Tuesday, June 20, 2006

PUP is passed intact. What's next?

Late Tuesday afternoon in Birmingham, Alabama, the PCUSA officially broke covenant with its Presbyterian roots and its churches who still cling to those roots. When it passed the Peace, Unity, and Purity report essentially unchanged, it broke covenant in at least three ways:

1. It changed its historical practice of one denominational set of standards for ordination to variable local standards. The PCUSA is now a congregational denomination.
2. The PCUSA rejected clear, important Biblical injunctions on sexual behavior in order to adjust to our culture’s standards. "Sola Scriptura" has become "Via Vulgaris."
3. The PCUSA has placed itself into an Orwellian doublespeak position of maintaining (on paper) the standard of “fidelity in marriage, chastity in singleness,” while clearly giving the go-ahead to say that a standard is not a standard.

I had the chance, following the vote, to visit with many people in the various conservative renewal groups. Some are claiming “victory,” since there was a minor alteration in one paragraph, and because the GA did not strike down G-6.0106b (the “chastity and fidelity” clause).

On the first they are, I believe, deluded. The whole point of the PUP report has been to start a new “experiment” in being the church; an experiment that allows for the ordination of practicing homosexuals and, inevitably, the encouragement and endorsement of same-sex marriages. On the second, retaining G-6.0106b is irrelevant since local option negates it.

People are openly speaking of what was once whispered: will we leave the denomination? This certainly is one of several considerations before every evangelical, conservative congregation. There needs to be some time for the dust to settle, though, before such decisions are made.

I met this evening with my friends in New Wineskins. First on our agenda was how to encourage people to come to the Kirk in July for our convocation. We desire, at that time, to have full and frank discussions of the options before us. One of our greatest concerns is for those congregations whose pastors and elders have not kept them up-to-date on what has been going on in our denomination, much less what happened today. Another is for those pastors and members in congregations that are split over these issues.

We believe that we need to make clear decisions soon, but in a context that will allow these other congregations time to consider what is now before us. I have always said that the Kirk will never be a maverick congregation, going off somewhere on its own. That is still true. The essence of Presbyterianism is being connected as a body. The fact that the PCUSA has effectively rejected this is no reason for us to operate alone.

The convocation in mid-July will be a time for consideration of all the above in a timely fashion. While what has happened is, in my mind, terrible, God never wastes anything. He will take this event and use it to His glory. My prayer is that we stay faithfully one step behind the Lord.
Keep the faith,
Tom

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

As a member of the congregation, I am sadly not shocked; people will go to any exreme to rationalize their sin. Revivial can happen, yet it will be in the trenches of individual lives that this cultural battle must be won.
Praying,
Andrew and Jennie Strong

Anonymous said...

Thanks, Tom. You've said some important things about timing.

Grace and Peace in Him,
Renee

Anonymous said...

Amen Tom. Thanks for faithfully blogging-- AND thinking. I had no idea how much of a body blow it would feel like yesterday afternoon with PUP passing. I had talked about this eventuality with session, I thought I had prepared for it-- but I was still bummed beyond belief heading to VBS last evening. The thing that was truly telling- were the number of teenage YADS who got up to speak-- several faithful-- reading scripture- but most speaking about feelings-- and we give them the same weight as others- Noel Anderson blogged on this-- this is truly telling as to level of our common judgment and discernment. God only gets one vote-- if he can get to the mic.

Lord have mercy upon us.

Anonymous said...

From the Steeple, I understood that there were 3 things to look out for: 1) PUP passage, 2) any amendments to 6.0106b, and 3) any amendments to the 1978/1993 Authoritative Interpretation. From your posts, it looks like we don't have to worry about 2 and 3 for this GA. Correct?

As to the PUP, since the constitution remains unchanged, isn't it incumbent on the GA to undo a new ordination of a GLBT by a Presbytery acting under color of authority of the PUP? If not, why not?

What Presbyteries have indicated their willingness to ordain GLBTs upon passage of the PUP?

Thanks for your blogging,
Brian

TomGray said...

Brian,
It is only G-6.0106b that has not been changed. The passage of PUP, according to our stated clerk, supercedes the AI of 1978/1993.
The PUP report stands now on its own as the only AI we now have.
Tom

TomGray said...

Brian,
It is only G-6.0106b that has not been changed. The passage of PUP, according to our stated clerk, supercedes the AI of 1978/1993.
The PUP report stands now on its own as the only AI we now have.
Tom

Anonymous said...

Tom,
What is your opinion regarding the power of the GA to check any misguided Presbytery's ordination of a GLBT? Further, given the unchanged and clear admonitions of the constitution, how reasonable is it for a member to have confidence that the GA will be an effective check on so-called progressive Presbyteries?

If we assume for the purposes of this post that the opinion of the stated clerk is controlling on whether the PUP is now the only AI on the issue at hand, don't we still have a constitution that no right thinking person could reasonably believe authorizes the ordination of GLBTs?
Thanks for your guidance,
Brian