Friday, September 3, 2004

Slate of four announced for Rio Grande coadjutor

by Jan Nunley

ENS 090304-1

[ENS] Four priests form the final slate of nominees for Bishop Coadjutor of
the Diocese of the Rio Grande, announced September 1 by the Rev. Canon Brian
C. Hobden, president of the diocesan Standing Committee.

They are the Rev. Canon F. Brian Cox IV, rector of Christ the King Episcopal
Church in Santa Barbara, California; the Rev. Dr. Ronald W. Jackson, rector
of St. Luke of the Mountains in La Crescenta, California; the Rev. Martyn
Minns of Truro Church in Fairfax, Virginia; and the Very Rev. Dr. Graham
Michael Smith, rector of St. David's Episcopal Church in Glenview, Illinois.

The four were chosen from an original field of 24, which was then narrowed
to 11 semifinalists. Further nominations by petition will be announced after
September 15. Deanery "meet and greet" sessions with the nominees will be
held October 7-10, and the electing convention is scheduled for October 16
in Las Cruces, New Mexico. Consecration of the next bishop will be held
January 15, 2005. Bishop Terrence Kelshaw is expected to retire no later
than July, 2005.

All four nominees are conservative evangelicals, and all but Smith's parish
are currently listed as affiliates of the American Anglican Council (AAC) on
the group's website [www.americananglican.org/Issues/IssuesList.cfm?c=14].
Both Cox and Jackson recently told the Los Angeles Times that their parishes
would not join three other AAC-affiliated Los Angeles-area congregations in
renouncing the Episcopal Church to come under the Ugandan Diocese of
Luweero. The two have said they and their parishes will await the outcome of
the Lambeth Commission report, rather than seek other action at this time.

The Rio Grande diocese is relatively young. In 1892, General Convention
established the Missionary District of New Mexico; at the 1895 Convention,
nine Texas counties were added to form what became the Missionary District
of New Mexico and Southwest Texas in 1923. In 1973, the name was changed to
the Diocese of the Rio Grande.


Varieties of experience

[Note: At press time, biographies submitted by the nominees were not yet
available online at
http://riogrande.0catch.com/diocesan/Election%20of%20a%20Bishop%20Coadjutor.
html.]

The 54-year-old Cox, a Chicago native canonically resident in Los Angeles,
is rector of Christ the King Episcopal Church in Santa Barbara, California.
He holds a master's in dispute resolution from Pepperdine University Law
School, is the president and founder of the Reconciliation Institute and the
author of Reconciliation Basic Seminar (1996) and Faith-Based Diplomacy and
International Peacemaking (2000). He has been a vicar, associate rector and
a rector in the dioceses of Los Angeles and Virginia, including nine years
as associate rector of St. James' in Newport Beach, California, one of three
AAC congregations that has aligned with Uganda's Luweero Diocese. In the
Diocese of Los Angeles, Cox is a founding co-chair of Bishop J. Jon Bruno's
diocesan-wide Reconciliation Task Force. Cox is married to Ann and has two
children.

Jackson, 56, born in Frankfurt, Germany, is rector of St. Luke's of the
Mountains in La Crescenta, California, where he also served as a curate in
the mid-1970s. The parish assists with relief work in Uganda and was visited
recently by Uganda's Archbishop Henry Orombi. Canonically resident in Los
Angeles, and a member of the diocesan council there, Jackson has also served
congregations in Cape Town, South Africa; Akron, Ohio; and Nashville,
Tennessee. He and his wife Patricia have four children.

Minns, 61, is the English-born and American-ordained rector of Truro Church
in Fairfax, Virginia, one of the oldest and largest parishes in the
Episcopal Church. A former Mobil Oil executive, Minns has also served
congregations in Connecticut, Louisiana, and New York. He has been in a
number of episcopal elections, is a frequent preacher and speaker at
conservative and evangelical gatherings, and addressed the Lambeth
Commission on Communion at Kanuga earlier this summer as part of a
delegation of those opposed to the actions of General Convention 2003. Minns
has invited Lord George Carey, the former Archbishop of Canterbury, to Truro
September 15 to confirm candidates from 11 Virginia parishes that reject
diocesan bishop Peter James Lee because he voted to ratify the election of
openly-gay priest Gene Robinson as the bishop of New Hampshire. Minns'
parish is also withholding money from the diocese and national church
programs to protest Robinson's consecration. The father o!
f five, Minns is married to Angela and has 11 grandchildren.

Smith, 56, is Canadian-born and the rector of St. David's Episcopal Church
in Glenview, Illinois. He has served congregations in Ohio and Illinois. His
name appears on the board of the conservative Institute for Religion and
Democracy [http://www.ird-renew.org/Feedback/FeedbackList.cfm?c=12]. He is
married to Sharon and has two children.


Some polarization

Retiring bishop Terrence Kelshaw has a history of strong support for
conservative positions in the Episcopal Church. Before his election as
bishop in 1989, the Manchester, England, native was a member of the faculty
of Trinity Episcopal School for Ministry in Ambridge, Pennsylvania, near
Pittsburgh. In 1995 he was one of 10 bishops who presented charges -- later
dismissed by a court -- against Bishop Walter Righter for ordaining a gay
man living in a committed relationship. In 1999, Kelshaw and the bishop of
the local Reformed Episcopal Church diocese, the Rt. Rev. Royal U. Grote,
Jr., jointly ordained two young men as deacons for Bishop Samuel Ssekkadde
of Namirembe (Uganda), to serve, not in Uganda, but under Kelshaw. In 2000
Kelshaw granted Bishop Charles Murphy, of the breakaway Anglican Mission in
America, permission to visit and confirm at a parish within his diocese.

At the 2003 General Convention he joined some 20 bishops in disassociating
from the convention's decision to ratify Robinson's election, and called for
the intervention of Anglican primates under the authority of Lambeth
Conference resolution III 6(b). He also signed the memorandum of agreement
establishing the Network of Anglican Communion Dioceses and Parishes
(NACDAP) [www.anglicancommunionnetwork.org/home/index.cfm], which is seeking
"realignment" in the Anglican Communion, on January 20. Seven days later,
its Standing Committee joined Rio Grande to the Network.

But while Kelshaw's views are apparently shared by a majority in the
diocese, a significant minority disagrees. At the annual diocesan
convocation following last summer's General Convention, 35 percent of clergy
and lay representatives declined to support a resolution condemning
Robinson's election and upholding marriage between a man and a woman as the
only appropriate place for sexual relations. That fall, a group of clergy
and laity formed Via Media Rio Grande (VMRG) [www.viamediariogrande.org] in
response to what they called "an atmosphere of polarization" and to oppose
what they saw as "alienation from ECUSA by diocesan leadership," including
Kelshaw.

In early December VMRG asked for time on the agenda of the Standing
Committee to plead for an interim bishop instead of a coadjutor election, in
light of diocesan divisions. But the committee refused, later stating
concerns that granting the time "would encourage every special interest
group in the diocese to seek a similar hearing and thus politicize this
season of discernment."

In response, VMRG sent a letter on December 23 to bishops and standing
committees, requesting that they withhold canonical consent for the
election. Only one bishop and three standing committees declined consent,
but the letter clearly stung. Both Bishop Kelshaw and the Standing Committee
protested in letters sent to the diocese and to the bishops and standing
committees of the Episcopal Church, complaining that the VMRG request was
"mischievous," "reprehensible," and "destructive." Tensions remain.

"Our concerns reflect those voices heard in numerous meetings across the
diocese," VMRG spokesperson Diane Butler responded to news of the
nominations. "Primary concerns expressed include a strong desire to remain
within ECUSA and for a bishop who will encourage openness, inclusiveness,
and harmony, and who will maintain a positive relationship with those who
hold diverse personal and spiritual values." Meanwhile, the group has
proposed a resolution for the upcoming annual convocation, committing the
diocese to "the discipline, faith and unity of the Episcopal Church USA as
the American expression of the rich and diverse Anglican tradition."

--The Rev. Jan Nunley is deputy director of Episcopal News Service.

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