Wednesday, June 11, 2008

General Assembly Top 10 Issues--Part 2.

Did you know that the Stated Clerk of the PCUSA copies David Letterman? Each night Letterman goes through his top ten list--at times the list is funny, other times it is dumb. other times it is just plain stupid. Before each meeting of the Presbyterian Church’s General Assembly meeting the Stated Clerk offers his/her top ten list—the top ten issues coming before the Assembly. The PCUSA web site offers the list—in no particular order. Look at it here.

Another of the top ten issues deals with “PC(USA) ecumenical stance and covenants.” The Stated Clerk said,

“The 218th General Assembly will take action on a number of ecumenical items, including a proposed new policy on the ecumenical stance of the PC(USA) and covenant agreements with four different churches: the Korean Presbyterian Church in America, the Episcopal Church, the Catholic Church and the Moravian Church.”

As a “denomination” these may be important issues. In the local church these are not an issue. We work cooperatively with these denomination—and others. It is crazy that we have to take “official” action to affirm that these groups are Christian churches we are willing to work with.

What the State Clerk does not say is that the General Assembly will seek to slap the wrist of the Evangelical Presbyterian Church (overtures on the EPC are listed under the topic of ecumenical and interfaith relations).

I have struggles in the ecumenical interfaith area facing the Assembly. The world-wide Anglican community is in the process of disciplining the Episcopal Church in the United States. Why is the PCUSA trying to affirm the actions of the Episcopal Church at a time when members of the Anglican Communion are distancing themselves from the Episcopal Church? And yet, the Evangelical Presbyterian Church has not been sanctioned by any Reformed oversight “body” and yet the PCUSA is trying to punish the EPC. I don’t get it? If the PCUSA seeks to discipline the EPC then the PCUSA should affirm the discipline that the Anglican Communion is dishing out to the Episcopal Church.

I guess that what we are saying is: “A denomination can believe and do what ever it wants as long as PCUSA congregations do not seek join that other denomination.” Pretty self serving.

Tuesday, June 10, 2008

General Assembly Top 10 Issues.

Did you know that the Stated Clerk of the PCUSA copies David Letterman? Each night Letterman goes through his top ten list--at times the list is funny, other times it is dumb. other times it is just plain stupid. Before each meeting of the Presbyterian Church’s General Assembly meeting the Stated Clerk offers his/her top ten list—the top ten issues coming before the Assembly. The PCUSA web site offers the list—in no particular order. Look at it here.

Did you know that The Belhar Confession is one of the most important issues coming before the Assembly? What??? You must be joking!! Has the Stated Clerk lost his mind? Praise God that our Stated Clerk isn’t running for another term of office.

For the unenlightened (of which I was one), The Belhar Confession was written in the 1980s in South Africa as a response to Apartheid. It is now being pushed to combat racial separatism in any setting.

Now, don’t get me wrong, I am against racial separatism. If we adopt this then I hope we “enforce” it equally. I am confident that this will be one more weapon in the arsenal to degrade Israel while building up the Palestinians. But before we do that, let’s remember scripture and take the plank from our own eye before we begin to operate on someone else’s eye.

A friend of mine lives in an Alaskan Yup’ik village. He has been married to a Yup’ik Eskimo woman for around thirty years. They have lived in the village for their entire married life, except when the wife went to college to get her teaching degree. They speak Yup’ik in their home. They live a subsistence lifestyle. My friend has learned and adopted their culture. He is one of the two best hunters and trappers in the village. Yet, he is, and always be, a second class citizen in his village. The village IS NOT a “reservation” (Study the Alaskan Native Claims Settlement Act to understand those particular issues). He will never be allowed to have a say in the community government. The PCUSA should speak out about against this injustice if it adopts The Belhar Confession.

Here in Washington, a new Native American casino is about to open. Several members of that tribe (they have been on the council) have been removed from the tribe in a power play dispute. These ostracized people are losing out on mega-dollars, as well as their health care. They are having to “document” that their dead relatives really were a part of the tribe (up until now their family membership has never been in doubt). The PCUSA should speak out about against this injustice if it adopts The Belhar Confession.

I know a young native boy (who isn’t so young any more). The young man is Tlingit and born in Sitka, Alaska. His mother (a full blood Tlingit) is from a family that has been active in the Presbyterian Church in Sitka for generations. This lady was unable to care for her baby and put her baby up for adoption. A couple (the wife is Caucasian and the husband is Native American—not of the Tlingit tribe) that I know adopted the child. The birth mother (and family) of this child have refused to “register” him as a Tlingit—this means that the child (now a young man) is not recognized by the tribe or the U.S. government as a Tlingit and he misses out on all of the benefits that go with that recognition (membership in the Native Corporation, financial assistance, health benefits, etc.). The PCUSA should speak out about against this injustice if it adopts The Belhar Confession—especially, since the birth family is Presbyterian!

The Belhar Confession looks good on paper. The Belhar Confession speaks part of the gospel message. We should be involved in speaking out about racial injustice. However, The Confession of 1967 does just that!! Check out The Confession of 1967 here and look at section 9.44a:

“God has created the peoples of the earth to be one universal family. In his reconciling love, God overcomes the barriers between sisters and brothers and breaks down every form of discrimination based on racial or ethnic difference, real or imaginary. The church is called to bring all peoples to receive and uphold one another as persons is all relationships of life: in employment, housing, education, leisure, marriage, family, church, and the exercise of political rights. Therefore, the church labors for the abolition of all racial discrimination and ministers to those injured by it. Congregations, individuals, or groups of Christians who exclude, dominate, or patronize others, however subtly, resist the Spirit of God and bring contempt on the faith which they profess.”

The PCUSA is facing huge issues! The Belhar Confession is not one of them!