4/20/2007

Time to do the homework: Give your response to the Draft Covenant.

The Executive Council has published "A SHORT STUDY GUIDE TO AID THE EPISCOPAL CHURCH IN RESPONDING TO THE DRAFT ANGLICAN COVENANT AS PREPARED BY THE COVENANT DESIGN GROUP." This may be one of the few instances where a study guide only adds two pages to the length of the document under discussion. In addition to an introduction to the document, the study guide consists of fourteen questions, spread through the text. The questions, except for the ones at the end, are in reference to the materials in the section just preceding. It's all pretty straightforward.

Readers of this blog are already likely to know a good bit about the draft of a Covenant proposed by a group called together by the Archbishop of Canterbury called the Covenant Design Group. (For more on its composition and origins, see my blog posting HERE. )

Some readers will also be somewhat suspicious of ANY talk of Covenant in the present highly charged Anglican environment. The disastrous example of a Covenant in the Windsor Report, so bad that almost everyone was quick to point out that it was NOT part of the Windsor Report itself, has given a bad name to the whole undertaking. Matters have become more confused by the Primates Communique of March 2007 which suggests that we MUST buy on to the Draft Covenant, at least in broad outline, if there is to be progress in forming a perfected Covenant in the next few years. Suspicions of coercion abound and do not give confidence that covenant discussions are on the up and up.

It seems to me that instructive as those suspicions may be, this is one of those times where the work of thoughtful examination of the Draft is worth the effort. It is time to put the suspicions aside, if only for a moment.

Remember, the effort to find some way of drawing up a set of commonly agreed on understandings of what it means to be part of the Anglican Communion is a long standing one. The Anglican Communion is a product of nineteenth century commercial expansionism and religious enthusiasm and its "instruments" a product of the post World War II concerns for international coherence in the midst of the rapid expansion of nation states, reflected in ecclesial structures. So it is no wonder that there would be a growing need to articulate just what it is that makes the Anglican Communion an appropriate organizing factor in modern Christendom and in a Christian faith responsive to multi-denominational and interfaith environments.

The Chicago-Lambeth Quadrilateral (1888) and the idea of Mutual Responsibility and Interdependence in the Body of Christ (MRI) (1963) are products of these two phases of our exploration. For some time there has been talk of a document, sometimes called a covenant, that would provide an understanding of the vocation of the Communion and something of a structure for Mutual Responsibility and Interdependence. So the issues in the current conversations continue both longstanding concerns: vocation and accountability.

My sense is that VOCATION is the real issue. Does the Anglican Communion have a vocation within the Christian community? Does it have some particular gift to bring to the whole? How might that gift be expressed? Or, alternately, is the Anglican Communion simply an accident or even worse a mutation, providing only a dead end or a wild strand? And, for us particularly, how does our own vocation as The Episcopal Church relate to the Anglican Communion sense of self?

It is only in that context – the context of vocation – that any structures of accountability among the member churches make much sense. If we are without a common vocation, or there is one that we as Episcopalians do not share, then it matters very little if we are structured. If we do have a vocation then perhaps the structures of accountability can reflect that call.

It is for this reason that your comments, and mine, to the proposed Draft Covenant are important. If we can in a wide variety of ways begin to establish a sense of our vocation as a Communion and from that find some way of developing a sense of what mutual responsibility and interdependence would look like, we will have gone a long way to address both issues.

YOU CAN DO THIS. Read the Study Guide on the Draft Covenant write down your thoughts and send them in. What good is the opportunity to comment on the Covenant if it is not taken up?

STIR THE POT.




1 comment:

  1. Presumably, no one has commented on this post because everyone is busy pondering the study guide. Good. As one suspicious of the process, however, I want to say why.

    The first reason to be suspicious is that the people pushing the covenant have shown themselves to be bullies intent on getting their own way. I don't have time to support this assertion here, but most readers know what I am talking about. (At the very least, certain primates are exercising power no one gave to them.) The frustration of dealing with the primates comes through clearly in the resolutions of the recent House of Bishops meeting.

    Second, we are hoping against hope that some useful and Godly agreement will come of this process. The real reason for the covenant—we all know this—is to rein in The Episcopal Church. Why should we volunteer for enslavement if we truly believe our mission is something else entirely?

    Finally, and perhaps most importantly in light of Mark's essay, is skepticism about the nature of the process. We are writing drafts before (1) we agree on what problem we are solving and (2) before we agree on the characteristics any solution should have. I write this as a computer scientist, not a priest. I am not longer surprised by what I consider to be an incompetent problem-solving paradigm regularly used by ecclesiastical bodies, but I am saddened by it. I made a plea before the 2006 General Convention for the church to consider what it was trying to accomplish in responding to the Windsor Report and to consider the likely effects of particular strategies. General Convention certainly did not take my advice. We can see how well that turned out.

    ReplyDelete

OK... Comments, gripes, etc welcomed, but with some cautions and one rule:
Cautions: Calling people fools, idiots, etc, will be reason to bounce your comment. Keeping in mind that in the struggles it is difficult enough to try to respect opponents, we should at least try.

Rule: PLEASE DO NOT SIGN OFF AS ANONYMOUS: BEGIN OR END THE MESSAGE WITH A NAME - ANY NAME. ANONYMOUS commentary will be cut.