miracles, nor the virgin birth, nor the resurrection, nor the threat of the outer darkness, nor a liberal commitment to social justice, but with the profound mystery of the sacrifice of Jesus. He goes straight to the heart of God's compassion for creation, and builds from there. The foundation of our faith is that God became one with us in the person of Jesus, sacrificed himself for all of us, and gives us hope in the resurrection.

This is kind of heavy stuff, and it's a little weird. I've noted before how I never really got the resurrection (until I did), so the next task is to connect this foundational understanding to our personal stories and our collective actions as a church. This is far from a sufficient solution, but it is a starting point. It involves saying something positive about the God who grounds us, not putting other believers down.

Tuesday, July 17, 2012

Biblical support for pet funerals

I'm reluctant to contribute anything further to the debate about the Jay Akasie article about the General Convention in last week's Wall Street Journal, considering how easy it is to knock down his errors (see Scott Gunn's blog for a comprehensive list), but I can't stop myself from weighing in on the pet funerals question.
Let's be clear that the General Convention did not authorize pet funerals. It authorized a service of comfort for someone grieving at the loss of a pet. It's actually a lovely document, but compare it to the burial offices in the Book of Common Prayer and it's easy to spot that there is no equivalency here. This is a kind pastoral office, not a theological statement on the soul.
Still, would it be so wrong if it were? In one of tonight's Psalms for evening prayer, we come across this: "Your righteousness is like the strong mountains, your justice like the great deep; you save both man and beast, O Lord." (Ps. 36:6). I don't know about you, but this sounds like a virtual mandate for miniature caskets to me.

Friday, July 13, 2012

General Convention as Pilgrimage

Today I was back at work, and people remarked that I looked awfully poorly rested after a ten-day vacation. And I was. I worked long days...five hour morning shifts in the print shop followed by five hour evening shifts as a page in the House of Deputies. Then I came home and wrote this blog, or went to Acts 8 meetings, or went to July 4th barbeques, or who knows what else. I didn't sleep much.

So why on earth was I there? For me General Convention is a good example of a pilgrimage for a restless mind. A pilgrimage, as opposed to a mission, is an opportunity simply to renew one's faith. And while the usual picture of a pilgrimage is to the Holy Land or some cathedral or cave somewhere, the convention center did it for me. Each work session opened with prayer, and I occupied myself with simple tasks and attentiveness to the needs of others. I barely checked work e-mail, and was only distantly aware of the news. I spent a fair amount of time studying the Bible as I wrote this blog.

There were also lots of opportunities to connect with people in unusual ways. In the print shop in particular there were opportunities during downtime to share stories of faith and the communities we serve. I'm particularly grateful for the time I had to connect with other priests and laypeople within the Diocese of Indianapolis. While we have an annual diocesan convention, we wind up in busy, mostly meaningless legislative sessions and manufactured service projects with little time for personal connections. The ridiculous length of General Convention provides the breathing space for long conversations and relational development. As General Convention gets shorter, which it inevitably will, this is something I'll miss.

That said, in 2015, General Convention is getting longer. I kid you not. On the final day the House of Deputies concurred with the House of Bishops and bizarrely reinstated the 10-day long convention by passing A093. This is nuts. It may be subverted by the budget process. But for folks like me, who just want to get away from the world into an all-consuming parallel universe governed by parliamentary procedure and occasionally prayer, what's not to like?

Thursday, July 12, 2012

And on the eighth day...

It says something about our sense of self-importance that the General Convention lasts longer than God's creation of the world. And believe it or not, this is a shortened convention.

There's a packed legislative calendar today, but it's largely courtesy resolutions and pet projects. There's nothing on the table today either house actually cares about.

Except one thing - Open Communion (about which I've written elsewhere). That sort of passed the House of Deputies in a vote by orders yesterday, and will be considered by the Bishops today. The resolution that passed isn't open communion, but does crack the door a bit. I'll be surprised if it makes it through the Bishops. In any event, while I fall on the traditional side here, I can't work up much enthusiasm for this.



Wednesday, July 11, 2012

Where to start with Tuesday's Session?

When I started writing this blog as General Convention got going, I was optimistic and hopeful, then quickly soured as I despaired at the prospects of accomplishing any significant change through the unwieldy structures of the General Convention. I got particularly discouraged over the weekend as the business of the House of Deputies screeched to a halt in a parliamentary morass of amendments to amendments, re-referrals to various committees, and general lack of understanding on the part of some of the deputies about what was going on.

Oh me of little faith.

Things started clicking on Monday. And yesterday the institutional church took a huge leap forward. I might as well start with the obvious - the vote to authorize a liturgy to bless same-sex unions. I've already written about this elsewhere. Debate started at 5:00 and ended at a little after 5:30, after which opponents engaged in elaborate parliamentary maneuvering to try to maximize the chances of a vote that would force sending the measure back to the House of Bishops. Supporters fought back with equally wily deployment of the rules of order. It was like the dweebiest action movie ever. After 45 minutes of this, the vote was finally taken, and it passed overwhelmingly. Yes, I saw this coming from a mile away. Yes, I still fought back tears.

Ok, let's back up a little. The session started with a joint presentation of the budget to the bishops and the deputies. This was far better than I expected. As with any budget, everyone can find something to hate, but the budget takes steps to focus on growth and mission through creative block grants. I was also very pleased that the Presiding Bishop's proposal to divert $700,000 of funding from Episcopal Relief & Development was undone. There's a lot that needs to change in the national church. Episcopal Relief and Development isn't one of them. As usual, Tom Ferguson's analysis is superior to anything I can provide. This budget has not yet been passed, but it will be moving through the houses today and tomorrow.

The Rev. Susan Brown Snook was elected to the Executive Council. Woohoo! Susan is one of the minds behind the Acts 8 Moment, and is an innovative thinker about the future of the church.

The structure resolution unanimously passed without amendment. In general you can ignore unanimous votes at General Convention because it means we haven't committed ourselves to do anything meaningful. Example 1: Sunday we passed a resolution to "stand as one" with Haiti. Who's going to vote against that? But it obligates us to do what exactly? Example 2: Also Sunday, we passed a resolution commending the work of missionaries. This is barely better than the courtesy resolutions thanking convention staff and volunteers. Really, why bother? At least the deputies voted down establishing a lay ministry month, because...seriously.

The structure resolution is a whole other thing. It commits the whole church to change how it envisions itself and operates. It's going to require a huge amount of work not only from the task force it establishes, but they're not going to get anywhere without input fm the rest of us, especially where things are working. And remember that if we're going to change as a church, most of that change is actually going to be happening at the parish level. Don't get too comfortable.

So I'm feeling pretty good today, as we go into the penultimate legislative day. We've still got big stuff ahead of us - mainly the budget and the denominational health plan, but I'm going in feeling better than I have in days. Thanks be to God.


The Print Shop: Killing Trees for Jesus

The print shop is an interesting experiment in testing whether a church can manage simple assembly line tasks. Turns out that it can, though things are always a little creaky at the beginning of a shift.




The document boxes (aka honeycombs) have acquired names.




There's a lot of appetite for a paperless convention. That's easier said than done, but clearly we can be doing better in our stewardship of the earth. I suspect that this will be a shrinking operation over the next few conventions.




Keith Yamamoto (left) and Johnnie Newton (second from left) are our fearless coordinators. They exhibit unflappable cool under tight deadlines.





Tuesday, July 10, 2012

Parsing the A049 Vote

This afternoon was the most dramatic legislative session in the House of Deputies so far this convention, and I'm amazed at having the privilege of being there. Really big things got accomplished, but for now I want to focus in on one narrow aspect of the vote on A049, authorizing the provisional use of a rite blessing same sex unions.

The vote on this was done by orders, meaning that a majority of lay and clergy deputations had to vote for it in order for the resolution to pass. Most votes in the House of Deputies are taken by voice, and only the most contentious are done by orders. Likewise, yesterday's vote in full inclusion of transgendered people in the life of the church was also done by orders. So we have a fuller counting than usual.

While both measures passed by wide margins in both orders, the vote for full inclusion of transgendered people received greater support. 16 clergy deputations and 16 lay deputations opposed or were divided on D002, one of the two resolutions toward transgender equality. 26 clergy deputations and 24 lay deputations opposed or were divided on same sex unions.

I'm going to go out on a limb and assume that all the folks who opposed trans inclusion also opposed same sex unions. But that still leaves about 10 deputations in each order that supported trans inclusion but opposed same sex unions. I'm going to further infer that most of those folks are probably cool with LGBT people in the church, but remain uncomfortable with a rite that looks a lot like marriage.

I'm not going to speculate on their reasons here. I'm just going to encourage readers not to jump to conclusions about no voters. Remember that the next time someone tells you that they like gay people but have a problem with same sex marriage, it's not necessarily a cover for bigotry. They may be telling you the truth.

Here's the vote data:

D002 (via @dantetavolaro):

Lay 94 yes 11 no 5 divided
Clergy 95 yes 16 no 0 divided

A049 (via The Lead):

Lay 86 yes 19 no 5 divided
Clergy 85 yes 22 no 4 divided