May 24, 2017

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Episcopalians, Methodists Propose Full-Communion Agreement

by Mary Frances Schjonberg

Proposal needs approval of denominations' governing bodies

The Episcopal Church-United Methodist Dialogue Committee met in April in Charlotte, North Carolina.


A group of Episcopalians and Methodists has released its proposal for full communion between the two denominations.

Full implementation of the proposal will take at least three years. The Episcopal Church General Convention and the United Methodist Church General Conference must approve the agreement, which culminates 15 years of exploration and more than 50 years of formal dialogue between the two churches. General Convention next meets in July 2018 in Austin, Texas. The General Conference's next meeting is in 2020.

The 10-page proposal, titled "A Gift to the World, Co-Laborers for the Healing of Brokenness," says it "is an effort to bring our churches into closer partnership in the mission and witness to the love of God and thus labor together for the healing of divisions among Christians and for the well-being of all."

Montana Bishop Frank Brookhart, Episcopal co-chair of the dialogue, and Bishop Gregory V. Palmer, United Methodist co-chair, wrote in a recent letter that "the relationship formed over these years of dialogue, and the recognition that there are no theological impediments to unity, pave the way for this current draft proposal."

In the coming months, there will be opportunities for feedback, regional gatherings and discussions on the proposal, according to a May 17 press release.

"We encourage you to reach across denominational lines to establish new relationships and deepen existing relationships by shared study of these materials and mutual prayer for the unity our churches," Brookhart and Palmer wrote. "We believe that this proposal represents a significant witness of unity and reconciliation in an increasingly divided world and pray that you will join us in carrying this work."

The Episcopal Church defines "full communion" to mean "a relation between distinct churches in which each recognizes the other as a catholic and apostolic church holding the essentials of the Christian faith." The churches "become interdependent while remaining autonomous," the church has said.

The Episcopal Church-United Methodist Dialogue Committee, which developed the proposed agreement, says the two denominations are not seeking a merger but that they are "grounded in sufficient agreement in the essentials of Christian faith and order" to allow for the interchangeability of ordained ministries, among other aspects of the proposed agreement.

"We are blessed in that neither of our churches, or their predecessor bodies, have officially condemned one another, nor have they formally called into question the faith, the ministerial orders, or the sacraments of the other church," the group said.

The Episcopal-Methodist proposal also benefited from the fact that Anglicans across the Communion and Methodists elsewhere in the world have an on-going dialogue, the group said. The dialogue launched a report in 2015, "Into All the World: Being and Becoming Apostolic Churches", describing its progress. The launch highlighted a then-new new relationship of full communion between Irish Anglican and Methodists churches, and the historic concrete steps towards an inter-changeable ministry.

The Episcopal-United Methodist full-communion proposal acknowledges that the United Methodist Church "is one of several expressions of Methodism" and notes that both denominations have been in dialogue with the historically African American Methodist churches for nearly 40 years. They have also worked with African Methodist Episcopal Church (AME), African Methodist Episcopal Church Zion, (AME Zion) and Christian Methodist Episcopal Church (CME) in various ecumenical groups.

The Episcopal Church and the United Methodist Church have taken some interim steps toward full communion in recent years. In 2006, they entered into Interim Eucharistic Sharing, a step that allowed for clergy of the two churches to share in the celebration of the Lord's Supper under certain guidelines. In 2010, the dialogue group issued a summary of its theological work called "A Theological Foundation for Full Communion between The Episcopal Church and The United Methodist Church".

The proposal for full communion outlines agreements on the understanding of each order of ministry. The ministries of lay people, deacons Episcopal priests and United Methodist elders or presbyters (elder is the English translation of presbyter) would all be seen as interchangeable yet governed by the "standards and polity of each church."

Both churches have somewhat similar understandings of bishops, according to the proposal.

"We affirm the ministry of bishops in The United Methodist Church and The Episcopal Church to be adaptations of the historic episcopate to the needs and concerns of the post-[American] Revolutionary missional context," the dialogue says in the proposal. "We recognize the ministries of our bishops as fully valid and authentic."

The Episcopal Church and the United Methodist Church would pledge that future consecrations of bishops would include participation and laying on of hands by at least three bishops drawn from each other's church and from the full-communion partners they hold in common, the Moravian Church and the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America.

The Episcopal Church currently is in full communion with the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America; the Mar Thoma Syrian Church of Malabar, India; Old Catholic Churches of the Union of Utrecht; the Philippine Independent Church; the Church of Sweden and the Northern and Southern Provinces of the Moravian Church. It is also engaged in formal bilateral talks with the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) and the Roman Catholic Church via the U.S. Conference of Bishops.

More information about the Episcopal Church's dialogue with the United Methodist Church is here.

The work of the Episcopal-United Methodist Dialogue is enabled by two General Convention resolutions: 2015-A107 and 2006-A055.


Episcopal Divinity School and Union Theological Seminary 
 Agree on Collaboration


Kelly Brown Douglas, scholar and racial justice activist, named EDS's new dean
"We had three goals when we began to plan this news phase in EDS's life," said the Rev.  Gary Hall, chair of the EDS board. "We wanted to continue providing Episcopal theological education within an accredited, degree-granting program, deepen our historic commitment to gospel-centered justice, and provide financial strength and stability for EDS's future. Today, I am delighted to say that we have achieved all three."
"This is an historic moment," said the Rev. Serene Jones, president of the Union faculty and Johnston Family Professor for Religion and Democracy at Union. "We are honored that EDS has chosen to partner with us and are certain that the stewardship of our deepest commitments will be fulfilled in the years ahead."
The Rev. Kelly Brown Douglas will be the first dean of EDS at Union. Photo: Washington National Cathedral
EDS appointed the Rev. Kelly Brown Douglas, Susan D. Morgan Professor of Religion at Goucher College in Maryland and canon theologian at Washington National Cathedral, as the first dean of EDS at Union. Douglas will also join the Union faculty as a professor. She is the author of many articles and five books, including "Stand Your Ground:  Black Bodies and the Justice of God," which was written in response to the murder of Trayvon Martin.
"Kelly Brown Douglas is one of the most distinguished religious thinkers, teachers, ministers, and activists in the nation," Jones said. "We are confident that Union's longstanding commitment to both the Gospel and social justice will be strengthened and enhanced under her leadership."
Ordained as an Episcopal priest in 1983, Douglas holds a master's degree in theology and a Ph.D. in systematic theology from Union. Her academic work focuses on womanist theology, sexuality and the black church, and she is a sought-after speaker and author on issues of racial justice and theology.
"Kelly is an Episcopal Church leader and an eminent scholar-and she is a daughter of Union," Hall said. "Working together, EDS and Union aim to advance the causes of social justice and theology in the world and Kelly is the ideal leader for this new venture."
"I am excited for the challenge," Douglas said. "What I am really happy about for the wider EDS community is that this isn't the typical bad news of a small seminary closing. This is the news that this place believed enough in its mission that it went out and found a way to carry that mission forward in a viable fashion, and found a way for the mission to grow. EDS is going to continue. The EDS community has found the platform to do that, and they have found in UTS an institution that shares their mission. I feel privileged to be a part of this next chapter in EDS' life."
Beginning in 2018, students who enroll in the EDS program at Union will earn graduate degrees from Union and also fulfill requirements for ordination in the Episcopal Church. In addition to Douglas, EDS will hire a professor of Anglican studies to join the four Episcopal priests currently on Union's faculty.
"I look forward to the amazing possibilities that will be brought forth through this affiliation," said Union's Board Chair Wolcott B. Dunham Jr. "Our work together will surely expand the ways we serve the church and the world." A lifelong Episcopalian, Dunham is also senior warden of St. James' Episcopal Church in the City of New York and a former trustee of the Episcopal Diocese of New York
EDS plans to purchase a floor in a new building being constructed at Union that will house offices, residential space for the dean, and other facilities. The EDS campus in Cambridge will be sold after operations there cease in July, and the proceeds will be added to the school's endowment, currently valued at $53 million.
The EDS board has voted to cap spending at four percent of its endowment once expenses associated with the move to Union are paid. "We are in this for the long haul," said Bonnie Anderson, vice chair of the EDS board.  "Enshrining our commitment to sensible, sustainable spending in our affiliation agreement was important to us."
EDS alums will enjoy the same library and campus privileges accorded to Union alums. The EDS library and archives will be reviewed by representatives from both schools and Union will accept items that do not duplicate its own holdings. The Burke Library at Union, part of Columbia University's library system and one of the largest theological libraries in North America, with holdings of more than 700,000 items.
The initial term of the EDS-Union affiliation agreement is eleven years, and both schools have the option to agree to extensions beyond that time. EDS will remain its own legal entity with its own board of trustees.
The two seminaries began negotiations in February after Union was chosen from among nine potential candidates that expressed interest in an alliance with EDS. The EDS board, spurred by financial challenges that were depleting the school's endowment, voted in 2016 to cease granting degrees in May 2017 and to explore options for EDS's future.
EDS has adopted a generous severance plan for its faculty and staff. All students who did not complete their degrees this month are being "taught out" at other seminaries with EDS's financial support so as to avoid additional costs.
About Union Theological Seminary

Union Theological Seminary in the City of New York is a seminary and a graduate school of theology established in 1836 by founders "deeply impressed by the claims of the world upon the church." Union prepares women and men for committed lives of service to the church, academy and society. A Union education develops practices of mind and body that foster intellectual and academic excellence, social justice, and compassionate wisdom. Grounded in the Christian tradition and responsive to the needs of God's creation, Union's graduates make a difference wherever they serve.
Union believes that a new interreligious spirituality of radical openness and love is the world's best hope for peace, justice, and the care of God's creation. Empowered by groundbreaking inquiry aligned with practical realism and a bias for action, Union is charting a profound new course for enduring social change. Union's graduates stand out wherever they serve, practicing their vocations with courage and perseverance, and speaking clearly and acting boldly on behalf of social justice in all of its forms.
About Episcopal Divinity School
Episcopal Divinity School in Cambridge, Massachusetts was formed in 1974 by the merger of Philadelphia Divinity School (1857) and Episcopal Theological School (1867). For more than 40 years, EDS has offered a bold and expansive vision of inclusion and social justice in the service of preparing students to lead faith communities.
In July 2016, the EDS Board of Trustees voted to cease granting degrees in May 2017 and to explore options for EDS's future that would carry on the seminary's historic mission, continue accredited degree-granting theological education, and provide financial strength and stability for EDS's future.



Outreach Ministries at Christ Church Media





Christ Episcopal Church of Media, Pennsylvania is busy with outreach ministries. The parish is collecting school supplies to fill backpacks for students graduating from St. James School in Philadelphia. In partnership with St. Mary's Church in Chester, the parish helps stock St. Mary's food cupboard.  To help St. Mary's support children who will miss their school breakfast and lunch programs during the summer, the parish is running a kids' summer food campaign.



Men's Fellowship Conversation and Cookout






The Diocese of Pennsylvania in Conjunction with The African Episcopal Church of St. Thomas and St. David's (Radnor) invite the Men's Ministries and Fellowships of our Parishes and Missions to come together for conversation about deepening the ministry of men in our churches and a cook-out on Saturday, June 10 from 5:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. on the grounds of St. David's in Wayne.

Men in church can be a powerful force for good in our churches and many of our parishes have formal ministries that enliven and empower men to exercise their various ministries and to help raise up new generations of Christians. Come and hear about some of the ministry that is going on and how you can start a men's ministry or fellowship in your church.

Click here to register.



Diocesan Communications Conference for Congregational Development

Social Media, Video Production and Website Design Videos



Union of Black Episcopalians Annual Business Meeting



On behalf of the UBE National Board of Directors and the Conference Planning Team, it gives us great pleasure to invite and welcome all members and supporters to the:

 UBE 49th Annual Business Meeting and Conference, 

July 23 - 26, 2017 at the 

Crowne Plaza Hotel in Philadelphia/Cherry Hill, NJ.

For the first time, this gathering will be a joint partnership between the Union of Black Episcopalians and the African Descent Lutheran Association (ADLA). Both organizations share a vital commitment to vigilance and action aimed at achieving justice for all people, especially those of African descent.

We will also be commemorating the 225th anniversary of the Black presence in the Episcopal Church at our first church,  the African Episcopal Church of St. Thomas

Our 2017 conference theme is: "Like a Rolling Stream, Let Justice Roll... Absalom, Jehu, and Beyond"

Join us to be recommitted and renewed for the work ahead with God's help!!  For additional information: www.ube.org or contact The Rev. Renee McKenzie, UBE Philadelphia Chapter, [email protected].

-- 
Rev. Dr. Renee McKenzie
Vicar & Chaplain, Church of the Advocate
  



DIOPA Resource Guide

                     The DIOPA Resource Guide is here!

We have heard your suggestions, compiled them, and we would like to present the DIOPA Resource Guide: a directory of information about the Diocese of Pennsylvania, and how we can best serve you. We encourage you to explore the website at  http://www.dioparesourceguide.com/ .
This website is designed to continue to capture information that is useful and relevant to all members of the Diocese. Please continue to submit your suggestions. Contact J.D. Lafrance at  [email protected]   or use our online form:  https://diopa.wufoo.com/forms/cant-find-something/ .



Join the Bishop's Bible Challenge! 




Heard the word?
 
  Over 1900 people have  - YOU CAN TOO!
 
"Together the diocese is reading the Bible,
bringing God into our lives, and it is transformative."   Bishop 
Gutiérrez
 
 
 Please join us! Go to App Store and download the Diopa Bible App on your smart phone.

OR - 
 
Register on our website at  www.diopa.org - Bishop's Bible Challenge
 
Listen during your daily run or commute to work
 Begin with today's reading or an earlier one!
 
For additional information call the Offices of the Diocese at 215.627.6434  



DIOPA Deanery Calendar



Our DIOPA Deanery Calendar is fully operational and available to capture and disseminate your event information - diocesan wide! It's the place to post parish events in each deanery and can be found on www.diopa.org at the bottom right of the home page under Calendars. It's a read-only site, with information being posted by an administrator in your deanery. Call your parish office to have your administrator post an event you want to share.



Video Invitation to Join the Bishop's Bible Challenge!

Dear Brothers and Sisters,

As another part of my promise to better serve you, I am pleased to present another major initiative from the Offices of the Episcopal Diocese of Pennsylvania. This Bible App will help us all to feel connected, provides a platform for participating in the Bishop's Bible Challenge, and perhaps most importantly is a powerful tool for you to read or hear the Word of God in 1,000 languages. With the Bible App, many now have access to the word of God in their primary language. Reading the Bible together as a diocesan community will have a life changing effect. The importance of Christian people using Holy Scripture as a foundation for daily life is hard to overstate. Who we are as the People of God flows directly from our worship, doctrine, and liturgy, which are all rooted in Scripture. To know the Bible better, is to know ourselves as the People of God better, to know our mission to the world better, and to know our faith better. We are here to help and to serve you, and this mobile app is another important step in showing the kind of innovation and emphasis that is placed on equipping our congregations to build the Kingdom of God.

The Rt. Rev. Daniel G.P. Gutiérrez
XVI Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Pennsylvania


The Bishop's Bible Challenge leads us through the entire bible in a year's time. Not only will you find the daily reading and meditation rewarding, but you will be joining in community with hundreds, possibly thousands, of fellow Episcopalians in our diocese. While this may seem like a daunting undertaking, as the Bible tells us "Fear Not", for there are many ways to connect!
You can download The DIOPA Bible in a Year App from iTunes, Apple App Store, and Google Play. To download the mobile application, go to the "App Store" icon on your iPhones or the "Google Play" icon on your Android Phone and search for "DIOPA" or "DIOPA bible." It is a self-contained way to participate and has everything you need including a link to the registration page, the Bible readings for each day, an online link to the Bible in audible and readable forms and daily reading or listening selections that will help everyone to read the same selections each day.
 
* If you don't want to use the app, register to participate at our online registration site:  https://diopa.wufoo.com/forms/bishops-bible-challenge/
 
* If you do not use a computer or smart phone simply call the Offices of the Diocese at 215-627-6434 to register and receive a Bible Study Packet; or contact your Priest for these materials.

* Join our online Facebook group at < DIOPA Bishop's Bible Challenge>. This is where you can post your own testimonies on the readings. These responses can be written or use your phone or camera to take a picture that reflects your response to the reading. Include a brief description and post with the hash tag #wordon and #diopabbc. Check the group page or the hash tags to see what other participants are saying!

* Information and resources regarding The Bishop's Bible Challenge can be found online:  http://www.diopa.org/bishops-bible-challenge/

The important thing to know is that you are not alone in this and you cannot mess this up! If you miss a day of reading, or a week for that matter, just jump back in to the schedule because there is no wrong way to do this. If you'd rather not read, the Bible App will play the day's selections in a dramatized audio format for you to listen.

So let's come together as a diocesan family and build the Kingdom of God -praying together, worshipping together, studying together - in this the "come and see" diocese. #diopalove #diopacomeandsee #wordon #diopabbc - there are multiple ways to connect!


Online Staff Directory


Visit our new "Staff Directory" page on the diocesan website to see photos, bios, and job descriptions 
of the current staff of the Offices of the Diocese of Pennsylvania.





Download our Diocesan Mobile App "DIOPAConnect"


Dear Brothers and Sisters,

As part of my promise to better serve you, I am pleased to offer a major initiative from the Offices of the Episcopal Diocese of Pennsylvania. This mobile directory app will help us all to feel connected, provides useful information about parishes, and enables us to have one more important way to stay informed about everything going on in our wonderful Diocese. We are here to help and to serve you, and this mobile app is an important step in showing the kind of innovation and emphasis that is placed on equipping our congregations to build the Kingdom of God.

The Rt. Rev. Daniel G.P.  Gutiérrez
XVI Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Pennsylvania

To download the mobile application go to the "App Store" icon on your iPhones 
or the "Google Play" icon on your Android Phone  and 
search for "DIOPA" or "DIOPA mobile directory."

Let us know how DiopaConnect works for you. 
 User feedback helps us to tailor our applications to better meet your needs.