| Assembly adopts Theological Task Force
report
Controversial 'authoritative interpretation' garners
57% support [6-20-06]
by Jerry L. Van Marter, Presbyterian News Service
This
article is also posted on the PC(USA) website >>
BIRMINGHAM, June 20 — By a vote of 298-221 (57% to 43%),
the 217th General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) today
approved an "authoritative interpretation" of the church's Constitution that
maintains current ordination standards for church officers but gives
ordaining bodies greater leeway in applying those standards to individual
candidates for ordination.
"Today we saw the Presbyterian process of doing things at
its best," said the Rev. Joan Gray, moderator of the 217th General Assembly,
at a press conference following the vote. "We saw people working fairly and
treating each other justly."
Stated Clerk of the General Assembly, the Rev. Clifton
Kirkpatrick, added, "With the vote today we have not altered the
fundamentals; we have the same standards as before. The report encourages a
more pastoral approach to ordination and encourages our governing bodies to
do a thorough work of examining people for office."
The proposal was one of seven contained in the report of
the Theological Task Force on Peace, Unity, and Purity of the Church (TTF)
that has spent the last four years looking for ways to help the deeply
divided denomination stay together despite its differences.
Four other recommendations passed by an overwhelming 87%
majority. They "strongly encourage" all Presbyterians to witness to the
church's oneness and "to avoid division into separate denominations"; to
urge congregations, governing bodies and other groups of Presbyterians to
engage in "intensive discernment" in the face of difficult issues; to study
the theological reflection section of the TTF report; and to encourage
church bodies to "explore the use of alternative forms of discernment and
decision-making as a complement to parliamentary procedure."
In tandem with the authoritative interpretation — of
G-6.0108 of the Book of Order — the Assembly voted to disapprove more than
20 proposals also pending before the Assembly to delete G-6.0106b of the
church's Book of Order — which requires of church officers "fidelity within
the covenant of marriage between a man and a woman or chastity in
singleness" — or an authoritative interpretation dating back to 1978 that
undergirds it.
The Assembly Committee on Ecclesiology, which brought the
TTF recommendations to the Assembly, presented the two proposals as "one
indivisible package."
The authoritative interpretation affirms that The Book of
Confessions and the Book of Order "set forth the scriptural and
constitutional standards for ordination" and that the standards "are
determined by the whole church."
But in what TTF member the Rev. William Stacy Johnson of
Princeton Theological Seminary called "a simple and time-tested framework
for staying together in times of conflict," the authoritative interpretation
harkens back to the Adopting Act of 1729 in stating: "Ordaining and
installing bodies, acting as corporate expressions of the church, have the
responsibility to determine their membership by applying these standards to
those elected to office."
The 1729 act allowed ordination candidates to declare a
"scruple" against any matter of church doctrine (then the Westminster
Confession and Catechism), with the ordaining body determining if the
scruple constituted "a departure from scriptural and constitutional
standards for fitness for office" and "a failure to adhere to the essentials
of the Reformed faith and polity."
The authoritative interpretation approved today borrows
that language.
Supporters of the authoritative interpretation expressed
hope it will break the cycle of conflict in the PC(USA), particularly over
the gay ordination issue.
Ecclesiology committee moderator, the Rev. Blair Monie of
Grace Presbytery, said the authoritative interpretation "clarifies what is
already in the Constitution, calling G-6.0108 "one of the oldest legacies we
have that we've used to keep the church together through many crises."
The authoritative interpretation, Monie added, "includes
four important Presbyterian ordination principles: maintaining standards,
rigorously examining candidates, protecting individual conscience and
protecting the church through judicial review."
Former General Assembly moderator, elder Marj Carpenter of
Big Spring, TX, said, "I'm against the ordination of homosexuals, though I
love 'em. But we've been fighting in this ditch for 28 years and ditch is
getting deeper." Her voice quavering with emotion, Carpenter continued,
"It's starting to affect our mission work, our youth ministry and our
evangelism and I'm ready to try something else. Please, let's get on with
being the church, taking the gospel into the world and offering them
something else other than arguments."
But the Rev. David Miller of Tampa Bay Presbytery called
the measure "a wrong turn." He called it "a license…to overlook clear
standards that have been set, a license to ignore the larger discernment of
the body of Christ and a license to legislate by interpretation."
Saying that people are "looking for churches where people
are gracious but have clear boundaries," the Rev. Michael Carey of Central
Florida Presbytery said approval of the measure would "open the floodgates
of controversy."
A minority report asking that the authoritative
interpretation be stricken from the recommendations failed 234-287. A
subsequent motion to refer the tandem proposals to presbyteries for further
discussion and comment also failed, 234-281.
The TTF was created by the 2001 General Assembly "to lead
the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) in a time of discernment of our Christian
identity in and for the 21st century." The group was specifically asked to
address issues of Christology, biblical authority and interpretation,
ordination standards and power.
"We were not instructed to solve any of the issues
included in our mandate," TTF co-moderator, the Rev. Gary Demarest of
Pasadena, CA, told commissioners. "It was our mandate then and it is now
that the issues run deep and will not end soon. But we know that
winner-take-all solutions will only perpetuate the conflict."
Added his co-moderator, elder Jenny Stoner of Craftsbury
Common, VT: "We have concluded that though we may be on different pages, we
are all in one book — biblical, Presbyterian and Reformed. We need each
other, we are a faithful but diverse body of Christ and we must learn how to
remain one body." |