The 2002
General Assembly
A Special Report to Witherspoon Society Members
by
Gene TeSelle, Witherspoon Issues Analyst,
and
Doug King, Network News editor and WebWeaver
Our thanks to the Presbyterian News Service, whose reports have
supplemented, verified, or corrected our own notes.
For more detailed reports on our own site and
others, click here. Links to many
reports are included in the text that follows.
[7-1-02]
This was an Assembly whose docket was shaped largely
by the self-described "Confessing Church Movement" and its
allies. The end result, however, was a rejection of their agenda by wide
margins. The headlines on the web site of the Layman
indicate disappointment and anger: "Assembly requires no compliance
to constitution," "Assembly sanctions late-term
abortions," "Commissioners spurn Marriage Amendment,"
"Instead of missionaries, Assembly spends on causes."
Witherspoon as usual was active at the Assembly, with no fewer than four
special events, including a pre-Assembly theological
conversation, an orientation session for commissioners, the annual Witherspoon
luncheon, and an Awards Dinner and
annual meeting. The next Network News will
include these and other reports of meetings sponsored by the progressive
organizations. But we must mention a prayer for children, with which
Marian Wright Edelman ended two addresses; it
can be found on our web site.
Election of the Moderator
The three candidates for Moderator had agreed to work
and pray with each other; while their responses to questions from the
floor on Saturday night indicated their differences, they also
manifested a quest for unity (none of them, for example, championed the
"Confessing Church Movement"). All spoke effectively. But it
soon became clear that the Rev. Fahed Abu-Akel, 58, a
Palestinian-American pastor from Atlanta, was the man of the year. The
Assembly wanted to send a message in favor of a just peace in the Middle
East and in opposition to Palestinian and Israeli violence. Abu-Akel
received 42% on the first ballot and 57% on the second. Most of the
switch came from Tankersley voters; Laird Stuart's vote stayed almost
the same.
Abu-Akel named as Vice-Moderator his nominator, Ann
Beran Jones, commissioner from the Presbytery of Chicago and its current
moderator. A retired Christian educator, she has been active in
Presbyterian Women.
One of the first actions of the Assembly was to
promote dialogue and
understanding between Muslims and Christians, calling on
individuals, congregations and governing bodies to "interact with
those Muslims in their own localities who are interested in building
bridges of understanding and trust, doing so ecumenically whenever
possible." It also commended a document titled "Striving
Together in Dialogue: A Muslim-Christian Call for Reflection and
Action," written by Christians and Muslims together after
discussions organized by the World Council of Churches. Four PC(USA)
publications also were commended for study and reflection, although many
commissioners pointed out that they emphasize conversion rather than
dialogue.
Those traveling to the Middle East were urged to
consult with the Middle East Office of Worldwide Ministries and the
Middle East Council of Churches and to meet, when in Israel-Palestine,
with Palestinian Christians and Muslims, partner groups, Israeli peace
activists and other groups carrying out nonviolent witness, and (in
wording that was struggled with on the floor) groups representing the
positions of both the Israeli government and the Palestinian National
Authority and other sectors of Israeli and Palestinian opinion.
Confessions and Christology
The committee with this name dealt with some of the
hottest issues of the Assembly. Despite the intensity of debate, the
committee sent two unanimous recommendations to the Assembly, which were
then approved overwhelmingly on the floor. The hero of the Assembly (or
"she-ro," as Vicki Moss corrected us) was the committee
moderator, Professor Anna Case-Winters of McCormick Theological
Seminary, who insisted on plenty of time for informal discussion before
moving to parliamentary procedure.
Case-Winters put celebration of the Confession of 1967
first in her report to the Assembly, lifting up the continued need for
reconciliation in both the world and the church. A new
inclusive-language text of the Confession of 1967 is to be sent to all
congregations, presbyteries and seminaries, to help in their own
reflection on confessing today; an amendment on the floor affirmed the
need to send out the text and brief accompanying materials within
calendar year 2002.
As Chris Iosso said in committee testimony, C-67 still
speaks in "our language," but it needs to be made more
inclusive of all the people of God. The new inclusive language text of
C-67 builds upon the one done by Professor Freda Gardner and Rev.
Cynthia Jarvis in 1982; it has been revised by Rev. Jarvis and Professor
Daniel Migliore and the Theology and Worship Office's advisers. The
Office of Theology and Worship is also developing a lectionary-based
liturgical resource that draws on affirmations of faith from the
church's Book of Confessions (including C-67).
Case-Winters listed the surviving members of the
drafting and revising committees that prepared the Confession: Edward A.
Dowey, Jr. (its Chair), Janet Harbison Penfield, Gayraud S. Wilmore,
Calvin DeVries, Charles West, Louis Evans, Robert Lamont, Lewis Mudge,
and William Wiseman, who was present at the Assembly and was introduced
on the platform.
| Witherspoon member Chris Iosso
initiated a conference on the Confession of 1967 at Stony Point
early this year. Since then the Witherspoon Society has
sponsored three consultations on the Confession, with a study
booklet developed by Witherspoon coordinator Ann Euston.
"Mini-conferences" have been held in Palo Alto and
Davis, CA, and Eugene, OR; others could be held in your
presbytery or region. Conferences are also planned at Princeton
Seminary (November 11) and McCormick Seminary (February of
2003); others are under consideration at Columbia and Union
(Richmond). The Covenant Network will also be featuring C-67 at
its fall conference in Minneapolis, November 7-9.
Papers from the Stony Point conference and
other commissioned essays were included in a special book issue
of Church & Society (May-June
2002). The Hope and Challenge of Reconciliation
Today: Reflections on The Confession of 1967 After 35 Years,
a 224-page bargain, can be ordered for individual and group
study. Single copies are $2.50 (ten or more, $2 each) plus
shipping and handling (10% of order, $2 minimum, $20 maximum).
Contact PDS, 1-800-524-2612 or PresbyNet inbox "PDS
Orders." |
The other unanimous recommendation of the committee
was to adopt the brief theological statement "Hope in the Lord
Jesus Christ," prepared last fall by the Office of Theology and
Worship in the wake of the flap two years ago over Dirk Ficca's Socratic
question "What's the big deal about Jesus?" and discontent
with the statement crafted on the floor by last year's General Assembly.
Many overtures demanded one-liner declarations about Jesus as God, Lord,
and sole Savior. The committee preferred the longer, more nuanced
approach of the "Hope" document, as more in keeping with the
richness of our confessional heritage. Plenary discussion was brief,
with no statements in opposition, and the vote was an overwhelming 97%
in favor. (The paper and a study guide are available on the Theology and
Worship web site: www.pcusa.org/pcusa/cmd/cfl/christdoc.htm.)
Debate was more heated over the Pittsburgh overture
calling for an authoritative interpretation of the first ordination vow,
and the somewhat milder San Francisco overture asking the Assembly to
make its own paraphrase of the vow. The Advisory Committee on the
Constitution had advised against a binding interpretation, since its
effect would be to amend the constitution without a vote of the
presbyteries. These two measures were disapproved overwhelmingly in the
committee.
The Rev. Nancy Gillard, from Giddings-Lovejoy, first
talked about filing a minority report. In conversation with key members
of the majority she developed a new proposal. It acknowledged that many
in the church were awaiting a clear statement, then adapted a comment
from the Office of the General Assembly that the PC(USA) is
"neither confused nor hesitant" about its faith, and went on
to quote an entire paragraph from the "Hope" statement,
beginning with "Jesus Christ is the only Savior and Lord" and
ending "Grace, love and communion belong to God, and are not ours
to determine."
This motion satisfied the demands of the conservatives
without going beyond what had already been affirmed by the majority.
Then, as Ted Smith said, it was "sold upward" to the
conservative and progressive advocacy groups, and finally to
moderatorial candidates Jerry Tankersley and Laird Stuart; both spoke in
favor of it on the floor, helping it gain the approval of 94% of the
commissioners.
Budget Rhetoric
Although General Assemblies have met annually since
1789, this one voted by a 2-to-1 margin to convene an Assembly every
other year, with the first gap coming in 2005. The rhetoric of
stewardship (of time, money, and energy) made this action inevitable.
(The Assembly now costs $5 million, most of which is paid out of per
capita assessments.) There was plenty of grieving, and the Assembly
adopted an amendment by Kitty Borchert to enlarge the evaluating process
and address possible conflicts with the Reformed principle of
representative government.
The Assembly is a significant educational event for
ministers and elders, manifesting the richness and breadth of the PC(USA).
We can expect more "off-year" gatherings; but representation
of minorities, women, and youth may be endangered if presbyteries do not
subsidize their travel. We can also expect advocacy groups, especially
several well-financed groups on the right, to promote their own
gatherings. And it has already become clear that conservatives will
exploit the change, claiming that out-of-control bureaucrats and elected
officials are making even more decisions without review by the Assembly.
The vote unleashed further rhetoric about money. If
$4.5 million per Assembly is saved, some wanted this to be transferred
to "mission" (which is not funded out of per capita, however).
A commissioner from San Joaquin moved to direct the General Assembly
Council to restore 34 slots for missionaries by making further cuts in
other divisions. Conservative groups had already tried unsuccessfully to
defund the Washington Office and the Advisory Committee on Social
Witness Policy in order to restore these positions. The more reasonable
answer given by the Assembly was to promote the Mission Initiative, a
five-year $40 million campaign for new church development,
redevelopment, racial ethnic churches, and 45 international positions,
with the proviso that this be "over and above" the existing
commitment to missions. Once again the rhetoric of "mission"
and "evangelism" was used to trump concerns about social
justice, where a number of staff positions have been cut in recent
years. John Detterick, who has presided over this process, was reelected
to another term by acclamation.
The Presbytery of San Joaquin had sent an overture
asking the Assembly to set aside an authoritative interpretation that
requires presbyteries to pay the per capita not paid by a session. The
Committee and the Assembly bent over backwards to say that some
congregations "struggle financially to pay per capita" and
urge presbyteries to "work pastorally with those sessions who
choose to withhold their per capita." This does not negate the
facts that San Joaquin as a presbytery has been the source of repeated
attacks on other Presbyterians and that its congregations have engaged
in budget boycotts.
| In light of budget boycotts and
hard times for many programs, the Witherspoon Society has
started an Up Your Giving
campaign (buttons saying "Up Your$" sold well at
the Assembly). We challenge every congregation to increase its
giving by $1 per member and every member to increase giving by
$100. Options for extra commitment giving are the Washington
Office, Women's Ministries, the Peacemaking and Hunger Programs,
Presbyterian Disaster Assistance, National Network of
Presbyterian College Women, and Racial Ethnic Ministries. |
In other actions, the commissioners voted to have the General Assembly
elect members of its Nominating Committee, after nomination by the
Moderator (currently the Moderator appoints them).
The Assembly, fed up with stonewalling by the Presbyterian Lay Committee
and other groups, approved a commissioners' resolution requiring
"affinity groups" to submit a copy of their latest 990 form
for public posting or lose rights in the exhibition hall.
The Assembly also turned back another attack upon PHEWA. A
commissioners' resolution tried to de-fund it by making it one more
"affinity group" and pretending that it follows its own
agenda, when it has been a General Assembly entity since 1956 and
follows the mandates of the General Assembly.
Polity Shenanigans
While the "ordination question" was not up
for discussion, it was present in a number of ways.
Shenango Presbytery submitted an overture urging the
General Assembly to intervene in a case in Northern New England, filed
by the Londonderry session against the session of Christ Church in
Burlington, VT, which had issued a statement of dissent from G-6.0106b,
then "set it aside" early in June.
The General Assembly, following the advice of the
Polity Committee, disapproved the overture, for several good reasons.
(1) It was out of order, since a legislative body was interfering in a
judicial matter, when the Rules of Discipline spell out clearly the
remedial actions that are to be taken. (2) It was moot, since the
session had "set aside" its action and the presbytery had
declared the matter resolved. (3) All commissioners could envisage ways
future Assemblies might interfere in the life of their own sessions or
presbyteries.
Six committee members filed a softened minority
report. It claimed to be "pastoral," "commending"
the presbytery for working with the session. But the floor speeches of
its supporters had the same judgmental tone as the Shenango overture. A
YAD said it was like counting to three when a child misbehaves, and a
commissioner asserted that the presbytery needed "help" in
dealing with a congregation that was in "active disobedience."
The Rev. David Van Dyke of Columbus said that the
motion was "not pastoral in any way." Carl Hilton-Van Osdall
of Northern New England said that any "commendation" would be
perceived as having the same non-conciliatory tone as the original
overture. The Rev. Julie Adkins of Grace Presbytery suggested that the
proposed action was as incongruous as "asking the Supreme Court to
elect the President of the United States."
The Assembly also disapproved a series of
"super-majority" overtures that would have made it more
difficult to amend the Book of Order (and specifically to remove
G-6.0106b) by requiring two-thirds votes by the General Assembly and/or
the presbyteries. It was pointed out that the rule, if adopted, could
call into question any features of the Book of Order that had passed by
less than two thirds, including G-6.0106b.
An overture asking for a study of costs and consequences
of litigation related to G-6.0106b was disapproved, but with an
expression of concern about the "pain and financial hardship"
of litigation and a call to "strive unceasingly to be reconciled to
each other" in the spirit of D-1.0103.
And in answer to overtures calling either for a period
of grace, during which the Assembly would "implore all" to
refrain from judicial or legislative action, or for a five-year
moratorium on legislative actions, the Assembly noted that one Assembly
cannot bind the actions of another and that no Assembly has authority
over judicial process. Instead it called for a season of prayer and
encouraged dialogue among those who disagree. After the vote, the Rev.
Steven Van Kuiken of Cincinnati still asked for a period of grace from
judicial and legislative action. "Please let us send a message of
grace," he said. "I find the call to prayer to be fine but
woefully inadequate."
Dealing with a proposal that was sidelined last year,
the Assembly voted to reaffirm several positions taken by the 1978
Assembly concerning gay/lesbian rights in civil law.
Finally, the Assembly disapproved a commissioners'
resolution to support the Federal Marriage Amendment. It was presented
as being compatible with domestic partner legislation, but it would
enshrine in the Constitution a definition of marriage as "the union
of a man and a woman" and would forbid any construal of the
Constitution to confer marital status on "unmarried couples or
groups," including common law marriages as well as same-sex unions.
Abortion Policy
The General Assembly approved a statement on late-term
abortions that includes a list of situations in which such abortions
might be permissible. The statement is not a new policy but a
compilation of prior Assembly policy statements, the most extensive of
which came in 1992. It is the product of two years of work by the
Advisory Committee on Litigation and the Advisory Committee on Social
Witness Policy (ACSWP).
The central statement is this: "The ending of a
pregnancy after the point of fetal viability is a matter of grave moral
concern to us all, and may be undertaken only in the rarest of
circumstances and after prayer and/or pastoral care and when necessary
to save the life of the woman, to preserve the woman's health in
circumstances of a serious risk to the woman's health, to avoid fetal
suffering as a result of untreatable, life-threatening medical
anomalies, or in cases of incest or rape." The Assembly voted down
an amendment to delete "only" on the grounds that it binds
conscience and choice. The position of the committee was that this is a medical
decision, not to be precluded with an absolute prohibition (examples
included the medical condition of the fetus or the woman and the
availability of medical care).
The Sexuality Curriculum
After long debate the Assembly turned back an effort
to force Congregational Ministries to drop the
"God's Gift of Sexuality" curriculum. This would require the
destruction of inventory worth $114,000. The curriculum has been widely
sought by libraries and non-profit organizations as well as churches,
though sales dropped during the last two years because it was not
advertised.
The Assembly voted 375-136 to grant a two-year
deferment to produce a "library of resources" to supplement
the current curriculum, on the understanding that a "review and
revision" process ordered by the Assemblies of 1998 and 1999 will
continue. Many commissioners defended the sexuality curriculum and
expressed their appreciation for it, noting that it has a number of
components and is used in cooperation with parents.
New Dispensation for Educators
Ending several years of debate, the committee and then
the whole Assembly approved most of the report of a task force favoring
the ordination of Christian educators. A number of proposed amendments
to the Book of Order will be sent to the presbyteries for ratification
in the coming year.
Candidates who meet certain standards (including
academic degrees and demonstration of teaching skills) could be ordained
as ministers of Word and Sacrament with a concentration in Christian
education. At the option of presbyteries, candidates could present a
lesson plan in lieu of a sermon in the examination process. A
"grandparent" provision would allow a time period (through
2007) during which a presbytery, by a three-fourths vote, might waive
education and examination requirements to clear the way for the
ordination of Certified Christian Educators "when a strategy for
mission requires it." CCEs ordained under such waivers would be
eligible to serve as associate pastors in their congregations.
The Assembly approved a recommendation to refer the
troublesome matter of major revisions to Chapter XIV of the Book of
Order to the Office of the General Assembly for resubmission to the 2006
Assembly, following "broad-based conversations" with
presbyteries and others regarding the role of the constitution in the
life of the PC(USA).
International Issues
The Committee on Peacemaking and Global Issues worked
into Tuesday night, rewriting a paper on global security and arms
control that will be distributed by the Peacemaking Program as a study
guide. The Assembly also voted to authorize a study on violence and
terrorism, examining the relationship between religion and violence as
well as asking how U.S. military, political and economic actions may
contribute to global problems.
By a two-vote margin that reflected a close and
confused vote in committee, the Assembly endorsed creation of a United
States Department of Peace. Legislation has been introduced in the House
of Representatives to create such a department, and Moderator Fahed Abu-Akel
had been slated to be overture advocate in presenting this proposal from
the Presbytery of Atlanta.
Other actions include a "Plan of Christian
Compassion to Ameliorate the HIV/AIDS Crisis in Africa,"
"Guiding Principles for Decisions Concerning Religious Freedom
around the World," and a number of calls upon U.S. officials: to
lift economic sanctions against Iraq, to release funds approved by the
Congress for the United Nations Population Fund, to support the new
nation of East Timor, and to sign the Ottawa Convention banning
antipersonnel land mines.
National Issues
An important paper on restorative justice, prepared by
the Advisory Committee on Social Witness Policy, was approved. There was
also a resolution to clean up power-plant pollution, enforce clean-air
laws, and end the "grandfather" loophole that exempts older,
coal-fired plants.
The complex issue of "takings," which had
been confused by last year's sympathy vote for ranchers in the Klamath
Basin, was referred to the Advisory Committee on Social Witness Policy
and the Advisory Committee on Litigation. This will be a tough one,
since the troubles of local congregations with zoning and historic
preservation have led to claims that these are "takings"
deserving compensation under the Fifth Amendment. The Bible has a few
things to say about this kind of marketizing of the common good.
(Bob Stivers of Presbyterians for Restoring Creation has provided a good
summary and commentary on the Assembly's actions
on environmental issues.)
Responding to an effort in Ohio to force the state
Board of Education to require the teaching of "intelligent
design" along with evolution in public schools, the Assembly issued
a more general statement, affirming that "there is no contradiction
between an evolutionary theory of human origins and the doctrine of God
as Creator" and calling on Presbyterian scientists and educators to
help Presbyterians and the public "understand what constitutes
reliable knowledge." The Office of Theology and Worship is
currently developing study materials on "the relationship of the
finding of the sciences to the affirmation of God as creator of the
universe."
In response to an overture from Tampa
Bay, the
Assembly voted to support a national boycott of Taco Bell restaurants,
focusing attention on working and living conditions among the Immokalee
workers (pronounced Im-MOCK-a-lee) who pick tomatoes used in Taco Bell
products. There were the expected doubts from the floor: What about
other tomato companies? (The others, unlike Taco Bell, use
machine-picked tomatoes.) Wouldn't the workers be hurt? (Several of them
appeared at the Assembly to ask for the boycott.)
The Assembly also approved "We Are What We
Eat," a document produced in response to the farm crisis and its
impact on farmers and ranchers. It calls for prayer for farmers around
the world, lawmakers, directors and employees of trans-national
corporations in the food industry, and for "each of us as we make
choices related to the food we produce, process and consume." Since
around 30% of the 11,000 PC(USA)
congregations are located in rural areas, the
document is seen as a step toward revitalization of rural congregations.
~~~~~~~~
This Assembly reaffirmed, not only in words but in
deeds, the Confession of 1967, which tells us in no uncertain
terms, "To be reconciled to God is to be sent into the world as
God's reconciling community" (C-9.31). In this hopeful situation we
ask Witherspooners to take the lead in their congregations and
presbyteries, urging them not only to read
C-67 but to study it with the aid of the
Witherspoon resource guide and the much fuller discussion in the new
issue of Church & Society. You might also
think about organizing a conference in your presbytery.
For more information and copies of the resource
guide to go with Church & Society, contact Witherspoon
Program Coordinator Ann Euston.
E-mail: sustain@trailnet.com
Phone: (505) 623-1094.
| Thanks to Dr.
Jack Marcum, Jr., Associate for Survey Research in the
Research Services office of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.),
for this kind correction of our numbers. |