Presiding Bishop Frank Griswold responds to Ohio Confimations
Irregular confirmations in Ohio spark stern response from bishops
By Jan Nunley
ENS 031504-1
[ENS] Presiding Bishop Frank Griswold, Ohio Bishop J. Clark Grew II, and Ohio
Bishop-elect Mark Hollingsworth Jr. responded sternly to five retired Episcopal
bishops and a diocesan bishop from Brazil who confirmed 110 individuals at a
service held March 14 in an Orthodox church in Akron, Ohio, without the permission
of the local diocesan bishop.
Bishop William Wantland, retired Bishop of Eau Claire, was the celebrant at
the confirmation Eucharist, held at resentation of Our Lord Orthodox Church
in Akron. Bishop C. FitzSimons Allison, retired Bishop of South
Carolina, preached, and Bishop Robinson Cavalcanti of Northern Brazil was a
special guest whose presence was described in a press release issued by the
American Anglican Council (AAC) as ³illustrating international support
for
the measures.² Also participating in the confirmations were Bishop Maurice
Benitez, retired Bishop of Texas; Bishop William Cox, retired assistant bishop
of Oklahoma; and Bishop Alex Dickson, retired Bishop of West Tennessee.
The six congregations involved were Church of the Holy Spirit, Akron; St. Anne¹s
in the Field, Madison; St. Stephen¹s, East Liverpool; St. Barnabas, Bay
Village; St. Luke¹s, Akron; and a non-ECUSA congregation, Hudson Anglican
Fellowship, Hudson, whose rector serves on the staff of St. Luke¹s.
In a statement released March 15, Griswold declared that the bishops ³have
arrogated to themselves the right to perform episcopal and sacramental acts
without the permission of the diocesan bishop. The claim that their
action was pastoral and in accordance with a mandate from the Archbishop of
Canterbury and the Primates of the Anglican Communion is contradicted²
by statements from the Primates that, he said, clearly indicated that
provisions for episcopal oversight of dissenting minorities are ³a matter
to be resolved by the province.²
The canons of the Episcopal Church, as well as those of the councils of the
undivided Christian Church--beginning with Nicaea in 325 A.D.--specify that
no priest or bishop may perform sacramental acts in another diocese
without prior permission of that diocese¹s ecclesiastical authority.
Boundaries crossed
In January 2000, Allison and Dickson were part of a group that consecrated two
American priests, John H. Rodgers and Charles H. Murphy, as bishops for what
became the Anglican Mission in America (AMiA), a breakaway
Anglican group operating under the auspices of the Provinces of South East Asia
and Rwanda. In June 2001, they also participated in the irregular consecration
of four additional bishops for the AMiA. Both actions were denounced by then-Archbishop
of Canterbury George Carey as divisive.
Benitez told the Ohio congregation that he and the other bishops were present
³in direct response to the Archbishop of Canterbury, and the rest of the
Primates of the Anglican Communion² in their call for episcopal oversight
for dissenting minorities and that their participation represented ³emergency
measures² for the Ohio congregations.
³Our active bishops are currently seeking means for providing Adequate
Episcopal Oversight, and if an acceptable plan is approved, these kinds of measures
may no longer be necessary. But right now, we consider these actions an essential
and imperative response to a pastoral emergency in northern Ohio,² Benitez
added.
It was not clear to which group of bishops Benitez referred. But in a memo [http://www.episcopalchurch.org/3577_26104_ENG_HTM.htm]
drafted for the AAC¹s Bishops¹ Committee on Adequate Episcopal Oversight,
released by the Washington Post in January, the Rev. Geoff Chapman stated:
As an intermediate step, we will respond to the urgent pastoral need in our
country by offering Adequate Episcopal Oversight to parishes or remnants of
parishes who share our deeply held convictions, proceeding under the
guidance of our Bishops and the Primates. Bp Griswold¹s offer of ³Extended
Episcopal Care² is unacceptable, fundamentally flawed and disingenuous,
and does not meet the needs of our parishes or the intentions of the Primates.
Our AEO will maintain confidentiality in the application process, and seek transfer
of parish oversight across geographic diocesan boundaries to an orthodox bishop,
the right of pastoral succession, liberty of conscience in financial stewardship
(the right to ³redirect² funds), and negotiated property settlements
affirming the retention of ownership in the local congregation.
The AAC later disavowed the memo, saying that it was an unapproved draft.
Attempt to co-opt bishops¹ meeting?
³In consultation with the Archbishop of Canterbury and his chancellor,
our bishops have been considering a draft plan for episcopal pastoral care which
they will address further when we gather for our spring meeting later this week
in Texas,² Griswold said in his statement. ³Why, I am moved to ask,
did these bishops decide that Confirmation of these persons was pastorally necessary
at this moment and act without permission of the Bishop of Ohio? Given that
the House of Bishops will meet later this week, I can only surmise that their
intention is to co-opt the bishops¹ agenda and
provoke a reaction that will appear sufficiently lacking in pastoral concern
for Œdissenting minorities¹ to justify what they have done in the
eyes of others. I trust that they will be disappointed in their hope and that
the vast majority of bishops of this church - occupying the diverse center -
will find a way forward that is clear and just in its principles, pastoral
in its approach and responsive to the needs of the church in this present moment.²
Griswold quoted a letter from Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams, who told
him, ³My hope and prayer is that this meeting will offer generous and constructive
ways forward within the constitutional and canonical structures of ECUSA that
will guarantee Episcopal care for all and avoid further fragmentation, and the
consequent distraction from our main task of proclaiming Christ.²
ŒNo place in our polity¹
Bishop-elect Hollingsworth released a statement March 15 declaring his disappointment
that the priests and bishops involved ³chose to begin their relationship
with me, not with direct and honest dialogue, but by acting in this manner.
I certainly don't want anyone to think that this behavior is characteristic
of Christian community, especially the young people of those congregations.
"An action of this sort, designed to break down the community of faith,
has no place in our polity. No one group can define for the whole Church what
constitutes an Œemergency,¹" Hollingsworth continued. ³The
laity and the clergy of the Diocese of Ohio, meeting in convention last November,
clearly articulated their support of an inclusive theology in the larger Church,
and their affirmation of its actions in last summer's General Convention. It
is a singular privilege to begin serving with them in this diocese at a time
of such great potential for the Church.²
Bishop Grew, calling the service ³unauthorized and clandestine,² said
that ³there is no crisis in the Diocese of Ohio, except the one created
by a group that hopes to hold on to attention that is slipping away as time
passes, a group that may use the threat of further extracanonical action as
a way to manipulate the House of Bishops in its deliberations on the matter
of alternative oversight.²
But, Grew said, ³Neither the House of Bishops nor the Diocese of Ohio is
likely to be swayed by sudden confrontational actions. Any response by the Diocese
of Ohio in this matter will be prayerfully considered and
characterized by the life of Jesus himself, who calls us all to unity of the
Spirit in the bonds of peace.²
The following is the full text from Presiding Bishop Frank Griswold:
By their recent action in the Diocese of Ohio, five of our retired bishops and
a bishop from the Anglican Episcopal Church of Brazil have arrogated to themselves
the right to perform episcopal and sacramental acts
without the permission of the diocesan bishop. The claim that their action was
pastoral and in accordance with a mandate from the Archbishop of Canterbury
and the Primates of the Anglican Communion is contradicted by the
statement of the Primates last October which states quite clearly that they,
³reaffirm the teaching of successive Lambeth Conferences that bishops must
respect the autonomy and territorial integrity of dioceses and provinces other
than their own,² and that they ³call on the provinces concerned to
make adequate provision for episcopal oversight of dissenting minorities within
their own area of pastoral care,² and that they should do so ³in consultation
with the Archbishop of Canterbury on behalf of the Primates.²
Provisions for ³episcopal oversight of dissenting minorities² is thus
clearly a matter to be resolved by the province. That is precisely what this
church is seeking to do. In consultation with the Archbishop of Canterbury and
his chancellor, our bishops have been considering a draft plan for episcopal
pastoral care which they will address further when we
gather for our spring meeting later this week in Texas.
With respect to this forthcoming meeting, the Archbishop of Canterbury said
in a recent letter to me, ³My hope and prayer is that this meeting will
offer generous and constructive ways forward within the constitutional and
canonical structures of ECUSA that will guarantee Episcopal care for all and
avoid further fragmentation, and the consequent distraction from our main task
of proclaiming Christ.²
What is quite clear is that whatever pastoral response is agreed to, it must,
as the Archbishop points out, be consistent with the ³constitutional and
canonical structures of ECUSA.² Here I note that according to our Constitution:
A bishop shall confine the exercise of such office to the Diocese in which elected,
unless requested to perform episcopal acts in another Diocese by the Ecclesiastical
Authority thereofŠ[Article II,Sec.3]
Why, I am moved to ask, did these bishops decide that Confirmation of these
persons was pastorally necessary at this moment and act without permission of
the Bishop of Ohio? Given that the House of Bishops will meet later this week,
I can only surmise that their intention is to co-opt the bishops¹ agenda
and provoke a reaction that will appear sufficiently lacking in pastoral concern
for ³dissenting minorities² to justify what they have done in the
eyes of others. I trust that they will be disappointed in their hope and that
the vast majority of bishops of this church--occupying the diverse center--will
find a way forward that is clear and just in its principles, pastoral in its
approach and responsive to the needs of the
church in this present moment.
The Most Rev. Frank T. Griswold
Presiding Bishop and Primate
The Episcopal Church, USA
March 15, 2004
--The Rev. Jan Nunley is deputy director of Episcopal News Service.