Executve Council Wraps Up Triennium
Reflection on teh Past,
Preparation for the Future
by Jan Nunley for ENS
Winding up the business of the last three years and
moving on towards this summer's General Convention
was the dominant theme of the last Executive Council
meeting of the triennium, held at a conference center in
Ellicott City MD, April 28-May 1.
The council spent a day evaluating its performance and "graduated" 19 of its 38 members, who will
be replaced in elections held in Minneapolis this summer. But the "class of 2003" left continuing members
with plenty to do and think about, including revisions to
a handbook for the next Council and preparations for
renovating the Episcopal
Church Center in New
York.
Members also
passed resolutions calling
for opposition to expansion
or extension of the USA
PATRIOT Act and other
curtailments of civil rights
and adopting a policy of
disinvestment from U.S.
defense contractors.
House of Deputies
president George Werner
opened the meeting with a call to reject what he called
the "conventional wisdom of the gated community" as
a model for the church. "The 'conventional wisdom' is
not the Gospel," Werner admonished. "Christianity must
never be a 'gated community.' The ultimate figure of
vulnerability in all of art is that of our savior with his
arms extended on the cross."
"As we prepare for the 74th General Convention of the Episcopal Church we are called outside... to meet the challenges of the pandemic of AIDS, of global debt, of genocide, of the blocking of immigrants, to
the potential loss of habeas corpus and other values,
which once made us the hope of the world," Werner
said. "This General Convention has an opportunity to
lead the daring and the vulnerable, wisely risking as the
wounded loving hands of Christ....Therefore, if there
is tolerance, if there is grace and generosity of spirit
between our houses, if we trust our system and allow
our committees to do their work, if we allow the drama
to play out, I truly believe that we can rise above the
'conventional wisdom' of our wider community and this
moment in history and be the church at its best."
In his opening remarks to the council, Presiding Bishop Frank Griswold related a question asked by
Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams at a private dinner following his Trinity Institute presentation
in New York: "Are we [Anglicans] a communion or a
federation?" The answer given to that question,
he said, has a lot to do with how we view the work of
reconciliation in the church: as "God's work accomplished in Christ" or as "human getting-along." To live
a "resurrection life," he continued, is to experience the
"healing and transformation of our desires" so that "the
structure of our desire is to
conform to God's desire."
"When we last met I didn't know how much I
was going to be in the public eye," he continued
wryly, reporting on the aftermath of critical com-
ments he had made in a January interview about
the way Americans and American foreign policy
are viewed abroad. "Everything has been in absolute terms" in response to his statements, he said,
and many of those responses reflect a view that "the
only reality is the United States and its public policies"
and have overlooked the fact that the question of "global citizenship" is a vital one for Christians. "How can
we, by virtue of our citizenship in the body of Christ,
help our fellow citizens to see globally?" he inquired.
Griswold's concern was reflected in two resolutions received from the council's National Concerns
subcommittee. The first expressed "deepening concern"
with "emerging policies and practices of our government" that target immigrants from the predominantly
Muslim countries of South Asia. Specifically, the measure opposed "any further expansion or extension" of
the USA PATRIOT ("Uniting and Strengthening
America by Providing Appropriate Tools Required to
Intercept and Obstruct Terrorism") Act, passed in October, 2001. The act was originally due to "sunset" in
2005, but moves to extend it indefinitely and further
expand it (the so-called "Patriot Act II") are underway
in Congress, said the Rev. Richard Parkins, director of Episcopal Migration Ministries.
"How can we,
by virtue of our citizenship
in the body of Christ,
help our fellow citizens
to see globally?"
"This is an area in which I work every day,"
said council member and federal magistrate James E.
Bradberry of Southern Virginia, who with other federal
judges has been critical of the government's legal treatment of criminal suspects with Middle Eastern backgrounds. Last September, according to news reports,
Bradberry blasted government officials who sought to
detain an Egyptian without bond for lying on government forms, and in February he repeated his criticisms
in a case where government agents sought to detain a
naturalized Jordanian on charges that Bradberry said
might not have resulted in the same request for
an Anglo-Saxon."
"The PATRIOT Act has had damaging effects
on our civil rights, and what all of us need to understand is that the actions in [it] cover us as well as the
people that we're aiming to get out of the terrorism business," Bradberry continued. "The problem is that we
cannot afford to give up so many of these rights or we
wind up literally worse than the people we're
pursuing...The second version of the PATRIOT Act
would allow secret arrests with no requirement for accountability. It ought to send a chill over your heart."
Bishop Catherine Roskam of New York agreed
with Bradberry, adding that she "cannot tell you how
offensive it is to New Yorkers that 9/11, which we experienced and which we suffered through, is consistently
used as an excuse for this kind of oppressive legislation."
The council passed the resolution unanimously.
Divestment from military industries
The second National Concerns committee resolution,
aimed at disinvestment from companies that manufac-
ture military goods, generated more debate--mostly over
the difficulty of determining which companies make
what products.
Prepared by the council's Social Responsibil-
ity in Investments Committee, the resolution was a re-
sponse to frustration with the ineffectiveness of share-
holder resolutions filed with defense contractors. Such
resolutions, asking for actions such as the adoption of
ethical criteria for military contracts and reports on for-
eign military sales, seem to have little impact on com-
pany practices, and few receive enough votes to be refiled
at subsequent shareholder meetings.
The solution, according to the Rev. Brian
Grieves, director of Peace and Justice Ministries, is to
set up a so-called "social screen" that would obligate
the church to disinvest from companies that are among
the top five US defense contractors and listed among
the top 50 that receive more than half their revenues
from military contracts.
The top five military contractors are Lockheed
Martin, Boeing, Northrop Grumman, Raytheon, and
General Dynamics. Among the other firms affected are
BAE Systems and Engineered Support Systems;
BPAmoco, also on the list, is subject to divestment
because of its business ventures in Sudan.
Corporate mergers and diversification make it
difficult to link individual manufacturers and specific
munitions. "It's probably the case that one company is
not the sole producer of land mines," explained council
member Rebecca Snow of Alaska. "One company produces the hardware and another the trigger and another some wire that goes into it. That is the problem
with military contracts--they could be for uniforms or
food or thousand-dollar toilet seats."
Bishop Francisco Duque of Colombia also
pointed out that chemical manufacturers are frequently
involved in military-related tasks, such as the fumiga-
tion of coca fields in his country, that result in the deaths
of animals and food crops, pollute water supplies, and
cause disease in children.
But some members cautioned that a blanket
policy of divestment from defense contractors would
raise further moral dilemmas for the church--questions
of lumping the peacekeeping missions of the military
with its warfighting functions, of the peacetime
benefits of military-funded research, and the effects of
divestment on defense industry employees.
After a pause for prayer, the measure passed
24-10 with two abstentions on a roll call vote.
Home office improvement planned
While a good portion of the past year's council deliberations were taken up with the question of whether to
proceed with moving the Episcopal Church Center's
operations to the campus of the General Theological
Seminary in New York, Church Center management
still had to tackle the question of what to do with the
current headquarters, now more than 40 years old.
When agreements on the seminary project fell through
in December, the question of what to do with the building at 815 Second Avenue, just a block from the United
Nations, moved to the front burner.
The major problem with the building, according to treasurer Ralph O'Hara, is the presence of asbestos in the flooring and ceiling tiles. No renovation of the
space can be done until the asbestos is safely contained
and removed--and that means gutting the space,
O'Hara explained.
"The need for it is unquestionably there, and
we are, in effect, behind the times in doing it," he said.
The present Church Center was built to accommodate a staff of more than 300, plus other agencies of the church, but now houses 100 fewer staff members.
Potentially, a renovated and reorganized Church
Center would free up to three floors worth of space,
which could be rented out, providing what O'Hara called
'a sizeable income stream" for the church. Potential uses
under consideration include commercial retail space on
the first floor and a conference area and computer training space on the mezzanine level. O'Hara said consultants have told Church Center management that a yearand-a-half long "phased renovation," which would not
require moving operations out of the building, is possible.
Total cost of the renovation project is currently
estimated at $20-24 million. The council unanimously
passed a resolution authorizing $750,000 to hire an
owners' representative and an architectural firm and
continue with plans for the renovation.
Wounds healed but identified
The council heard from director of communication Dan
England about the upcoming Episcopal Ad Project and
an update on progress towards offering church documents translated into Spanish and other languages.
Archdeacon Helena-Rose Houldcroft of the Diocese of
Qu'Appelle brought an update on issues facing the Anglican Church of Canada, including the native schools
settlement and the New Westminster controversy.
Members took half a day to complete anti-racism training and an entire day, most of it in private meetings, to evaluate the council's performance during the
last triennium. Encouraged to reflect on what assumptions and unspoken norms they encountered, members
spoke of communications breakdowns and the frustrations of unclear relationships of accountability between the council, its officers, and national staff members.
Some of those concerns also emerged in conversations
about a revised handbook for council members, put into
its final form at the meeting.
Hopeful signs identified for the future included
"the ability to learn from history and move on," the spiritual leadership of the presiding bishop, the inclusiveness of diversity in worship, and the caring exhibited by council and staff members alike. "The first thing the
resurrected Jesus does is to show the disciples his
wounds," Roskam pointed out during the evaluation.
"There is no divine 'cosmetic surgery'--his wounds
are healed, but identified, and we need to move to the
same place." Other items addressed by resolution at
the meeting included:
acceptance of audited financial statements
for the past fiscal year;
a call for a task force to investigate financial
problems at St. John's School in Guam;
establishment of a committee to evaluate a
request from the Episcopal Church Foundation for
money to expand its gift planning program;
a request for the Director of Research to pro-
vide an annual update on the ordination and deploy-
ment of women clergy;
support for an educational resource and video
on cultural diversity in the ordination process;
support for the establishment of an endow-
ment fund for the Episcopal Church in the Philippines.
The council's next meeting is set for October
24-27 at the Lake Geneva Conference Center in Wis-
consin.
The Rev. Jan Nunley is deputy
director of Episcopal News Service