Joe's Journal
June 27, 2008
As I write today, the General Assembly of our
denomination is meeting in San Jose,
CA. In the two days left to conduct their
business, the Assembly will deal with its most controversial issues, including
an overture to ammend paragraph G-6.0106b of the Book of Order dealing with
ordination standards, and overturning the findings of the Peace, Unity and
Purity report passed at the 2006 General Assembly. These are the issues that will no doubt
dominate media coverage of these decisions.
As of Friday at 1:00 p.m., these decisions have not been made. I want to let you know about events and
decisions at this General Assembly you might not hear much about.
(cont.) Last Saturday night, the Assembly elected the
Reverend Bruce Reyes-Chow, a 39-year-old new church development pastor and a
leader in the emergent church movement. Rev. Reyes-Chow is pastor of Mission
Bay Community
Church, an innovative new church of San Francisco Presbytery who recently
received the Sam and Helen Walton Award for outstanding new church development. Reyes-Chow, the grandson of Chinese and Filipino
immigrants to California, was raised in Sacramento and Stockton,
CA. He is a graduate of San Francisco State University
and San Francisco Theological Seminary. He describes himself as a “pastor/geek/dad/follower
of Christ.” In her nominating speech,
my friend Vivian Guthrie, the widow of Shirley Guthrie, said Reyes-Chow’s election was
needed, “to keep our church relevant … or we aren’t going to be on the same
page as younger people. Bruce has a profound understanding of the way the world
is changing, so he can help us feel less anxious and less resistant to change.”
On Tuesday, a
proposal to significantly simplify the Book of Order was approved for referral
to the General Assembly Office and to Presbyteries and churches for study. This will be a landmark process and will no
doubt enhance our understanding of Presbyterian polity.
On Wednesday, the
Assembly approved a resolution “On Calling for Tolerance and
Peaceful Relations Between the Christian and Muslim Communities.” The vote was
547-149. The Assembly found common
ground with interfaith groups in the concept that Christians, Jews and Muslims
may hold different understandings of how God has been revealed to humankind,
but all three groups are called to love God and neighbor and care for the poor.
That means Presbyterians ought to be in conversation with Jews and Muslims,
celebrate religious holidays together and even set aside days to worship
together — all to promote understanding, respect and goodwill.
On Thursday, the Assembly celebrated an
announcement concerning the denomination’s Mission
Initiative. To date, over $33 million
has been raised nationally to support missionary efforts at home and
abroad. Half of these funds will be used
for new church development projects in the United States, and the other half
will fund missionary efforts around the world.
Please keep our denomination in your prayers
as today and tomorrow major decisions will be made concerning controversial
matters. Know that whatever decisions
are made, the Presbyterian system requires they be sent to the Presbyteries to
be ratified. So ultimately, no change
will happen as a result of today’s decisions. Change may be initiated, but no
final decisions will be made.
I continue to believe it is an amazingly
hopeful time for our congregation. This
year’s General Assembly gives me hope for our denomination’s future. We’ve elected a visionary leader. We’ve committed a tremendous amount of money
to mission. We’ve made a bold statement
calling for interfaith dialogue. All in
all, I see these things as positives. I
look forward to discussing with you all the matters that come from this General
Assembly in the days and weeks ahead.
In Christ,
Joe