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News of the PC(USA) --
archive for January - June, 2009 |
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Click here for all
the more recent stories on the PC(USA).
Earlier stories are indexed:
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The
Presbyterian Church (USA) is shrinking. John Shuck
offered these reflections on his blog, Shuck & Jive
We are whittling down our denomination to the
size of
Gideon's army. The Presbyterian News Service
published a story today about our latest loss which is
the largest since reunion in 1983.
LOUISVILLE —
Membership in the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) fell by
69,381 in 2008, the Office of the General Assembly (OGA)
has announced in its
annual statistical report, continuing a trend that
began in the mid-1960s.
Total membership of
the denomination is now 2,140,165.
Where did they go?
Almost 104,000 people joined the PC(USA)
last year, but that good news was more than offset by
the 34,101 Presbyterians who died, the 34,340 who were
members of the 25 congregations that left the PC(USA)
for other denominations, and the staggering 104,428 who
were removed from the rolls by their sessions without
apparently joining any other church.
Our stated clerk, Gradye Parsons said,
“Presbyterians can be evangelists!”
I tried that word "evangelist" on my folks the other day,
but they didn't like it much. It reminds people of a sweaty
tent-meeting filled with loud, insistent Bible-thumpers.
When I tried to suggest that evangelism means "good news"
they didn't buy it. Too much baggage. On the other hand,
they are good about inviting people to our congregation.
Just don't call them evangelists.
I have no clear idea why our denomination is losing members.
I suppose if you don't want to go to church, one excuse is
as good as another. Baggage is a big issue. Creeds, boring
hymns, bashing gays, superstitions, and the general nausea
caused by Christian "evangelism" have got to be turn offs.
It can't be working in our favor when the true believers
actively prevent congregations from welcoming members. I
am surprised that anyone shows up at all.
More >>
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| “Big Tent” Was
More Than Just Words a report from Mitch
Trigger, Witherspoon's Secretary/Communicator
[6-23-09]
Ever since the
Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) went to biennial assemblies, our church
has been looking for something to fill the void left in the
off-years. I admit to being one of those “GA junkies,” the people
that attend General Assemblies no matter where they are at or what
issues are being discussed. I missed seeing friends, hearing
first-hand stories about what was happening around the denomination,
and talking to the many wonderful people who serve the PC(USA)
through the offices in Louisville.
For the rest
of Mitch's report >>
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|
Presbyterian “Big Tent” draws 1,500,
offers a wide array of good things
[6-19-09]
We regret that we
were not able to be there for what was apparently a very impressive
event – or rather a collection of many events, large and small.
But to see a listing
of Presbyterian News Service reports from many of them,
click here.
Click here
for
a few of the
highlights that might be of special interest to Witherspooners. |
|
Remembering Mary Jane Patterson [4-16-09]
We've just received the published obituary of Mary
Jane Patterson, long-time Director of the Presbyterian Church's
Washington Office. who died on April 8 in Washington, DC.
Mary Jane Patterson, the eldest child of Robert and Ida Patterson,
was born on February 12, 1920, in Marietta, Ohio. She was preceded
in death by a younger sister, Roberta and younger brother, Calvin.
Mary Jane attended and graduated from the Marietta school system
with high honors. She continued to academically excel as she
received a BS and BA degree in accounting and philosophy at Ohio
State University. She completed her formal education with a Masters
degree in Social Work from Ohio State.
Mary Jane's childhood experiences helped to shape
her lifelong involvement in the African solidarity and civil rights
movements. Her dedication to human rights began long before the
1960s. Her father knew A. Philip Randolph from the 1920s, and she
recalls him talking of a march on Washington long before the 1963
march. Her mother instilled in her a love, and compassion for all
people, regardless of race, nationality, or creed. Mary Jane began
her quest for justice with a restaurant sit-in in the late 1940s.
Her journey took her to justice efforts around the country including
organizing an Ohio delegation to the 1963 March on Washington and
engaging in voter registration efforts in Mississippi in 1964.
By 1960 Mary Jane focused her attention to the
life and ministry of the Presbyterian Church.
In that year she was ordained a ruling elder in
the Presbyterian Church.
In 1966 she was appointed a career missionary by
the Commission on Ecumenical Mission and Relations and assigned to
Nairobi, Kenya, East Africa. During her two and a half years in
Nairobi she worked as a community developer and consultant on social
work for the Presbyterian Church of East Africa. In 1968, along with
100 other missionaries she was called home because of the crises in
our nation around the assassinations of Martin Luther King, Jr. and
Robert Kennedy.
In January of 1969, she accepted a post with the
Protestant Community Services of Los Angeles where she worked as a
community organizer specialist and ombudsman.
In 1971, Mary Jane went to Washington, D.C. as
Associate Director of the Washington Office of the Presbyterian
Church. In 1976, she became the first woman to be named Director of
the Washington Office. She retired from her position as Director in
1986, but she never retired from championing human rights and
justice. Among her other accomplishments, Mary Jane served for six
years as President of the World Conference on Religion and Peace,
USA. WCRP is a world-wide inter-religious organization dedicated to
collaboration among the world's religions on issues concerning peace
with justice and the integrity of the environment. She also served
on the National Capital Presbytery Administration and Personnel
Committee and on their Permanent Judicial Commission.
In 1977, Mary Jane was asked by President Jimmy
Carter to serve in his administration as member of the Presidential
Advisory Board for Ambassadorial Appointments. She was also
frequently called upon for advice by President Ronald Reagan despite
their disagreements on many issues. As was recently quoted in the
Presbyterian News Service “No one ignored Mary Jane Patterson.”
All her adult life Mary Jane has confronted
violence against women. She worked closely with the House of Ruth, a
home for battered women. She also developed a program to build
economic justice for women, making sure they receive the same wages
as men in the common workplace.
Mary Jane was the recipient of numerous awards for
her work in civil rights, human rights, and peace and justice
issues. However, she was most proud of her award as a Presbyterian
Church (USA) Woman of Faith in 1998.
Mary Jane has said many times “The important thing
is faithfulness. We have been working on these issues for a long
time. The issues change but the struggle continues. God calls us to
faithfulness.”
Mary Jane leaves to mourn: One sister-in-law: Dorothy Patterson
Gregory (Columbus, OH); Nieces and Nephews: Brenda J.P. (Winston)
Arthurs (Columbus, OH); Robert L. (Patricia) Patterson (Springboro,
OH), Brian L. (Esther) Neal (Corona, CA), Dale A. (Cheryl) Patterson
(Columbus, OH); Eight Great Nieces and Nephews: Shanee' (MyRon)
Edmonds (Antioch, TN), DaNielle Arthurs (Antioch, TN), Nia Patterson
(Columbus, OH), David Patterson (Annandale, VA) Brandon Patterson
(Severn, MD), Bryan Patterson (Colton, CA), Barrington Arthurs
(Columbus, OH), Dominic (Tinisha) Neal (San Diego, CA). Eight Great
Great Nieces and Nephews: Makayla Arthurs, Teylor Edmonds, Dominque
Neal, Violet Neal, Jalen Patterson-Greene, Noah Goodman-Patterson,
Camden Edmonds, Sean Neal: Cousins Constance Toles (Columbus, OH),
Robert Leach, (Fontana, CA), Robin Leach (Los Angeles, CA) and a
host of other relatives and friends.
Acknowledgment
The family acknowledges with sincere thanks and
appreciation all of your prayers, acts of kindness, and expressions
of love and sympathy during this period of our bereavement.
In a broken and fearful world the Spirit gives us
courage to pray without ceasing, to witness among all peoples Christ
as Lord and Savior, to unmask idolatries in church and culture, to
hear voices of people long silenced, and to work with others for
justice, freedom, and peace. In gratitude to God, empowered by the
Spirit, we strive to serve Christ in our daily tasks and to live
holy and joyful lives, even as we watch for God's new heaven and new
earth, praying, “Come, Lord Jesus!”
– From “The Presbyterian Church Statement of
Faith” - The Essence of Mary Jane Patterson
Pallbearers
Claude Brame ** Nathaniel Gorman ** Clarence
McCollum ** Cline J. Warren ** Paul Washington, Sr. ** John Wingo
Interment: Washington National Cemetery, Suitland,
Maryland |
| 18 congregation-based community organizing groups
to share $92,500
Grants support local efforts such as affordable housing, job
creation
[4-15-09]
Presbyterian News Service reports that the
Presbyterian Hunger Program, in partnership with the Presbyterian
Church (USA)'s Small Church and Community Ministry Office, recently
allocated $92,500 to 18 congregation-based community organizations (CBCOs).
"They are among the hundreds of Presbyterian
Church (U.S.A.) congregations making a difference in their local
communities" said the Rev. Phil Tom, associate for small church and
community ministry in the Evangelism and Church Growth area of the
General Assembly Council.
Grants are also provided to support training for
lay leaders, pastors, middle governing bodies' staff and seminarians
to develop the skills for congregational-based community organizing.
CBCOs – about 170 of them around the country – are
broad-based coalitions of congregations working in partnership with
other community organizations to address quality of life issues such
as affordable housing, living wage and job creation.
The rest of the
story >> |
|
GAC
closes $9.92 million 2009 mission budget gap
Global
economic crisis, strategic planning shape package of expense cuts,
use of reserves
Net total of 44 positions are being eliminated
by Jerry L. Van
Marter,
Presbyterian News Service
| We are deeply saddened by this news
of further reductions in the programs and ministries of
the PC(USA) -- partly because they directly impact or
eliminate so many social justice and peace-related
programs to which Witherspoon has long been committed,
and even more, perhaps, because of the number of staff
members whose lives and ministries will be affected by
the changes. We encourage all
Witherspoon members and friends to hold these people and
their good work in our prayers, and to pray also for
those who will strive to carry on what they have done.
Doug
King, Witherspoon Communications Coordinator
If you have comments
to share about this development,
please send a note, to be posted here. |
LOUISVILLE ― March
27, 2009 — The General Assembly Council (GAC) closed a $9.92 million
shortfall in the 2009 General Assembly Mission Budget today (March
27), making budget reductions of $3.99 million and using unspent
previous year revenue totaling $5.93 million.
In doing so, the
council reduced the mission budget from $110,885,317 ― which it
approved last September ― to $106,914,584. The overall 4 percent
budget reduction includes a 16 percent decrease in unrestricted
spending and a 1 percent increase in restricted expenditures.
The budget cuts
announced today include the elimination of 14 incumbent positions
and 19 vacant positions at the Presbyterian Center here.
Combined with
personnel actions prior to this meeting which impact the 2009
budget, the GAC staff has been reduced by a net total of 44
positions, with 56 positions eliminated and 12 new ones created. The
GAC staff now numbers just over 400, not including mission
co-workers, conference center staff at Ghost Ranch and Stony Point
and other GAC-related entities.
“The decision to
eliminate positions was difficult,” said GAC Executive Director
Linda Valentine in a press release issued shortly after the GAC
adjourned its May 25-27 meeting. “We know it will have a real-life
impact on people for whom we care and with whom we have worked side
by side. We truly appreciate the work of all our employees. I want
to personally thank those who are leaving us for their efforts on
behalf of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.).”
Four minister members
of Mid-Kentucky Presbytery will be at the center Friday afternoon to
counsel with affected employees. Central Presbyterian Church here
has scheduled a “Service of Gratitude, Lament and Hope” Monday
evening (March 30) at 5:30 in its sanctuary.
Throughout the
meeting here and in a budget orientation video released last week,
GAC staff leaders have emphasized that that the budget-reduction
decisions have been accompanied by an accelerating strategic vision
process designed to “reshape” the GAC’s work.
“This process has
been going on at least as long as I’ve been at the GAC,” Valentine
said earlier this week. She began work as the GAC’s top executive in
July 2006.
“This has been a
constant process of reshaping our mission and ministry,” Valentine
said. “We relentlessly ask: ‘What are we uniquely positioned to do?
What do we do best? What does the church most need from us?’”
In addition to across
the board cuts of 10 percent in postage and mailing and 15 percent
in travel, the cuts reflect this strategic realignment.
A number of service
and program areas have been eliminated: Media Services (last fall),
National Health Ministries, and a training event for mission
personnel in the Middle East and Central Asia. The budget cuts also
reduce support for military chaplains by about 5 percent and Mission
Program Grants (by suspending the fall cycle of grants).
Other programmatic
work has been restructured, including:
•
the Evangelism area in Evangelism and Church Growth;
• the
Presbyterian Peacemaking Program;
• the
Christian Formation office in Theology Worship and Education;
• Church
Financial Campaign Services (in December 2008);
• Financial
Aid for Studies in the Vocation ministry area;
• combining
youth ministries with collegiate ministries in Evangelism and Church
Growth;
• combining
the Educational Ministries office with Curriculum Publishing’s
marketing office;
• combining
the Child Advocacy and Social Welfare Organizations offices; and
• moving the
Multicultural Ministries office from Evangelism and Church Growth to
Racial Ethnic and Women’s Ministries/PW and renaming it
Multicultural Congregational Support. That office and the
congregational enhancement offices will be blended into a new Office
of Cross-cultural ministries and Congregational Support.
Additional savings are
being realized by foregoing a planned $500,000 allocation to the
Capital Reserve Fund; by changing payroll software, and by
renegotiating some contracts with outside vendors.
A mandatory one-week
furlough for all GAC staff, May 18-22 ― announced earlier ― is
expected to save in excess of $420,000.
“Some of the changes
to our budget were made to improve our flexibility, effectiveness
and responsiveness, while others are purely cost-cutting measures,”
said Joey Bailey, treasurer and chief financial officer, in the
press release. “Overall, I think the new budget reflects our
commitment to being responsible stewards of the funds that are
entrusted to us, being accountable to the church, and to our
constituents.”
Valentine
acknowledged that the GAC faces a “similar projected shortfall next
year.” The council will take up that task at its September meeting.
But in her closing remarks to the council, she remained upbeat.
“The cup is more than
half-full,” she said Friday morning. “It is overflowing with the
mission and ministry of Presbyterians all over the world. Soon we’ll
be moving from Lent to Easter,” she said, “and there’s an incredible
amount of good news to tell.”
Eliminated positions
The 14 incumbent
staff positions eliminated March 27:
• Communication
and Funds Development: art director, Presbyterians Today
• Compassion,
Peace and Justice: associate, Social Welfare Organizations
• Compassion,
Peace and Justice: administrative assistant, Director’s Office
• Compassion,
Peace and Justice: associate, network support (part-time),
Presbyterian Peacemaking Program
• Compassion,
Peace and Justice: administrative assistant, Presbyterian
Peacemaking Program
• Compassion,
Peace and Justice: administrative assistant, Presbyterian
Peacemaking Program
• Compassion,
Peace and Justice: associate, National Health Ministries
• Compassion,
Peace and Justice: associate for program resource development
(term), National Health Ministries
• Evangelism
and Church Growth: associate, collegiate ministries
• Evangelism
and Church Growth: program assistant, collegiate ministries
• Racial Ethnic
and Women’s Ministries/Presbyterian Women: administrative assistant
• Shared
Services: maintenance engineer, Building Services
• Theology
Worship and Education: administrative assistant, Theology and
Worship
• Theology
Worship and Education: associate, Christian Education, Middle
Governing Bodies
Here is a complete
list of previously eliminated incumbent and vacant positions as well
as vacant positions eliminated March 27:
Staffing Changes by Title
Incumbent positions
that have been eliminated March 27, 2009:
1. Evangelism &
Church Growth: Associate, Collegiate Ministries
2. Evangelism &
Church Growth: Program Assistant, Collegiate Ministries
3. Compassion,
Peace & Justice: Associate, Social Welfare Organizations
4. Theology
Worship & Education: Administrative Assistant, Theology & Worship
5. Racial Ethnic
and Women’s Ministries/Presbyterian Women: Administrative Assistant
6. Shared
Services: Maintenance Engineer, Building Services
7. Compassion,
Peace & Justice: Senior Administrative Assistant, Director’s Office
8. Compassion,
Peace & Justice: Associate, Network Support (part-time), Peacemaking
Program (effective 4/3/09)
9. Compassion,
Peace & Justice: Administrative Assistant, Peacemaking Program
10. Compassion,
Peace & Justice: Administrative Assistant, Peacemaking Program
11. Compassion,
Peace & Justice: Associate, National Health Ministries
12. Compassion,
Peace & Justice: Associate for Program Resource Development (term),
National Health Ministries
13. Theology
Worship & Education: Associate, Christian Education, Middle
Governing Bodies
14. Communications
& Funds Development: Art Director, Mission Interpretation,
Presbyterians Today
Incumbent positions
previously eliminated:
1. Communications & Funds Development: Coordinator, Media
Services, Creative Services (October 2008)
2. Communications & Funds Development: Media/Production
Specialist, Creative Services (October 2008)
3. Communications & Funds Development: Media Specialist,
Creative Services (October 2008)
4. Racial Ethnic
and Women’s Ministries/Presbyterian Women: Associate, National
Network of Presbyterian College Women (November 2008)
5. Racial Ethnic
and Women’s Ministries/Presbyterian Women: Associate, Racial Ethnic
Young Women Together (November 2008)
6. Racial Ethnic
and Women’s Ministries/Presbyterian Women: Associate, Women’s
Advocacy (November 2008)
7. Shared
Services: Database & Programming Manager, Information Technology
(March 6, 2009)
8. Shared
Services: Systems Developer, Information Technology (March 6, 2009)
9. Shared
Services: Systems Developer, Information Technology (March 6, 2009)
10. Shared
Services: Database Administrator, Information Technology (March 6,
2009)
11. Shared
Services: Network Analyst, Information Technology (March 6, 2009)
12. Shared
Services: Desktop Support Analyst, Information Technology (March 6,
2009)
13. Shared
Services: Supervisor, Computer Operations, Information Technology
(March 6, 2009)
14. Shared
Services: Network Analyst, Information Technology (March 6, 2009)
Vacant positions that
have been eliminated March 27, 2009:
1. Evangelism &
Church Growth: Field Staff, Multicultural Ministries (when term ends
5/31/09)
2. Evangelism &
Church Growth: Field Staff, Multicultural Ministries (when term ends
5/31/09)
3. Evangelism &
Church Growth: Field Staff, Multicultural Ministries (when term ends
5/31/09)
4. Theology
Worship & Education: Administrative Assistant, Educational
Ministries
5. Theology
Worship & Education: Associate for Curriculum Development, Adult
6. Theology
Worship & Education: Editorial Assistant (budgeted for half a year)
7. Theology
Worship & Education: Designer (budgeted for half a year)
8. Theology
Worship & Education: Formatter (budgeted for three-fourths of a
year)
9. Theology
Worship & Education: Copyeditor (budgeted for half a year)
10. Theology
Worship & Education: Designer
11. World Mission:
Administrative Assistant, Education, Training, & Events
12. Racial Ethnic
and Women’s Ministries/Presbyterian Women: Administrative Assistant
13. Shared
Services: Senior Accountant, Financial Services
14. Shared
Services: HR Generalist, Human Resources
15. Shared
Services: Senior Customer Service Representative, Distribution
Center
16. Shared
Services: Fulfillment Clerk, Distribution Center
17. Shared
Services: Mail Clerk, Mail/Print Center
18. Office of
Vocation: Program Assistant, Undergraduate Grants
19. Compassion,
Peace & Justice: Administrative Assistant (part-time), Hunger
Program
Vacant positions that
have been previously eliminated:
1. Communications & Funds Development: Administrative
Assistant, Creative Services (October 2008)
2. Communications & Funds Development: Associate, Creative
Services (October 2008)
3. Racial Ethnic
and Women’s Ministries/Presbyterian Women: Associate, Racial Justice
& Advocacy (November 20008)
4. Racial Ethnic
and Women’s Ministries/Presbyterian Women: Business Manager
(November 20008)
5. Communications & Funds Development: Coordinator, Church
Financial Campaign Service (December 2008)
6. Communications
& Funds Development: Assistant for Administration, CFCS (December
2008)
7. Communications
& Funds Development: Campaign Consultant, CFCS (December 2008)
8. Communications
& Funds Development: Campaign Consultant, CFCS (December 2008)
9. Communications
& Funds Development: Campaign Consultant, CFCS (December 2008)
New positions created
March 27, 2009:
1. Evangelism &
Church Growth: Associate, Personal Evangelism
2. Evangelism &
Church Growth: Associate, Church Evangelism
3. Racial Ethnic
and Women’s Ministries/Presbyterian Women: Coordinator,
Congregational Support & Cross-cultural Ministries
4. Racial Ethnic
and Women’s Ministries/Presbyterian Women: Executive Assistant,
Director's office
5. Compassion,
Peace & Justice: Program Associate, Interpretation, Director's
Office
New positions
previously created:
1. Communications
& Funds Development: Producer, Creative Services (October 2008)
2. Communications
& Funds Development: Production Assistant, Creative Services
(October 2008)
3. Racial Ethnic
and Women’s Ministries/Presbyterian Women: Coordinator, Racial
Ethnic & Women's Leadership Development/RESC (November 2008)
4. Racial Ethnic
and Women’s Ministries/Presbyterian Women: Associate, Women's
Leadership Development (November 2008)
5. Racial Ethnic
and Women’s Ministries/Presbyterian Women: Associate, Gender and
Racial Justice (November 2008)
6. Racial Ethnic
and Women’s Ministries/Presbyterian Women: Ministry Specialist,
Women's Leadership & NNPCW and REYWT (Lydia Kim to fill position on
April 6, 2009.)
7. Executive
Director’s Office: Associate, Advocacy Committee Support (November
2008)
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|
Register for the Big Tent
"and the Word became flesh . . ."
June 11-13, 2009
Hyatt Regency Downtown · Atlanta, Georgia
The
Psalmist looks toward the day when love and faithfulness meet,
justice and peace will embrace (Psalm 85:10).
[3-14-09]
Bring your hopes and yearnings for peace and justice to Atlanta
and network with Presbyterians at the
Big Tent - a first ever gathering of 10 PC(USA) conferences.
The Presbyterian Peacemaking Program and the Presbyterian
Health, Education & Welfare Association will each host one of
the conferences. (Note: Early-bird
registration has been extended through March 30.)
The
Presbyterian Health, Education & Welfare Association's
Biennial Social Justice Conference moves from January to June to
be part of the celebration at the Big Tent. Since 1956, PHEWA
has been a prophetic arm of the PC(USA) working with
marginalized communities and those who serve those communities.
Come to learn and share. Come and discover a community of
support. Come to pray, sing and show that justice is alive and
vibrant in the PC(USA).
Download a schedule for the Social Justice Biennial Conference.
[PDF]
Jesus calls and empowers us to make peace with our neighbors
around the corner and across God's world.
Peacemaking Conference participants will have the
opportunity to visit significant sites in metropolitan Atlanta
where peacemaking is taking place, share stories from our own
neighborhoods, and engage in public witness, small group
discussions and conversations on current issues as we explore
how to do justice and seek peace.
Download a printer-friendly [PDF] flier about the 2009
Peacemaking Conference and a
bulletin insert [PDF] to promote the conference.
Register now and join us at the Big Tent.
From Mark Koenig of the Presbyterian Peacemaking Program
|
| Membership named to
Belhar Confession panel
Replacement also named for Civil Unions and Marriage Special
Committee
[3-14-09]
by Sharon Youngs, OGA Communications Coordinator
(March 11,, 2009
To read this
note on the PC(USA) website >>
LOUISVILLE - The
individuals who will serve on the Special Committee to Consider
Amending the Confessional Documents of the Presbyterian Church
(U.S.A.) to Include the Belhar Confession in The Book of Confessions
have been announced.
The 218th General
Assembly (2008) of the PC(USA) took action to initiate the process
to consider including the Belhar Confession in the church's
confessional documents by appointing a committee to study the
possible addition.
This special
committee, the Assembly noted, is "separate from any committee
assigned to the Heidelberg Catechism," already in The Book of
Confessions. That catechism is being studied by another committee of
15, which is focusing on correcting translations problems within the
confessional document.
The PC(USA)'s Book of
Order (G-18.0201b) provides the details of how such amendments to
the church's confessional documents are to be considered, including
a description of the formation of the committee itself.
The provision states,
"Amendments to the confessional documents of this church may be made
only in the following manner: (1) the approval of the proposed
amendment by the General Assembly and its recommendation to the
presbyteries; (2) the approval in writing of two thirds of the
presbyteries; and (3) the approval and enactment by the next ensuing
General Assembly.
G-18.0201b further
states that, prior to any such amendment being sent to presbyteries,
the assembly "shall appoint a committee of elders and ministers,
numbering not less than fifteen, to consider the proposal, of whom
not more than two shall be from one synod. The committee shall
consult with the committee or governing body ... in which the
amendment originated, and report its recommendations to the next
ensuring General Assembly."
The next assembly
will convene in Minneapolis in June 2010.
The 218th General
Assembly (2008) of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) directed the
Moderators of the 216th, 217th, and 218th General Assemblies to name
the committee to consider including the Belhar Confession, in
consultation with the Stated Clerk of the General Assembly, the
Advocacy Committee for Racial Ethnic Concerns, the Presbyterian
Peacemaking Program, and the Office of Theology and Worship."
Named to the special
committee are the Revs. J. C. Austin (New York City Presbytery),
Jennifer Ayres (Chicago Presbytery), Katie G. Cannon (Philadelphia
Presbytery), Aurelio A. Garcia (Presbiterio de San Juan), Jin. S.
Kim (Twin Cities Presbytery), Mark Lomax (Greater Atlanta
Presbytery), David P. Moessner (John Knox Presbytery), Paul Parsons
(Heartland Presbytery), George W. Stroup, III (Cherokee Presbytery),
Jerry Tankersley (Los Ranchos Presbytery), Eugene G. Turner
(Cayuga-Syracuse Presbytery); and elders Jane Dempsey Douglass (San
Gabriel Presbytery), Leslie McClure (Middle Tennessee Presbytery),
Judith Pingel (Sierra Blanca Presbytery), and Y. Dianna Wright
(Salem Presbytery).
Pingel will serve as
chairperson of the group.
Staffing the
committee will be the Rev. Joseph D. Small, director of Theology
Worship and Education (General Assembly Council) and the Rev.
Fairfax F. Fair, pastor of Highland Presbyterian Church, Louisville,
Ky., on behalf of the Office of the General Assembly.
Presbyterian
News Service has provided brief bio information on the committee
members:
The Rev. J.C. Austin has
served as associate pastor at Madison Avenue Presbyterian Church in
New York City since 2000. An Atlanta native who attended Princeton
Theological Seminary, Austin spent the 1998-99 academic year as a
Visiting Fellow at the University of Cape Town in South Africa,
studying the public roles of the churches in the apartheid struggle
and the reconciliation process. He is currently a Ph.D. candidate at
the University of Cape Town, where he is continuing that study.
The Rev. Jennifer Ryan Ayres
is assistant professor of Christian ethics at
McCormick Theological Seminary in Chicago, where she also teaches
courses on faith and politics, Christian social witness and
globalization. She's a graduate of the University of North
Carolina-Chapel Hill with a degree in political science and of Union
Theological Seminary-Presbyterian School of Christian Education. She
earned her Ph.D. from Emory University, where her dissertation was
on the practical theology of Reformed Christian social witness. She
also studied human rights.
The Rev. Katie G. Cannon
is professor of Christian ethics at Union Theological
Seminary-Presbyterian School of Christian Education in Richmond, VA.
She has also taught at Temple University in Philadelphia, Episcopal
Divinity School in Cambridge, MA, and New York Theological Seminary.
She is the author or editor of six books, including Teaching
Preaching: Isaac R. Clark and Black Sacred Rhetoric, Womanism and
the Soul of the Black Community and Black Womanist Ethics. Her
current work is on a book about the Transatlantic slave trade.
Elder Jane Dempsey Douglass
is a retired professor of the history of Christianity and historical
theology. Holding a Ph.D. in history of religion from Harvard, she
has taught at Claremont School of Theology, Claremont Graduate
University and Princeton Theological Seminary. She made several
trips to South Africa as president of the World Alliance of Reformed
Churches. She has served as president of the American Society of
Church History and was vice-chair of the committee that developed
the PC(USA)'s Brief Statement of Faith.
The Rev. Aurelio A. Garcia
has been professor of humanities at the University of
Puerto Rico since 1999. He has also taught at the Evangelical
Seminary of Puerto Rico. A native of Arecibo, PR, he earned his
Ph.D. in history of Christian doctrine at Princeton Theological
Seminary. He has also studied at Temple University, Cornell
University and the University of Chile in Santiago. Fluent in
Spanish and English, he has served several pastorates in San Juan
Presbytery. He is a specialist in Reformation history, particularly
the Swiss theologian Heinrich Bullinger.
The Rev. Jin S. Kim is
the founding pastor of Church of All Nations in Minneapolis. He
holds degrees from Georgia Tech, Princeton Theological Seminary and
Columbia Theological Seminary. In demand as a speaker, Kim preached
at the 2004 and 2008 General Assemblies. He is moderator-elect of
Twin Cities Area Presbytery and is a PC(USA) delegate to the
National Council of Churches General Assembly. Locally, he serves on
numerous boards, including the Cross Cultural Alliance of Minstries
and the Greater Minneapolis Council of Churches.
The Rev. Mark Lomax is
founding pastor of First African Presbyterian Church in Lithonia,
GA, where he has served for fifteen years. A graduate of United
Theological Seminary, he is assistant professor of homiletics at
Interdenominational Theological Center in Atlanta, which includes
PC(USA)-related Johnson C. Smith Seminary. He is currently the
interim dean at Johnson C. Smith Seminary.
Elder Leslie McClure is
a graduate of Belmont University in Nashville and is a master's
degree candidate in Latin American Studies at Vanderbilt University.
A native of Louisville, KY, McClure is a singer/songwriter/recording
artist who frequently raises money for various mission and hunger
projects around the world through concerts and CD sales. She has
traveled extensively in Latin and South America and has been an
active member at Crescent Hill Presbyterian Church in Louisville and
Second Presbyterian Church in Nashville.
The Rev. David Moesssner
is professor of Biblical theology at the University of Dubuque
Theological Seminary in Iowa, where his greatest joy is preparing
students for ordained ministry. He has also taught at University of
Pretoria in South Africa, Yale Divinity School, Columbia Theological
Seminary and Eberhard-Karis University in Tubingen, Germany. He has
lectured in 10 different countries, including Corinth, where he
helped celebrate 1,950 years of Paul's founding of the church there.
He's a Phi Beta Kappa graduate of Princeton University.
The Rev. Paul Parsons
has served as a pastor for 34 years - three with the United
Methodist Church and 31 with the PC(USA). A native of Maryland, he
graduated from Johns Hopkins University and Gordon-Conwell
Theological Seminary. He has served congregations in Richland, WA;
San Jose, CA; Montrose, CO; and Kansas City, MO. He recently
accepted a call to serve as associate pastor at First Presbyterian
Church of Colorado Springs, CO. An avid mountain climber, he has
scaled 110 summits..
Elder Judith Pingel is
chair of the special committee. She's a public school teacher and
trained mediator. She is currently moderator of Sierra Blanca
Presbytery Council and has also served as a member and chair of the
PC(USA)'s Advocacy Committee on Racial Ethnic Concerns. She
describes herself as a faithful servant.
The Rev. George W. Stroup III
is professor of theology at Columbia Theological Seminary in
Decatur, GA. A native of Tulsa, OK, he graduated from Rice
University, Yale University Divinity School and Vanderbilt
University. Prior to joining the Columbia faculty in 1986, he taught
at The University of the South, Princeton Theological Seminary and
Austin Presbyterian Theological Seminary. He has written and edited
numerous books. Stroup served on the PC(USA)'s Council on Theology
and Culture and on the Brief Statement of Faith committee.
The Rev. Jerry Tankersley
is a recently retired pastor who has served pastorates in Southern
California and served at all levels of the PC(USA). He has just
completed service on the General Assembly Nominating Committee and
was co-moderator of the 2007 National Pastors Sabbath. A native of
Amarillo, TX, he graduated from Westmont College in California and
holds graduate degrees from Fuller Theological Seminary, Princeton
Theological Seminary and the School of Theology at Claremont, CA. He
also teaches law at the California State University-Los Angeles.
The Rev. Eugene Turner
is a retired minister living in Fayetteville, NY. A graduate of
PC(USA)-related Knoxville College in Tennessee and Pittsburgh
Theological Seminary, he did graduate work at Harvard. After serving
pastorates in Patterson, NJ, and Philadelphia, Turner entered
executive service, serving in Philadelphia Presbytery and then as a
synod executive in San Francisco and Syracuse, NY. On General
Assembly staff he served as associate stated clerk as ecumenical
officer where he represented the church at the NCC, WCC and WARC.
The Rev. Y. Dianna
Wright is African American Ministry Advocate for Salem
Presbytery, based in Clemmons, NC. A graduate of the Presbyterian
School of Christian Education (now Union-PSCE) in Richmond, VA, and
Columbia Theological Seminary, she has been an education consultant
and curriculum and devotional writer for many years, writing
Christian education curriculum, devotions for These Days and
Presbyterian youth resources. She is the founder of the Kuumba
Center for Christian Education and Spiritual Growth in Florence, SC.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Earl B. Arnold named to committee on marriage
and civil unions
The Rev. Bruce
Reyes-Chow, moderator of the 218th General Assembly (2008), also
named a replacement to another special committee at work in response
to an action by last summer's assembly: the Rev. Earl B. Arnold
(Cayuga-Syracuse Presbytery) will fill the vacancy left by the
resignation of the Rev. Steve Hancock (Arkansas Presbytery) on the
General Assembly Special Committee to Study Issues of Civil Union
and Christian Marriage.
|
| Presbyterian young adult
conference set for May 27-30 in Austin, Texas
Early registration deadline for the YAM Jam
Conference is this Wednesday, February 25.
News Release [Posted here 2-23-09]
Austin Texas - the “Live Music Capital of the
World” – is the location for YAM-Jam – a gathering of Presbyterian
young adults and young adult leaders throughout the PCUSA that will
take place on and around the campus of Austin Theological Seminary
from May 27-30. Bruce Reyes-Chow (Moderator), Carol Howard-Merritt
(author of Tribal Church, and Ted Wardlaw (President of Austin
Seminary) are scheduled to keynote this first time event. Hosted by
PACHEM (Presbyterian Association for Collegiate and Higher Education
Ministries) and sponsored through the Office of Collegiate
Ministries YAM-Jam is an event for people seeking creative ways to
be in ministry with young adults and college students in the PCUSA.
The classic problem facing young adult ministry in
the PCUSA is feeling isolated from the rest of the denomination. As
our church adjusts to issues of culture and structural changes,
YAM-Jam is a way to bring those who care about young adults together
to share, learn, worship, and play. To make this happen, the
gathering will follow the flow of a Jam Session. According to
Wikipedia – “a jam session is a musical session where musicians
gather and play (or "jam") without extensive preparation or
predefined arrangements. Jam sessions are often used to develop new
material, find suitable arrangements, or simply as a social
gathering and communal practice session. Jam sessions may be based
upon existing songs or forms, may be loosely based on an agreed
chord progression or suggested by one participant, or may be wholly
improvisational. Jam sessions can range from very loose gatherings
of amateurs to sophisticated improvised recording sessions intended
to be edited and released to the public.”
“Yam-Jam will begin like a traditional
conference,” said Rev. Tommy Brown of the PACHEM Board, “but we hope
it will quickly become a true Jam Session of ideas, creativity, and
connections for college and young adult ministries in the PCUSA.”
Brown continued, “It is going to be exciting to see what emerges
from YAM-Jam – it is really going to be left up to the Holy Spirit
and the passion, energy, and creativity of everyone there.”
If you want to be a part of what God is doing
through YAM-Jam – go to
PACHEM.org or register through the
Collegiate Ministries Office. YAM-Jam is limited to 125
participants and there is a goal of 50% leadership/participation by
young adults. |
|
Financial "downturn"
hits the PC(USA) Commentary
by Gene TeSelle
[2-19-09]
The head of the Presbyterian
Foundation recently commented on the economic downturn. We must
applaud his saying something publicly about it. But much of his
language is that of the corporate world, from which he came, and his
own salary is in the neighborhood of $600,000, ten times that of
most ministers and most GA staffers.
Gene TeSelle offers some reflections on the
economic situation and its impact on the PC(USA), and on the views
expressed by Robert W. Maggs
Jr., President and Chief Executive PC(USA) Board of Pensions. |
| Membership named for
two GA special committees Topics of study to
include Heidelberg Catechism and Israel Palestine
by Sharon Youngs, Communications Coordinator,
Office of the General Assembly
LOUISVILLE — February 6, 2009 — The membership of
two General Assembly special committees have been released, bringing
the total of special committees named by the Rev. Bruce Reyes-Chow,
moderator of the 218th General Assembly (2008) of the Presbyterian
Church (U.S.A.) to three this week.
Reyes-Chow earlier named his appointees to the
Assembly’s Special
Committee
to Study Issues of Civil Unions and Christian Marriage.
All three special committees were formed out of
actions of the 218th General Assembly (2008), which met last summer
in San Jose, Calif.
Heidelberg
Catechism
The Special Committee on Correcting Translation
Problems of the Heidelberg Catechism will consider proposed changes
to the catechism made by last year’s assembly. According to the
assembly action, the proposed changes revolve around correcting
“translation problems in five responses of the Heidelberg Catechism
as found in The Book of Confessions and to add the original
Scripture texts of the German Heidelberg Catechism.”
The Book of Order (G-18.0200) calls for a special
committee of no less than fifteen individuals to be formed when a
General Assembly proposes any changes to part of the PC(USA)
Constitution. The Heidelberg Catechism is in The Book of
Confessions, part of the Constitution.
The special committee will consider the proposed
changes to the catechism; consult with Newark Presbytery, which sent
the original overture to last year’s assembly; and report back to
the 219th General Assembly (2010) in Minneapolis.
Minister members of the special committee chosen
by Reyes-Chow are the Revs. Heidi Husted Armstrong (Olympia
Presbytery), Warner M. Bailey (Grace Presbytery), Shelly Barrick
Parsons (West Virginia Presbytery), James R. Edwards (Inland
Northwest Presbytery), Christopher Elwood (Mid-Kentucky Presbytery),
Gary Neal Hansen (John Knox Presbytery), Neal D. Presa (Elizabeth
Presbytery), Lorna A. Shoemaker (Redwoods Presbytery), David L.
Stubbs (Lake Michigan Presbytery), and Floretta L. Watkins
(Charlotte Presbytery)
Elders chosen for the panel are Dawn DeVries
(James Presbytery), Sylvia Dooling (Plains and Peaks Presbytery),
Susan N. Haskell (Sheppards and Lapsley Presbytery), Patrick Hunt
(San Francisco Presbytery), and David Mulford (South Louisiana
Presbytery).
|
Biographical information on members of Heidelberg
Catechism committee
by
Bethany Furkin and Jerry L. Van Marter,
Presbyterian News Service [posted here
2-16-09]
The Rev.
Heidi Husted Armstrong: has
been parish associate for preaching and worship at
Trinity Presbyterian Church in Tacoma, WA, since 2007.
She previously served several pastorates in Washington
and California, as the Christian impact director at
World Vision U.S., and is currently preacher and worship
leader for the Immigration and Customs Enforcement
Northwest Detention Center.
The Rev.
Warner M. Bailey: is
director of Presbyterian studies and adjunct professor
of polity at Brite Divinity School at Texas Christian
University. He is also the parish associate at St.
Stephen Presbyterian Church in Fort Worth, TX. Bailey
has served as moderator of the Committee on the Brief
Statement of Faith at the 201st General Assembly (1989)
and moderator of the Committee on Bills and Overtures of
the 213th General Assembly (2001).
Elder
Dawn DeVries: is professor
of systematic theology at Union Theological
Seminary-Presbyterian School of Christian Education in
Richmond, VA. She is a prolific writer, editor and
translator. In the mid-1990s, she served on the Special
Committee on Catechisms that produced new
non-constitutional catechisms for the PC(USA)
Elder
Sylvia Dooling: is an
ordained elder and deacon at Mountain View Presbyterian
Church in Loveland, CO. She led Bible study for 24 years
at her congregation and has also been active in Boulder
Presbytery, having served as vice moderator and
currently on the Committee on Preparation for Ministry
and presbytery’s Council.
The Rev.
James Edwards: is professor
of theology at Whitworth University in Spokane, WA,
teaching biblical languages — Hebrew and Greek — and
biblical studies, especially New Testament. A prolific
author and traveler, particularly to German-speaking
countries and the Middle East, Edwards leads a weekly
adult Sunday School class at his home church.
The Rev.
Christopher Elwood: is
professor of historical theology at Louisville
Presbyterian Theological Seminary, specializing in the
history and theology of the 16th-century Reformation. He
has written several works on the origins of Reformed
theological traditions, including the widely-read Calvin
for Armchair Theologians.
The Rev.
Gary Hansen: is assistant
professor of church history at the University of Dubuque
Theological Seminary in Iowa. He is on the board of the
Calvin Studies Society and is a regular presenter at the
annual Sixteenth Century Studies Conference. Hansen
previously served as stated supply pastor of
Hillsborough Presbyterian Church in Belle Mead, NJ.
Elder
Susan Haskell: is an elder
and teacher and helps lead local and international
mission work for her congregation in Birmingham, AL. She
is on the board of Columbia Theological Seminary and has
served as moderator of the Presbytery of Sheppards and
Lapsley, on its. Committee on Preparation for Ministry
and on the Committee on Local Arrangements for the 2006
General Assembly.
Elder
Patrick Hunt: is a teacher
of archaeology at Stanford University. He has written 10
books and 50 articles ranging on topics from ancient
history to biblical literature. Hunt regularly appears
on The History Channel, the National Geographic
Channel’s “Explorer” and PBS. He has recently won an
award for his contributions to the History Channel’s
“Engineering an Empire Series: Persia and Carthage.”
Elder
David Todd Mulford: is a
risk strategist for Louisiana Companies and Assurex
Global, where he helps clients design, implement and
maintain risk strategies for their businesses. He has
completed Commissioned Lay Pastor training for through
the Presbytery of South Louisiana and has preached at
several churches there. Mulford was an elder
commissioner to the 218th General Assembly (2008).
The Rev.
Shelly Barrick Parsons: is
the Presbyterian campus pastor at West Virginia
University and the director of the Campus Ministry
Center there. She is a graduate of Union Theological
Seminary-Presbyterian School of Christian Education in
Richmond, VA. Her areas of greatest interest are
Reformed hermeneutics and Christian education.
The Rev.
Neal Presa, chair: is
pastor of Middlesex Presbyterian Church in Middlesex,
NJ, and is completing a Ph.D. dissertation in liturgical
studies at Drew University in Madison, NJ. He is
convener/chairman of the Caribbean and North American
Area Council of the World Alliance of Reformed Churches.
Presa has also served as vice-chair of the General
Assembly Council and as a member of the Committee on the
Office of the General Assembly.
The Rev.
Lorna Shoemaker: is
director of the library and professor of the history of
global Christianity at Christian Theological Seminary
(Disciples of Christ) in Indianapolis. Currently working
on her Ph.D. from the Graduate Theological Union in
Berkeley, CA, Shoemaker has served in parish ministry
and as a staff associate for Women’s Ministries for the
PC(USA).
The Rev.
David Stubbs: has taught at
Western Theological Seminary in Holland, MI, for eight
years. He has been involved with the PC(USA) at all
levels, including several study groups of the Office of
Theology and Worship. He has published and presented
papers in several areas in theology and ethics and is
working on a project about the Reformed theology of the
Eucharist.
The Rev.
Floretta Watkins: is a
fourth-generation Presbyterian who has served the church
as an ordained minister since 1993, working in campus
ministry and two pastorates. She now works with a
multicultural congregation in Charlotte, NC. Watkins is
also the managing partner of Leadership Acuity, which is
affiliated with the Leadership Management Institute in
Waco, TX.
Information about all of the General Assembly special
committees named to date is
available online. |
The committee membership covers a spectrum of
ages. Of the fifteen, three are between the ages of 26-35, two are
between 36 and 45, four are between 46-55, six are between 56-65,
and one is over 65 years old.
Presa will chair the committee. The Revs. Charles
Wiley, coordinator in Theology Worship and Education (General
Assembly Council), and Tom Hay, director of operations for the
Office of the General Assembly, will staff the group.
The committee will begin its work at the end of
March.
Israel
PalestineThe 218th General Assembly
(2008) also asked the Moderators of the 218th, 217th, and 216th
General Assemblies (2008), (2006), and (2004) to “select a
nine-member committee from a broad spectrum of viewpoints from
PC(USA) members to prepare a comprehensive study, with
recommendations, that is focused on Israel/Palestine within the
complex context of the Middle East.
The Assembly said the study “should include an
evaluation of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.)’s mission and
relationships, including an assessment of the future for the
Christian presence and witness in the Middle East; an overview of
the complex interactions among religions, cultures, and peoples that
characterize the region; an analysis of U.S. policies that impact
the area; and steps to be taken with our partners in the Middle East
and the United States to foster justice, improve interfaith
relations, and nurture the building of peace toward a secure and
viable future for all.”
This Special Committee to Prepare a Comprehensive
Study Focused on Israel Palestine is also to report back to the
219th General Assembly (2010).
Elder Rick Ufford-Chase, Moderator of the 216th
General Assembly (2004), and the Rev. Joan Gray, Moderator of the
217th General Assembly (2006), joined Reyes-Chow in naming the
special committee’s members.
Minister members are the Revs. Susan R. Andrews
(Hudson River Presbytery), John Huffman (Los Ranchos Presbytery),
Rebecca Reyes (New Hope Presbytery), Marthame Sanders (Greater
Atlanta Presbytery), Ronald L. Shive (Salem Presbytery), and John W.
Wimberly, Jr. (National Capital Presbytery).
Elders serving on the panel are Frederic W. Bush
(Los Ranchos Presbytery), Nahida H. Gordon (Muskingum Valley
Presbytery), and Lucy Janjigian (Palisades Presbytery).
|
Biographical information on members of the Committee to
Prepare a Comprehensive Study Focused on Israel
Palestine
[posted
here 2-16-09]
For this story as posted on the PC(USA) website >>
The
Rev. Susan R. Andrews is
general presbyter of Hudson River Presbytery. She
previously served as a parish pastor for 32 years, most
recently at Bradley Hills Presbyterian Church in
Bethesda, Md. Andrews has also served as moderator of
two presbyteries and was chair of the General Assembly
Call System Task Force from 1986-1990. She was moderator
of the 215th General Assembly (2002).
Elder
Frederic W. Bush is a
retired professor of Ancient Near Eastern Studies and
Old Testament at Fuller Theological Seminary in
Pasadena, Calif. As a professor, he directed a summer
program that took students to Israel to study biblical
Hebrew. Bush holds a bachelor’s degree from the
University of Washington, a Master of Divinity from
Fuller Theological Seminary, and a Ph.D. from Brandeis
University.
Elder
Nahida H. Gordon is a
biostatistics professor at Case Western Reserve
University in Cleveland. A Palestinian-American, Gordon
and her family emigrated to the United States when she
was young. Gordon was a Fulbright scholar at Birzeit
University in Palestine in 1997. She is a member of the
PC(USA)’s Israel Palestine Missionary Network and gives
talks about Palestine around Northeast Ohio.
The Rev.
John Huffman is pastor of
St. Andrew’s Presbyterian Church in Newport Beach,
Calif. He is on the boards of World Vision U.S. and
Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary and is chairman of
the board of Christianity Today International. Huffman
chaired the PC(USA) delegation to the National Council
of the Churches of Christ in the U.S.A. from 1992-2000
and served on the Mission Initiative: Joining Hearts and
Hands national steering committee.
Elder
Lucy Janjigian has
volunteered as a short-term mission worker with the
Armenian Missionary Association of America. A painter,
she introduced crafts to coordinate with Bible studies
and vacation Bible schools in Armenia, Georgia and Ngorn
Kharabakh. Janjigian was born of Armenian descent in
Jerusalem and worked with the United Nations Relief
Works Agency among Palestinian refugees.
The
Rev. Rebecca Reyes is the
project coordinator for the Latino Health Project at
Duke University Hospital in Durham, N.C. An ordained
minister for 28 years, Reyes has served the PC(USA) as a
pastor, campus minister, global recruiter, and General
Assembly staff associate. She has also led several
global faith seminars in such countries as South Africa,
Nicaragua, Mexico, and Canada.
The
Rev. Marthame Sanders has
served as pastor of Oglethorpe Presbyterian Church in
Atlanta since 2005. Before that, he and his wife served
as PC(USA) mission volunteers in the Palestinian
Christian village of Zababdeh. They also produced a
documentary film series, “Salt of the Earth: Palestinian
Christians in the Northern West Bank.” Sanders is a
graduate of Yale University and the University of
Chicago’s Divinity School.
The
Rev. Ronald L. Shive
(chairperson of the committee) is pastor of First
Presbyterian Church in Burlington, N.C. He previously
served at several churches in South Carolina. A
commissioner to the 218th General Assembly (2008), Shive
served on the Assembly Committee on Peacekeeping and
International Relations, which proposed the special
committee. He was the convener and organizer for the
first Peru Mission Network meeting and serves on the
board.
The
Rev. John W. Wimberly, Jr.,
has for 25 years been pastor of Western Presbyterian
Church in Washington, D.C. He has served as moderator of
National Capital Presbytery and the Synod of the
Mid-Atlantic Synod. Wimberly is co-founder of numerous
social justice/service programs that have focused on
such issues as battered women, rape victims, and the
homeless. He has also helped build a congregation in
Ghana and a health care ministry in Ethiopia. |
Staffing the committee will be the Rev. Christian
Iosso, coordinator of the Advisory Committee on Social Witness
Policy; the Rev. Victor Makari, coordinator for the Middle East,
Asia Minor and the Jinishian Memorial Program for the General
Assembly Council; Elder Doug Dicks, a PC(USA) mission co-worker in
Israel Palestine; and the Rev. Kerry Clements, director of
Communication, Development, and Technology for the Office of the
General Assembly.
|
| ACSWP seeks moral voice in economic
reconstruction Fledgling “Global Oikonomics
Project” aims at ‘well-being of all’ [1-28-09]
As the world struggles with the current economic
crisis, the Presbyterian Church, through its Advisory Committee on
Social Witness Policy (ACSWP), is beginning to add a moral and
ethical dimension – a concern for justice – to the concern for
economic recovery.
“There needs to be a moral, justice-seeking
dimension to this work and above all an acute sense of its likely
impact on the poor,” retired San Francisco Theological Seminary dean
Lewis Mudge told his fellow members of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.)’s
Advisory Committee on Social Witness Policy (ACSWP) at their recent
meeting in Berkeley, CA.
The full story >>
|
|
and the Word became flesh
Presbyterian Health, Education & Welfare Association
Social Justice Biennial Conference
in the Big Tent
June 11 - 13, 2009
Atlanta, GA
[1-16-09]
Isaiah 54:2
says, "Enlarge the site of your tent…" Is our Tent large enough for
those with no tent or those who stand outside, waiting for
hospitality to be offered? Our participants will connect with those
working at the grass- roots of our denomination in justice
ministries. Listen, learn and share how congregations can be in
ministry with persons and families affected by disabilities, mental
illness, human trafficking, HIV/AIDS, domestic violence, substance
abuse, immigration, child welfare, health disparities… These are
ministry, justice, and biblical imperatives! Atlanta, with its deep
history of involvement in civil rights, is the perfect landscape to
engage in this discussion.
The Big Tent is a celebration of the
Presbyterian Church (USA) as 10 conferences of the Church come
together in Atlanta. There are some common meal, worship and
workshop times, as well as separate conference schedules.
Engage the
Church in more diverse ways than ever before.
JUNE 11 – 13,
2009 • Atlanta, GA
Click here for the conference
brochure, in PDF format
To register >>
To learn more about PHEWA >>
|
| GAC office of racial
ethnic and women’s ministries reorganized
Hunter
says focus is on strengthening ties to congregations
Presbyterian News service
reports that the Rev. Rhashell Hunter, director of the General Assembly
Council’s Racial Ethnic and Women’s Ministries/Presbyterian Women has
announced a redesign of the office to focus on racial ethnic and women’s
leadership development.
Five new positions have
been created as a result of the redesign, and five existing positions
have been eliminated.
More >>
| Note: The Witherspoon Board has
discussed this development briefly, and sees many reasons
for concern. We are seeking more information and will
offer comments as soon as we are able to.
If you have comments to share, please send
them to us, and we'll share them here if you permit.
Just
send a note. |
|
|
Click here for all
the more recent stories on the PC(USA).
Earlier stories are indexed:
|
| |
|
Visit
our lively
new website! |
|
GA actions
ratified (or not) by the presbyteries
A number of the most important actions of the 219th
General Assembly have now been acted upon by the presbyteries,
confirming most of them as amendments to the PC(USA) Book of Order.
We provided resources to help inform the
reflection and debate, along with updates on the voting.
Our three areas of primary interest have been:
 |
Amendment 10-A,
which removes the current ban on
lesbian/gay/bisexual/transgender persons being considered as
possible candidates for ordination as elder or ministers.
Approved! |
 |
Amendment 10-2,
which would add the Belhar Confession to our Book of
Confessions. Disapproved, because as an amendment
to the Book of Confessions it needed a 2/3 vote, and did not
receive that. |
 |
Amendment
10-1, which adopts the new Form of Government
that was approved by the Assembly. Approved. |
|
| |
|
If you like what
you find here,
we hope you'll help us keep Voices for Justice going ... and
growing!
Please consider making a special
contribution -- large or small -- to help us continue and improve
this service.
Click here to send a
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out to "Presbyterian Voices for Justice" and marked "web site," to
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Some blogs worth visiting |
|
PVJ's
Facebook page
Mitch Trigger, PVJ's
Secretary/Communicator, has created a Facebook page where
Witherspoon members and others can gather to exchange news and
views. Mitch and a few others have posted bits of news, both
personal and organizational. But there’s room for more!
You can post your own news and views,
or initiate a conversation about a topic of interest to you. |
| |
|
Voices of Sophia blog
Heather Reichgott, who has created
this new blog for Voices of Sophia, introduces it:
After fifteen years of scholarship
and activism, Voices of Sophia presents a blog. Here, we present the
voices of feminist theologians of all stripes: scholars, clergy,
students, exiles, missionaries, workers, thinkers, artists, lovers
and devotees, from many parts of the world, all children of the God
in whose image women are made. .... This blog seeks to glorify God
through prayer, work, art, and intellectual reflection. Through
articles and ensuing discussion we hope to become an active and
thoughtful community. |
| |
|
John Harris’ Summit to
Shore blogspot
Theological and philosophical
reflections on everything between summit to shore, including
kayaking, climbing, religion, spirituality, philosophy, theology,
politics, culture, travel, The Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.), New
York City and the Queens neighborhood of Ridgewood by a progressive
New York City Presbyterian Pastor. John is a former member of the
Witherspoon board, and is designated pastor of North Presbyterian
Church in Flushing, NY. |
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John Shuck’s Shuck and Jive
A Presbyterian minister, currently
serving as pastor of First Presbyterian Church of Elizabethton,
Tenn., blogs about spirituality, culture, religion (both organized
and disorganized), life, evolution, literature, Jesus, and
lightening up. |
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