Saturday, January 31, 2009

Required Watching!

Thanks to Episcopal Cafe for the "heads up" on this Father Matthew YouTube ... which IMHO should be required watching from everyone from the senior staff at 815 to my parish Incorporation & Growth team and ANYONE else interested in growing the gospel and the church.

Here's how the 2:42 piece is described on the YouTube blurb:

A quick piece that was made for the "A Brand New Way" Conference for Young Adults in the Episcopal Church held in Houston, TX in the Summer of 2008. This was made because I couldn't make it to the conference like I really wanted to. Matthew Moretz is an Episcopal priest at Christ's Church in Rye, New York. He likes evangelism, just not the type most people are familiar with.

ENJOY!


Friday, January 30, 2009

Check it Out: Mel & Mike White are going to be a team on "The Amazing Race"


So I was sitting here fiddling away on Facebook on a nice quiet Friday evening and the TV show I wasn't really watching ran a commercial for the new season of "The Amazing Race" -- and darned if there wasn't Mel White and his son Mike as one of the teams!

Check out the CBS website here ... and here's a shout out to Mel & Gary -- the first same-sex couple we married at All Saints during those brief, shining months of marriage equality here in California.

Go, Team White!
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Creating Change in Colorado

From my colleague, Jan Adams, attending the "Creating Change" conference in Denver this week:

The Rev. Deborah Johnson of Inner Light Ministries knows how to preach it. She's convinced we're coming into a new time and we must not try to put new wine into old wineskins. So she brought some admonitions.

"There are no gay issues -- there are simply justice issues."

"If we are gay by nature, it is by God's design and it is good."

"I did not join this movement to get heterosexual privilege!"

On the last point, she urged us to remember that we face discrimination because we don't conform to "the rules" of gender and we should not be hoping to become insiders--we need to understand ourselves as being about destroying gender-based privilege, along with other forms of power over each other. She concluded:

"The world, the planet, is waiting for America to come to grips with its privilege!"

Here's a video clip from the conference-in-progress:

Thursday, January 29, 2009

A New Bishop on deck for the EPISCOPAL DIocese of Fort Worth

Breaking News via press release (thanks, Episcopal Cafe!) from the Diocese of Fort Worth:



The Most Rev. Katharine Jefferts Schori has recommended the Rt. Rev. Edwin F. "Ted" Gulick Jr., bishop of Kentucky, to be the provisional bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Fort Worth. If elected by the special meeting of the convention of the diocese, Bp. Gulick will be installed during the meeting. Bishop Gulick will serve part time as he continues to serve as bishop of Diocese of Kentucky.

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The special convention is scheduled for Saturday, February 7th. Do keep the Episcopalians of Fort Worth in your prayers as they take this BIG next step forward in mission and ministry in their corner of the kingdom!

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Come out, Come out, Wherever you are!


Judge denies request to keep Proposition 8 donors secret
[The Sacramento Bee]

A federal judge today denied an attempt by Proposition 8 supporters to withhold disclosure of late campaign donors to the state's same-sex marriage ban.

California's Political Reform Act, approved by voters in 1974, requires disclosure of the name, occupation and employer of anyone contributing $100 or more to campaigns. The suit challenges the constitutionality of the disclosure requirement, claiming donors to Proposition 8 have been ravaged by e-mails, phone calls and postcards -- even death threats.

Yes on 8 campaign officials said hundreds of people have alleged harassment, intimidation or threats. Attorneys for Proposition 8 assert that First Amendment rights to be free from retaliation outweigh the state's interest in disclosure.

But U.S. District Judge Morrison C. England Jr. disagreed.

"The court finds that the state is not facilitating retaliation by compelling disclosure," he said.

====

Among the comments on the online article was this keeper:

Funny how it's the Yes on 8 side that's afraid to be known. Don't hear that from the No on 8 side, do we? Why? Because bigots hide in the dark ...


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Wednesday, January 28, 2009

Bumped by a U-Haul

So the Breaking News on Jane Velez-Mitchell's Headline News show today turned out NOT to be what a "panel of experts" thought about Ted Haggard's fall from grace -- it was an obviously-high-on-something blond-in-a-tank-top who stole a U-Haul and led police on a high speed chase across most of Southern California this afternoon.

(As I said to the nice CNN man in the suit who walked me out to the car waiting to bring me back my office, "If this is the Big News that must mean we've fixed Iraq and the economy, right?" He said, "I don't think so, Ma'am.")

ANYWAY ... if you bothered to watch you know we each got about four words in. (If you DIDN'T bother you didn't miss anything!)

Just for the record, though, since I had them all ready, here are some of the pithy comments I had HOPED to make in response to Jane Velez-Mitchell's question, "So what do we make of the Ted Haggard mess?"

I had hoped to say that this whole tragic story is yet another illustration of what happens when someone thinks they have to be or become someone they're not in order to be accepted, to be loved, to be whole.

I wanted to say that I agreed with the psychologist who said Haggard's story sounds like a classically bi-sexual man and that rather than beating himself up for being erotically wired to respond to both men and women, he should work on staying faithful to his wife and not beating himself up for being who he is.

I also wanted to say (and at least had a chance to START to say) that the other minister on the panel (whose name eludes me at the moment) who went to such pains to declare that being homosexual was "no worse a sin than being an adulterer" was Exhibit A of the presenting problem in Ted Haggard's life -- and that problem wasn't his sexual orientation but his theological orientation.

It was buying the lie that "the church" has for too long told LGBT people -- the lie that they needed to live a lie in order to be loved by God -- the lie that Ed Bacon debunked on Oprah a couple of weeks ago when he said "Being gay is a gift from God" -- the lie that it is time for us to put behind us and get on with building up a kingdom that includes ALL God's beloved children equally at the table.

(And this was my favorite:)

President Obama says the time has come for post-partisan politics in this country -- and I say the time has come for post-homophobic religion in this country.

Let's end the collateral damage to those like Ted Haggard who grow up thinking they have to choose between who they are and how they love and whether or not they can love & serve God.

Let's give young LGBT folks OUT role models so no matter what their sexual orientation ends up being, there is someone they can look to and say, "I want to grow up like him/her."

Let's model that it is no longer acceptable to preach family values and devalue gay and lesbian families.

(Even WITHOUT the U-Haul I wouldn't have gotten all that in during a Headline News segment ... but I'll be ready for 'em next time!)
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More Coming Attractions:

I'm scheduled to be on the CNN Headline News show "Issues with Jane Velez-Mitchell" this evening talking about the church and hypocrisy regarding LGBT issues in general and Ted Haggard in particular.

Tune in if you have a few minutes ... supposed to be 7:40 eastern/4:40 pacific.
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Tuesday, January 27, 2009

Coming Attractions

Equality Forum is a nonprofit organization whose mission is to advance national and international gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender (GLBT) civil rights through education.

Their annual Forum event is April 27 - May 3 this year and I've been honored to be asked to preach at Christ Church, Philadelphia at the Interfaith service on Sunday afternoon, May 3rd.

Check out the program ... looks like there's something for just about everybody! ... and think about putting a trip to Philadelphia on your "to do" list for 2009!
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Monday, January 26, 2009

Just Another ...

I'm not sure it if was the accumulation of all the things that were on the "to do after New Year's" list that got pushed back to "after the Inauguration" -- or because last week was a short week with MLK Day off on Monday and then All Inauguration All Day on Tuesday -- or if it's the collateral damage of sacrificing two Saturdays in a row on the altar of Post-Prop 8 Politics ...

Whatever it is, Monday was particular manic in my little corner of the kingdom and I'm hoping Manic Monday leads to Tranquil Tuesday. (Note that "hoping" is not the same as "counting on!" :)

But at the end of this long, Manic Monday, the thing I'm still thinking about is an experience this morning on the drive into work:

So I'm driving down Fair Oaks this morning, having treated myself to a Starbucks to reward myself for heading into the office when I know most of my colleagues are still in bed on a Monday. (They may do the same thing on Friday when I'm the one sleeping in -- if so, I say party on!)

Anyway, I'm at the light behind an SUV that still has a "W/04" sticker in the back window ... opposite a "McCain/Palin" sticker in the other corner. And then I notice the license plate frame. It says:

You Suck ...
And that's sad.

Honest. That's what the owner/driver of this late model, not-inexpensive, SUV chose to go out and purchase ... then dig through the junk drawer in the garage or kitchen and find a screwdriver to mount around the license plate on their car ... in order to display this profound message to the world at large:

You Suck ...
And that's sad.

That's the message they want you to know about them when you don't know anything else about them. (Well, I guess we know their voting record, but you get my point.)

What's it like, I wondered, to have that worldview that "You" (and I'm taking that as a generic "ya'll" not a specific "you Susan") "Suck."

What does it say about how you make choices about what matters and what doesn't.

About what we pay for with our taxes and what we don't. About who's entitled to equal protection -- or equal rights -- and who isn't.

Maybe I'm making too much of a license plate cover glimpsed at a stoplight at the beginning of a Manic Monday. Or maybe not. Maybe it was a glimpse into why this work we do -- this striving to turn the human race into the human family stuff -- this preaching respect for the dignity of every human being stuff -- this trying to love your neighbor as yourself stuff -- is worth the long hours, the manic Mondays, the sacrificed Saturdays and the two steps forward, one step back that characterizes that journey along the arc history that bends toward inclusion.

Maybe it's an explanation of the over 400 emails we've gotten in response to seven simple words spoken by Ed Bacon on national TV: "Being gay is a gift from God."

Maybe we do have the antidote to the poison that tells people THEY Suck ... which leads them to project that self-loathing and leaks out into our common life with not just license plate frames but with words and actions and policies and politics that tell people -- fellow human beings -- members of the same human family -- equally fearfully and wonderfully made by the One who loved us enough to become one of us to show us how to love one another -- that they "suck."

And that, my brothers and sisters, is what's sad.

So I'm grateful -- at the end of this Manic Monday -- for conference calls and spread sheets; calendar meetings and scheduling charts; huddles about Lent and emails about Oprah; for Noonday Eucharist and afternoon coffee; annual report drafts and video shoot schedules. I'm even grateful for the large pile of "things left undone" on my desk.

Because tomorrow is another day. And maybe -- just maybe -- we'll get the chance to let one single solitary person know they do NOT Suck by making God's love tangible -- in a hug, an email, a blog post, a staff meeting or maybe even in Starbucks.

Reclaiming the planet, an inch at a time, until the Garden of Eden grows green again. Tomorrow.
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(Good Night, Moon!)

Sunday, January 25, 2009

Sean Penn: Male Actor in a Leading Role

Amen, Screen Actors Guild!!

Dear Mr. President,

It was just another Sunday in paradise ... here's a shot of the crowd on the lawn after the 11:15 service at one of those declining liberal mainline churches ... AKA All Saints Church, Pasadena.

Every Sunday we're given a chance to "put our faith into action" and this morning the "action" was one my mother would TOTALLY have approved of: writing thank you notes! (Or, more accurately, signing and personalizing thank you letters to President Obama for the actions he's taken in these first days of his historic presidency.

As you can see ... it was bumper-crop-business at the action tables ...

... and not everybody even waited for a table to get their letter done!


The result was over 1200 signed letters -- which will be wending their way to Washington next week.


Here's the text from our letter ... in case you're inspired to "go and do likewise."
======
January 25, 2009
Dear President Obama,

Thank you for your courageous, principled and inspiring leadership in the initial days of your presidency.

The actions of your first week have immediately increased my hope for peace and justice and are inspiring a new generation of Americans to be people with an inner moral sense -- to be people of conscience. Your work has inspired me to respond by recommitting my my own energies and resources toward the good of all. Thank you for inviting each of us into the work of restoring our country's moral leadership in the world, calling us to confront the moral issues of our day, which includes respecting the dignity for everyone in our human family.

Your appointment of Senator George Mitchell as special envoy for Middle East Peace brings the United States to a new level of commitment to peacemaking in an area of the world so oppressed by an increasing cycle of violence, which will never solve anything. Appointing a dedicated and experienced peacemaker who commands global respect restores our integrity in the international community, demonstrating that we recognize that Unites States' involvement is indispensable in achieving the goal of establishing a lasing peace between Israelis and Palestinians.

As a person of faith, I am deeply grateful to you for bringing an end to our country's morally grotesque and counter productive practices of torture. What a moving and healing us of your moral authority! I feel the same about your lifting the the shame of Guantanamo from our country's future reputation in the world. Your Executive Order banning torture and closing Guantanamo move the heart, stir the conscience and take enormous strides forward in our collective responsibility to ensure dignity and justice to every member of the human family. You have my passionate commitment to stand with all your efforts to prevent human rights violations both at home and abroad and to restore human rights standards everywhere.


With great respect and appreciation,

[Your Name Here!]
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Saturday, January 24, 2009

Dear World ...

It was a REALLY long day at work in fields of the Lord ... AKA attending the Equality Summit at the L.A. Convention Center. I've got notes and pictures and thoughts to share but that will happen tomorrow. Right now it's Chinese take out and an early bedtime for me ... but first this quick post I can't resist sharing that came from an L.A. colleague via I-can't-remember-where.


Dear World,

We, the United States of America, your top quality supplier of the ideals of liberty and democracy, would like to apologize for our 2001-2008 interruption in service.
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The technical fault that led to this eight-year service outage has been located, and the software responsible was replaced November 4.
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Early tests of the newly installed program indicate that we are now operating correctly, and we expect it to be fully functional on January 20, 2009. We apologize for any inconvenience caused by the outage. We look forward to resuming full service and hope to improve in years to come. We thank you for your patience and understanding.
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Sincerely,
THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
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Here's where we'll be today ... "fllm at eleven."

Thursday, January 22, 2009

Another picture worth 1000 words ...

Just posted to Bishop Robinson's blog ...

more photos from Inauguration Day!

[photo credit: Mark Andrew]

Pictured here with now-Mr. President Obama
is the lovely Ella Robinson
and her fabulous father, Bishop V. Gene Robinson.

WOO HOO!

Wednesday, January 21, 2009

Sermon from this morning's National Prayer Service

Harmonies of Liberty
Isaiah 58:6‐12, Mt 22:6‐40
Rev. Dr. Sharon E. Watkins
[photo: Donovan Marks]
National Prayer Service; January 21, 2009
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Mr. President and Mrs. Obama, Mr. Vice President and Dr. Biden, and your families, what an inaugural celebration you have hosted! Train ride, opening concert, service to neighbor, dancing till dawn . . .

And yesterday . . . With your inauguration, Mr. President, the flame of America’s promise burns just a little brighter for every child of this land!

There is still a lot of work to do, and today the nation turns its full attention to that work. As we do, it is good that we pause to take a deep spiritual breath. It is good that we center for a moment.

What you are entering now, Mr. President and Mr. Vice President, will tend to draw you away from your ethical center. But we, the nation that you serve, need you to hold the ground of your deepest values, of our deepest values.

Beyond this moment of high hopes, we need you to stay focused on our shared hopes, so that we can continue to hope, too. We will follow your lead.

read the rest here ... (REALLY worth it ... trust me ... she was GREAT!)

94 - 2: IT'S OFFICIAL!

Say hello to Madame Secretary of State!


We're not in Kansas anymore, Toto!


So I got this information from several sources (thanks all!) yesterday but this is the first moment I've had to [a] check it out myself much less [b] get it up on this blog ... and I'm doing that over a teriyaki chicken bowl at my desk during what passes for a late-lunch hour!
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ANYWAY, check it out -- here's the link to the Civil Rights Agenda page on the White House website. (The info, I am told, was updated shortly after noon yesterday!)
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Too busy to "click here?" Then just read this part:
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"While we have come a long way since the Stonewall riots in 1969, we still have a lot of work to do. Too often, the issue of LGBT rights is exploited by those seeking to divide us. But at its core, this issue is about who we are as Americans. It's about whether this nation is going to live up to its founding promise of equality by treating all its citizens with dignity and respect."
-- Barack Obama, June 1, 2007

Expand Hate Crimes Statutes: In 2004, crimes against LGBT Americans constituted the third-highest category of hate crime reported and made up more than 15 percent of such crimes. President Obama cosponsored legislation that would expand federal jurisdiction to include violent hate crimes perpetrated because of race, color, religion, national origin, sexual orientation, gender identity, or physical disability. As a state senator, President Obama passed tough legislation that made hate crimes and conspiracy to commit them against the law.


Fight Workplace Discrimination: President Obama supports the Employment Non-Discrimination Act, and believes that our anti-discrimination employment laws should be expanded to include sexual orientation and gender identity. While an increasing number of employers have extended benefits to their employees' domestic partners, discrimination based on sexual orientation in the workplace occurs with no federal legal remedy. The President also sponsored legislation in the Illinois State Senate that would ban employment discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation.

Support Full Civil Unions and Federal Rights for LGBT Couples: President Obama supports full civil unions that give same-sex couples legal rights and privileges equal to those of married couples. Obama also believes we need to repeal the Defense of Marriage Act and enact legislation that would ensure that the 1,100+ federal legal rights and benefits currently provided on the basis of marital status are extended to same-sex couples in civil unions and other legally-recognized unions. These rights and benefits include the right to assist a loved one in times of emergency, the right to equal health insurance and other employment benefits, and property rights.

Oppose a Constitutional Ban on Same-Sex Marriage: President Obama voted against the Federal Marriage Amendment in 2006 which would have defined marriage as between a man and a woman and prevented judicial extension of marriage-like rights to same-sex or other unmarried couples.

Repeal Don't Ask-Don't Tell: President Obama agrees with former Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff John Shalikashvili and other military experts that we need to repeal the "don't ask, don't tell" policy. The key test for military service should be patriotism, a sense of duty, and a willingness to serve. Discrimination should be prohibited. The U.S. government has spent millions of dollars replacing troops kicked out of the military because of their sexual orientation. Additionally, more than 300 language experts have been fired under this policy, including more than 50 who are fluent in Arabic. The President will work with military leaders to repeal the current policy and ensure it helps accomplish our national defense goals.

Expand Adoption Rights: President Obama believes that we must ensure adoption rights for all couples and individuals, regardless of their sexual orientation. He thinks that a child will benefit from a healthy and loving home, whether the parents are gay or not.

Promote AIDS Prevention: In the first year of his presidency, President Obama will develop and begin to implement a comprehensive national HIV/AIDS strategy that includes all federal agencies. The strategy will be designed to reduce HIV infections, increase access to care and reduce HIV-related health disparities. The President will support common sense approaches including age-appropriate sex education that includes information about contraception, combating infection within our prison population through education and contraception, and distributing contraceptives through our public health system. The President also supports lifting the federal ban on needle exchange, which could dramatically reduce rates of infection among drug users. President Obama has also been willing to confront the stigma -- too often tied to homophobia -- that continues to surround HIV/AIDS.

Empower Women to Prevent HIV/AIDS: In the United States, the percentage of women diagnosed with AIDS has quadrupled over the last 20 years. Today, women account for more than one quarter of all new HIV/AIDS diagnoses. President Obama introduced the Microbicide Development Act, which will accelerate the development of products that empower women in the battle against AIDS. Microbicides are a class of products currently under development that women apply topically to prevent transmission of HIV and other infections.

===

Are we going to agree with the new president about everything? My kids have the answer to that ... "Duh!" But can we just take a minute to let it sink in what a difference 24 hours makes ... from a White House that PUSHED the Federal Marriage Amendment to a White House that opposes one? Supports Hate Crimes legislation, opposes "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" and supports an inclusive Employment Discrimination Act?

We're TOTALLY not in Kansas anymore, Toto.

And the response to that versicle, boys and girls is: THANKS BE TO GOD!

(And now, back to my regularly scheduled Wednesday afternoon workload!)
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The role of religion under Obama

A report from the Christian Science Monitor




[Washington] - After decades of ceding God to the GOP, at least in the public square, Democrats – with President Obama in the lead – are speaking with a fuller religious voice. The watchword? Inclusiveness.

It's a voice that signals openness at a time when diversity in American religious life is rising.

"We know that our patchwork heritage is a strength, not a weakness. We are a nation of Christians and Muslims, Jews and Hindus – and nonbelievers," Mr. Obama said in Tuesday's inaugural address.

Wednesday's National Prayer Service, a tradition since George Washington's inauguration, featured faith leaders chosen "to symbolize America's traditions of religious tolerance and freedom," said the 2009 Presidential Inaugural Committee. It included, for the first time, a sermon delivered by a woman.

For Obama, the broad outreach into the faith community isn't confined to ceremonies but is emerging as a key element in his approach to coalition-building, say religious leaders who worked on the transition.

"Barack Obama is himself a person of faith, but he also believes that the faith community has a real role to play in creating the kind of social change we need now," says the Rev. Jim Wallis, president of Sojourners, a network of Christian social activists.

Indeed, religious groups have been broadly advising the Obama transition team on issues ranging from poverty to criminal justice to foreign policy. "To move from a consuming, polluting, poverty-creating economy to one that conserves, is a good steward of the environment, and focuses on bringing people out of poverty, that's more than a structural crisis, it's a spiritual one," says Mr. Wallis.

Obama's predisposition to stake a big tent that includes a broad range of faith traditions has been evident early.

Who leads the prayers at presidential inaugurations is usually about as controversial as whether to put an American flag near the podium. Preachers such as the late Billy Graham typically struck a broad, ecumenical tone acceptable to a wide range of religious adherents.

Not so this inaugural cycle. Obama's choice of the Rev. Rick Warren – a popular Evangelical who has campaigned against gay marriage – to deliver the inaugural invocation riled many liberals. Obama's subsequent invitation to V. Gene Robinson, the first openly gay Episcopal bishop, fired up the other end of the religious spectrum.

"Bless this nation with anger: anger at discrimination at home and abroad, against refugees and immigrants, women, people of color, gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender people," said the Right Rev. Robinson at Sunday's opening of inaugural ceremonies.

Obama's choice of two spiritual leaders with such distinct and controversial views signals that differences are not to be avoided but are an essential part of the conversation.

"Rick Warren and Gene Robinson are symbols and represent large constituencies – and were in that sense daring choices," says Charles Haynes, a scholar at the First Amendment Center in Washington. "But I think the mood of the country is to say: This is what we want. People want to see the president trying to represent the country as a whole. If there ever was a moment when we have to have a cease-fire in the cultural wars, it's now. Given the nature of the problem the country faces, we cannot afford to demonize each other, to tear each other down."

Many presidents have tried to build coalitions, including those involving religious leaders, but Obama is working from an exceptionally inclusive template.

"President Obama, like most presidents, is a coalition-builder, but this president sees a broader end product," says John Green, senior fellow at the Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life. "Obama seems to have a more inclusive view of religion than some people on the right and some people on the left.

"This is a very productive place to be but a very difficult place to be in a pluralistic society," he continues. "It is often difficult to recognize the authentic spirituality of different faiths without bringing them into conflict with each other."

At the same time, boosting religion's prominence in Democratic Party politics could deepen rifts within the party establishment.

"In religion, as in politics, he's trying to include a lot of people, and a lot of people will be upset," says Stephen Prothero, a religion professor at Boston University. "The movements for civil rights, for abolition and temperance, were movements that had religious people behind them, who were there for religious reasons. It makes sense, especially for someone like Obama for whom ideas matter so much. But there's a possibility that Democrats are going to end up being more religious than Republicans."

That prospect alarms activists who work to preserve separation of church and state.

"It remains to be seen what Barack Obama will do with the moral or ethical advice he is getting from religious leaders," says the Rev. Barry Lynn, executive director of Americans United, in Washington. "It would be odd if he were not meeting with people of faith, but he has to temper his religious views with the demands of the Constitution."

These days, at least in America, religious leaders are not the political leaders. But at the National Prayer Service here on Wednesday, Sharon Watkins, general minister and president, Disciples of Christ, noted scriptural advice to kings and leaders of yore:

"We need [the leaders of this nation] to be guided by the counsel that Isaiah gave so long ago: to work for the common good, the public happiness, the well-being of the nation and the world, knowing that our individual well-being depends on a world where liberty and justice prevailed. This is the biblical way. It is also the American way."
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Good Morning, America!

Good Morning America ... and welcome to The First Day of the Rest of Our Life as a nation dedicated to the proposition that ALL are created equal!

So +Gene Robinson was Jon Stewart's guest last night on The Daily Show. (Incidentially the only news show my son said he and his colleagues watched when they were deployed in Iraq because all the rest was "BS.") Quick-on-his-feet as always, our Bishop of New Hampshire may just have given a whole generation a new way to think about the game of chess! :)

Also, you'll want to check out +Gene blogs about his Inauguration Day experiences here ... as well as his reflections on Sunday's concert here.


Thanks to Episcopal Cafe for the link to this video -- and stay tuned for more on this morning's Nat'l Prayer service ... still in progress as I write ... where Sharon Watkins preached a TOTALLY fabulous sermon that deserves a much wider audience than whoever is still at home on a Wednesday morning watching CNN!

What a GREAT beginning to this First Day of the Rest of Our Lives in the U.S. A.!
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Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Yes We DID!!!

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Here's what history looked like through the lens of the AP photographer ...

And here's what it looked like this morning at All Saints Church in Pasadena!

The cheering crowd numbered in the hundreds ... folks from the parish and the community-at-large who made their way to the All Saints Forum ...

... signed in, found some bagels, pan dulce & coffee and found a seat in the crowd ...
. ... that settled in to watch on the "big screen" a moment in some ways too-big-for words!
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For this little, it was chance to get pictures in the baby book that said "you were THERE sweetie!" when he's old enough to understand what happened on January 20, 2009.
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For others, it was a chance to put finally away the Countdown Clock and look forward to a New Tomorrow!

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Much more to say, to ponder, to celebrate ... but for the MOMENT it's "back to work we go" as the regular business of a busy parish Tuesday takes back over my calendar.

HAPPY INAUGURATION DAY, EVERYBODY!
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Monday, January 19, 2009

Integrity Statement on Bishop Robinson's Inaugural Invocation

Integrity celebrates Bishop Gene Robinson’s historic presence in the Inaugural celebrations for our nation’s 44th President as a giant step forward taken for LGBT equality.

“There are miles to go before we rest in this journey toward being truly a nation of liberty and justice for ‘all,’” said Integrity President Susan Russell, “but when Bishop Gene Robinson took his place at the podium at the Lincoln Memorial yesterday we all moved closer toward realizing that goal. In addition to offering the invocation at Sunday’s Inaugural Concert, we are thrilled that Bishop Robinson will be among the invited guests at the prayer service on the Tuesday morning, will attend the swearing in ceremony, will view the Inaugural Parade from the Presidential viewing stand, and will attend the National Prayer Service at National Cathedral on Wednesday.

“Any disappointment that Bishop Robinson’s powerful opening prayer was not part of the HBO broadcast pales in comparison to the power of his iconic presence at the Lincoln Memorial on this historic occasion. Bishop Robinson’s invocation included prayers for patience, safety and compassion – and to 'Bless us with anger – at discrimination, at home and abroad, against refugees and immigrants, women, people of color, gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender people.' It will echo through the ages as words of hope, vision and promise."

“We look forward to both the opportunities and challenges ahead as we enter a new era of partnership in our common commitment to overcome bias, bigotry and discrimination for all Americans.”

====
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UPDATE: Obama staff takes heat for not airing bishop's prayer

President-elect Barack Obama's inaugural committee took the blame yesterday for Bishop V. Gene Robinson's invocation at the Sunday welcoming concert not being televised nationally, Politico reported.

Thousands of attendees heard the opening prayer given by Robinson, the openly gay New Hampshire Episcopal bishop, but viewers on HBO's telecast missed it. The inaugural committee said the telecast, including Robinson's invocation, will be shown on the big TV screens along the National Mall today.

"We had always intended and planned for Right Rev. Robinson's invocation to be included in the televised portion of yesterday's program. We regret the error in executing this plan - but are gratified that hundreds of thousands of people who gathered on the mall heard his eloquent prayer for our nation that was a fitting start to our event," inaugural committee spokesman Josh Earnest told Politico.

Initial Inaugural Invocation on YouTube

Thanks to Christianity Today's Sarah Pulliam:

A picture worth a thousand words:


Sunday, January 18, 2009

A Prayer for the Nation ...

Photos from USA Today:
(by Kevin Lamarque/Reuters):





As reported in The Boston Globe
(Photos by Kevin Lamarque/Reuters):

In the invocation offered by Bishop V. Gene Robinson of New Hampshire at today's inaugural welcoming ceremony, the openly gay bishop called on God to "bless us with anger – at discrimination, at home and abroad, against refugees and immigrants, women, people of color, gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender people." Robinson was tapped to give the invocation today after an uproar over President-elect Barack Obama's invitation to evangelical pastor Rick Warren, an opponent of same-sex marriage, to give the invocation during the inauguration Tuesday.

Here is the full text of the prayer, from Robinson's diocesan web site:

"A Prayer for the Nation and Our Next President, Barack Obama"
By The Rt. Rev. V. Gene Robinson, Episcopal Bishop of New Hampshire

Welcome to Washington! The fun is about to begin, but first, please join me in pausing for a moment, to ask God’s blessing upon our nation and our next president.

O God of our many understandings, we pray that you will…

Bless us with tears – for a world in which over a billion people exist on less than a dollar a day, where young women from many lands are beaten and raped for wanting an education, and thousands die daily from malnutrition, malaria, and AIDS.

Bless us with anger – at discrimination, at home and abroad, against refugees and immigrants, women, people of color, gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender people.

Bless us with discomfort – at the easy, simplistic “answers” we’ve preferred to hear from our politicians, instead of the truth, about ourselves and the world, which we need to face if we are going to rise to the challenges of the future.

Bless us with patience – and the knowledge that none of what ails us will be “fixed” anytime soon, and the understanding that our new president is a human being, not a messiah.

Bless us with humility – open to understanding that our own needs must always be balanced with those of the world.

Bless us with freedom from mere tolerance – replacing it with a genuine respect and warm embrace of our differences, and an understanding that in our diversity, we are stronger.

Bless us with compassion and generosity – remembering that every religion’s God judges us by the way we care for the most vulnerable in the human community, whether across town or across the world.

And God, we give you thanks for your child Barack, as he assumes the office of President of the United States.

Give him wisdom beyond his years, and inspire him with Lincoln’s reconciling leadership style, President Kennedy’s ability to enlist our best efforts, and Dr. King’s dream of a nation for ALL the people.

Give him a quiet heart, for our Ship of State needs a steady, calm captain in these times.

Give him stirring words, for we will need to be inspired and motivated to make the personal and common sacrifices necessary to facing the challenges ahead.

Make him color-blind, reminding him of his own words that under his leadership, there will be neither red nor blue states, but the United States.

Help him remember his own oppression as a minority, drawing on that experience of discrimination, that he might seek to change the lives of those who are still its victims.

Give him the strength to find family time and privacy, and help him remember that even though he is president, a father only gets one shot at his daughters’ childhoods.

And please, God, keep him safe. We know we ask too much of our presidents, and we’re asking FAR too much of this one. We know the risk he and his wife are taking for all of us, and we implore you, O good and great God, to keep him safe. Hold him in the palm of your hand – that he might do the work we have called him to do, that he might find joy in this impossible calling, and that in the end, he might lead us as a nation to a place of integrity, prosperity and peace.

AMEN.
===
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And ...
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The Associated Press -- The event began with a convocation by the Right Rev. Gene Robinson, who asked the crowd to pray for "understanding that our president is a human being and not a messiah."
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Detroit Free Press -- “God, we give you thanks for your child Barack,” the Rev. V. Gene Robinson, the Episcopal bishop of New Hampshire, said during the event invocation. “Give him wisdom beyond his years. Give him strength to find family time and privacy ... Please, God, keep him safe. We know we ask too much of our presidents, and we know we are asking far too much of him."
Robinson’s prayers seemed to touch the sentiments of many of the tens of thousands who began gathering at dawn to see Obama and star-studded concert called We are One: The Obama Inaugural Celebration at the Lincoln Memorial.
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Houston Chronicle-- In the end, the Obamas celebrated familial normalcy on the grandest of stages, reveling in the bond that Rev. V. Gene Robinson sought for them during his invocation at the start of the show. “Help (President-elect Obama) remember that even though he is president,” Robinson prayed, “a father only gets one shot at his daughter’s childhood.”
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USA Today -- Robinson asked God to give Obama wisdom, a "quiet heart" and "stirring words" to inspire the nation in a time of challenge and sacrifice. He concluded by imploring a "good and great God" to keep Obama safe to do his work and "find joy in this impossible calling..." Did you pray along? To whom? Share your prayer here.
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MLK Sunday @ All Saints Church

We must all learn to live together as brothers or we will all perish together as fools. We are tied together in the single garment of destiny, caught in an inescapable network of mutuality.



We celebrated Martin Luther King Sunday at All Saints Church with great music, powerful preaching and words from King's last Sunday sermon ... preached March 31, 1968 at the National Cathedral.


SALUTATION
Minister: We hold these truths to be self evident.
People: .....that all people are created equal.

Minister: Let justice roll down like waters,
People: .....and righteousness like an every-flowing stream.

COLLECT OF THE DAY
Almighty God, by the hand of Moses your servant you led your people out of slavery, and made them free at last. Grant that your Church, following the example of your prophet Martin Luther King, may resist oppression in the name of your love, and may secure for all your children the blessed liberty of the Gospel of Jesus Christ, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and for ever. Amen.

A READING FROM "Remaining Awake Through a Great Revolution," A SERMON PREACHED BY DR. MARTIN LUTHER KING, JR.

Through our scientific and technological genius, we have made of this world a neighborhood and yet we have not had the ethical commitment to make of it a brotherhood. But somehow, and in some way, we have got to do this. We must all learn to live together as brothers or we will all perish together as fools. We are tied together in the single garment of destiny, caught in an inescapable network of mutuality. And whatever affects one directly affects all indirectly. For some strange reason I can never be what I ought to be until you are what you ought to be. And you can never be what you ought to be until I am what I ought to be. This is the way God’s universe is made; this is the way it is structured.

John Donne caught it years ago and placed it in graphic terms: "No man is an island entire of itself. Every man is a piece of the continent, a part of the main." And he goes on toward the end to say, "Any man’s death diminishes me because I am involved in mankind; therefore never send to know for whom the bell tolls; it tolls for thee." We must see this, believe this, and live by it if we are to remain awake through a great revolution.

And then the sermon:

Living Together as Siblings
or Perishing Together as Fools


You can see it here.
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(And now, back to CNN! :)

Saturday, January 17, 2009

News from the Inaugural Front


I'm sitting here watching the news reports of the "Obama Express" heading to Washington DC. As I just shared with a colleague: getting weepy over two guys on a train platform doesn't bode well for my Kleenex conservation over the next 72 hours!

And I'm not the only one. Millions will jam the Washington Mall to be part of the historic events and the rest of us will watch, listen, TIVO or podcast this new beginning for all of us. And right there in the thick of it will be our own Bishop of New Hampshire ... who sent this missive via email early this morning:

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Dear Friends,

Well, in a few hours we'll be off to Washington for the inauguration. Here are a few items that might be of interest. Please feel free to share them with whomever you deem appropriate:


1. I will be blogging from Washington, using my summer's blogspot: "Tales From the Fringe" (Perhaps this should be renamed "Tales from Closer to the Center" but I didn't have time!)

2. Sunday's opening inaugural event at the Lincoln Memorial will be taped by HBO. What I DO know is that HBO will be airing it on Sunday evening -- and the signal will be available to EVERYONE, WHETHER OR NOT you are a subscriber to HBO!

3. The text of my inaugural event prayer will be available on our diocesan website on Sunday afternoon.

4. On Tuesday night, after attending the LGBT ball, sponsored by HRC and others, I will be Jon Stewart's guest on The Daily Show, a special live-from-Washington edition. At least here in the East, it is broadcast at 11:00pm on the Comedy Channel, and then rebroadcast the next night. Check local listings.

This promises to be an awesomely wonderful time. I am so honored and humbled to be so included. The President Elect has invited me to attend a small, private worship service on the morning of the inauguration, to attend the swearing in/inauguration itself, to view the parade from the Presidential viewing stand, and to attend the National Prayer Service at National Cathedral on Wednesday.

I hope that through these invitations, in some small way, ALL of you will feel included in these events by our next president.

Please pray for me as I undertake this awesome honor. I hope to do us and the Episcopal Church proud!

+Gene
=====
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You've already made us proud, +Gene! Now go keep warm, have some fun and thanks for keeping us so "in the loop!"

Friday, January 16, 2009

We are everywhere!

Check this one out ... "Born Again American" is the project dreamed up by Norman Lear ... described on the website as a "movement committed to the rebirth of American citizenship through informed and thoughtful activism."

This music piece was produced by Lear for the Inaugural celebration and it includes ... choir members from All Saints Church, Pasadena!

ENJOY! (Me ... I'm running out to get a flag to hang on the porch on Tuesday!)



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Thursday, January 15, 2009

+Gene on Rachel ...

It doesn't get much better than this:



(Have been in Prop-8 Debrief meetings ALL day today with more to come tomorrow so finding this on YouTube was a GREAT way to end a really LOOOOOOOOOONG day! More later!)

Wednesday, January 14, 2009

Rick Warren Takes the High Road

Rick Warren Reaches Out to Gene Robinson
By Jacqui Salmon (washington post.com)

The Rev. Rick Warren, the conservative evangelical minister who will deliver the invocation at Barack Obama's inauguration, has extended an olive branch to Bishop V. Gene Robinson.

Today, Warren issued a statement praising Obama for selecting Robinson, saying the president-elect "has again demonstrated his genuine commitment to bringing all Americans of goodwill together in search of common ground. I applaud his desire to be the president of every citizen."
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So here's what I'd like to see: How about a nationally televised discussion between Rick Warren and Ed Bacon (or +Gene Robinson ... I'm easy!) on the topic: "Is gay a gift from God?"

"Dear Oprah"

So here's the letter I just sent to The Oprah Winfrey Show ...

Dear Oprah.com,

Re: Ed Bacon on "Spirituality 101"

I just want to make sure Oprah and her production team knows how many lives have been changed and how much healing is happening out here because of Ed Bacon's unequivocable statements about God's love being equally available to ALL people. As a priest and pastor, my phone is ringing and my email box is full of people asking me, "Where's a church like his near me?"

I'm sure you're hearing from "the other side" as well but PLEASE know there are plenty of channels and shows and webcasts people can tune in to hear about judgment. THANK YOU for offering a national platform for people to hear instead about grace.

The Reverend Susan Russell

Here's where you click to go and do likewise. (Ready, Set, GO!)

Inaugural is a "coming out party" for Democrats


... from the Associated Press article that includes the line up for clergy at the National Day of Prayer service on January 21st ... a list that includes Muslim, Jewish and Roman Catholic voices.

"This inaugural is a coming-out party for the Democrats in terms of their religious voice," said Stephen Prothero, a religion professor at Boston University. "Democrats found their religious voice in the last election and I think there's interest in seeing how that voice is going to sound."

Haynes said Obama is also carrying the hopes of the many Americans frustrated by the prominence of the Christian right in recent decades, especially in the administration of President George W. Bush. That partly explains the backlash against Warren, he said.

"The sense is it's time to balance that out and to have other voices heard. He's supposed to represent change," Haynes said. "There are many people looking for a symbolic change in tone, especially when it comes to issues of religion and public life."

Q & A with Oprah Winfrey

Q. "So what exactly did you mean by that ["being gay is a gift from God"] comment?

A.



And a bulk of my day today will be spent answering mails in response ... including this one:

I wanted to take the time to share with you my great appreciation for the words you expressed on The Oprah Winfrey Show both last Thursday and this past Monday. “Being Gay is a Gift from God”, I cannot even type it without blurring my eyes from an unknown well of emotion and satisfaction. It is interesting and very surprising to me that I could live my life today (for the last 40 years) and for the last 17 years (being out) never crossing the threshold you pulled me through last Thursday. If you asked me last Thursday I would have said that I was a happy, confident, contributing member of society. A man blessed with so much love.
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I have to tell you, no one has ever spoken so directly to the part of me that needed to hear those words of love, acceptance and inclusion. I didn’t even know I needed to hear them until you said them. It is an odd experience to find myself sympathizing with a guest on the show and in the course of one sentence being transported to another level of enlightenment. It was tangible. In that instant I felt the change manifest within me. I was different. I was unlimited potential. The weight of a new responsibility to myself and the world was now present, welcomed, and totally within my power to command.
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I held my breath on Monday in fear for what I thought would be the inevitable step back; a softer version, an apology of some sort for loving with an intensity not yet recognizable by others. What came was the assertion that there was no misunderstanding, that the words are simple truth, and there will be no apology. Thank you, Thank you, Thank you.
.

I'm trying to imagine what it must be like to "hold your breath" for fear that someone "take back" the message that you are unconditionally loved by God.

Wow. We CAN make a difference by getting our voices out there and THANKS BE TO GOD that Orprah Winfrey offered this national platform for the Good News of a God who loves absolutely everybody to get out there!

Take a minute to thank her ... click here to send a message through her website ... because you KNOW she's getting emails from "the other side." Let's make sure she hears from us as well!

And now, back to answering emails!

"Dear Oprah Watcher, Thanks so much for taking time to write ..."
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Tuesday, January 13, 2009

Shout out to Al Sharpton!

Posted last night to "The Southern Voice:"

Sharpton decries churches pushing Prop. 8
Atlanta alliance forms to counter anti-gay religious rhetoric

“It amazes me when I looked at California and saw churches that had nothing to say about police brutality, nothing to say when a young black boy was shot while he was wearing police handcuffs, nothing to say when the they overturned affirmative action, nothing to say when people were being delegated into poverty, yet they were organizing and mobilizing to stop consenting adults from choosing their life partners,” Sharpton told a packed audience on Jan. 11.

“There is something immoral and sick about using all of that power to not end brutality and poverty, but to break into people’s bedrooms and claim that God sent you,” Sharpton added.
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Monday, January 12, 2009

Here's what CBN (that's "Christian Broadcast Network") had to say ...

... about today's announcement about the Inauguration.


Link to video

"I meant exactly what I said."

From the Oprah.com website:


Another hot-button issue that sent viewers straight to our message boards was a comment made by the Rev. Ed Bacon during a discussion on spirituality.

After hearing from Sedrick, who says he had a tough adolescence growing up as a gay teen in rural Alabama, the Rev. Bacon said something Oprah says she has never heard a minister say. "Being gay is a gift from God," the Rev. Bacon said. "But our culture doesn't understand that. And consequently, the culture sends messages that you ought to isolate. And isolation is the antithesis of what all of us need."

To further explain his comment, the Rev. Bacon joins Oprah via satellite. "I meant exactly what I said," he says. "It is so important for every human being to understand that he or she is a gift from God."

Just as the Oprah.com message boards were buzzing, the Rev. Bacon says he has been receiving plenty of feedback. The majority of it, he says, is positive. "My e-mail was full of comments, and what I gather is that it simply unleashed a flood of healing throughout the country and Australia and Great Britain, across the continent. It was amazing."

===

Stay tuned for further news on this ... and do consider logging in to register for the webcast Wednesday night when I guess the panelists from last week's show -- including Ed -- will take questions.

What an interesting beginning to the New Year, eh? Who REALLY thought they'd live long enough to see Ed Bacon on Oprah AND Gene Robinson giving the opening prayer at the opening event at the Lincoln Memorial for the Inauguration Celebration of a 44th President of these United States named Barack Hussein Obama?

My, my, my!
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First Oprah, then O'Reilly ... what's next????

In other news ...

Pasadena Pastor back on Oprah today to explain why "Gay is a gift from God"

Media Advisory: For Immediate Release
Monday, January 12, 2009

The Reverend J. Edwin Bacon, Jr., rector of All Saints Church, Pasadena will make an encore appearance on The Oprah Winfrey Show today, Monday, January 12, to respond to the controversy around his statement in a January 8th segment on the Oprah Show that "being gay is a gift from God."

It was no surprise at All Saints Church that the show's producers asked for some follow-up time with Reverend Bacon. "The volume of email we're getting here in Pasadena tells us that Ed Bacon's message -- the good news that God loves absolutely everybody -- is one people are hungry to hear," said the Reverend Susan Russell, All Saints Senior Associate for Communication.
"We are deeply grateful for the national platform Ed Bacon's appearance on Oprah has given this message of love, inclusion and tolerance that we hear preached here in Pasadena 24/7. We look forward to welcoming those coming toward us who are hearing for the first time that the abundant, inclusive love of God includes them!"

For more information contact Keith Holeman, Director of Communications at All Saints Church, Pasadena, at kholeman@allsaints-pas.org, or 626.583.2739.

Keeping an eye on the "breaking news"

It's a VERY busy Monday here in Sunny Pasadena but here's my shot at compiling some of the news items around today's announcement of +Gene Robinson's role in the upcoming inaugural celebrations. Stay tuned for more!


NEWS:

Gay bishop will open inaugural -- Politico

Can anybody be "America's Pastor" now? -- USA Today

Gay bishop get role in inauguration event -- Reuters

Gay Episcopal Bishop Tapped for Obama Inauguration -- US News & World Report

Bishop Robinson gets inaugural role -- Boston Globe

New Hampshire Bishop invited to offer prayers -- Episcopal Life

Openly gay bishop to offer first inaugural invocation -- CNN

N.H. bishop invited to D.C. to give prayer --Concord Monitor

Openly Gay Episcopal Bishop to Deliver Invocation at Lincoln Memorial -- New York Times

BLOGS:

Huffington Post

Episcopal Cafe

HRC: Human Rights Campaign

GLAAD Blog

Bishop of New Hampshire to lead off Inaugural Celebrations

From Bishop Robinson: [via email this morning and posted on Episcopal Cafe]

"I am writing to tell you that President-Elect Obama and the Inaugural Committee have invited me to give the invocation at the opening event of the Inaugural Week activities, “We are One,” to be held at the Lincoln Memorial, Sunday, January 18, at 2:00 pm. It will be an enormous honor to offer prayers for the country and the new president, standing on the holy ground where the “I have a dream speech” was delivered by Dr. King, surrounded by the inspiring and reconciling words of Abraham Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address. It is also an indication of the new president’s commitment to being the President of ALL the people. I am humbled and overjoyed at this invitation, and it will be my great honor to be there representing the Episcopal Church, the people of New Hampshire, and all of us in the gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender community."

From Integrity USA's press release:

Integrity is delighted at today’s announcement of New Hampshire Bishop Gene Robinson’s role in the upcoming Inaugural celebrations. Following on the heels of yesterday’s selection of the Rev. Sharon E. Watkins as the first woman preacher for the January 21st National Prayer Service, today’s news is yet another indication that we are entering an historic era of diversity and inclusion.

“Bishop Robinson’s selection by the President-elect to pray God’s blessings on the opening event of the Inaugural week is good news not only for gay and lesbian Americans but for all who share the audacious hope of a nation conceived in liberty and dedicated to the proposition that all are created equal,” said Integrity President Susan Russell.

“It also gives us hope that the age of an ‘America’s Pastor’ is behind us and that we enter a new era where diverse voices of faith speak from the particularity of their own experience of God’s grace, love and power. While there are many miles to go before we are done with racism, sexism and homophobia in this country, we look forward to Barack Obama’s inauguration, to Sharon Watkins’ sermon and to Gene Robinson’s prayers as signs of great progress and profound hope.

Sunday, January 11, 2009

Being Gay Is A Gift From God

Here's how Ed dealt with the Oprah experience in his sermon this morning:



You can see the whole sermon on the All Saints website -- I particularly liked what he calls "God's Politics of Love."
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"Gay is a Gift" ... You heard it on Oprah!

So I was doing the quick-email-check-on-a-Sunday-morning thing and found a link to this article about Ed's interview on Oprah ... which was in DUTCH so I couldn't read it ... but found that it had a link to an excerpt from the segment on You Tube, so ... VOILA!



Lots of comments, emails and stuff flying around about this, as you might imagine. There are hundreds of comments on the Oprah.com community pages and we continue to get emails and voicemails in response. I even heard that Bill O'Reilly referred to the segement but haven't gotten confirmation or a clip yet. (Am thinking that it wasn't to say, "Amen!")

So tune in on Wednesday evening when the panel does their live webcast with follow up questions. At the end of the day what matters most, I think, is the comment Sedrick made at the end of the segment, "After listening to you guys today I think I'm going to leave here with a renewed vision."

What a GREAT way to start off the Season of Epiphany! With an "AHA!"

PS - Stay tuned ... the focus of today's sermon here at All Saints was "A Stubborn Kind of Love" and we should have an excerpt soon.

Saturday, January 10, 2009

Celebrating Ten New Presbyters in the Church of God

It was a beautiful day in the Los Angeles neighborhood ... and a great day for an ordination service!


So we did what Anglicans "do" when it's time to ordain new priests ...

... got a cathedral lined up and found a crucifer to lead the procession. Then we herded a bunch of clergy into line (NO small task, that!) ...
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And got ready to process to (you guessed it!) ... "St. Patrick's Breastplate."
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Now, the ordaining of new clergy is the main reason for the celebration, but let's face it ... seeing old friends and connecting with colleagues we usually only see on "Facebook" is also worth celebrating. (Here's me with friend Albert Ogle.)
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Cue Music: (click video to play)
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video

And here they are ... two-hours-and-change later: 10 New Presbyters in the Church of God with their bishops and the preacher du jour ... Grace Cathedral's Canon Mary Haddad. (Great sermon, Mary!)

And here's my friend Vicki Mouradian giving +Jon a blessing at the end of a VERY blessed day.

It was a great day to be an Episcopalian ... an Angeleno ... and I found myself thinking about some of the "ghosts of ordinations past."

I remember singing the same anthem the choir sang today -- Friedell's "Draw Us in the Spirit's Tether" -- at my friend (now Dean of St. Paul's, San Diego) Scott Richardson's ordination in (I think) 1990. Maybe 1991. Whatever. A long time ago.

I remember the year someone missed that the names of the year-before's ordinands were listed in the litany instead of that year's crop ... and the litanist didn't miss a beat and prayed God's blessing a whole slew of last year's priests. Oh well.

I remember the year we ordained the first "openly gay" priest in this diocese. I was the litanist that year and my cue to move to the lectern was when the bishop asked if there was any "crime or impediment" ... and I remember literally feeling the intake of 1000 people holding their breath ... and all was well.

I remember my own ordination when my son thought the mounted police who were gathered in the parking lot adjacent to St. John's to monitor a protest going on further down Figueroa Boulevard were there "to make sure my mom gets ordained." (At least that's what he told his Grandma!)

And I remember the year we ordained Robert Two Bulls and the procession was led by the MOST amazing corps of Native American drummers ... and how when they stood in the narthex it felt as though St. John's might just be pulsing with the heartbeat of the universe ... and then as the last drum beat faded into the first chords of St. Patrick's Breastplate and we processed down the aisle into the packed cathedral ... well ... it was the kind of moment you remember when you're remembering those kinds of moments.
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So congratulations to Anna, Jeffrey; Shannon, Allison, William, Elizabeth, Victoria, Loren, Kirby and Richard. May God richly bless you in your lives and ministries ... and may the One who has given you the will to do all these things give you grace and power to accomplish them!
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Words of wisdom from behind the Orange Curtain

My friend and colleague, John Taylor, wins the 'Behind the Orange Curtain" award for this blog posted yesterday in response to the news that Rick Warren, the purpose-driven-America's-Pastor-wannabe, is now offering "sanctuary" to the former Episcopalians who've lost their fight to leave the Episcopal Church and take our property with them.

If you don't know John, you should. You can read more about him here ... but key bio material includes "The Reverend John H. Taylor is the former post-Chief of Staff to Richard Nixon, former President of the United States, and currently serves as the Executive Director of the Richard Nixon Library & Birthplace Foundation."

So here ... fresh from Behind the Orange Curtain (AKA Orange County CA) is:

Nobody Steps On A Church In My Town * by John Taylor

It's often been a blessing to have Pastor Rick Warren's mammoth Saddleback Church in our backyard at St. John's in Rancho Santa Margarita, about two miles south of Warren's digs. His ministry gives inspiration and comfort to tens of thousands in our community and millions around the world. He brings the gospel alive in practical ways to help people live better, more faithful lives.

But now he's offered to help dissident Episcopalians plant a church in our neighborhood. Thanks a lot, dear colleague!

In the wake of Monday's ruling by the California Supreme Court under which three churches which tried to leave our Diocese may soon have to return their buildings and other properties, Warren wrote,

We stand in solidarity with them, and with all orthodox, evangelical Anglicans. I offer the campus of Saddleback Church to any Anglican congregation who need a place to meet, or if you want to plant a new congregation in south Orange County.

As the orthodox pastor of the closest Episcopal church to Saddleback, I'll try not to take it personally. Still, if any of the 20 million Baptists who aren't especially taken with Pastor Rick's conservative Southern Baptist Convention want to plant a church in his backyard, I'll happily talk to the St. John's Bishop's Committee about using our choir room to start Saddleback South. We could only seat about 20, compared to Pastor Rick's 50,000 Christmas Eve worshipers, but all good things start small.

Among dissidents' problems with Mr. Warren's Southern Baptists is this carefully worded policy statement from the Convention's web site:

Women participate equally with men in the priesthood of all believers. Their role is crucial, their wisdom, grace and commitment exemplary. Women are an integral part of our Southern Baptist boards, faculties, mission teams, writer pools, and professional staffs. We affirm and celebrate their Great Commission impact.

While Scripture teaches that a woman's role is not identical to that of men in every respect, and that pastoral leadership is assigned to men, it also teaches that women are equal in value to men.

That's right: Pastor Rick and his colleagues believe Jesus Christ didn't want women to be pastors. The policy is one reason former President Jimmy Carter resigned from the Convention in 2000. With us Episcopalians and many other denominations, the seeming crisis is over the sacramental status of gay and lesbian people. But an even more important problem is that many Christians haven't even come to terms with the radical equality of women in the body of Christ.

In the early church, women played a prominent role in all aspects of ministry. After all, the "apostle to the apostles" wasn't Peter, James, or Paul, or indeed Tom, Dick, or Harry. All four gospels agree (in other words, "scripture teaches") that Mary Magdalene first received the good news of our Lord's Resurrection. She believed, while Jesus's male followers (who had fled in fear after the Crucifixion) at first did not.

And yet in the 21st century, powerful Christian leaders still keep Mary's half of the population down. I can well understand why they prefer to talk instead about the 2-3% of the population who are homosexual. Safer odds.

* Name that movie!
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Friday, January 09, 2009

He's B - A - C - K !!!

As reported in today's USA Today ...

Rick Warren, who has been out of the news for, oh, about 10 minutes, since the controversial California pastor was picked to give the invocation at Barack Obama's inauguration, is back.

Recapping here: After sticking a fork in the eye of gay rights advocates by actively supporting Proposition 8 -- which overturned the legalization of gay marriage in California -- Warren compounded their outrage by equating gay marriage with incest in an interview with Beliefnet.

The hubbub lulled down a little over the holidays but today, he's back, with an open invitation to any group displaced by their denomination. This is code for Episcopal congregations that oppose that church's acceptance of a gay bishop in 2003. Earlier this week, a California judge ruled that a breakaway congregation, St. James in Newport Beach, cannot keep its property now that they have left the Episcopal Church.

The Southern Baptist Warren shared his letter with Christianity Today which says, in part:

We stand in solidarity with them, and with all orthodox, evangelical Anglicans. I offer the campus of Saddleback Church to any Anglican congregation who need a place to meet, or if you want to plant a new congregation in south Orange County.

This is pretty much guaranteed to revive demands by gay rights advocates for Obama to reconsider Warren for the invocation. My bet is that Obama will hold firm, maintaining, as he has before, that this is a diverse nation and that Warren, as much as Rev. Joseph Lowery, a zealot for civil rights, are equally welcome on the podium. Lowery is set to give the benediction.
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Q & A

Q. So your boss was on Oprah. Big Deal. Isn't it time to move on and write about something else?

A. Not today. Not when I've spent a good chunk of my day helping respond to emails like these:

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Thank you Mr. Bacon for so publicly saying that “gay” is a gift from God. I have struggled with homosexuality for many years. I grew up in the Southern Baptist church and always felt that maybe God didn’t love me because of the way I am. I tried years to change it, but when I finally accepted myself, I began to thank God for who I am. Had I not been a gay man, I may not have had the many talents or the success given my upbringing. I would love to visit the All Saints church. Are there other members from the GLBT community that attend you church?

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I just watched Rev. Bacon on the Oprah show and was moved to tears by his kindness and compassion. My father died of stomach cancer when I was 9 years old and on the day he died I stopped believing in God. The Reverends remarks about how God does not give diseases struck me at my very core and I am still crying as I type this. Moreover, his comments to the young gay gentleman were so incredibly kind and loving. I would like to reconnect with God. I live in New York City and was wondering if your church had a sister organization in NYC. I would like to find a Reverend and a church that shares Rev. Bacon's approach to spirituality. Would you be able to recommend a church in New York City? Or perhaps how I may start to figure out how to find one?Any help you could give would be greatly appreciated.

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I am a volunteer counselor at a suicide and crisis line for gay teens. When I started training I was staggered by the number of gay teens that attempt suicide, 3 to 1 over their heterosexual counterpart, and now as a counselor I find that most of the calls involve conflict about religion. So many teens across this country are torn between their sexuality and their faith. As a counselor, it is frustrating to have so little to say to be able to ease their often desperate anxiety. Your words on The Oprah Show, I am confident, changed the lives of many kids. There are so many conflicted kids who are trying so hard to do what's right, I know that your words saved some of their lives. I, myself was moved to tears. I wanted to commend you for you bravery and your clarity, and I thank you from the bottom of my heart.

====

Q. Will you proclaim by word and example of the Good News of God in Christ Jesus ... [even on The Oprah Winfrey Show?]

A. I will, with God's help!

And let the people say Amen, Amen, Amen!

Thursday, January 08, 2009

Bits & Pieces

Some bits and pieces for the New Year:

My Christmas Eve sermon -- "Hope Happens" -- is up online on video now.

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If you watched Ed Bacon on Oprah and have a question for him -- or for any of the other panelists -- you can click here and send one for them to answer on the live webcast scheduled for next Wednesday, January 14th. Here's mine:

My question is for Ed Bacon: How do you answer those who ask, “How can you say ‘God made you gay’ when the Bible says that homosexuality is an abomination?”

I myself am a lesbian who is also an Episcopal priest, so I believe you’re absolutely right. But I also know there are so many viewers who have only heard the Bible used as a weapon of discrimination and judgment rather than a tool for inclusion and love. I would love to be able to hear you expand on your statement “God made you gay” in light of your spiritual wisdom and theological training. Thank you!


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Also "in the news" is this yet-another "Through the Looking Glass" moment over in the Diocese of Fort Worth ... wherein the former bishop of the diocese -- having left the Episcopal Church and all -- is now taking umbrage at what he calls the Episcopal Church being "disruptive in the life of our diocese. "

What did The Episcopal Church do to "be disruptive?" What it ALWAYS does at this very time of year: sent out the parochial report forms to congregations to fill out and return.

Keep your eye on Katie Sherrod's blog for further developments and DO keep the Episcopalians of Fort Worth in your prayers as they prepare for their special convention on February 7th and look forward to a new era of mission and ministry in their little corner of the kingdom.

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Finally, if you missed Rachel Maddow on John Stewart last night, check this out:


Iglesia de Todos los Santos "Misa Bilingue "

Our bilingual service celebrated its third anniversay on All Saints Sunday ... and last week, had a visit from the "Tres Reyes" ... pictured below and with members of the congregation.




The congregation was also featured in the liturgical calendar created by the Nat'l Church Hispanic Ministries desk -- we were "Miss January!" (or "Senorita Enero!")

Every Sunday at 1:00 p.m. The music is great, the congregation welcoming and it's a totally happening place to be! Come check us out!
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Wednesday, January 07, 2009

New Prop 8 postmortem data

Prop. 8 Exit Polling of African-Americans Way Off, Experts Say
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A new study on California’s Proposition 8 voting trends released Tuesday found that far fewer African-Americans voted to pass the gay marriage ban than the 70% suggested by exit polling and concluded that race was not the most significant factor affecting people’s vote for or against marriage equality.

After conducting in-depth analysis of election returns from five key California counties and using census data to estimate the racial makeup of the voters in those counties, researchers found that between 57% and 59% of African-Americans voted in favor of Proposition 8, which amended the state's constitution to prohibit same-sex marriage.

"This is a far cry from the [National Exit Poll] estimate,” said Kenneth Sherrill of Hunter College, one of the lead authors of the study.

Sherrill also noted that four pre-election polls put black support for the antigay ballot initiative anywhere between 41% and 58%. “While that’s quite a range, none venture above 58%,” he said. “On this basis alone, the NEP estimate of 70% would appear to be an outlier.”

A comparison of the Prop. 8 data with that of polling after the Knight Initiative, a 2000 measure that prohibited gay marriage in California by statute (rather than constitutional amendment), showed overall movement toward support of marriage equality across almost every demographic group “with the only holdouts being Republicans, conservatives, and those born before World War II,” said Patrick Egan of New York University, another lead author of the report. “Although Proposition 8 was victorious, I think the real story is that California voters have nevertheless shifted dramatically toward support for same-sex marriage.” In fact, the study found support for marriage equality increasing in nearly every demographic group by about one percent each year since 2000.

Read the rest here

"Spirituality 101" on The Oprah Winfrey Show today

So here's why I think this is a bigger story than "my boss is on TV:"

When was the last time you saw an Episcopal priest in the media talking about something OTHER than [a] reacting to the latest news from schism central or [b] talking about "sex"????

Which makes this the "Breaking News:"

The fact that the rector of one of the largest, most progressive Episcopal Churches in the country is on national television today as part of a panel on faith and spirituality is a HUGE step forward for those of us who have worked so long to get progressive faith voices "out there" and to convince the media that there actually ARE people of faith who are not religious fundamentalists.

In a world where people are searching for meaning and where religion is too often used as a weapon, this chance to share the radically inclusive love of God to such a wide audience is a huge gift.

And as we begin a New Year AND a New Administration, it is a great opportunity to invite people who may have "given up" on religion back into dialogue and conversation -- and maybe back into community!

Here endeth "the pitch." We'll be watching the segment together as a staff this afternoon ... check it out -- if you can -- and let me know what you thought!

Integrity Applauds California Supreme Court Ruling for Diocese of Los Angeles

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
January 6, 2009

Monday’s unanimous Supreme Court decision is a landmark ruling that states – once and for all – the reality that individuals may choose to leave the Episcopal Church but they cannot choose to take the property that belongs to the diocese with them.

The truth is, in spite of all the efforts to spin the story otherwise, the current departures from the Episcopal Church amount to a splinter … not a split. A relatively small but vocal minority of Episcopalians have chosen to leave over the inclusion of gay and lesbian people more fully in the life and work of the church but the vast majority of Episcopalians remain committed to moving ahead with our mission and ministry, in spite of their differences on this and many other issues.

In the 1970’s here in the Diocese of Los Angeles four congregations attempted to “leave the Episcopal Church” over the ordination of women. There were law suits and property challenges and – at the end of the day – two of them left and two of them ended up staying.

Now in 2009 we have four congregations seeking to “leave the Episcopal Church” -- ostensibly over the ministry of gay and lesbian folk in the church. This is not the greatest schism in the history of Christendom – it is the cost of discipleship we pay as a church willing to follow the Jesus who called all people into God’s loving embrace. We paid it in the 70’s over the ordination of women and we’re paying it now over the full inclusion of the LGBT baptized. And we will be a stronger church as a result.

While we believe it grieves the heart of God whenever there is a split in the fellowship of brothers and sisters in Christ, at the end of the day what matters more than those who choose to leave the Episcopal Church because they’re disagreed with are those who will COME to the Episcopal Church because of our policies of welcome, inclusion and our message of love and tolerance.

That’s the good news we have to proclaim as Episcopalians in this New Year and the welcome decision of the California Supreme Court is going to help us do precisely that.


(The Reverend) Susan Russell, President
president@integrityusa.org

Tuesday, January 06, 2009

Story Time 2.0


Back on July 17, 2007 I posted a blog entitled "Story Time" -- and today ... the day after the unanimous ruling by the CA Supreme Court in favor of the Diocese of Los Angeles -- it seemed like a good time to revisit that story ... for those who may have missed it or who need a "memory refresher course."

The blog was in response to a commenter named "Jim" who wrote this in response to a story about the ongoing litigation over property in the Diocese of Los Angeles: "It seems to me that there has been little of what might be called Christian charity in any of this prior to the filing of lawsuits."

In response I replied, "If you'd like to email me I'd be happy to give you some of the "back story" of just how far backwards this diocese bent to keep the litigation from happening. What 'seems to you' is not all there is to the story. "

And then I figured I might just as well answer it for all ya'll. So let's have "Story Time."

~ ~ ~ ~ ~
Once upon a time there was a diocese getting ready to elect a new bishop. The Search Committee presented four candidates -- any one of whom would have made a perfectly FINE bishop -- but there were some people in the diocese who thought they needed more diversity in the slate so two other candidates ... both of whom would make perfectly fine bishops ... were persuaded to allow themselves to be nominated from the floor of the Electing Convention.
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One of those was a priest named Jon Bruno. I remember returning to town from some meeting or the other to the news [a] that Jon had agreed to stand for election and [b] that David Anderson (then Rector of St. James, Newport Beach) was supporting him in the election.
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So I called Jon ... who I'd known for many years in Stewardship and Cursillo contexts ... and left him a message that I had a question for him.
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He called me back. My question was ... well, to put it bluntly ... blunt.
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"I heard that David is supporting your candidacy and before I can figure out who I'm supporting need to know from you whether you've cut some kind of Griswoldesque deal with him that involves the word "abstain." (This was not long after Lambeth 1998 when +Frank Tracy famously abstained on Lambeth 1.10)
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Jon's answer was he had not cut any kind of "deal" -- that David knew where he stood on the issues they disagreed about and the only thing he'd promised was that there would always be a place at the table for people who disagreed with him. And he asked me for my support. And I gave it to him.


So +Jon Bruno became Bishop Coadjutor in 2000 and Bishop Diocesan in 2001 and set about trying to make sure that there was a place for everybody. Even people who disagreed with him. And he brought together people who disagreed with EACH other to try to bridge the gap. I wrote back in May about some of my experience with that process.
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Here's a bit from that post about "... the once-upon-a-time when the Bishop of Los Angeles was longing to hope that if he brought together clergy leaders from his diocese for conversations about faith and theology we'd learn that we had more in common than we did in difference and we'd find a way to heal the breech between us. So we did. Eight of us. Four "liberal" and four "conservative." We met for a year. Twelve months. Once a month.
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We brought sack lunches and sat around a round table in our Cathedral Center and read the Catechism together -- the Outline of the Faith from the Book of Common Prayer. And we talked about it. About God. About Jesus. About the Holy Spirit. About the Church. About the Sacraments. About Sin.
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And we prayed for each others' children and grandchildren. And we found we did indeed have a lot more in common than we did in difference. And in the end three of the four "conservatives" left the Episcopal Church. David Anderson to Nigeria. Bill Thompson to Uganda. Ron Jackson to I-can't-remember-where."
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And how much harder could +Jon Bruno have worked to keep that from happening? Where was "Christian Charity" when we could have used it -- back before the lawyers and the courtrooms and the countersuits?
.
Here's what I know. On Diocesan Dodger Night +Jon took me aside and -- over peanuts and a beer -- told me that he had that very week met with "our brothers" and offered them Delegated Episcopal Oversight (DEPO) from the bishop of their choice. "It breaks my heart, Susan," he said, "that at this point none of the bishops of Los Angeles can meet their sacramental needs. But we have to realize that this is just where we are as a church right now and give them what they need so we can put this fighting behind us and get on with the mission and ministry of the church."
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And he said he would keep me posted. And the next thing I heard that "our brothers" told him didn't want another bishop ... that +Jon was their bishop and they loved him. And the following Monday (the bishop's day off) letters were presented at the Cathedral Center saying they were leaving for greener Anglican pastures. Oh -- and they were taking the property that belonged to the Diocese of Los Angeles with them.
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And here we are. Story time doesn't have a "happily ever after" ending today, I'm afraid. The bishop who promised that there would always be room at the table for those who disagreed with him before he even WAS a bishop still has a place set at the table for those who have left -- and in my index of gifts and graces that would certainly be listed under "Christian Charity."
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I couldn't agree more that the lawsuits are a sad distraction from and a significant drain on the resources we have been given to do mission and ministry.
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And I wish with all my heart there had been a way for us to work through our differences or -- lacking that -- to come to a mutually agreeable separation agreement.
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And it seems to me that the chance for that was somewhere inbetween "thanks for the offer of DEPO but we want you to be our bishop" and "these are our lawyers."
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And the responsibility for that lies firmly at the feet of the ones walking out the door with the silver, the linens and the deeds stuffed in their pockets -- not at the feet of the one still setting a place at the table for everybody.
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THE END

Monday, January 05, 2009

"On the 12th Day of Christmas ..."

Forget the "Twelve Drummers Drumming" ... here in L.A. on this 12th Day of Christmas we got "Seven Justices Concurring" that the church property in dispute in Newport Beach, North Hollywood and Long Beach belongs not to the individual Episcopalians who have left The Episcopal Church for greener doctrinal pastures but to the Diocese of Los Angeles.

One -- Justice Joyce Kennard -- concurred on the "who owns the property" issue while dissenting on the "neutral principles of law" approach of the majority, but a unanimous decision on the property question was more than I think anybody had hoped for. (And a GREAT way to end the 12 Days of Christmas and start the New Year!)

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The Diocese of Los Angeles has now issued a statement and there's a press conference happening "as we speak."

From the Diocesan Press Advisory:

In a landmark ruling that could have national implications, the California Supreme Court on January 5 upheld an earlier court decision that buildings and property do not belong to three dissident congregations but to the Diocese of Los Angeles and the general Episcopal Church.

Associate Justice Ming W. Chin, writing the opinion concurred to by all justices, said the diocese held the property and buildings in trust for individual congregations. The case involved St. James Church in Newport Beach, St. David's Church in North Hollywood, and All Saints Church in Long Beach, where a majority of members realigned themselves with the Anglican Province of Uganda after The Episcopal Church (TEC) ordained an openly gay bishop. Members of the congregation had amended their articles of incorporation and attempted to retain the property.

Chin acknowledged that while the court cannot decide church doctrinal matters, it could decide property disputes, using a "neutral principles of law" approach. In rendering its decision the court examined property deeds, local church articles of incorporation, the general church's constitution, canons and rules, and relevant statutes and concluded "that the general church, not the local church, owns the property in question.

"Although the deeds to the property have long been in the name of the local church, that church agreed from the beginning of its existence to be part of the greater church and to be bound by its governing documents," Chin wrote.

"These governing documents make clear that church property is held in trust for the general church and may be controlled by the local church only so long as that local church remains a part of the general church. When it disaffiliated from the general church, the local church did not have the right to take the church property with it."

====

From the bishop's statement:

"The Episcopal Diocese of Los Angeles is overjoyed with the conclusive opinion of the California Supreme Court.

"We have prevailed in all areas of law addressed in this case.

"We look forward to the possibility of reconciiation with these congregations, and we assure that this Diocese and the people of The Episcopal Church that we will continue mission and ministry in the areas of these congregations.

"The mission of The Episcopal Church in the Diocese of Los Angeles continues, as our prayer book states, 'to restore all people to unity with God and each other in Christ.' We will continue to seek this reconciliation with fellow Christians in the communities of Long Beach, Newport Beach, and North Hollywood, as well as La Crescenta, where Episcopal church properties continue as part of the Diocese of Los Angeles in accordance with the Court's opinion announced today.

"We acknowledge that this opinion establishes a precedent. We further note the pastoral concerns at this time within The Episcopal Church, which continues in its mission of service, especially in providing food, shelter, medicine, and pastoral care to those in greatest need locally and globally, respecting the dignity of every human being."

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From "the other side":

Eric Sohlgren, of the Irvine-based Payne and Fears firm, who represented the congregations, did not return telephone calls Monday.

Stay tuned for further developments!

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LA Times story: Rebellious churches must leave assets behind
AP: CA Court sides with Episcopals over property (Someone give them a call about their headline choice, please!)
Central Valley Busniess Times: State Supreme Court deals blow to Anglicans (Ummm ... excuse me ... WE'RE the Anglicans, here, folks!)

CA SUPREME COURT RULES IN FAVOR OF DIOCESE OF LOS ANGELES


You can read the whole decision here ... but if you want to "cut to the chase," here's the bottom line:

Applying the neutral principles of law approach, we conclude that the general church, not the local church, owns the property in question.

More to come ...

Sunday, January 04, 2009

On the 11th Day of Christmas ...

... my true love made for me:

Giada De Laurentiis'
Panettone Bread Pudding
with Amaretto Sauce



Bread Pudding:
1 (1-pound) loaf panettone bread, crusts trimmed, bread cut into 1-inch cubes
8 large eggs
1 1/2 cups whipping cream
2 1/2 cups whole milk
1 1/4 cups sugar

Sauce:
1/2 cup whipping cream
1/2 cup whole milk
3 tablespoons sugar
1/4 cup amaretto liqueur
2 teaspoons cornstarch

To make the bread pudding: Lightly butter a 13 by 9 by 2-inch baking dish. Arrange the bread cubes in the prepared dish. In a large bowl, whisk the eggs, cream, milk, and sugar to blend. Pour the custard over the bread cubes, and press the bread cubes gently to submerge. Let stand for 30 minutes, occasionally pressing the bread cubes into the custard mixture. (Recipe can be prepared up to this point 2 hours ahead. Cover and refrigerate.)

To make the sauce: Bring the cream, milk, and sugar to a boil in a heavy small saucepan over medium heat, stirring frequently. In a small bowl, mix the amaretto and cornstarch to blend and then whisk into the cream mixture. Simmer over medium-low heat until the sauce thickens, stirring constantly, about 2 minutes. Set aside and keep warm. (The amaretto sauce can be made 3 days ahead. Cover and refrigerate. Rewarm before serving.)

Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F.

Bake until the pudding puffs and is set in the center, about 45 minutes. Cool slightly. Spoon the bread pudding into bowls, drizzle with the warm amaretto sauce, and serve.

Saturday, January 03, 2009

A Year in Review: Susan's Top Ten List for "Oh Eight"

An unobjectively personal non-scientifically selected top ten list of events in the just completed Year of Our Lord Two Thousand and Eight.

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10. All Saints Church 125th Anniversary
It was great fun to spend 2008 celebrating 125 years of work and witness by All Saints Church in Pasadena. From speaking out against the deportation of Japanese-Americans to detainment camps during World War II to standing with Martin Luther King during the 1960's to being a Peace Parish during the Viet Nam war it's a deep delight to be part of a parish with the struggle for peace and justice as part of its DNA!


9. Gene & Mark's wedding
On June 7th I had the extraordinary privilege of being the preacher at the blessing of the union of Gene Robinson. Not just a privilege, it was a delight and a joy -- and Louise and I were so very blessed to enjoy a wonderful weekend in New Hampshire and some time in Boston. "Mazel tov," guys!


8. Rachel Maddow
I've been a huge Rachel Maddow fan ever since she got her Air America radio show and so was thrilled to see her getting such well deserved national attention as a smart, savvy, able political commentator. (And yes, I'm TOTALLY open to any time she needs a little faith-based-commentary on life-in-general ... or Rick Warren in particular! Call me, Rachel!)
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7. Lambeth Conference
There are a dozen things I could write about Lambeth but the photo blog from Canterbury covers all of them. In retrospect, the moment I'm choosing is this one -- the arrival of "our" bishops at the Integrity/Changing Attitudes Eucharist. (God bless them, every one!)


6. Hillary Clinton
Hillary Clinton's strong, determined campaign for President of these United States was an inspiration, a source of hope and empowerment and a class act from start to finish. We love you, Hillary!


5. Losing Harvey & Birdie/Getting Juno
Having animal members of your family brings us not only the deep joy of their unconditional love but the deep sadness of vulnerability to grief at their loss. This year we lost Harvey and Birdie ... the two senior members of the Brooks-Russell family ... and welcomed Juno: still a bundle of puppy energy at now-6 months old.

Harvey
1994 - 2008

Birdie
1993 - 2008

Juno (with Luna)
Born June 2008
Arrived @ Our House August 2008

4. Marriage Equality in California
The May 15th Supreme Court decision ushering in marriage equality in California changed the entire landscape of 2008. Pastorally, it gave us the opportunity to celebrate with GREAT joy the marriages of dozens of fabulous couples at All Saints Church between June 17th and November 4th. It also provided the impetus for our bishop, +Jon Bruno, to form a Task Force on Marriage Equality which led to sweeping changes in our diocesan policies on marriage and blessings here in the Diocese of Los Angeles. Happily Ever After All Over the Place!
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3. Proposition 8
The "Bad News" part of the "Good News/Bad News" on marriage in 2008 was the narrow victory of the discriminatory ballot measure stripping a percentage of California citizens of equal protection under the constitution. Out of that election battle came new alliances, hard lessons and a deepened commitment to build the grassroots movement necessary to overcome the bigotry motivated campaign of dis-information waged by the determined opponents of marriage equality. We'll be back!



2. Mother
The sudden and most unexpected passing of my 82 year old mother -- Betty Lou Brown -- on July 24th was a deep grief and leaves a still gaping hole in our lives and in our family. I remain deeply grateful for the parenting of one who didn't just talk about "family values" but lived them. We miss you, Mom!

August 1925 - July 2008

1. "Yes, We Can!"
The election of Barack Hussein Obama as the 44th President of the United States is still a goose-bump inspiring landmark for this nation committed to liberty and justice for all. The challenges are great, the hurdles are huge and -- like every political leader in the history of politics -- he will both disappoint and inspire. But at this very moment ... 16 days from his historic inauguration ... it is SUCH a joy to wake up every morning knowing that we are on the cusp of putting the Imperial Presidency of these last eight disastrous years behind us as we move forward with more hope than many of us have had for a VERY long time!
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Here endeth Susan's "Top 10 List"
[Cue music:]

God of our weary years,
God of our silent tears,
Thou who hast brought us thus far on the way;
Thou who hast by Thy might,
Led us into the light,
Keep us forever in the path, we pray.

Friday, January 02, 2009

Ed on Oprah

So here's an opportunity to start your New Year out right ... tune into the Oprah Winfrey show next Wednesday (January 7th) and check out my rector, the Reverend J. Edwin Bacon, who's featured on the "Your Spirituality" segment of Oprah's "Best Life Series."

From the website:

YOUR SPIRITUALITY: January 7 -- Elizabeth Lesser, the Rev. Ed Bacon and Michael Bernard Beckwith explore ways to find deeper meaning in life.

And here's from the All Saints publicity blurb:

"In a world where people are searching for meaning and where religion is too often used as a weapon, this chance to share the radically inclusive love of God to such a wide audience is a huge gift,” said Susan Russell, All Saints’ Senior Associate for Communications. “We here at All Saints Church are thrilled that our purpose-driven pastor will have this national platform to preach the values of love, compassion and inclusion."

Check it out and see what you think!

Same "Stuff", Different Year

It may be a New Year but in the Church of England it's starting off with an Old Fight over ... (wait for it ...) WOMEN BISHOPS!

(Yes, Virginia, it IS two-thousand-and-nine ... go figure!) Here's an overview
from Judith Maltby in the Guardian:


=========

Women bishops by Judith Maltby
What makes women bishops so difficult for the Church of England is not theology. It's that they're women

When I was ordained a deacon in 1992, a few months before the historic vote on women priests, I was like most people shortly to be ordained: overly anxious and overly serious. Added to that I had recently finished my doctorate on an aspect of the English Reformation. This meant, unlike most Anglican ordinands, I had actually read the 39 Articles to which one must assent before being ordained in the Church of England. I had scruples. I told my diocesan bishop that although most of the thirty-nine were fine, one or two were a real problem.

Article 37 for example, endorses capital punishment, a position I find incompatible with the Christian gospel – a fact that seems to have been overlooked (or has it?) by those who wish to impose the Articles as a touchstone of orthodoxy and morality on the whole of the Anglican Communion. I received from my bishop just the right response for the occasion: he told me that by 'assent', I was saying 'Yes bishop, those are the 39 Articles'. His pastoral, intelligent and humane response to my somewhat precious scrupling carried me through the day.

The draft legislation to consecrate women as bishops published on Mondayand the supporting documentation makes a great deal of Anglicanism's gift for holding together diverse, at times, contradictory points of conviction in a wider context of pastoral common sense. Often derided by others for this as the fudge producers extraordinaire of Christianity, we Anglicans tend to make a virtue of it and if it makes us less prone to witch-hunts and the gleeful doctrinal purges of the purity police, I'm all for it. Human beings, let alone God, are rather complicated.

Anglicans disagree about more things than I could live long enough to enumerate: how is Christ present in the Eucharist, if at all; does Baptism make people regenerate or does it anticipate later conversion; what does it actually mean to say that the Bible is the Word of God; is the death of Jesus redemptive because he took punishment which should have been ours or through his death, God shows the profundity of the divine identification and commitment to the human race; is ordination ontological or merely the authorizing an individual to perform a set of ecclesiastical functions ndash; oh and can women, as well as men, be priests and bishops? Yes we disagree about that too as well as not agreeing just what a priest or bishop actually is in the first place. I haven't even begun to scratch the surface of the things over which Anglicans differ.

In the midst of all this merry muddle, what we have never done as a church until the Act of Synod in 1993, is to deal with differing convictions by setting up a class of bishop to give pastoral care to one group based solely on their views on one issue. The draft legislation carries on this idea with its proposal of 'complementary' bishops to serve the minority in the church unhappy about women bishops. Not only would these bishops be men, they would have to be men untainted by sacramental association with women clergy – please understand: just being a bloke isn't good enough, the bloke must be pure. I get angry emails from time to time for describing this as a theology of taint, but I honestly can't think of a more candid description for this position.

The point is this: I have a very 'high' view of the Eucharist – if my bishop does not share this view, by the reasoning that gives us complementary bishops, I should be entitled to a bishop who agrees with me for surely Eucharistic theology is as important as disputes over ordination. But no. From disagreements over the Eucharist, the Bible, even the theological meaning of the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ, we Anglicans feel no need to haul in a complementary bishop.

Why is that? One is left with the sad conclusion that the draft legislation and its code of practice isn't really trying to deal with genuine theological difference – the Church of England has that in abundance – it is trying to deal with women. I don't blame the hard working members of the drafting group for this – this reflects state of the Church of England. Women are the problem, not a gift, which needs a solution.

The Oxford English Dictionary defines 'complementary' as 'completing and perfecting'. What, I wonder, could possibly be 'incomplete' about a woman in episcopal orders (answers on a post card, please)? Maude Royden, the first Anglican woman to preach in the Church of England in 1919, sparking enormous controversy at the time (as it still would in Sydney), once remarked ironically 'I was born a woman and I can't get over it'. The Church of England, it would appear, bereft of any irony, cannot get over it either.

Thursday, January 01, 2009

Ringing in the New Year ...

... with Mimosas for Brunch and these roses picked this morning from our garden.


Working on a "that was the year that was" piece but first we're going to watch USC win the Rose Bowl -- GO TROJANS!

Meanwhile, here are some words of wisdom for the New Year from Harvey Milk, courtesy the Human Rights Campaign:


Happy New Year, All!