A flurry of legislation cleared the House of Deputies in the waning
hours of the 75th General Convention June 21, including a resolution
that begins interim Eucharistic sharing with the United Methodist Church
(UMC), and other resolutions that reaffirm church support for gays and
lesbians.
The relationship with the United Methodist Church includes
recognition of the UMC as "a member of the one, holy, Catholic and
apostolic Church in which the Gospel is rightly preached and taught" and
encourages the development of a common Christian life between the two
bodies. The agreement permits common, joint celebrations of the
Eucharist (Holy Communion) between the two churches.
Deputies concurred with the House of Bishops in opposing the
criminalization of homosexuality, opposing state or federal
constitutional amendments that prohibits same-gender civil marriage or
civil unions and affirming the civil rights of gays and lesbians.
Another resolution reiterates Episcopal Church support of gay and
lesbian people as "children of God who have a full and equal claim with
all other persons upon the love, acceptance, and pastoral concern and
care of the Church."
Deputies also concurred with bishops in adopting a resolution calling
for equal representation of women and men on all decision-making bodies
within the church at local, diocesan and national levels. This
recommendation originated with the 2005 meeting of the Anglican
Consultative Council.
The deputies also concurred with the House of Bishops in a mission
initiative resolution for the New Orleans area that will gather data
that can be used to advance evangelism elsewhere in the church.
Additional resolutions were passed that came from the special
committee that considered resolutions in response to the Windsor Report.
They reiterated the historic separate and independent status of the
churches of the Anglican Communion and affirmed the "Windsor process" to
discern the nature and unity of the church and the report's call for a
listening process.
Deputies also concurred in creating a new task force to study aspects
of church disciplinary canons. Proposed changes to Title IV would have
replaced the current court-oriented system with a multi-layered approach
intended to focus on mediation and reconciliation which included a
controversial provision that would subject certain lay leaders to the
new canons. After hearing significant concern about the proposal,
particularly about subjecting laity to ecclesiastical discipline, the
legislative committee attempted to rewrite the 30-page resolution to
clarify issues. However, it quickly became apparent to committee members
the revision could not be accomplished in time for this convention to
act, prompting a referral to the task force for continued revisions in
the next three years.
Deputies also approved a pilot project to provide summer camps for
children whose parents are in prison. A line item in the budget already
approved by General Convention included $65,000 for the new program.
In other final day action, the House of Deputies also took action on
the following legislation that had already passed the House of Bishops:
- directed General Convention planners to provide child care
facilities at the 2009 convention. It also encourages dioceses and
provinces to provide similar services at conventions and synod
meetings (D059).
- defeated a resolution to shorten the length of General
Convention to eight days, or nine days if a Presiding Bishop was to
be elected (A155).
- adopted a proposal to standardize the size of standing
commissions to 12 people, three bishops, three priests or deacons
and six lay persons (A104).
- authorized the creation of a Standing Commission on Lifelong
Christian Education and Formation to develop and recommend policies
for children, youth, adults, and seniors for lifelong Christian
formation (A105).
- approved active support for the right of workers to form a union
and increase the support nationwide for passage of "living wage"
legislation. It also commits the church to contract solely with
union hotels in its meetings, or hotels that offer "living wages" to
employees (D047).
- approved additional commemorations in the Calendar of the Church
Year and authorize trial use thereof for the triennium 2007–2009,
for Harriet Bedell, Deaconess and Missionary; Anna Julia Heyward
Cooper, Educator; James Theodore Holly, Bishop of Haiti and
Dominican Republic; Oscar Romero, Archbishop of San Salvador, and
The Martyrs of El Salvador; Tikhon, Patriarch of Russia and
Confessor; Vida Dutton Scudder, Educator and Witness for Peace; and
Frances Joseph-Gaudet, Educator and Prison Reformer (A063 and
A064).
- approved for trial use new liturgies concerning rites of
passage, including reaching puberty, earning a driver's license and
dating relationships (A067).
- acknowledged the authority of the triune God, exercised through
Scripture (D069.)
- recognized the position in the Constitution and Canons that only
those who have been baptized in the Name of the Father and of the
Son and of the Holy Spirit shall be eligible to receive Holy
Communion; and that the 76th General Convention receive a pastoral
and theological understanding of the relationship between Holy
Baptism and Eucharistic practice (D084).
- directed the Standing Commission on Ministry Development to
design strategies for raising awareness and responding to the crisis
of educational debt for seminarians (B006).
- urged the church to work to ensure that governments provide
programs that combat social and economic conditions that place
children at risk or diminish children's ability to achieve their
full potential in the world (A018).
- defeated a proposal that would allow an assistant, suffragan or
coadjutor to help a diocesan bishop fulill the canonical requirement
to visit each congregation in a diocese (B007).
- authorized the establishment of a Church Planting Initiative to
raise funds for new congregations (A042).