PROGRESSIVE EPISCOPALIANS OF PITTSBURGH
6393 Penn Avenue, PMB 207
Pittsburgh, PA 15206-4010
Contact:
Joan R. Gundersen, President
Progressive Episcopalians of Pittsburgh
Telephone: +1 (412) 799-0440, +1 (412) 418-6870
E-mail: jrgunder@hotmail.com
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Pittsburgh Chooses Path to Separation
Johnstown, Pennsylvania — November 2, 2007 — Declaring, “As a diocese we
have come to a fork in the road,” Pittsburgh’s Bishop Robert Duncan set the tone
for the 142nd annual convention of the Episcopal Diocese of Pittsburgh. The
bishop continued, “This is not a place we would wish to stay, even if we
could.” The convention majority agreed with the bishop, voting in favor of
amendments to eliminate the diocese’s accession to the constitution and canons
of The Episcopal Church (TEC) and allowing it to designate by canon the Anglican province to which it
will belong. The resolution also eliminated the requirement that parishes have
similar accession clauses in their bylaws or articles of incorporation. The
vote, by secret ballot, favored passage by 118 to 59 lay votes, with one
abstention, and 109 to 24 clergy votes. On the way to the final vote, the
convention defeated an attempt to substitute an amendment that would have
restored the accession clause to its pre-2004 condition.
Quoting Martin Luther in a brief reply to her recent letter, Bishop Duncan
defiantly rejected Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori’s request that he
urge the convention to reject the resolution he has hitherto strongly
supported. Rather than heed the Presiding Bishop’s advice, Duncan denied a
request from a deputy to declare the resolution out of order by virtue of its
being beyond the power of the diocese to enact. The bishop’s actions and his
continuing advocacy of “realignment” will likely make him subject to church
disciplinary action.
Bishop Duncan continued to assert his unique theory of diocesan independence,
reversing the generally accepted understanding of Episcopal Church polity. Once
again, he asserted that those wishing to remain in TEC would
have to leave the diocese to do so, seemingly denying that it is he and his
supporters who want out of TEC. The bishop then suggested that
property currently held in common, including Trinity Cathedral and Calvary Camp,
should, after a split, be administered for the benefit of all. It became clear,
in other words, that he expects both to leave TEC and remain in control of its
assets, which he would then generously offer to share with those he had
dispossessed.
During both the convention and a set of morning workshops preceding the formal
opening of the business meeting of the convention, proponents of the
anti-accession resolution described an Episcopal Church that had strayed from
Christian “orthodoxy,” citing, among other complaints, the failure of the
church to discipline Bishops Pike and Spong. Episcopal Church supporters talked
about the impropriety of the resolution, the fact that TEC has not changed its
core beliefs, and the pain that necessarily will accompany any separation. The
outcome, however, was never in doubt.
”The vote today was tragic,” said Joan Gundersen, president of Progressive
Episcopalians of Pittsburgh and a deputy to the convention. The step taken
today by the Diocese of Pittsburgh will only lead to pain for all the people of
the diocese, to increased litigation, and to charges being filed against Bishop
Duncan under the disciplinary canons of the church. That pain was often evident
in the voices of those speaking on both sides of the measure. The next year
will be one of constant turmoil, as the diocesan leadership furthers its
separation plans in anticipation of a final ratification of constitutional
changes next year.
Contact:
Joan R. Gundersen, President
Progressive Episcopalians of Pittsburgh
Telephone: +1 (412) 799-0440, +1 (412) 418-6870
E-mail:
jrgunder@hotmail.com
On the Web:
This document:
http://progressiveepiscopalians.org/html/2007-11-02change.html
Progressive Episcopalians of Pittsburgh:
http://progressiveepiscopalians.org
Bishop Duncan’s address to the convention:
http://www.pgh.anglican.org/news/local/duncanaddress110207
Bishop Duncan’s letter to the Presiding Bishop:
http://www.pgh.anglican.org/news/local/pbresponse110207
Progressive Episcopalians of Pittsburgh is an organization of clergy and
laypeople committed to the unity and diversity of The Episcopal Church, and of
the Episcopal Diocese of Pittsburgh. It is a member of the Via Media USA
alliance.
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