A House Divided: Ways Forward for North American Anglicans
By William Glass and Justin Welby
()
About this ebook
Justin Welby
The Most Reverend Justin Welby is the present Archbishop of Canterbury and thus senior Bishop of the Anglican Communion throughout the world. He was formerly Bishop of Durham. He spent a number of years working full-time on reconciliation, especially in Sub-Saharan Africa. He is an honorary fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge.
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A House Divided - Isaac Arten
A House Divided?
Ways Forward for North American Anglicans
Isaac Arten and William Glass, editors
wipfstocklogo.jpgA House Divided?
Ways Forward for North American Anglicans
Copyright © 2015 Wipf and Stock Publishers. All rights reserved. Except for brief quotations in critical publications or reviews, no part of this book may be reproduced in any manner without prior written permission from the publisher. Write: Permissions, Wipf and Stock Publishers, 199 W. 8th Ave., Suite 3, Eugene, OR 97401.
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EISBN 13: 978-1-4982-2448-2
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The Scripture quotations contained herein are from the New Revised Standard Version Bible, copyright © 1989, by the Division of Christian Education of the National Council of the Churches of Christ in the U.S.A., and are used by permission. All rights reserved.
Table of Contents
Title Page
Contributors
Preface
1. Introduction by Isaac Arten and Nicholas Lash
2. Homily on 1 Corinthians 1:10–18 by David Marshall
3. Life among the Prayer Book–Minded by Timothy E. Kimbrough
4. A Gospel Unity by John Yates III
5. A Common Heritage and a Common Vocation by John Bauer Schmidt
6. A Unity Greater than Doctrine by Terrell Glenn
7. The Tragedy of Communion by Dorsey W. M. McConnell
8. Responses
Sacramental Relationality by Bryan Biba
Gathered at the Foot of the Cross by Molly McGee Short
A Naïve Hope by David Wantland
Toward a Shared Narrative by Michelle Wolfe Howard
9. Homily on Matthew 5:13–20 by David Marshall
10. Afterword by William Glass and Simone Weil
Bibliography
Contributors
Isaac Arten, Master of Divinity 2015, Duke Divinity School
The Right Reverend Doctor John Bauerschmidt, Bishop of the Diocese of Tennessee
Bryan Biba, Master of Divinity 2015, Duke Divinity School
William Glass, Master of Divinity 2014, Duke Divinity School
The Right Reverend Terrell Glenn, Missionary Bishop of the Western Gulf Coast (ACNA)
Michelle Wolfe Howard, Master of Divinity 2014, Duke Divinity School
The Very Reverend Timothy E. Kimbrough, Dean of Christ Church Cathedral, Nashville, Tennessee
The Reverend Doctor David Marshall, Director of the Anglican Episcopal House of Studies at Duke Divinity School
The Right Reverend Doctor Dorsey W. M. McConnell, Bishop of the Diocese of Pittsburgh
Molly McGee Short, Master of Divinity 2014, Duke Divinity School
David Wantland, Master of Divinity 2015, Duke Divinity School
The Most Reverend Justin Welby, Archbishop of Canterbury
The Reverend Doctor John Yates, III, Rector of Holy Trinity Anglican Church (ACNA), Raleigh, North Carolina
Preface
Long before I became Archbishop of Canterbury, one of the most important lessons I learned about the Christian life is that it is spiritually unhealthy (and ultimately boring, even depressing) only ever to hang out with those whose views are like my own.
Of course, in the Church as elsewhere we will sometimes want to meet with those with whom we share a particular vision, to plan together, support, and encourage one another. Such forms of gathering, whether informal and ad hoc, or developing into organized movements within the Church, are inevitable and often necessary if we are to harness commitment and energy towards fruitful new projects of service and witness.
But for Christians it can never be enough to meet only with the like-minded. From the earliest days of the Church, we have been taught that our unity in Christ transcends both blood groups and friendship groups.
So although I enjoy being with those of similar outlook to my own, I have increasingly found it to be a vital spiritual discipline as well as a source of great growth and joy to be stretched beyond my comfort zone in the Church. I have gained far more in my own walk with Jesus Christ through being willing to meet with Christians whose traditions and convictions differed from mine—seeking to be as transparent with them as with my closest friends—as from anything else.
Since becoming Archbishop of Canterbury I have had the huge privilege of visiting every province of the Anglican Communion and spending unhurried time in conversation with all its Primates. I have been thrilled and humbled by what I have learned of the range of ways, often in the most difficult of circumstances, that Anglican Christians are living out their faith in witness to Christ and in service of a world in need. But it has also become absolutely clear to me that we are now at a time in the life of the Communion when, more than ever before, we all need to grow in the spiritual discipline of learning to handle difference within our unity in Christ. We cannot all travel the world: but we can all choose that journey, because it starts close to home.
Lest that sound like a limp platitude, I shall be specific. The future of the Communion depends on the willingness of Anglicans across our cultural, political, and especially theological divides to spend time together, praying to God, and understanding each other better. Not to paper over differences, but despite them and even through them to set ourselves to discern the presence and work of Christ in each other. That is not something that can happen over cyberspace; indeed I would suggest the global village of instant cross-continental communication undermines genuine fellowship in this respect. I am talking about real-time encounter, which is probably costly, often confusing, but necessarily face-to-face, even eye-to-eye. Our God is incarnational: he came to us in the flesh.
I am painfully conscious that this is not easy. In North American Anglicanism in particular, there are many faithful Christian leaders, on both sides of the current divides, who have been deeply hurt by all that has happened there over recent years. I understand why the prospect of conversation between Episcopalians and other Anglicans can seem foolish or futile. Yet, I pray, the divisions must not become decisive and defining. In light of our Lord’s prayer for the unity of all who believe in him, we cannot give up on the task of seeking to live into the reconciliation which he brings. That Jesus voices the prayer in John 17 helpfully acknowledges that the reality is not easy. Yet the choice is not ours to decline. Reconciliation is not an optional extra to the gospel, it is the gospel. The world is crying out to be transformed by the gospel, by the self-giving love of Christ. If we could truly demonstrate that gospel in the way we live it together—where self-giving stretches even across the pain of heart-felt differences—then there might be a chance that the world would get
the gospel we proclaim.
The words of Abraham Lincoln in his first inaugural address are as relevant to the Church today as to the nation in 1861. We cannot remove our respective sections from each other nor build an impassable wall between them. A husband and wife may be divorced and go out of the presence and beyond the reach of each other, but the different parts of our country cannot do this. They cannot but remain face to face, and intercourse, either amicable or hostile, must continue between them.
So I have been deeply encouraged by what I have learned of the work of the Anglican Episcopal House of Studies at Duke Divinity School, as reflected in this series of amicable and constructive conversations. The contributors to this volume are bold in their willingness to enter difficult, controversial territory, and yet also realistic about the challenges that lie ahead. Pain and perplexity are acknowledged frankly, and there are no naïve proposals for quick-fix solutions. If there is a way forward, it surely arises from the recognition in these pages that Christ is present among those with whom we disagree and from whom we may be formally separated. Such a realization is humbling but hope-giving: it leaves us with no choice but to honor Christ wherever he is recognized and to find ways of connecting across the barriers that have arisen. I commend especially the suggestions made about ways to do this. I pray that all who claim to be Anglicans or Episcopalians across our various churches will reach out to each other face-to-face: at the very least, to talk and pray, and together to find ways to serve the world in Christ’s name. This has been aptly named a roots down, walls down
approach to discipleship.
That such resources should emerge from a collective of bright young students who are eager to change the world—and the Church—beginning with themselves comes as no surprise. That these students will be tomorrow’s spiritual leaders . . . now that is news, and cause for rejoicing!
Justin Welby, Archbishop of Canterbury
Feast of St. Cuthbert, bishop and missionary
March 20, 2015
1
Introduction
A Year of Fierce Conversations
—Isaac Arten
The duty of attempting accurately and generously to understand and represent the words and deeds of those from whom we differ has its roots in the doctrine of God’s Trinity. The appropriate character of Christian disagreement is a strictly theological topic, and by no means merely a question of church order or Christian ethics. As such, it is, at present, dangerously neglected.
¹
—Nicholas Lash
Nicholas Lash’s sobering assessment of the state of Christian practices of disagreement seems nowhere better reflected than in the anathemas and statements of impaired relationship thrown back and forth by members of the Anglican Communion over the past several decades. As various Anglican bodies have attempted to articulate a faithful and compassionate treatment of human sexuality and identify fit persons
² for the ministries of the priesthood and the episcopate, these pressing and visible issues intersect with broader and older matters involving principles of scriptural interpretation, sacramental theology, and ecclesial authority. In the resulting melee, marked by lawsuits, congregational splits, and a general obscuring of the Church’s ability to restore all people to unity with God and each other in Christ,
³ the ability of any Anglican group to speak accurately and generously
of any other often seems to be the first casualty.
In the midst of this contention, the Anglican Episcopal House of Studies (AEHS) at Duke Divinity School exists, in Bishop Dorsey McConnell’s words, as a happy anomaly.
During the two or three years they spend working toward their degrees, members of AEHS from The Episcopal Church (TEC), the Anglican Church in North America (ACNA), and the Province de l’Eglise Anglicane au Rwanda en USA (PEAR-USA), and other groups worship, study, serve, and share meals together as members of a single organization. These interactions are built into the design of the House and its program of Anglican Spiritual Formation: for example, as AEHS’s directors organize students into weekly listening groups
(small gatherings designed to provide support and accountability and enable continuing vocational discernment), they intentionally combine students affiliated with the various Anglican bodies represented in the House, so that the discussion and discernment that takes place in these groups will include diverse perspectives. The efforts to ensure that Episcopal and other Anglican students encounter and learn from each other while working toward their Master of Divinity degrees form an important part of the public identity of the House as well. Due in part to the House’s stated commitment to maintaining conversation and communion [among the] different Anglican institutional affiliations now represented among its students,
⁴ and the expressions of that commitment in House worship, coursework, and social gatherings, incoming students expect opportunities to share time and space across the boundaries of specific Anglican bodies, and current students appreciate the connections they have made because of them.
Three major factors contribute to the striking collegiality among House members. First, AEHS is located in the broader ecumenical context of Duke Divinity School (DDS), a United Methodist seminary. Since Episcopalians and other Anglicans are themselves guests among the Methodists and Baptists who make up the majority of DDS’s student body, no Anglican group is able to claim a dominant position over the others. Since the House was established in 2006, when multiple Anglican