By Mark Tooley on 4.24.09 @ 6:07AM
A Buddhist bishop for the Episcopal Church?
The modern Episcopal Church always strives to stay ahead of the
latest fads. In recent years it has dealt with its first openly
homosexual bishop, its first Islamic priest, and its first Druid
priest. Now it might be on the verge of electing its first
Buddhist bishop.
Kevin Thew Forrester, who is ordained both as an Episcopal priest
and as a lay Zen Buddhist, was elected bishop by the Diocese of
Northern Michigan (the Upper Peninsula) in February. He is also
known as "Genpo," or "Way of Universal Wisdom." A majority of
Episcopal bishops and diocesan standing committees now must
consent to his election by July. The 2003 election of actively
homosexual Gene Robinson as New Hampshire's bishop has already
fueled schism within the Episcopal Church and the global Anglican
Communion. Would a Buddhist bishop add to the division, or merely
be an anticlimax?
"I have been blessed to practice Zen meditation for almost a
decade," Forrester has explained.
"About five years ago a Buddhist community welcomed me as an
Episcopal priest in my commitment to a meditation practice -- a
process known by some Buddhists as 'lay ordination.'" He further
opined: "Literally thousands of Christians have been drawn to Zen
Buddhism in particular because, distinct from western religions,
it embodies a pragmatic philosophy and a focus on human suffering
rather than a unique theology of God."
Forrester, who is 51 and has been an Episcopal priest since 1994,
insists Zen Buddhism is compatible with his faith. "It's not a
matter of holding two faiths. There's one faith and it's
Christianity," he told a local Michigan newspaper. "The gift is
that that faith is deepened by my meditative practice and I'm
eternally grateful to Zen Buddhism for teaching me that practice
and receiving me as an Episcopal priest." Forrester insists that
his faith allows him to be "open to receive the truth and the
beauty and goodness, and the wisdom from the other religious
traditions of the world, and to be in dialogue with them."
The diocese to which Forrester has been elected bishop has only
27 churches, has lost 30 percent of its membership, and now has
fewer than 2000 souls, fewer than 700 of whom actively attend
church. But consent to his election by the Episcopal Church will
elevate him in the global Anglican communion, whose more than 800
bishops preside over nearly 80 million communicants. An Anglican
bishop in Nigeria or Sudan may preside over many tens of
thousands of members and arduously commute, sometimes by bicycle,
across many hundreds of miles of dirt roads. Small, liberal, and
affluent dioceses in the U.S. can afford to be more esoteric in
their selection of bishops, who have fewer responsibilities.
According to a Diocese of Northern Michigan statement, Forrester
was "drawn into the Christian-Zen Buddhist dialogue through
centering prayer and his desire to assist persons in their own
transformation in Christ." He has practiced Zen meditation for
nearly 10 years and, "with marvelous hospitality, the Buddhist
community welcomed him in his commitment to meditation practice
as an Episcopal priest."
An Episcopal theologian who assisted the Northern Michigan
Diocese in its election similarly explained that "Buddhism is a
set of practices similar to Christian practices about meditation
and awareness and compassionate living." She insisted Zen
Buddhism could be "practiced without detriment to doctrine" and
there are "a number of bishops" in the Episcopal Church who
"engage in and have experience of Buddhist practices of
mediation." So if his election is confirmed, Forrester apparently
will not be alone among the bishops.
Forrester's confirmation by most Episcopal bishops may be less
than automatic. Even several non-conservative bishops have
publicly opposed him. Bishop of Southern Ohio Thomas Breidenthal
says he's concerned not so much about the Zen Buddhism as about
Forrester's seeming denial of the Christian understanding of
salvation.
"According to Thew Forrester, Jesus revealed in his own person
the way that any of us can be at one with God, if only we can
overcome the blindness that prevents us from recognizing our
essential unity with God," Breidenthal
noted. "The problem here is that the death of Jesus as an
atonement for our sins is completely absent, and purposely so. As
I read Thew Forrester, nothing stands between us and God but our
own ignorance of our closeness to God. When our eyes are opened,
atonement (not for our sins, but understood as a realization of
our essential unity with God) is achieved."
The Southern Ohio bishop worried that Forrester's teaching "flies
in the face of what I take to be the conviction at the heart of
our faith tradition, namely, that we are in bondage to sin and
cannot get free without the rescue God has offered us in Jesus,
who shouldered our sins on the cross." Breidenthal observed that
Forrester's sermons, once publicly available on his home
congregation's website, have recently been removed.
Of course, most of Forrester's sermons had already been
downloaded by countless curious Anglicans. The Arkansas
Democrat Gazette
wrote extensively about Forrester's theology, reporting that
the proposed bishop "denies that Satan exists," "doesn't believe
God sent his only-begotten son to die for the sins of the world,"
"says that the Koran is sacred," and altered the Apostles' Creed,
all while aspiring to become a "successor to the Apostles."
The Gazette quoted Forrester's Buddhist abbot fondly
remembering when the Episcopal priest "donned ceremonial garb,
kneeled with his hands in a praying position, took Buddhist vows
and received his new dharma name" of Genpo.
Early this month, the Seattle Episcopal priest who professed also
to be a Muslim was defrocked by her bishop. In 2005, a
Pennsylvania Episcopal priest who had been outed as a Druid (he
belonged to the Order of Bards, Ovates, and Druids) was forced to
resign by his bishop. Having rejected Muslim and Druid priests,
will the Episcopal Church now affirm a Buddhist bishop? We'll
know this summer.