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The Peace, Unity and Purity report
An analysis by Eugene TeSelle |
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Gene TeSelle, Issues Analyst of the
Witherspoon Society and emeritus professor at Vanderbilt Divinity School,
offers an in-depth analysis of the report of the Theological Task Force on
the Peace, Unity, and Purity of the Church.
A list of the contents:
Exhortations to
mutuality and discernment
What the report does
American Presbyterianism's heritage of
flexibility
Faith, Practice, and Polity --
all are involved together
What would the Reformers say?
What the Report Does Not Do
What will happen at the Assembly?
What will the Assembly do?
Something more that can be
done
Extra informational boxes along the way:
All those
abbreviations!
Is predestination an "essential" of the
Reformed faith?
How many "shalls" are there?
What does the Advisory Committee on the
Constitution say?
Six perspectives on
homosexuality
Extra background resources
This report is also available in the
Spring 2006 issue of the Witherspoon Society's Network News, which is
being mailed around May 10 to all commissioners and advisory delegates
to the General Assembly. You can also find it online in PDF
format, at
http://www.witherspoonsociety.org/NN%20spring%2006.pdf, beginning on
page 6.
[5-9-06]
If you have comments or questions
about the complex issues involved in the PUP report,
please send a note,
and let's see what we can do as we think together about this.
Reflections on the Report on Peace, Unity and Purity of the Church
In 2001 the General Assembly created the Theological Task
Force (TTF) on the Peace, Unity, and Purity of the Church (PUP), directing
it to discuss issues of "Christology, biblical authority and interpretation,
ordination standards, and power" and report annually to the presbyteries and
to the General Assembly. Those reports have been made, and the final report
was issued in two parts, one on July 19 and another, including the
much-awaited recommendations, on August 25.
Exhortations to Mutuality and Discernment
The document begins, continues, and ends with
exhortations to mutual "discernment" as Presbyterians conduct their business
and respond to each other’s actions.
This reflects what happened in the deliberations of the
twenty-member TTF. They learned to love and respect each other despite their
differences; yet no one’s mind was changed concerning core convictions,
especially the ordination of gay and lesbian, bisexual and transgender
members of our church.
They worked out a statement that all of them could agree
to, without any dissenting votes or minority report. The conservatives
on the Task Force, who include Jack Haberer, the new editor of the
Presbyterian Outlook, can thus be characterized as "inclusive
conservatives," in contrast to the "exclusive conservatives" whose
united voice is the Presbyterian Coalition.
In Part V, the conclusion of the report, the TTF’s
Recommendation 2 urges governing bodies, congregations, and other groups of
Presbyterians to follow the example of the TTF and engage in a process of
"intensive discernment." This has already been done in a few presbyteries,
responding early to the TTF’s report.
Recommendation 4 urges all who plan and moderate meetings
of governing bodies to "explore the use of alternative forms of discernment
and decision-making as a complement to parliamentary procedure, especially
in dealing with potentially divisive issues" (lines 1150-54).
All this is to the good. But most people in the church
were waiting for the "bottom line" — how the TTF dealt with the issues for
which it was created.
What the Report Does
The big surprise is that the TTF focuses not on the
controversial G-6.0106b, which was added to the Book of Order in 1996-97,
but on G-6.0108, which has been there since reunion in 1983. This says that
• ordained officers "shall adhere to the
essentials of the Reformed faith and polity";
• freedom of conscience
in the interpretation of Scripture is to be maintained as long as there is
not "serious departure" from these standards; and
• the judgment whether a person has
departed from the "essentials," and how seriously, rests with the governing
body.
In Recommendation 5, the TTF calls on the 2006 General
Assembly to adopt an authoritative interpretation ("AI" for short) of
G-6.0108b, stating that
• the standards for ordination and
installation are set forth in the Constitution;
• governing bodies have the responsibility
to apply these standards;
• this includes the task of determining
whether a candidate has "departed" from the scriptural and constitutional
standards and whether any such departure amounts to a failure to adhere to
the "essentials" of the Reformed faith and polity;
• even when a governing body has acted
responsibly, its decision is always subject to review by a higher body; but
• all parties should "endeavor to outdo
one another" in honoring each others’ decisions.
Throughout the TTF report there is a constant balancing
of two seemingly contradictory perspectives.
Sometimes there is "hold the line" language, to
the effect that standards are established by the whole church; that local
governing bodies "cannot set their own standards or set aside the church’s
standards"; and thus that "local option" is not an accurate way of
characterizing their recommendation.
At the same time there is flexibility, since any
examination involves determining, "on a case-by-case basis," whether
the person adheres to the "essential and necessary articles" and, if there
is any "departure" from them, whether it is "serious." The report notes that
the Adopting Act of 1729 gave ministers the opportunity to dissent from
articles of the Westminster Confession and made ordaining bodies responsible
for determining whether this was an essential tenet. Neither the Adopting
Act nor any subsequent action of the church has ventured to say what the
essential tenets are.
American Presbyterianism’s
Heritage of Flexibility
In the Church of Scotland after 1700 there was a strong
impulse toward "strict subscription" to the Westminster Confession of
Faith and the Shorter and Longer Catechisms. This was controversial from the
start. It was intensified by the desire of some Scottish presbyteries to
impose stricter standards, in effect imposing additional confessions of
faith.
In colonial America, the first presbytery was organized
in 1706 — exactly 300 years ago — and the first synod in 1717. Their makeup
was already diverse, with ministers from Scotland, Ireland, and New England.
In 1729 the synod approved an Adopting Act that affirmed the Westminster
standards "in all the essential and necessary articles," but permitted those
seeking ordination to state their "scruples" concerning these standards and
left it to the presbytery to judge whether these were within legitimate
bounds, not affecting the essentials.
American Presbyterians split a number of times, then came
back together. There were agreements of reunion between the Old Side
and New Side (1758), Old School and New School (1869-70), the PCUSA with the
Cumberland Presbyterians (1903-6), the PCUSA with the United Presbyterians
(1958), and the UPCUSA with the PCUS (1983). These would not have
happened without the continuing spirit of the Adopting Act. The language
of G-6.0108 and the TTF’s Recommendation 5, therefore, is not something new;
it is the spirit of American Presbyterianism from the very beginning.
During the 1920s the fundamentalist-modernist controversy
broke out in the Presbyterian church. After several years of tension, the
General Assemblies of 1926 and 1927 approved the recommendations of the
Swearingen Commission, which said that any GA statement about "essentials,"
such as the five fundamentals, cannot have the same authority as the
Constitution. No standards can be imposed beyond the Confessions and the
Book of Order, and the ordaining body has the responsibility of assessing an
ordinand’s statement as a whole.
Members of the TTF have emphasized the word "standards,"
noting, on the one hand, that standards are not "essentials," and, on
the other, that standards are not a matter of "local option." It is
important to remember this guideline as we think about the PUP report.
In sum, the TTF acknowledges, and urges the Assembly to
acknowledge formally, that G-6.0108 has already established
the legitimacy of "departures" ("scruples" in the language of the Adopting
Act) from adherence to the letter of the Constitution, as long as they are
not violations of the "essential and necessary" features of Reformed faith,
practice, and polity.
Is predestination an
"essential" of the Reformed faith? >>
More resources on the
controversy during the 1920s >>
Faith, Practice, and Polity — All Are Involved Together
The TTF report speaks of both faith and practice,
as G-6.0108 does, and as the Adopting Act already did in speaking of
"doctrine, discipline, and government." It notes the irony that over
time (especially in recent years, we might add, with heated disputes over
same-sex relations) an imbalance has developed, with flexibility over
doctrine but requirements for strict compliance in conduct — in other words,
the Book of Order has become a more powerful, or at least a blunter,
instrument than the Book of Confessions.
The TTF was prescient when it noted this growing
imbalance between flexibility in doctrine and rigidity over polity. In
response to the TTF report, conservatives have sought several means of
reducing flexibility in matters of discipline and government. These
moves seem to grow out of fear that some governing bodies might ordain gay
and lesbian, bisexual and transgender persons.
Three different ways of achieving greater rigidity in
polity are being tried.
1. Pittsburgh Presbytery is sending an overture to
amend the Form of Government by adding a new sentence to G-6.0108b,
stating that any practice that is required or mandatory, labeled with the
word "shall," is to be considered "an essential of Reformed faith and polity
for officers of the church." The purpose, of course, is to counter the
effect of the TTF’s Recommendation 5 if it is adopted.
2. Philadelphia Presbytery has approved an overture whose
implementation would be less cumbersome. It proposed to amend
Recommendation 5 before final action by the Assembly, adding language
stating that
(a) any violation of a "direct provision" of the Book
of Order is a bar to ordination or installation,
(b) even if no direct provision applies, any "failure to
adhere to the essentials of Reformed faith and practice" is a similar bar;
and
(c) no ordaining body may fail to maintain "any standard
stipulated in the Book of Order."
3. An overture from the Presbytery of New Covenant
(Texas) asks the General Assembly to adopt an alternative authoritative
interpretation, stating that there is a difference between the
essentials of Reformed faith and the essentials of Reformed polity.
The former, it says, have not been formally declared; the latter have been
so declared, wherever the Book of Order says "shall."
What Would the Reformers Say?
The spirit of these overtures is an amazing one for a
church in the Reformation tradition even to think of adopting. The Reformers
were deeply concerned about churchly ordinances and requirements, obedience
to which had been made mandatory by the Catholic Church, even being
considered necessary for salvation. Their judgment was that this led to
superstition and tyranny rather than the edification of the church. They
made it clear that they respected the interpretations and procedures that
the church had set forth in the past; but they were also ready to dissent
when these added to Scripture or contradicted its central message, which
they characterized as "faith and love" (C-5.010-011).
This insistence on the "shalls" of Presbyterian polity
is, at its worst, a doctrine of salvation by works rather than by faith. And
if it is not salvation by works, then it is even worse, inviting man-made
polity to get in the way of the gospel of salvation by faith. All churches
have differentiated between matters of faith, which are (ideally)
unchangeable, and those of order, which are time-bound, determined
largely on the basis of appropriateness and even convenience.
The Reformers were especially vocal when it came to
monastic vows and the requirement of priestly celibacy. In harmony with
several passages in the New Testament, they insisted that celibacy is a
gift which, being a gift, can be taken away (C-5.245, 7.248). Therefore
they warned against "entangling vows of single life" (C-7.249) and "monastical
vows of perpetual single life" (C-6.126).
As Archbishop Tutu has pointed out, today we require
celibacy only of gay and lesbian, bisexual and transgender persons. This is
certainly contrary to the spirit of the Reformation, which opposed monastic
vows and requirements of celibacy as both impracticable, leading only
to hypocrisy, and as an offensive binding of the conscience.
The observations in the last few paragraphs apply to
these conservative proposals when they are taken at face value, in
their intent.
But in practice their bark is worse than their bite,
because the Book of Order must always be interpreted and applied
within the framework of the entire Constitution. Through the years the
Permanent Judicial Commission of the General Assembly has specified the
meaning of G-6.0106b ("6b" for short) in a number of ways, making clear that
it is not in fact an absolute and unconditional prohibition, applicable
under all conceivable circumstances.
For example, you cannot refuse to ordain someone merely
because of sexual orientation; the refusal must be based on practice.
Furthermore, you cannot ask prying questions; there must be
reasonable cause for inquiry, some "direct and specific knowledge" based on
"factual allegations." Even if there is some kind of "self-acknowledgment"
it must be "plain, palpable, and obvious." And since 6b talks about all
the practices that are called sins in the Book of Confessions, an examining
body cannot single out sexual orientation and ignore other possible
sins. Although this was the intent of many in the church when they proposed
and approved 6b, it is unworthy, giving credence to stereotyping and
engaging in obvious discrimination.
Recently there was much furor over the ruling by the PJC
of Redwoods Presbytery that the Rev. Jane Spahr had the right to perform
marriage ceremonies for same-sex couples. The PJC pointed out that G-6.0106b
applies only to ordination and does not affect the Directory for Worship;
indeed, an AI issued by the 1991 General Assembly did not use mandatory
language in cautioning against such ceremonies.
In ways like these, Amendment B has already been limited
in its scope. We are learning that it is one thing to say, "Let’s pass a law
forbidding their ordination"; it’s another thing to interpret that law in a
way that is compatible with the entire Constitution of our church.
What the Report Does Not Do
But now let’s notice what the TTF report does not do.
To many the most bitter medicine is Recommendation 6:
that, if the General Assembly approves the previous recommendation, it
adopt no additional AIs, not remove any existing ones, and send no
constitutional amendments to the presbyteries that would change the church’s
policy on these matters. This recommendation is accompanied by an
exhortation that we remember our obligation "to conciliate, mediate, and
adjust differences without strife, . . . prayerfully and deliberately"
(D-1.0103, cited in lines 1469-72).
Approval of Recommendation 6 would perpetuate the
church’s prejudicial teachings about homosexuality, whose intent has been to
exclude GLBT persons from ordination. And in exhorting the church to
continue engaging in dialogue and discernment, the TTF has totally
forgotten to mention those persons who are most affected by the
ecclesiastical warfare of recent years, our gay and lesbian, bisexual and
transgender members, many of whom have been called to church office but have
encountered various obstacles, including "review" by higher governing bodies
and their Permanent Judicial Commissions.
Perhaps most damning, the TTF did not give any explicit
consideration to issues of power, one of the four themes it was
directed to consider. Aggressive exercise of power — through the channeling
or withholding of money, through the power of the press and the internet,
and through disciplinary proceedings — has been noticeable for many years in
the PC(USA).
The Covenant Network, More Light Presbyterians, and the
Witherspoon Society have all said that the TTF report, while it has many
positive features, falls short of their goal of removing Amendment B
or 6b, and that therefore they do not endorse the report’s
recommendations, especially Recommendation 6.
In characterizing the report, a number of people have
suggested that it gives us a glass half full — but also half empty.
The question they have posed, therefore, is whether the glass should be
poured out onto the floor — rejected entirely — or whether we should improve
it, fill it up.
What Will Happen at the Assembly?
In the agenda of the Assembly, the TTF report will
probably come to the floor early, with a recommended response from the
Assembly committee that deals with the report. We can foresee several basic
kinds of responses:
1. Oppose it. Many conservative organizations are
positioning themselves against the report, especially its Recommendation 5,
which offers an authoritative interpretation of G-6.0108 concerning the
legitimacy of disagreements with the constitution as long as these are over
"non-essentials."
At the meeting of the Presbyterian Coalition in Orlando last December, one
possibility mentioned by several speakers was that approval of the Task
Force report could lead to a campaign to get congregations to sign a formal
threat to withdraw from the church (Presbyterian Outlook, Dec. 5/12,
2005). The hope is to drive a hard bargain with the General Assembly,
letting them leave with their property and continue to draw pensions.
Stockton Presbytery is sending an overture to change the
constitution (G-8.0100-07) to state that a congregation’s property "is the
sole property of the church" except for the amount of financial assistance
provided by the wider church; a congregation could sever its relationship by
a vote of 60 percent of the active members.
In the face of ultimatums like these, some commissioners
to the Assembly may feel reluctant to risk driving the conservatives out of
the church.
But most commissioners are likely to resent this kind of
brinkmanship, an all-or-nothing insistence on one’s own point of view. It
stands in sharp contrast with the attitude of the inclusive conservatives
on the TTF, who were part of the consensus approving the report as a whole.
And many commissioners will want to add another point:
The church cannot stifle its public witness in behalf of justice and
God’s all-embracing love for the sake of a superficial peace —
peace among various factions within the church, and peace with a noisy
segment of public opinion.
2. Block it or limit its effect. Another
conservative strategy has recently emerged. We have already mentioned the
overture from Pittsburgh Presbytery to amend the Book of Order, the overture
from Philadelphia Presbytery to amend the TTF’s Recommendation 5, and the
overture from New Covenant Presbytery to issue a different kind of AI. All
are intended to prevent any action on Recommendation 5, or, if the
Assembly should be disposed to approve it, to limit its effect.
Either way, approval of these overtures would nullify
three centuries of American Presbyterianism, which has repeatedly given
flexibility of judgment to governing bodies in deciding what is an
essential; this principle is now stated explicitly in G-6.0108.
3. Label it a "constitutional crisis." San Diego
Presbytery on March 21 adopted an internal resolution (not an overture) that
not only reaffirmed its list of "Essential Tenets and Reformed Distinctives"
(adopted in 2003) but engaged in brinkmanship. If the TTF’s Recommendation 5
is adopted, the presbytery’s moderator will appoint a task force that is to
make its report at the September meeting of presbytery. It will consider
• whether the change creates a constitutional crisis,
• whether it creates a state of "biblical and
confessional defection,"
• whether the covenant binding congregations and
presbyteries together has been breached,
• whether the change minimizes or eliminates the
presbytery’s obligation to abide by the polity and discipline of higher
governing bodies,
• whether the change compromises the PC(USA)’s ability to
exercise governance over its presbyteries,
• what will be the future relationship between the
presbytery and the PC(USA), and
• what future steps the presbytery will take to address
its concerns with the PC(USA).
4. Exploit it. Now we come to an even
farther-reaching strategy. It has been clear that, if the TTF’s
Recommendation 5 were to be approved by the Assembly, presbyteries would
have more leeway in approving candidates for ordination. Conservative
presbyteries might become more conservative, progressive ones more
progressive. (That is not a certainty, however. Even conservative
presbyteries might ordain "out" candidates whom they know and respect as
individuals. Most presbyteries already ordain people with whom they disagree
on various points, which are sometimes major points.)
Looking ahead to this possibility and even trying to
hasten it, the conservative Beaver-Butler Presbytery in western Pennsylvania
has approved an overture to allow congregations, by a two-thirds vote, to
change their presbytery and synod affiliations. The effect would be to
make all presbyteries non-geographical — something that is at present
an exception to the rule, permitted only for ethnic reasons in the Dakota
Presbytery and three Korean presbyteries. Presbyteries at both ends of the
doctrinal spectrum would become more homogeneous, depriving us of the task
of living together with our differences.
5. Support it. Many moderates, including most of
the recent Moderators of the General Assembly, see the TTF’s Recommendation
5 as a step forward, compatible with the Adopting Act of 1729, the longtime
practice of the church, and the present G-6.0108. In addition, two
presbyteries have sent overtures to the General Assembly urging support of
the TTF report.
6. Vacillate. Some progressives, disappointed that
the TTF report does not recommend removal of Amendment B and even counsels
taking no action on this issue, may feel inclined to vote against the
report.
For conservatives, the TTF report goes too far;
for progressives, it falls short, specifically in its Recommendation
6. These are quite different reasons for opposing the report. Progressives
are more likely to feel that the report is broken and needs to be
fixed.
7. Fix it. My own prediction — and my own
preference — is that the Assembly will support the TTF’s Recommendation 5
and oppose Recommendation 6, which would preclude taking any action
on removing B and the negative AIs.
What does the Advisory
Committee on the Constitution say? >>
What Will the Assembly Do?
The General Assembly is not the TTF. The dynamics at work
in the two bodies are quite different.
The TTF felt that it was important to seek unanimity. In
order to achieve this, they approved the report and its recommendations as a
carefully crafted whole, as "one package." Unanimity would have been lost if
any feature — especially any of the recommendations — had been removed.
That was appropriate procedure for a small group that met
in intimate encounter over a period of four years. But the same procedure is
not feasible for the church as a whole, or even for the commissioners to the
2006 General Assembly, despite the desirability of reaching consensus. The
Assembly is a large body that must work through discussion, debate, and
majority vote, even though opportunities are made in the committees for more
informal discussions and consensus building.
The TTF, because of its own experiences, felt it
essential to approve all the recommendations together, as a single package.
But the Assembly is not in any sense obliged to follow the TTF’s example.
The TTF is in no sense an autonomous body. Neither is it a commission acting
in our stead. It is the creature of the 2001 General Assembly, which
directed it to report each year to the to the General Assembly — and, it
added, to the presbyteries.
When the Assembly considers the recommendations in the
TTF report, it will most likely vote on them separately, one by one. It
will be quite proper for them to approve Recommendation 5 and disapprove or
take no action on Recommendation 6.
That course of action becomes even more likely when we
recall that, during the years when the TTF was doing its work, the
presbyteries have been discussing the "ordination question" — something that
the TTF decided not do in its report. Twenty-two presbyteries
have sent overtures to the 2006 General Assembly for revocation of all
previous AIs and removal of G-6.0106b.
The General Assembly has every right, then, after
• praising the TTF,
• adopting its Recommendations 1-5
(and also 7, as a matter of procedural housekeeping), and
• dismissing it with thanks, then
to
• approve these overtures, thereby
bringing the TTF’s work to its appropriate conclusion, carrying forward the
spirit already expressed in its vote on TTF.
Let’s conclude with some practical considerations.
Adoption of the TTF’s Recommendation 5 can give the church experience with
this new mode of approach, emphasizing mutual encounter and discernment. The
TTF, while acknowledging the impassioned debates over the issues of
sexuality and ordination raised by G-6.0106b, has proposed "ways for the
church to live faithfully while dealing with those issues" (lines 1367-68).
If the Assembly also sends an amendment to the
presbyteries repealing or altering G-6.0106b, it will have to be voted on
within one year after the adjournment of the Assembly. (Some of us might
like more time for living with the GA’s response to the TTF report, but the
Book of Order does not allow for that.) There would be the usual debate and
political maneuvering. But adoption of Recommendation 5 could also remind
the church about a principle that is as old as its organized life in North
America — and remind it that this principle has not led to disaster
in the past but in fact has given us the diverse church we already have.
Something More That Can Be Done
Ever since the landmark 1978 decision cautioning against
ordaining gays and lesbians, our church has also defended their civil
rights and welcomed them as members.
In keeping with that spirit, an overture from Cincinnati
Presbytery calls on the General Assembly to amend the 1978 policy statement
by deleting seven statements which set homosexuality in a negative light.
Those who were at the 2004 General Assembly will recall a
dispute, continuing long after the close of the Assembly, over a number of
negative quotations read out by commissioner Scott Schaeffer during a debate
over revoking the hostile AIs. Some of these were from the background paper
and thus were not part of the 1978 Assembly’s action. But there are negative
and contemptuous evaluations of homosexuality in the Assembly’s policy
statement, too. Schaeffer’s purpose was to point out the attitudes about
homosexuality that were prevalent in 1978, when the statement was adopted.
If you go to the www.pcusa.org web site, click on Search,
and type in "homosexuality," the first thing that pops up is this 1978
statement.
Much has happened since 1978. The American Psychiatric
Association and the American Psychological Association have made important
statements about homosexuality and about attempts at "conversion therapy"
which assume that it is a reversible "disorder." There have also been many
discussions of biblical and doctrinal perspectives on homosexuality. It is
time for the church’s most formal policy statement on sexual orientation to
be brought up to date and be made less blatantly offensive.
Princeton professor William Stacy Johnson, a member of
the Theological Task Force, has summarized six perspectives on
homosexuality, and these may help commissioners to the General Assembly as
they reflect on the Cincinnati overture.
• the "prohibition" view:
homosexuality is a perversion of God’s created order
• the "definitive guidance" view:
homosexual orientation and conduct is a tragedy, to be responded to with
repentance and abstinence
• the "justice" view: homosexuality
is like other natural conditions, and reconciliation comes when
heterosexuals repent of singling this out as the major sin
• the "pastoral" view: homosexual
relationships may be disobedient in form but obedient in substance, and
committed same-sex relationships are better than promiscuity
• the "celebration" view:
homosexuality is a fact of creation, to be regarded as God’s good gift
• the "consecration" view:
homosexuality is a fact of creation, but ambiguous, needing to be rightly
ordered by consecrating one’s sexuality in an exclusive, committed
relationship
Six
perspectives on homosexuality >> |
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All those abbreviations!
People are often puzzled by the
abbreviations used in this article, and in the discussions in
committees and on the floor of the General Assembly. Here are the ones
you are most likely to hear:
GA General Assembly
PJC Permanent Judicial
Commission
TTF Theological Task
Force
PUP Peace, Unity, and
Purity
AI Authoritative
interpretation of the Constitution by the General Assembly
G-6 Chapter 6
of the Form of Government, part of the Book of Order
6b
G-6.0106b, the amendment which was sent to the presbyteries as
Amendment B and was added to the Form of Government in 1997, whose
purpose was to prohibit ordination of gay and lesbian, bisexual and
transgender members
8
G-6.0108, a passage that has been in the Form of Government since
reunion in 1983, which affirms freedom of conscience under the Word of
God and authorizes governing bodies to judge whether any "departure"
from the provisions of the Constitution concerns the "essentials" of
Reformed faith and polity
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Is
Predestination an "Essential" of the Reformed Faith?
For centuries, predestination was
considered an essential, and certainly the most distinctive essential,
of the Reformed tradition. There were several alternative ways of
stating it (we do not need to go into these now!), but suggestions
that human beings determine their own destiny were consistently
condemned. The Cumberland Presbyterians broke away because this
doctrine looked like "fatality."
During the reunion with the majority of
the Cumberland Presbyterians in 1903, several chapters were added to
the Westminster Confession (C-6.183-190), along with a "Declaratory
Statement" (C-6.191-193) that God wills the salvation of all and
offers it to all, hindering no one. Where the Westminster Confession
had spoken only of "elect infants" (C-6.066), it now declared that
"all dying in infancy are included in the election of grace"
(C-6.193). These were major shifts.
Today, most ministers and members of
the PC(USA) probably do not affirm predestination as classically
understood; they would find other ways to affirm God's love for all
human beings, their freedom to accept or reject this love, and their
continuing need to rely on God for perseverance. |
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How Many
"Shalls" Are There?
Passage of this amendment would have
some rather curious consequences. Michael Adee, field organizer for
More Light Presbyterians, did a count with the help of his computer
and found that "shall" is used 980 times in the Form of Government.
These new "essentials," he says, would include review of session
minutes every twelve months, an outside audit of the church's books
every year, and kneeling during ordination. Adee expresses sympathy
for seminary students trying to review all of them in preparation for
ordination.
Most of the "shalls" turn out to be
relatively innocuous. The notorious one in G-6.0106b is exceptional in
its exclusionary spirit. And some of the "shalls" have the opposite
force. The list of "rights" of church membership includes "to vote and
hold office" (G-5.0202). And there is this declaration (G-4.0403):
The Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.)
shall give full expression to the rich diversity within its
membership and shall provide means which will assure a greater
inclusiveness leading to wholeness in its emerging life.
Because of this commitment, we have
committees on representation and the requirement (G-9.0104) that:
All governing bodies shall work to
become more open and inclusive and to correct patterns of
discrimination on the basis of race, sex, age, marital condition
(married, single, widowed, or divorced), or disability.
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What Does the
Advisory Committee on the
Constitution Say?
The Advisory Committee on the
Constitution (ACC) has given its advice to the General Assembly
concerning the TTF report. After clarifying a number of issues already
decided by the General Assembly or its Permanent Judicial Commission,
it declares the TTF's Recommendation 5 to be in good order, something
that the Assembly can approve if it so chooses.
The ACC also notes two important
questions that remain open.
1. It raises the possibility, without
judging either way, that the AIs issued by General Assemblies prior to
the approval of G-6.0106b might appropriately be eliminated, on the
grounds that they added to rather than interpreted the constitutional
standards then existing. It is totally in order, then, to consider the
proposal, made in most of the overtures sent by the presbyteries, to
revoke all AIs prior to the addition of "6b."
2. It notes that no GA and no PJC has
addressed the question whether G-6.0106b is limited by G-6.0108. Thus
a governing body, as it deliberates on a candidate's suitability for
ordination, has discretion to regard "6b" as not an essential of
Reformed faith and polity. |
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Six perspectives on homosexuality
Princeton professor William Stacy
Johnson, a member of the Theological Task Force, has summarized six
perspectives on homosexuality, and these may help commissioners to the
General Assembly as they reflect on the Cincinnati overture.
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the "prohibition" view: homosexuality
is a perversion of God's created order |
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the "definitive guidance" view:
homosexual orientation and conduct is a tragedy, to be responded to
with repentance and abstinence |
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the "justice" view: homosexuality is
like other natural conditions, and reconciliation comes when
heterosexuals repent of singling this out as the major sin
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the "pastoral" view: homosexual
relationships may be disobedient in form but obedient in substance,
and committed same-sex relationships are better than promiscuity |
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the "celebration" view: homosexuality
is a fact of creation, to be regarded as God's good gift |
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the "consecration" view:
homosexuality is a fact of creation, but ambiguous, needing to be
rightly ordered by consecrating one's sexuality in an exclusive,
committed relationship |
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Extra
resources
If you want to do some homework prior
to the Assembly, several books deal with the controversy during the
1920s: Loetscher's The Broadening Church (Pennsylvania, 1954),
Longfield's The Presbyterian Controversy (Oxford, 1991), and Weston's
Presbyterian Pluralism (Tennessee, 1997). |
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[Submitted by the Witherspoon Society, Doug King, 5-9-06] |
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If you have comments or questions
about the complex issues involved in the PUP report,
please send a note,
and let's see what we can do as we think together about this. |
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Do you want to
be notified whenever something new is added to this web site?
Just send a note, and we'll add you to our e-list for brief
notes when something new is posted here.
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This website has been created by a number of progressive
organizations related to the Presbyterian Church (USA), with two
main purposes: 1. We
want to share our concerns and views with commissioners and others
attending the Assembly, and with anyone else who is watching from
afar. While some of our groups focus on one area of concern
and others are more general in their focus, we are all committed to
the wholeness of our world, which we understand to involve justice
and peace and the well-being of all people; and we are committed to
the wholeness and health of our Church and its witness and service
in the world.
2. We want to get to know
you better and serve your concerns and needs in any way we can.
So we will invite you to share your views with us and with one
another with any email responses or questions. We'll invite
your responses with links here and there, and we'll try to post
those that seem to contribute to our conversations.
Just send a note now, and tell us how we can be helpful!
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