Archive for July 12th, 2009

Church Periodical Club Awards International Grants

Sunday, July 12th, 2009

news-blueDWTX from Anaheim - The Church Periodical Club (CPC), an affiliated organization of the Episcopal Church, held their triennial meeting in Anaheim just prior to General Convention. The organization was founded at Church of the Holy Communion, New York, 125 years ago by Mary Ann Fargo, wife of the owner of Wells-Fargo. Her group sent books and magazines to settlers in the West on the wagons, providing both religious and secular information, education, and entertainment.

At the meeting, over $32,000 in grants was provided to recipients in the United States, Haiti, Tanzania, Kenya, and other parts of the world. Students at St. Philip’s Theological College in Tanzania received funds for books they will take from the seminary to other parts of their country where they travel as missionaries. The Dominican Episcopal Church in the Dominican Republic requested copies of The Book of Common Prayer in Spanish for an area with “limited resources vs. significant growth.” St. Leonard’s Adult High School in Chicago received funds to purchase computer books for adult education. Each year, CPC grants $8,800 for the eleven Episcopal seminaries in the United States. Up to four seminarians, chosen by the dean, receive those grants. Betty Morris, Diocese of West Texas, is the Seminarian Chair.

 Also during the meeting, election of new officers was held and Ethel Marple, Diocese of Southern Virginia, was elected President. The Board also consists of CPC representatives from each Province. Connie Osborne, Lovington, New Mexico, is the new Province VII representative.

The Triennial report of National Books Fund (NBF) grants showed that Bibles, Prayer Books, and Hymnals were provided in the United States-including one in Seattle in the Dinka Language, the Philippines, Honduras, and Puerto Rico, among other countries. Grants had also been made for Christian education, prison ministry, library books and recovery programs. In addition to the NBF, a Miles of Pennies fund makes grants for books for children. School and library books, Godly Play programs, and shipping costs to send books to 18 schools in Belize for 5,000 students were some of the MOP grants. A mile of pennies is $844.80, and grants are made in that amount. Grant applications for the National Books Fund and Miles of Pennies are available on line at www.cpc.org.

During the Convention, CPC members were at their booth in the exhibit hall to provide information on their programs and to learn from visitors how better to meet their needs for books. Each day, the Houses of General Convention and the ECW Triennial receive candy and a bookmark for an Energy Lift delivered by CPC members and volunteers.

The closing event for CPC and first event of Convention was the Overseas Bishops’ Dinner. Over 300 people from all parts of the church came to meet bishops from the countries where books from the Church Periodical Club make a real difference in their ministry. For more information on this organization, visit www.churchperiodical.com.

Important Day at General Convention

Sunday, July 12th, 2009

VIEWPOINT – For Elizabeth and me, General Convention did not start until 3p.m. today. That meant a good nights’ rest and a leisurely morning. Oh, how good life is!

As you may recall, all resolutions are referred to Committees, Committees hold public hearings and then deliberate and act on resolutions assigned to them. A Committee either amends the resolution or recommends that it be adopted, rejected or referred to another Committee. The resolution is ready at that point to go to one of the Houses (either the House of Bishops or the House of Deputies) for action.

The Deputies convened at 3pm and acted on some important resolutions today. We increased the Millennium Development Goals (relief for the poorest of the poor in the world) from 0.7% of the annual budget of The Episcopal Church to 1% per annum, with a goal of $5 million for the period 2010-2012. We also approved an important resolution approving a strategic plan for Hispanic and Latino/Latina ministries that Richard Aguilar, formerly of our Diocese, helped develop.

The most controversial and emotional resolution approved by the Deputies today was resolution D025, a very carefully crafted resolution that attempted to walk a very fine line between the differences our church is wrestling with today. After the consecration of Bishop Gene Robinson in 2003, the Episcopal Church agreed at its General Convention in 2006 that it would defer from consecrating any person living in a same sex relationship as a Bishop and that it would not authorize same sex blessings.

D025 reaffirmed the abiding commitment of The Episcopal Church to the fellowship of the churches constituting the Anglican Communion, encouraged Dioceses, congregations and members to participate to the fullest extent possible in the many relationships of the Anglican Community, reaffirmed The Episcopal Church’s financial commitment to the Anglican Community, acknowledged that General Convention has come to recognize that the baptized membership of The Episcopal Church includes same-sex couples living in lifelong committed relationships characterized by fidelity, monogamy, mutual affection and respect, careful honest communication, and the holy love which enables those in such relationships to see in each other the image of God, affirmed that God has called and may call such individuals to any ordained ministry in The Episcopal Church, which call is tested through the Church’s discernment processes acting in accordance with the Church’s Constitution and Canons and acknowledged that members of the Episcopal Church are not of one mind and that Christians of good conscience disagree about some of these matters.

D025, which the House of Deputies approved today by a vote of 68% of the clergy order and 71% of the lay order, may or may not have rescinded the moratorium approved in 2006. If any of you desire a copy of D025, you can get it on the website of The Episcopal Church or I can fax or mail you a copy. Whether it did or not rescind the moratorium, I think it clearly signaled that the dispute over homosexuality is no longer the principal focus of The Episcopal Church.

Now that D025 has been approved by the House of Deputies, it will be submitted to the House of Bishops, which can approve it as submitted, amend it or reject it. For D025 to become canon law, it must be adopted in the same form by both the House of Deputies and the House of Bishops.

The Prayer Book, Liturgy and Music Committee meets tomorrow morning at 7:30a.m. to consider liturgy resolutions that I think will be more controversial that D025.

We had dinner with Thurma Hilton tonight, what a lovely lady! We are anxiously looking forward to greeting Richard and Betty Mosty tomorrow. I have been keeping his seat warm in the House of Deputies and will glad relinquish it to Richard, who will do a splendid job representing the Diocese.

Keep those prayers coming!

Blessings,

Drew Cauthorn
Lay Deputy
St. Mark’s, San Antonio