By Quin Hillyer on 4.10.08 @ 12:08AM
Is the U.S. Episcopal Church being run by land developers?
Conservatives and common sense together won a big victory last
week when a Virginia state judge ruled in favor of parishioners in
11 individual churches who have broken away from the Virginia
Diocese and the national governing body of the U.S. Episcopal
Church.
By astonishingly overwhelming votes within each congregation,
the parishioners decided instead to join the Convocation of
Anglicans in North America (CANA), which is affiliated with the
worldwide Anglican Communion through the Church of Nigeria.
Naturally, the state and national Episcopal churches have not taken
kindly to the breakaway parishes, and have sued to force the
parishioners to leave the church properties involved. What the
parishioners won on April 4 was just the first battle in what may
be a long-running, multi-pronged lawsuit, but it was a hugely
important victory nonetheless. Fairfax County Circuit Court Judge
Randy Bellows ruled that something called the Virginia Division
Statute means what it very clearly states, which is that the
majority of a church parish is entitled to its property when there
is a division within the congregation -- and that the 90-plus
percent vote in eight of those 11 parishes (the lowest vote in
favor of breaking away was 72 percent) clearly represent a
"division" from the Episcopal Church.
The 11 parishes are theologically more "conservative" or
"traditionalist" than is the institutional U.S. Episcopal Church
(although their worship styles can tend far less toward traditional
Episcopalian ceremony and more toward Evangelical enthusiasm). One
of them, The Falls Church, is among the oldest churches in the
nation, and it and nearby Truro Church both have large and active
congregations that have spent many millions of dollars vastly
expanding the physical plants of each parish. The Falls Church
boasts significant numbers of current and former Bush
administration officials and conservative journalists within its
membership.
The national media tend to portray the split between these
parishes and the Episcopal Church as being mostly about issues of
sexuality, particularly homosexuality. And to be sure, those
differences exist, although the conventional portrayal -- of the
conservative parishes as being brutally censorious while the
national Episcopal Church is merely "tolerant" -- is both
simplistic and skewed. But the differences between CANA and the
Episcopal Church involve issues both more numerous and deeper,
theologically, than mere battles over whether to ordain lesbians or
perform same-sex rituals. And it's also not a mere battle of
conservative political activists versus liberal political
activists; it's more a case where the conservatives abjure politics
within worship, whereas the national Episcopal Church seems to
believe that politics itself -- specifically, liberal politics --
is a form of worship.
Go to the national church website, and the site map doesn't even include
the word "Creed" -- not Nicene, not Apostles' -- because almost
nothing in the national church seems focused on internal spiritual
beliefs. To quote one of the site's featured mini-essays (a highly
representative example), "It's not about having answers as much as
it is about engaging a story. It is about your story and how your
story connects to an ancient story of desert wanderers that, in
time, came to see that humanity and this energy they called God
mingled and existed through Christ and thus, exists in all of
humanity."
But even the Episcopal Church website's vapid pop psychology is
overwhelmed by the volume of political statements and programs that
make the site little distinguishable in tone or focus from that of,
say, the Americans for Democratic Action. The first listed
"mission" of the church is "justice and peacemaking," which has
subsets that advocate "speak[ing] truth to the powerful," "social
justice ministry," "criminal justice," "racism" defined not just as
prejudice but only as "prejudice coupled with power," (hint: black
Americans therefore can't be racist), and an "Office of Government
Relations" which sees its goals as "including issues of
international peace and justice, human rights, immigration,
welfare, poverty, hunger, health care, violence, civil rights, the
environment, racism and issues involving women and children."
Who has time to save souls when Caesar needs so much
guidance?
NEVERTHELESS, THE CIVIL LAW is and must be neutral about who has a
more noble or rewarding faith. The breakaway parishes ought to win
every facet of the lawsuit not because their beliefs or their
politics are better, but because both law and equity, along with
common sense, are on their side. Not only does Virginia state law
(the Division Statute) explicitly apply to just such a situation as
now exists, but the history especially of The Falls Church argues
against the claims of the Virginia Diocese with which they have
disassociated.
First, The Falls Church was founded, formed, and developed long
before the diocese, or the national Episcopal Church, even existed.
Title to the land and buildings is held by the individual churches'
trustees, not by the diocese. These churches (and others) helped
create the diocese, not vice versa. And, to the tune of many, many
millions of dollars, these churches have supported the diocese
financially, not taken from the diocese. The very same sets of
parishioners who voted so overwhelmingly to leave the Episcopal
Church are the ones who on their own, without diocesan help, raised
the vast sums of money needed to expand, improve, modernize and
beautify their church properties. Why the diocese should be able,
despite all those facts, to swoop in and claim the land and
buildings (to be peopled by whom, one wonders?) out from under the
parishioners who paid for and nurtured them is a question that
surpasseth human understanding.
Boiled down to their essence, the Episcopal Church arguments
against this are twofold -- and nonsense twice over. First, the
Episcopal Church will raise a federal First Amendment (free
exercise of religion) issue, saying in effect that the state has no
say over the internal laws of an organized Church. Because the
organized Church (in other words, the institutional structure, the
bureaucracy of the Diocese of Virginia and the U.S. Episcopal
Church) has bylaws that claim corporate ownership of all individual
churches' parish property, the state supposedly must uphold those
bylaws despite any claims, evidence, or history to the contrary.
Second, they will argue that "hierarchical" churches (e.g.,
Episcopal, Catholic), unlike "congregational" churches (e.g. United
Church of Christ), are indivisible without the assent of the whole
body (in this case, the diocese) -- much the same way that Lincoln
argued that the Union was indivisible.
Of course, their arguments fail the smell test, because a civic
polity and a religious one are two entirely different things. At
issue in the lawsuit are civic property rights, which are always
governed by the state, not the spiritual matters that are
exclusively (and rightly) the province of churches alone.
Throughout this whole fight, the CANA churches have offered to
negotiate a financial settlement, and they have kept their rhetoric
low-key and respectful. After last Friday's ruling, Jim Oakes,
vice-chairman of the new Anglican District of Virginia (the group
of breakaway churches), struck just the right tone in his
statement. "Let us choose healing over litigation," he said, "and
peaceful co-existence over lawsuits, and let us devote all our
resources to serving Christ and helping others around the
world."
If only the Episcopal Diocese of Virginia would be so
reasonable. The congregations of the CANA parishes built, care for,
and worship in their churches. The Episcopal Diocese ought to
adhere to the scriptural admonition against coveting those
properties the diocese had no part in creating or maintaining. To
do otherwise -- to continue attempts to confiscate those properties
-- is to accomplish the exact opposite of social justice.
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