The Rt. Rev. Edward L. Salmon, Jr
Address to the Special Convention
October 2, 2003
St. Paul's Church, Summerville
I was ordained 43 years ago. In all those years I have been to two special
diocesan conventions. Both were for the election of a bishop. One can ask
the question, since we are not electing a bishop, why are we here?
Bishop Skilton and I, along with a sizeable number of other bishops believe
that the General Convention in Minneapolis, in two actions, changed the
Episcopal Church by violating its constitution and violating the historic
teaching of the church covering human sexuality by approving the
consecration of the Bishop-elect of New Hampshire who is living in a
same-sex relationship, and by approving C051 which acknowledges local option
for the blessing of same sex relationships, making them acceptable in some
dioceses and forbidden in others. I voted against this resolution and have
no intention of allowing such blessings in the diocese. Instead of the
traditional teaching that new life in Christ for all of us comes from our
repentance at the foot of the cross, we simply voted to change the standards
so that what was once an expression of our fallen nature, is now, by us,
declared to be normative and acceptable.
It has been said of the debate and reflection in the House of Bishops, that
we were respectful and prayerful. We indeed were. We are personal friends
and friends in Christ who have worked with each other for years. (14 for
me). Therefore the assumption is made that the decision must be acceptable
simply because the debate was respectful. Let me quote Psalm 50, verse 21:
"these things you have done, and I have kept still, and you thought that I
am like you." If this atmosphere gave such a message, let me apologize and
repent. We said over and over again that the Church would never be the same
again after these votes because we were making a decision (1) contrary to
Holy Scripture, (2) contrary to the almost two thousand year tradition of
the Church, (3) contrary to the 1998 position of the Lambeth Conference, (4)
contrary to the request of the Archbishop of Canterbury, (5) contrary to the
request of the Brazil meeting of the Primates in the Spring, and finally,
(6) contrary to the requests of the Anglican Consultative Council. The
message in return was this is just like other difficult issues we have faced
(the ordination of women, Prayer Book revision, racism) the sense of
division will pass.
While we are waiting for this to pass, let me describe some of the fallout
in the American Church and beyond which indicates that this is not that kind
of issue.
1. In the dioceses all over the country we have had clergy, individuals,
families, and congregations leaving the church or refusing and redirecting
their support. Major building projects have been put on hold.
2. When the Presiding Bishop invited 10 Bishops to New York to reflect about
where we are, Bishop Ackerman reported that the one thing all could agree on
was that all the Bishops present and their dioceses were profoundly affected
by reactions in their dioceses to the decisions of General Convention.
3. A number of Primates and bishops have issued public statements to tell
how our decisions have been a severe blow to mission in their parts of the
world.
4. In describing the extensive reaction in his parish, one priest reported
that these decisions abolished the space of mutual respect that has allowed
people of differing views to co-exist. Since no diocese or church in the
nation is monolithic, the middle has been replaced by a battleground.
Parishioners are now at odds with fellow parishioners. We have seen some of
this in our own diocese. One bishop has reported that his diocese is now
seriously divided, whereas before they had been able to work together with a
common mission.
5. In another diocese the ministry team that cared for prisoners was refused
entry to a jail until negotiations revealed that they were not supporters of
the General Convention action. Another priest, while visiting the county
jail was amazed to discover that because of the media, prisoners were
concerned about the teaching that would be brought to them as they were
trying to grow in the Christian faith. A parishioner of his who visits
federal prisons reminded him that gay sex, while one is incarcerated, is not
a peripheral matter, and that when churches cannot offer clear teaching that
roots one in the will of God with clear direction, not only is credibility
lost but hope also.
6. The 2003 Al Azhar- Anglican Communion Dialogue of Muslim and Christian
participants, which was supposed to meet in New York's General Seminary on
September 11 was cancelled when the Muslim Scholars pulled out at the last
minute because of the action of General Convention. The Anglican Bishop of
Egypt, one of the participants, had this to say of Minneapolis, "we had not
expected this [New Hampshire election] to be done to us by brothers and
sisters who are in communion with us. We had expected that they would think
of us before taking such a grave step. It showed great disrespect for the
majority of the members of the Anglican Communion and the Church world wide.
In fact the decision shows disregard for the value of being in communion and
part of the Holy Catholic and Apostolic Church. It places in doubt the
future of the Lambeth Conference. When its resolutions are no longer
respected by members of the Conference, what purpose does it have?" Just
this morning, the Roman Catholic Diocese of St. Augustine withdrew its
permission to use one of their churches for the consecration of John Howard
because of the interview of the Presiding Bishop with the Associated Press
on Monday. "Many of my people would be deeply offended to learn that an
Episcopal bishop , who hold a position that is radically opposed to what
both the Catholic Church and Scripture teach about homosexuality, is using
one of our facilities," Roman Catholic Bishop Victor Galeone said.
7. To date, four dioceses have called special conventions and rejected the
decisions of General Convention. Others are scheduled to meet.
8. Because of the seriousness of the situation and its threat to the whole
Communion, the Archbishop of Canterbury has called his fellow Primates of
the Communion to meet in London in mid-October to respond to the crisis.
These reactions, not including the gathering in Plano, Texas, next week,
should indicate that this is not just another crisis around issues that time
will cure.
As Bishop of South Carolina, I have the solemn responsibility to connect us
to the whole Communion, to be responsible for the unity of the Church, to
proclaim the Gospel and to teach. Why have I taken the position I have
taken? The few remarks I wish to make only touch the subject. They should
not suggest that as a diocese we do not have much reflection to do together.
They will reveal, however, what I understand the teaching of the scripture
and the church to be, and I believe why the reaction has been so strong
around the Communion.
Part of the surprise of those who favor the actions of General Convention is
related to the cultural air we all breathe, which is filled with the
philosophies of relativism and individualism. It is this context which has
allowed us to end up with positions where a priest will be in good standing
in one diocese and subject to presentment in another. We have our truth and
you have yours, why can't it continue that way?
David B. Hart, an Eastern Orthodox theologian in an article "Christ and
Nothing" wrote, "We live in an age whose chief moral value has been
determined, by overwhelming consensus, to be the absolute liberty of
personal volition, the power of each of us to choose what he or she
believes, wants, needs, or must possess; our culturally most persuasive
models of human freedom are unambiguously voluntarism and, in a rather
debased or degraded way, Promethean; the will we believe is sovereign
because unpremised, free because spontaneous, and this is the highest good.
"Hence liberties that permit one to purchase lavender bed clothes, to gaze
fervently at pornography, to become a Unitarian, to market popular
celebrations of brutal violence, or to destroy one's unborn child are all
equally intrinsically 'good' because all are expressions of an inalienable
freedom of choice.
"And so at the end of modernity, each of us who is true to the times, stands
not facing God, or the Gods, or the Good beyond beings, but an abyss over
which presides the empty inviolable authority of the individual will, whose
impulses and discussions are their own moral index".
Richard B. Hays in The Moral Vision of the New Testament reminds us that the
teaching of the New Testament envisions a church whose most urgent pastoral
task is the formation of communities that embody the surprising hope of a
new creation. In this community is an understanding of discipleship which is
sustained so that it is the bearer of a distinct and peculiar vocation
within the world. While human sexuality appears to be the most pressing
issue before us today, we ignore to our peril the demanding issues around
violence, money, divorce, etc. which have implications on a potentially
greater scale.
The Bible has little discussion of homosexual behavior. There are perhaps
half a dozen references to it in the whole Bible. The Sodom and Gomorrah
narrative in Genesis is not one of them. Leviticus18:22, 20:13, which is an
unambiguous legal prohibition, is the basis for the universal rejection of
homosexual activity in Judaism.
According to Richard Hays the early Church did, in fact, adopt the Old
Testament teaching on matters of sexuality, including homosexual acts. Those
passages are I Cor. 6: 9-11, I Tim 1:12, Acts 15:28. You know those passages
and can read them if you wish.
The most critical text on the subject is Romans 1: 18-32. Here the rejection
of homosexual acts is in an explicitly theological context. Romans 1 makes
several crucial teachings in this passage. They are:
1. The Gospel is not merely a moral teaching that hearers may accept or
reject, it is the eschatological instrument through which God is working out
his purposes in the world.
2. The righteousness of God is manifest in God's wrath against the
unrighteousness of humankind.
3. Humanity's unrighteousness consists fundamentally in a refusal to honor
God and render him thanks because we worship and serve the creature rather
than the creator.
4. Romans refuses to list a catalogue of sins as the cause of human
alienation from God; all our depravities are the result of our radical
rebellion against the Creation. This rebellion finds universal expression ,
it includes us all.
5. The aim of Romans 1 is not a passage warning of God's judgment against
particular sins or an attempt to teach a code of sexual ethics, but a
diagnosis of the disordered human condition.
6. Romans sees homosexual activity as flouting sexual distinctions that are
fundamental to the Creator's designs, an outward and visible sign of an
inward rebellion, and also unnatural.
7. Romans treats all homosexual activity as prima facie evidence of humanity
's tragic confusion and alienation from God the Creator.
Then the startling conclusion to Romans Chapter 2: "Therefore you have no
excuse, whoever you are, when you judge others. For in passing judgment on
another, you condemn yourself, because you, the judge, are doing the very
same things." This is the ultimate understanding of the inclusively of the
Gospel. We all stand in the same position before God. Our debate is not
whether gay and lesbians are welcome in the church or not. If they are not,
no one is. The debate is around the question of a new creation. Are we not
all called to humble ourselves before the one who is humbled himself and let
his grace make us anew?
All people stand equally condemned under the judgment of a righteous God.
The gospel levels all of us before a holy God.
Richard B. Hays remind us of three things:
1. The scripture affirms repeatedly that God has made man and woman for one
another and that our sexual desires rightly find fulfillment in heterosexual
marriage.
2. As great-grandchildren of the Enlightenment we like to think of ourselves
as free moral agents. Scripture teaches us that we are deeply infected with
the tendency to self-deception. Once in a fallen state, we are not free not
to sin, we are slaves to sin, rendering us incapable of obedience. The Bible
thus rejects the notion that only freely chosen acts are morally culpable,
thus saying that a homosexual orientation is not morally neutral because it
is involuntary.
3. God's "giving up" of rebellious humanity is not the last word. The cross
declares that God loves us even in rebellion; the death of Jesus is the
measure of that love. In a community marked by sacrificial service for each
other, we are not locked into biological determination. There is a new
creation, but we struggle with disorder, we groan in pain and bondage in the
Church. There is no easy way to new life, nor is there any guarantee what it
will be like, but simply the promise that it will be.
As a Bishop with jurisdiction, I voted against the consecration of the
Bishop-elect of New Hampshire because he is living in a same-sex
relationship, he is un-repentant, and whether he realizes it or not he is
publicly placing his desires over the welfare of the Church Catholic. It is
not personal. I too stand under God's judgment as St. Paul warns in Romans
2. I ask the Diocese of South Carolina assembled in the special convention
to likewise reject this election.
The General Convention had endorsed a new religion - one of affirmation
rather than a new creation through repentance. It has also embraced a new
anthropology - human sexuality, heterosexual or homosexual - is asserted as
our core identity, rather than our common humanity in Christ. A new
understanding of Christian marriage is even proposed, differing from a
covenant relationship between male and female signifying the mystical union
betwixt Christ and the Church and instead to a committed relationship
defined by those who make it. We are in fundamental disagreement in the
American Church. I have appealed to the Archbishop of Canterbury and his
fellow Primates for a resolution of this impasse. What is our teaching? Who
is the Church? I ask the Diocese of South Carolina assembled in this special
convention to join me in this request to the Archbishops and Primates.
Bishop Skilton and I stand on a gospel of salvation, not affirmation. It
excludes no one. It does not play favorites. We have talked at each other
for years and arrived at a church profoundly divided. We are a party to the
problem, but we repent and seek a new day.
For further information contact:
The Rev. Dr. Kendall S. Harmon
Canon Theologian, Diocese of South Carolina
P.O. Box 2810
Summerville S.C. 29484-2810
Email: ksharmon@mindspring.com
Phone: 843-821-7254