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Trinity Church
North Patrick St

Dublin, TX 76446
Office 254.445.4833
Vicarage 325.356.2198
Cell 254.842.1228
 
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©2005-08 Trinity Church
Established 1890
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Friday, January 11, 2008

"Incline your ear and come to Me. Listen, that you may live; and I will make an everlasting covenant with you, according to the faithful mercies shown to David."
                                                                                Isaiah 55:3 NASV
 

  • A Message From Bishop Anderson
  • Virginia Attorney General Validates Position of ADV Parishes
  • Canada: Anglican Clergy Told to Declare Loyalties
  • Common Cause Bishops Receive Invitations to Jerusalem
  • Attendance at Jerusalem Conference Not Disloyalty, Says Archbishop Williams
  • Fort Worth: Preliminary Report on Southern Cone Invitation
  • Invading Anglican Closets

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A Message From Bishop Anderson

Brothers and Sisters in Christ,

Each year in the first week in January I attend a three-day Covenant Group retreat that has been meeting in Florida for quite a few years. Those from freezing climates always look forward to going south to warmer weather, but this year, despite "Global Warming," we froze in the cold temperatures. The climate inside the retreat, however, was warm and supportive, as men who have known each other for a decade or two listen to one another, offer counsel and critique, and pray with one another. I always come home refreshed.

In the last few years, each meeting has seen more of our group cross over in the realignment, leaving the Episcopal Church and affiliating with another Anglican Province. Besides TEC, Rwanda, Nigeria, and Uganda were all present at this year's meeting. Each year we wonder who else will realign before we meet again. That is the state of TEC: those orthodox priests inside TEC are looking for ways to forestall encroachment by revisionist bishops on their parish and ministry; those planning on leaving are looking for ways to do so in an orderly and well-prepared manner; and those who have already left bring witness to amazing joy and energy, even when they are being sued by TEC.

Of the many events covered in this weeks' Update, I would like to touch on a few. Regarding our orthodox brothers and sisters in Canada, specifically in the diocese of Eastern Newfoundland and Labrador, the Anglican Church of Canada's diocesan Cyrus Pitman is demanding that all the clergy come to his office on a certain date, kiss his ring, and swear fealty to him and his domain. He is concerned that some of his clergy might have divided loyalty to the former diocesan, Bishop Harvey, who is now affiliated with the Anglican Province of the Southern Cone, so Pitman is demanding that all clergy present themselves. This sounds like an Old Testament Cyrus. Usually when a new rector or bishop assumes pastoral oversight, he is interested in winning the hearts of those he is called to care for. It was once said that the people don't care how much you know until they know how much you care. This is one seriously strange way for Cyrus to demonstrate his love and care, and to win their hearts. Pray for his clergy who are thus summoned.

One of the difficulties that the American Anglican Council has had in communicating the outrages and atrocities of the US Episcopal Church leadership to the larger world is that it goes beyond belief. Bishops are not accustomed to other bishops lying to them, or saying one thing and then promptly doing the opposite. They can't believe it is possible until it happens, but gradually the number of international bishops who have tasted the duplicity of the TEC leadership has increased, and our reporting becomes more believable to the international world.

Despite all of the nuance of words that TEC uses to describe what it isn't doing, in order to reassure those few orthodox internationally who still believe them, sometimes things are accidentally stated clearly and everyone beholds the plain truth. An article written by Terry Mattingly (an orthodox Christian writer) on Trinity Church, Copley Square, Boston, in the uber-liberal diocese of Massachusetts, exposes what they are really saying and doing. Despite what Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori or Los Angeles Bishop J. Jon Bruno say, there are approved liturgies for blessings of same-sex unions - approved by dioceses and fully implemented. The historic Trinity Church offers clear guidance to those desiring a Blessing of Holy Union liturgy. They note, according to Mattingly, that the services are based on "A Rite for the Celebration of Commitment to a Life Together" which is used in their diocese, Massachusetts.

In watching the situation in Virginia, we understand that the judge has advised those in litigation that the case might stop for a season and then resume, carrying over into 2009. This might allow the orthodox faithful a breather to raise additional money for their defense, but in the Episcopal Diocese of Virginia and the national Episcopal Church this news can't be cause for rejoicing as the money dries up. Anglican Columnist David Virtue covers the story of the Episcopal Diocese of Virginia deciding to take out a two million dollar line of credit to maintain their liquidity, while they spend millions of dollars on the "full employment for attorneys" diocesan solution.

Diocesan bishop Peter Lee was very close to inking an agreement that would have been a possible win-win for both sides when Presiding Bishop Jefferts Schori told him to forget about it. So now the Virginia diocese is looking at not only lines of credit, but selling "real properties" to raise cash. Will they spin off their beloved diocesan camp, Shrine Mont, for money to sue and litigate?

In contrast, among those who have left TEC, there seems to be a good deal of joy and excitement about ministry. Where you might expect anger and depression I find - and I experience myself - quite the opposite: a peace and a joy that is just from God.

The Rt. Rev. David C. Anderson, Sr.
President & CEO
American Anglican Council

___________________________________

Virginia Attorney General Validates Position of ADV Parishes

Source:  Anglican District of Virginia
 

Date:  January 11, 2008

McDonnell: "As a matter of federal constitutional law, the Episcopal Church is simply wrong."

 - Virginia Attorney General Bob McDonnell has filed a motion to intervene and a brief in the ongoing church property litigation that is being heard by Fairfax County Circuit Court Judge Randy Bellows involving eleven congregations that separated from the Episcopal Church in 2006 and 2007 and joined the Anglican District of Virginia (ADV). In his brief, Attorney General McDonnell defended the constitutionality of the Virginia Division Statute (Virginia Code 57-9), thereby validating the position of the ADV churches and making it clear that there is no constitutional problem with applying the Statute in exactly the way ADV attorneys have advocated...

Read the rest of the press release by clicking here.

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Canada: Anglican Clergy Told to Declare Loyalties

Source: The Star

Date:  January 10, 2008

... a Newfoundland bishop is demanding clergy come to the provincial capital to declare whether their loyalties lie with him or his predecessor, the leader of a breakaway conservative movement.

"Attendance at these gatherings is mandatory," Cyrus Pitman, bishop of Eastern Newfoundland and Labrador warns in a Dec. 18 letter to clergy obtained by the Star. 

Clergy from Eastern Newfoundland's 33 parishes are to be in St. John's on Jan. 21 to restate their ordination vows and to get new licences, with a date for those from the six Labrador parishes yet to be set…

Read the rest of the article by clicking here.

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Common Cause Bishops Receive Invitations to Jerusalem

Source:  Common Cause Partnership

Date:  January 9, 2008

Common Cause Bishops Receive Invitations to Jerusalem 

Bishop Robert Duncan, moderator of the Common Cause Partnership, a federation of Anglican jurisdictions in North America, has invited members of the Common Cause College of Bishops to join him and other Anglican archbishops, bishops, clergy and laity from around the world in Jerusalem June 14-22...

Read the rest of the press release by clicking here.

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Attendance at Jerusalem Conference Not Disloyalty, Says Archbishop Williams

Source: The Living Church

Date: January 4, 2008

Plans by traditionalists to meet in Jerusalem a month prior to the Lambeth Conference do not signal disloyalty, according to Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams. Archbishop Williams noted that the Global Anglican Future conference  would not, however, have any official status as far as the Anglican Communion was concerned. His remarks were reported in the Church of England Newspaper.
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Fort Worth: Preliminary Report on Southern Cone Invitation

Source:  Diocese of Fort Worth

Date:  January 9, 2008

...We have now had opportunity to review the Constitution and Canons of the Province of the Southern Cone; an English-language edition of those documents is being edited and will be released shortly. Based on our review, we have concluded that the structure and polity of the Province of the Southern Cone would afford our diocese greater self-determination than we currently have under the General Convention of The Episcopal Church. This autonomy would be evident most specifically in the areas of property ownership, liturgy, holy orders, and missionary focus.

While nothing will change in the day-to-day operations of the churches in the Diocese of Fort Worth, we expect a significant change in attitude and focus of the clergy and people of the diocese. Becoming a member Diocese of the Province of the Southern Cone would allow the Diocese of Fort Worth the opportunity and freedom to continue to practice the "Faith once delivered to all the saints" without being constantly distracted by the controversies and divisions caused by innovations hostile to traditional Christian norms. Instead, it would allow the Diocese to concentrate on the call of Jesus Christ to preach the Gospel and make new disciples, while at the same time assuring our continued place in the mainstream of Anglicanism, an assurance The Episcopal Church is unable to give...

Read the entire press release by clicking here.

_______________________________________

Invading Anglican Closets

Source:  Scrippsnews.com

Date:  January 9, 2008

The historic Trinity Episcopal Church offers clear online guidance to those seeking a Blessing of Holy Union in its sanctuary on Boston's Copley Square.

The services are based on "A Rite for the Celebration of Commitment to a Life Together" which is used in the Diocese of Massachusetts.

"A priest may bless a same-sex civil marriage or preside at and bless a same-sex union. ... The same liturgical rite is used," say the guidelines. "In the presence of God and the couple's Christian community, the rite includes a declaration of the couple's intent to join their lives together and a celebration of their commitment to a life together."

This is precisely the kind of rite that has infuriated so many conservatives in the worldwide Anglican Communion...

Read the rest of the article by clicking here.