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by
Ed Vitagliano | AFA Journal News Editor
Whether or not the average member in the pew knows it, many leaders
within some of the nations oldest Protestant denominations
are steering their churches into schism.
Especially on the contentious issue of homosexuality but
also on the subject of abortion denominations like the United
Methodist Church (UMC), Episcopal Church USA (ECUSA), and the Presbyterian
Church USA (PCUSA) have lurched leftward in a turn that is as breathtakingly
swift as it is radical. This deviation threatens to further the
rupture between Bible-believing members and apostate leaders.
This was made tragically evident on April 25, when official elements
of the UMC, ECUSA and PCUSA co-sponsored a Washington, D.C., rally
in favor of abortion.
Euphemistically named the "March for Womens Lives,"
the rally was "a public demonstration of historic size in support
of reproductive freedom and justice for all women," according
to the events Web site. Participating groups were there, it
said, "to uphold the fundamental right of women to control
their lives through safe and legal abortion." The site also
called the recent federal ban on partial-birth abortion a "travesty."
The main organizers included the usual extreme left suspects: the
National Organization for Women, Planned Parenthood, NARAL Pro-Choice
America and the American Civil Liberties Union.
Astonishingly, however, delegates from the UMCs General Board
of Church and Society (GBCS) and the United Methodist Womens
Division participated in the event. Both groups co-sponsored the
march, and 50 to 100 delegates tramped with other pro-abortionists
under the banner of the Womens Division. According to the
General Board of Global Ministries Web site, UMC money was donated
to help with the overall expenses of the event.
The events Web site also listed ECUSA and PCUSA as co-sponsors.
The PCUSA site boasted about its participation in the rally: "Be
part of history and join the march to save freedom of choice and
womens lives."
AFA Chairman Don Wildmon, a UMC minister, said mainline Protestant
support for the slaughter of millions of unborn children is a tragedy
and an outrage. "Members of these denominations ought to carefully
consider where they are sending their money. Some of it went to
support this pro-abortion death-fest," he said.
Homosexuality: the faultline
While the issue of abortion is not likely to split the mainline
Protestant denominations, the issue of homosexuality appears to
be the developing faultline that may very well lead to schism.
In March, conservative United Methodists were furious when a jury
of UMC ministers refused to convict and discipline a lesbian minister
for declaring that she was "living in a partnered, covenanted,
homosexual relationship." UMC law clearly states: "Since
the practice of homosexuality is incompatible with Christian teaching,
self-avowed practicing homosexuals are not to be accepted as candidates,
ordained as ministers, or appointed to serve" in the UMC.
The denomination within liberal Protestantism that appeared to have
ignited the open rebellion over homosexuality, the ECUSA, is still
feeling the repercussions of the actions it took last summer. At
its 2003 General Convention, Episcopal bishops voted to accept as
bishop of New Hampshire a practicing homosexual, Gene Robinson.
Despite assurances to the contrary from liberals who supported Robinson,
conservatives have not accepted the decision of the bishopric. Within
the ECUSA, the 2.3-million-member American branch of the worldwide
Anglican Communion, conservatives forged a new alliance last November
under the leadership of the American Anglican Council (AAC). Called
the Network of Anglican Communion Dioceses and Parishes, the conservative
Episcopal group hopes to realign itself with bishops who are orthodox.
In April, for example, five Episcopal congregations in Ohio told
Bishop-elect Mark Hollingsworth Jr. that he is not welcome in their
churches, according to The Plain Dealer, a Cleveland newspaper.
Hollingsworth supported the consecration of Robinson.
Instead, the congregations are looking to a conservative bishop
assigned by the Network, although Hollingsworth may block such a
move.
According to the AAC, these same five Episcopal congregations demonstrated
their independent-mindedness in March when they bypassed their ECUSA
bishop for a confirmation service, and instead brought in retired,
but conservative, bishops.
In an official statement, the ECUSAs House of Bishops said
they "repudiate and deplore the unilateral actions" of
the conservative bishops.
Ironically, the statement also said the actions of the conservative
bishops were an act of "defiance" and "a willful
violation of our Constitution and Canons," a declaration that
drew a derisive reply from the five retired bishops.
"The action of the 2003 General Convention, in repudiating
4,000 years of biblical teaching regarding sexuality and the action
of the House of Bishops in repudiating their consecration vows regarding
Holy Scripture, were acts of defiance" said their own statement.
In Hackensack, New Jersey, another Episcopal church asked for a
conservative bishop to oversee its spiritual life. In a letter from
the leadership of St. Anthony of Padua Episcopal Church to liberal
Bishop John Croneberger in Newark, the reason cited for the request
was ECUSAs acceptance of homosexuality.
"Many homosexual clergy are living with their same sex partners
on parish property. Blessing of same sex partners has been common
for many years," the letter said. "This trend culminated
in your consent to the elections of V. Gene Robinson as ecclesiastical
authority in the Diocese of New Hampshire."
Voting with their pocketbooks
Donations to ECUSA tumbled in the aftermath of the General Convention.
The denominations executive council was told that revenues
were down more than $3 million following the controversy
representing 6% of the ECUSAs expected revenue this year,
according to Citizenlink.
The AAC also said dioceses in Missouri, Colorado, Tennessee, North
Carolina, New York and Virginia have reported a 10% to 30% drop
in giving since last summer.
"While spokesmen for ECUSA claim the shortfall is a result
of economic conditions, churches and dioceses across the nation
report they are experiencing lowered giving and/or redirecting funds
as a direct response to decisions at General Conference," said
a press release from AAC.
AAC spokesman Bruce Mason said last year his group accurately predicted
that many dioceses would cut back on their pledges to the national
church if Robinson was approved. He believes the financial impact
will be much greater than the Episcopal Church is reporting right
now.
He said some ECUSA members dont want their money being used
"to support a structure that they believe is no longer upholding
the historic teachings of the Christian Church and of the Bible."
While some conservatives in the U.S. are refusing to give to the
ECUSA, some conservatives outside the U.S. are refusing to take.
In April the leaders of the Council of Anglican Provinces in Africa
(CAPA) declared that they would no longer accept donations from
ECUSA churches or dioceses.
"We do not want any money from the Episcopal Church of the
United States," the African bishops said in a statement. "This
is not rhetoric. We will not, on the altar of money, mortgage our
conscience, mortgage our faith, mortgage our salvation."
CAPA represents a spreading sentiment within the worldwide Anglican
community of some 77 million adherents. Especially among the leaders
in nations throughout Africa, Asia and Latin America who
oversee 50 million Anglicans a number of bishops have formally
cut ties with the U.S. church, while many have publicly denounced
the ECUSAs consecration of Robinson.
Also in April, CAPA requested that the worldwide Anglican leadership
"call ECUSA to repentance giving it a three-month period to
show signs of such repentance. Failing that, discipline should be
applied."
Trouble brewing in ELCA
As if encouraged by fellow radicals in the ECUSA, some segments
of the Evangelical Lutheran Church of America (ELCA), the fifth-largest
Protestant denomination in the U.S., are also turning their back
on orthodoxy.
Three ELCA congregations two in California and one in Minnesota
thumbed their noses at church law and appointed homosexual
pastors. ELCA law allows homosexual men and women to serve as ministers
if they remain celibate, but the pastors appointed in April are
sexually active, according to Gay.com, an Internet news site that
caters to the homosexual community.
The defiance by the three congregations is not really surprising,
since ELCA has been drifting steadily leftward for some time, even
while conservatives fight to hold the line. The Los Angeles Times
noted that 10 years ago ELCA leadership expelled two churches in
San Francisco after they appointed noncelibate homosexual pastors.
However, subsequent defiance by more than a dozen ELCA churches
has been ignored.
The rebellion within ELCA is being applauded by those who support
the normalization of homosexuality within Christianity. The Rev.
Paul Egertson, a former ELCA bishop who participated in one of the
recent "gay" minister appointment services in California,
told the Los Angeles Times that such actions eventually would carry
the day for activists.
"These are all the breaks in a very fragile dam that looks
awfully solid but actually, in my view, is going to just either
be taken down by deliberate courageous action by church bodies,"
he said, "or its going to leak and leak and leak until
its more a sieve than a dam and finally go away."
The tragedy is that the sound of dams breaking can be heard in a
number of other denominations as well.
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