The Church We Are
Called to Be
The Rev. Dr. Jack Rogers
Moderator, 113th General Assembly
Covenant Network Gathering
Pasadena, California
November 2, 2001
Gene TeSelle reports on the
CovNet gathering as a whole.
[posted here 11-5-01]
I was in Louisville, at the Presbyterian Center on
September 11. If I had to be anywhere at that time of tragedy, except at
home, I was glad I was there. I want to tell you how very, very proud I
was of the national staff and the volunteers in the building on that day
of crisis. They immediately went to work to provide resources for our
congregations and governing bodies. I became a spokesperson for the
church in a way that I would not have been had I not been there. Within
minutes, the media people asked me to write a prayer which they put out
on the internet. The Theology and Worship staff put together a service
of hymns, prayers, and Scripture readings. I was there with two former
Moderators working on the Task Force on the peace, unity, and purity of
the church that has recently been announced.
Together, the three of us, with others, led a service
of worship in the Chapel at the Presbyterian Center. It was full. Wall
to wall people, and spilling out into the hall. When Freda Gardner began
to read the 23rd Psalm, everyone began to recite it aloud
from memory. There was a sense of solidarity.
Afterwards I met the TV and print media who were
there. An AP reporter asked me: "Why did you do this?" I
replied that two things seemed clear: "We knew we needed God. And
we needed each other." It seemed the most natural thing to want to
be together to share our shock and grief. We worshipped and witnessed.
Then everyone went back to work. People were on the phones, and email,
and fax, contacting the congregations in the hardest hit areas, offering
assistance. Presbyterian Disaster Assistance was immediately brought
into action. World Wide Ministries was in touch with our mission
personnel overseas. Theology and Worship was responding to requests from
pastors about how to interpret these events to their congregations and
to parents about how to interpret them to their children. Before the day
was over, Cliff Kirkpatrick, who was in Geneva, Switzerland, and John
Detterick, and I, had issued a pastoral letter that went out to all of
our presbyteries to be distributed to our congregations.
In a time of crisis we reach down deep inside ourselves
to find the resources to meet the challenge. For me, and for many in our
church, those resources are found in the wisdom of our Confessions. The
Heidelberg Catechism, Question 1: "What is your only comfort
in life and in death?" Answer: "That I belong - body and soul,
in life and in death - not to myself, but to my faithful Savior, Jesus
Christ." We drew on that resource when we wrote A Brief Statement
of Faith, the newest statement in our Book of Confessions,
"In life and in death we belong to God."
We have a strong, vital denomination, with committed
and compassionate leaders. The first lesson of September 11 is that we
must stand united. I preached for Joanna Adams at Trinity Presbyterian
in Atlanta. She told that in those first days when we were all
transfixed in front of our TV sets, there was a strip of announcements
of canceled events running across the bottom of the screen. One from the
law courts said: "Arguments canceled, today and tomorrow."
Would that it applied to the church as well.
I don't know how the vote on Amendment A will come
out. I have seen no running tallies of early votes in presbyteries. I
wish that we would all take a September 11 pledge - not to put forth any
more legislation nor initiate any more judicial action regarding
ordination standards until the Task Force on the peace, unity, and
purity of the church presents its final report in 2005. We need to give
this representative group time to consult with the church and to help us
understand the way forward into the 21st century. We need
more education, not legislation.
I couldn't leave Louisville, as planned, on September
11. I was there until Friday the 15th, when planes started
flying again. I couldn't get to Spokane, Washington, where I was
supposed to be preaching. I couldn't get back here to Los Angeles. But I
could get to Omaha. I was to be there the following week, meeting with
three presbyteries. My wife, Sharon's, mother lives in the village of
Bennington, just outside of Omaha, and she took me in. She is the
matriarch of that town. At 93, she still drives her car and goes to two
or three events a day. In Bennington, Nebraska, ecumenism is having the
option to choose between being Evangelical Lutheran and Missouri Synod
Lutheran. In deference to my limitations we went to Fremont to the first
Presbyterian Church where I brought greetings. Then we attended a family
gathering. When we got home, a neighbor was standing on the doorstep.
She said: "Come over for pie and coffee."
There were three couples, and Gretchen and I. We were
talking about the tragic events of September 11. One of the women said:
"What I don't understand is how some of those terrorists could have
been in this country four or five years and not realized that our way of
life is better and changed their minds." That is the second,
painful lesson of September 11. There are people in every country and
every religion that only see the dark side. America has many faults, and
we have made many mistakes in our foreign policy. We know these things
and we try to correct them, but we move on knowing the positive as well.
When people only see the negative about others and then cast their
attitude in religious terms they are called "fundamentalists."
About 10 years ago Martin Marty, now retired Professor
of Church History at the University of Chicago got the American Academy
of Sciences to authorize a "Fundamentalism Project." Most
people thought it was a waste of time. Who cares about fundamentalists?
Now Marty looks like a genius! His team has compiled about 10 volumes of
research on fundamentalisms worldwide. Recently in an article in the New
York Times Sunday Magazine, Marty listed four common
characteristics of all fundamentalisms. First, they grow on soil that
has been conservative, traditional, orthodox. Second, they imagine that
there was once an ideal community in the past and that the modern world
is a defection, a falling away, a perversion of that ideal community.
Many conservative people might share those first two attitudes of
fundamentalism. To be evangelical, or conservative is not to be a
fundamentalist. What distinguishes a fundamentalist is militancy. George
Marsden, in his book, Fundamentalism in American Culture,
defines fundamentalism as "militant anti-modernism."
Fundamentalists believe that they must react. They must fight a
holy war against change. Those of their own community who do not support
this holy war are called apostate. Their opponents are described as
minions of Satan. Fourth, these militant fundamentalists usually select
a few features of their imagined perfect past and make them absolute.
This often is set forth as the necessity to believe a few precisely
worded doctrinal statements.
What is most painful to say is that we have a militant
fundamentalist group within the Presbyterian Church. The common
fundamentalist themes can be found in the attitudes of the Presbyterian
Lay Committee. It was founded 36 years ago to try to change the
Presbyterian Church into a body that would not deal with social issues
and that would interpret the Bible with a surface literalism.. Growing
on the soil of a denomination that is conservative and theologically
orthodox, the Lay Committee idealizes the era in the 1920s when a
fundamentalist party ruled the church. In that period, candidates for
ministry were forced to conform to five precisely worded doctrines
called the five essential and necessary articles. The Lay Committee has
3 doctrines to which everyone must adhere in their particular wording.
They want their statements to become the basis for hiring and firing
people in the church. They declared our 213th General
Assembly "apostate," unchristian.
Many other Moderators have had to struggle with issues
that the Layman has blown out of all proportion to reality.
Moderators have tried to bring about reconciliation with the Lay
Committee. General Assembly committees have held hearings and issued
reports indicating that the Layman is unwilling to work
constructively within the denominational structures. This year the Lay
Committee has gone further in their destructive course than ever before.
I went to Orlando, Florida, for the last day of a
three day meeting sponsored by the Coalition, an umbrella organization
encompassing about 15 conservative groups in the denomination. The last
morning session was to be an "open mike" at which anyone could
say anything they wanted to. Without announcement, suddenly, the
Chairman of The Lay Committee, Bob Howard, appeared on the platform and
gave a half-hour power-point presentation on a strategy for making war
on the denomination. "War" was his word, and he asserted that
it was appropriate. He outlined the strategy by which the Lay Committee
plans to take over the Presbyterian Church. First, Howard announced that
the Confessing Church Movement - a group of churches that have pledged
adherence to the 3 statements of the Layman's creed - is now
the agency of connectionalism in the denomination. Howard described the
Confessing Church Movement as a "shadow church." The Lay
Committee wants to radically downsize the denominational agencies. They
hope to take the vote away from retired persons like me, anyone who is
not an active pastor or elder. If they got control of the denomination
they would invite churches that do not agree with their version of
"biblical ordination standards" to leave the denomination with
their property. If these churches will not leave, the Lay Committee
would threaten them with being disciplined. Howard encouraged
congregations to withhold both per capita and mission funds and divert
them to causes more to their liking.
Just as we must be very careful not to stereotype all
Arabs, or all Muslims, as terrorists, so we must not characterize all
conservatives, or evangelicals, as militant fundamentalists. There is a
significant difference between evangelicals who want to change the
church in a more conservative direction, and fundamentalists who want to
tear down the church and refuse to work within it. I believe that most
evangelicals and members of the Confessing Church movement want to
affirm their faith and remain within the denomination. Why then align
themselves with a potentially schismatic group?
What does the Confessing Church Movement have to
offer? A hastily drawn up, rigidly worded, 3 point creed tied to a
political agenda. We have as a denomination, something far better: A Book
of Confessions, representing centuries of wisdom from our forbears
in the faith who have lived and died for the faith that they have
bequeathed to us. We have something more: A democratic process,
involving the whole church by which we prepare and chose the creeds by
which we will live. I had the privilege of serving on the Committee that
prepared A Brief Statement of Faith. A representative committee, chaired
by Jack Stotts, took six years developing a draft. Then 3 General
Assemblies and a special revision committee had a part in shaping it.
The whole church was given opportunity for input which the committees
took very seriously. The result is a creed for our time that was
approved by almost all of our presbyteries. Do we want to toss aside the
wisdom of the church, and a democratic process, for the dictatorship of
a special interest group with a self-serving political agenda?
People signing on to the Confessing Church Movement
say that Jesus Christ alone is Lord of all and the way of salvation. The
statement about Jesus Christ, "fully human, fully God," is
much richer in "A Brief Statement." Jesus "proclaimed the
reign of God," followed by those wonderful gospel verbs -
preaching, teaching, healing, eating with outcasts, forgiving sinners,
and calling all to repent and believe the gospel. "Jesus was
crucified, suffering the depths of human pain and giving his life for
the sins of the world. God raised this Jesus from the dead…delivering
us from death to life eternal." Contrast that gracious statement
with one whose primary purpose is to say that some people are excluded
from God's grace. Scripture says that "God our Savior…desires
everyone to be saved and come to the knowledge of the truth" (I
Tim. 2:4). The Theology and Worship paper, and the Assembly wisely say
that "we neither restrict the grace of God to those who profess
explicit faith in Christ nor assume that all people are saved regardless
of faith." We are not God and should not play God. Our task is to
introduce people to the gracious Jesus of the Bible and the Confessions
so that their lives will be transformed as they come into relationship
to God.
The second article of faith, proposed by the
Confessing Church Movement, is "That Holy Scripture is the triune
God's revealed Word, the Church's only infallible rule of faith and
life." That only tells part of the story. A Brief Statement draws
on the language of many confessions in our Book of Confessions
saying, "The same Spirit who inspired the prophets and apostles
rules our faith and life in Christ through Scripture, engages us through
the Word proclaimed."
I've been reading the Bible every day since I was a
small boy. Most of my study and writing during my adult life has been
regarding biblical and confessional interpretation. I even wrote a five
hundred printed page dissertation on the first chapter of the
Westminster Confession on Holy Scripture. I can tell you with complete
confidence that the real Bible is much deeper and richer and more
challenging than the superficial literalism that passes for believing in
Scripture in some quarters.
I try to read some of the Gospels every day along with
other Old and New Testament passages. I find no evidence that Jesus
spent his time leading a moral crusade to support the status quo in
society. I find no evidence that he was busy seeking out people who
should be excluded from the church because they were different from the
majority. The only people that Jesus continually was in conflict with
were the people who were determined to uphold the law, as their culture
defined the law. Jesus continually defied the norms of his culture. He
interpreted the Old Testament to accept and include those whom the
religious leaders rejected as unclean - Samaritans, women, tax
collectors, people with leprosy. The list goes on and on. That accepting
Jesus is the Jesus of the Bible. We need to read it, and preach it, and
share it with everyone that feels excluded by our self-righteous,
religious culture.
Ah, yes. The 3rd and final point in this
new abbreviated creed: "That God's people are called to holiness in
all aspects of life. This includes honoring the sanctity of marriage
between a man and a woman, the only relationship within which sexual
activity is appropriate." I care about holiness. I believe that
every person in this room does. If we didn't believe that being a
Christian made a difference in people's lives we wouldn't be here. You
know that line in A Brief Statement of Faith, "we strive to serve
Christ in our daily tasks and to live holy and joyful lives."
"Holy." That's my word. I suggested it late one hot
August afternoon and the Brief Statement committee gladly accepted it.
The church is called to holiness. It is not the private property of just
people who use it to exclude others as unholy.
I care a lot about marriage. I've been married to the same
wonderful woman for 44 years. We all ought to care deeply about
marriage. Marriage is in trouble in this country. In the last one
hundred years, the United States has gone from being the most marrying
society in the world to the one with the most divorces and unwed
mothers. The divorce rate has risen from 7 percent in the 1860s to 50
percent annually today. As recently as the 1960s, the rate of
out-of-wedlock births was 5 percent. Today the overall rate of
out-of-wedlock births is near 30%. Cohabiting, living together without
being married, rose from 430,000 couples in 1960 to 4.1 million couples
in 1997. We live in an era of family disruption that leads to talk of an
emerging culture of 'serial marriage' and 'nonmarriage.'
None of these alarming trends has been caused by
homosexuals who want to marry. None of these trends will be solved by
denying same-sex couples the right to legal and church sanction for
publicly committing to a life-long relationship. In a culture of
non-marriage it is very ironic that we are spending great amounts of
money and energy in trying to prevent people from marrying who want to
do so in a way that would contribute to the stability of society and the
enrichment of the church.
Why are the sides so far apart on matters of human
sexuality? We are still talking past one another. Everyone thinks that
we are debating matters of principle, but underneath all the arguments
from Scripture and tradition we are really differing on matters of fact.
A recent book, being touted as the definitive study of what the Bible
says on homosexuality, is actually not based on revelation, but on
natural law. The author declares that we don't need biblical revelation
because the Old Testament writers and Paul said what they did because
they could see that women and men were "anatomically complementary
sexual beings." So we are making assumptions based on our human
evaluation. Another prevailing assumption among those opposed to full
inclusion of homosexuals is that all persons are born heterosexual. To
be homosexual is to have had bad childhood experiences. But to behave as
a homosexual is to willfully, sinfully act against one's God-given
nature. The cure is to repent and to submit one's life to Jesus and thus
to be changed. Persons supporting full inclusion of gay and lesbian
people predominantly believe that affection for persons of one's own sex
is for some people a given of their nature. Many homosexual people are
deeply devout Christians who cannot and should not change to be
heterosexuals but are living their lives in a faithful committed
relationship to a partner just as heterosexuals are called to do. We are
not really arguing about the Bible or the Confessions, but about
prevailing assumptions in contemporary culture. How can we get past this
impasse?
Sharon told me that she had read that in the week
after September 11, in Houston, Texas, 400 couples that had applied for
divorce, withdrew their petitions and decided to try again. If that was
just to grin and bear it in a loveless marriage, that would not be a
good model. But, if those couples try to discover again the love that
brought them together in the first place, it holds great promise and
hope. That is our task as the church. We need to remember that it was
the love of Jesus Christ that brought us together in the first place. We
didn't choose each other because we agreed on every issue. God chose us
and made us a part of God's family, the body of Christ. Let us
acknowledge and rejoice in our common commitment to Jesus Christ and
find therein a basis for continued relationship.
You see, there is another, related, doctrine that the Layman's
creed doesn't mention. I believe in the Holy Catholic Church. That is a
doctrine we need to believe, and preach, and teach. There is a genuine
danger of schism if the Layman cannot achieve its objective of
tearing down the present church and putting its own fundamentalist
church in its place. Calvin wrote: "There could not be two or three
churches unless Christ be torn asunder." My favorite seminary
professor used to ask us, "If Christ is divided, who bleeds?"
I called my friend, Bill Pannell, one night from
Atlanta. Bill and I taught together at Fuller, where he was professor of
evangelism and preaching. His wife, Hazel, had had a back operation and
I wanted to see how she was doing. Bill came on the phone and said:
"Jack, people want to get back to normal. It is your job to tell
them what is normal in the church." What a good insight. Normal
doesn't mean the way we've always done it. A norm is a standard. I
always told my students that the norm in our class was A+. The average
was usually something less, but the norm was what we all had to work
toward.
What is the Church that we are called to be? John
Calvin had two marks of the church - where the word is truly preached
and the sacraments are rightly administered. I see that happening all
over the country in Presbyterian churches large and small. John Knox was
a kind of radical student of Calvin, who went back to Scotland and added
a third mark to the authentic church, "discipline." We would
call it spiritual nurture. It meant that during the week before
communion, the pastor and/or elders went to the homes of members of the
congregation to inquire about the health of their souls. If they were
deemed in spiritual health, they got a token, wood or metal, the size of
a nickel or quarter, that admitted them to communion. I see spiritual
nurture going on as well, in congregations across the country, where
pastoral work is being done to support people in their spiritual growth.
At the reunion in 1983 of the northern and southern
streams of Presbyterianism, we got a new Book of Order. It has
four new chapters at the beginning that give the theological
underpinnings of our governmental practices. It begins with Christ as
the head of the church, and gives the preliminary principles by which we
function. Second is a wonderful chapter on "The Church and Its
Confessions." Then, there is a third chapter on "The Church
and Its Mission." It contains what I regard as two further marks of
the church. The first mark of the authentic church is to be in mission
in the world. The second is to be a community of diversity. By including
women and men of all ages, races, conditions, and abilities the church
is "providing for inclusiveness as a visible sign of the new
humanity."
These marks of the church are what make the church
normal, up to standard: Preaching the Gospel; administering the
sacraments; spiritual nurture; mission in the world; and, being a
community of diversity. It is these last two: mission in the world, and
diversity that are hard to accept for some who are quite certain about
the first three marks. As contemporary Presbyterians we need to affirm all
of them to be true to what we have learned from Scripture under the
leading of the Holy Spirit. When Jesus prayed in John 17:20 that
"all may be one," it was not just an interesting option. The
purpose is evangelism, "that the world may believe."
I was at Columbia Seminary a few weeks ago. After an
hour and a half discussion with students and faculty in which we had
dealt with a wide range of problems in the church, their new president,
my friend Laura Mendenhall, made the most helpful comment. She said:
"I read through the Book of Acts last summer. They had problems
greater than ours. But the Holy Spirit was at work and created a church
that now is spread over the whole world."
That is what I need to remember. This is God's church.
The Holy Spirit is not done with us. Isaiah 43:19 depicts God as saying,
"I am about to do a new thing; now it springs forth, do you not
perceive it?" I want, this year, to be open to discern what God's
Spirit is doing in this great church .
Amen.
Jack Rogers