Saturday, October 11, 2014

Sassy Helps Heal a Heel with Epsom Salt



We began an old TV series because it might be about Lutheran leaders - "Criminal Minds." The doorbell rang and Sassy Sue went crazy barking.

She has various levels of response. She often gets a Milkbone from the UPS driver, so she is hopeful about all deliveries. This one had her especially anxious to bark me to the front door.

Our helper was ringing the bell - with his daughter in his arms. His wife was there to grin at Sassy and say, "Happy Bark. Where's that happy bark?" That set off some joyous barking and a welcome for each member of the family.

They wanted Epsom Salt, in case I had a supply. Their girl had irritated her feet by wearing plastic flip-flops. I had two different bags, so I gave them a pound or more in one bag. We use it every day for human feet and often for rose roots. Dr. Oz has a slide show on Epsom Salt uses. Other uses include treatment for asthma - listed in Wikipedia.

We participated in that large scale regional thunderstorm that brought 3-4 inches of rain to Springdale yesterday, with more on the way. During a lull I sprinkled more Epsom Salt on the roses, crepe myrtle, spinach, and butterfly bush.

Those who say "scratch it into the soil" have no clue about its properties. Epsom Salt is hydrophilic, which means it instantly blends with water. Scratching the soil surface needlessly breaks up the fungal paths that feed the plants. It also stirs the weed seeds into action. Not smart.

Our helper's children are excited about gardening. They loved pulling gourds and giant beans from the foliage on the chain-link fence. I promised them samples of the seeds I order for the spring garden - beans, sunflowers, gourds, pumpkins. Their south-facing home will be a great place for experiments in agriculture.



Stealth Suet
If I can get the newest shipment of mesh bags past Mrs. I, more suet will be hanging in the back yard. Dime's Meat Market cut me three more pounds, without questioning my need for it.

More than one place has gone into shock about the amounts I order. I recall the response of a Midland store when I ordered a pound of edible pod pea seeds. "A pound?" I said, "I already have two pounds planted."

"What are you going to do with all those peas?" We ate them raw until longing turned to loathing. Then we fed pea vines to the rabbits, who converted them to Rabbit-Gro for the earthworms below their cages, who converted the natural fertilizer into castings and earthworm babies.

Some might ask, "Why more bags of suet?" I first saw this done in Midland, where bird feeding is almost universal. In those days, suet was in grocery stores and mesh bags were easily obtained for free. I saw groups of birds feeding from bags hanging from large lilac bushes and small trees. Since fat-loving birds are insect eaters, nurturing them is good for the yard and garden.



An ugly old bag of suet can be buried with new roses - an old wives' tale - to help the plant. No, I do not know why, but who wants an old greasy sack of suet hanging around all summer?

Our back yard has four live trees and one dead tree, The dead one has been used for storing garden hose, but next year will support a trumpet vine (a hummingbird plant). Since starlings hog a feeder, extra bags will allow other species to eat at their leisure in various places.

The neighborhood has plenty of bushes and trees for birds, so an increase in water and food will attract more species to our yard. If the winter is as wet, snowy, and icy as some predict, the reliable food zones will be appreciated and used. Birds are never completely reliant on feeders, but those feeders are extremely helpful during the worst weather, when food is hard to find - to keep the birds warm.

The birdhouse gourd.



Friday, October 10, 2014

Another WELS Woman Targeted by a Pastor

Walther was Bishop Stephan's enforcer and enabler.
CFW and his mob conveniently robbed Stephan of his gold, land, and library.


http://shatteredpulpit.blogspot.com/2014/09/why-victims-should-not-go-to-church.html

I don't know if this is the best place to post. I was a victim of a retired WELS Pastor, who held a position working with many young women. He told me he loved me, pursued me, even as his wife was watching, knowing. I told my husband, my pastor and finally my therapist. My therapist told me what would I do if he had done to me what this spiritual leader had done. I immediately said turn you in. Then he asked why hadn't I done so in this Pastor's case. Well, it was complicated I said. I didn't want to be a trouble maker. No one would believe me. I felt sorry for him. Then my therapist ask me why would I let anyone stay in their sin - if I truly believed. That got to me. I realized he was right. But I didn't turn him in. I instead ignored him and never spoke to him again. Now it was easy for me to do this as he had moved. I learned from this experience. Pastors are sinful men. I should never let anyone come between me and my worshiping my God. Would I have done anything different now. I would hope so, but I honestly don't know. I thank God for the Christian therapist and I thank God he moved. He's dead now. I only share this with you as an example of how I dealt with a similar problem. Did I do what was right? I don't think so as I now realize it probably wasn't just me he was trying to seduce. It saddens me to think he may have done this to younger even more vulnerable girls.

I will say it has changed the way I look at Pastors. They are only human just like any of us. My advice now is report and follow through with the police. I don't want to ever let someone stay in their sin and harm others faith. Trust God is in charge and be brave for those who need our encouragement. Be faithful to God not the Pastor.
Reply

***

GJ - Clergy predators have no qualms about recruiting more victims, as many court cases have shown. One was pursuing another young woman when he was on trial for his affair with a minor girl. But he was shocked and grieved that his wife divorced him.

It was the wife's fault, right? That is what Walther "privately" confided about the wife of Martin Stephan, STD, and Missouri published. Blaming the wife who died from getting her husband's syphillis - that shows how low the LCMS can sink. See Servant of the Word for proof.

Most of Stephan's children also died of syphilis, but he left them in Europe for his sick wife to care for and cry over. He took his groupies to America to help found the LCMS.

Nobody knows anything in WELS,
and if they did, they forgot.

No Soil Testing - Soil Improving as I Battle the Back Yard Bricks



The Church Growth Movement, from Fuller Seminary, has many fascinating, failed theories. Peter Wagner admitted in print that none of their CG principles work. When a founder concedes that, and the evidence backs him up, those who continue in that ideology must be idiots.



One of those Church Growth principles is Soil Testing, which the WELS Shrinkers dearly love..

Let me illustrate. I have three locations for bushes, which will screen the view of our neighbors' back yards. The problem is, I need to place the new arrivals in November, when the ground might be semi-frozen and inhospitable to gardening.

The cause is clay soil without many organic elements. The gardening books say, "Test the soil." I have never done that, because Creation Gardening relies on action rather than analysis.

I cannot dig a hole in the dry soil. I could start a brick factory if I had a kiln and compliant low-paid workers. The soil turns white and rock-hard when it dries out. My neighbors have the same problem.

After digging a small divot in the places where the Bonnie Butterfly bushes will go, I filled the depression with water. After soaking the divot for a day, I dug a much larger hole. This technique worked well in Phoenix, where the sun provided the kiln for the clay soil.

Each of the three holes received a bag of mushroom compost, a thick layer of wet newspapers on top, and some soil to hold them in place. Some call this a method of composting, and they use post-hole diggers to set up these soil creature magnets. In Midland (Wormhaven.1)  I dug a bottomless zinc garbage can into the soil and filled it with fresh compost material (with a lid on top). Eventually I pulled the can loose and beheld a new composted zone for planting.

Composting produces warmth, because the elements of decay all contribute their spark of energy. Billions of bacteria, springtails, protozoa, and nematodes are like a self-heating auditorium, where the equipment collects audience heat to keep the room warm.

The larger effect of burying a bag of mushroom compost is a zone where our favorite soil creatures meet, eat, live, love, and die. They invite themselves, like homeless people who spot a church picnic, politicians who investigate a taxing opportunity.

When the bushes arrive, the holes will be excavated, which will mix more clay with the compost, an ideal foundation for growth. The bushes will arrive dormant, but they will establish roots over the winter and spring, with mulch and Epsom Salt providing additional food and nutrition. Roots love Epsom Salt.

The elevated soaker hose will be extended to the back section of fence, and many butterfly, insect, and bird friendly plants will be added. The effect of more plants, mulch, and moisture in that zone will benefit the bushes by softening and feeding the soil.

What Should We Learn, But Seldom Apply to the Ministry?
The Parable of the Sower and the Seed (Matthew 13, Mark 4) teaches us to broadcast the Word (the seed) with abandon. The efficacious Word will take root, even though various forces war against the Gospel.

The parable is clearly the opposite of soil testing, because sowing relies on trust - that the living seed will combine with God's Creation to take root. Sowing is the opposite of soil-testing, just as the Means of Grace are the opposite of man's newly invented Church Growth principles.

Soil-testing means that materialistic ministers want to figure out where they can be successful in the eyes of the world rather than faithful to the Word of God.

Justus Liebig is justly called the Father of the Fertilizer Industry.


Here is an ironic note. Liebig invented soil-testing and adding man-made chemicals to goose the growth of his garden. Soon he realized that his methods did not work in the long run, but the inorganic chemical industry took off anyway, killing the ocean of life in the soil. That made the desperate gardeners buy more chemicals to repair the damage they just caused with their use of NPK fertilizers.

Norma Boeckler's illustration omitted the soil testing kit; 
she was following the original Parable of the Sower.


Thursday, October 9, 2014

Unusual Last 12 Months

Watching detective shows while eating gluten-free snacks.


Not long ago I had time on my hands for writing and publishing.  And I thought, "If only one school offered a little more work."

I was offered a lot more work - and it continued to build over the last year. Now I can pare back to online teaching alone, which is so handy for writing and publishing. I can move from demi-semi-retirement to semi-retirement. I intend to stay active as long as the fingers and brain work together.

Social Security gave me a pittance last year, more this year, and "full retirement" now.




Episcopalian The General Seminary Reprises Seminex Battle



I was in my first call, Cleveland, Ohio.

Seminex, Wikipedia
On February 17, 1974, the Board of Control declared that the 45 members of the faculty majority would be "in breach of contract" if they did not announce by noon the next day their intention to return to the classrooms, and that their teaching appointments at the seminary would thus be terminated.

The General Seminary's dean seems to have pushed his rebelling far Left faculty into the same position as Jack Preus did with Tietjen's bunch in 1974. By refusing to do any work they fired themselves.

The General faculty seems to operate from a position of new-found rights while the dean has a previous history as a lawyer at a large law firm. The board supports the dean. The New York Times has feature article on the story.

I doubt whether the dean is very conservative, but he is more conservative than his far Left ex-faculty members. One clue comes from the various denominational radicals crying foul. The Methodists want their newly discovered rights, too, such as the right to disrupt conventions with noisy demonstrations.

WELS' apostate Richard Jungkuntz led the Seminex faction and headed the board of governors for their portable mini-seminary. Note well - Seminex became the first Lutheran seminary to train homosexual pastors, forming an alliance with the Metropolitan Community Churches. Many Northwestern College graduates participated in the Seminex revolt.

General has an enormous endowment and only 70 students enrolled. However, they were already in a financial crisis in 2010. The deluxe campus needs $100 million in maintenance and debt relief.

Most denominations are over-built because their membership is declining and their charges to students are ridiculous. Watch the Lutheran seminaries and colleges continue to close.

The faculty is demonizing the dean, Kurt Dunkle.
The new sin - he "makes them feel uncomfortable."

New York Episcopalian Seminary - General - Models the Death Spiral of Mainline Seminaries

Presiding Bishop Schori was called in to meet with both sides.
These faculty refused to do any work until the board
met with them to discuss their demands.


General Seminary's Independent Faculty Website - Safe Seminary - I am not joking!

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Will the Great Divider patch things up?


October 2, 2014
The Episcopal Church’s oldest seminary is in upheaval following the announcement this week that most of its full-time faculty members will not be returning to teach. The Board of Trustees of the General Theological Seminary in New York says that the professors offered their de facto resignation when they went on strike over concerns about their new dean and president, the Very Rev. Kurt Dunkle. But the faculty members say they never wanted to resign, and rather were fired for defending the seminary’s values, including those of diversity and communication.
They allege that Dunkle has an authoritarian management style and has made numerous inappropriate sexual, racist and anti-gay remarks over many months. He also brushed off their earlier efforts to address those concerns with him personally, the professors say. Alumni and others with ties to Christian higher education, meanwhile, have taken to social media, criticizing Dunkle and the board for their actions and demanding answers. Commentators, too, say that the seminary schism reflects a bigger divide within the Episcopal Church about how to modernize.
General Seminary’s crisis erupted last week, when 8 of the institution’s 11 full-time faculty members wrote in an email to students that they were seeking to resolve a “serious conflict” with the board. Until then, they said, they would not be teaching or attending meetings or common worship. “Trust that we have acted in what we believe to be the best interests of your formation, our common life and the future of General Seminary,” they said.
The faculty members soon sent a follow-up email to students, offering more information and pointing to Dunkle, the dean and president of one year, as the problem.
“It is our view that that the president has repeatedly shown that he is unable to articulate sensitively and theologically the issues that are essential to the thriving of the Body of Christ in its great diversity,” the second email says. “Moreover his failure to collaborate, or to respond to our concerns when articulated, has resulted in a climate that many of us find to be fraught with conflict, fear, and anxiety. Unfortunately, it is the most vulnerable members of our community who most keenly suffer the distress caused by this environment.”
The professors continued: “Please know that we are not referring to off-hand remarks, or that we are overly concerned with ‘political correctness.’ Rather we refer to a number of very serious incidents and patterns of behavior which have over time caused faculty, students, and staff to feel intimidated, profoundly disrespected, excluded, devalued, and helpless. In short, we find ourselves in an emotionally charged climate that regularly interferes with our current work of teaching and learning together for the sake of God’s Church not to mention our ability to envision and plan for our future.”
The faculty members said they had reached an “impasse” with Dunkle, even after many attempts at dialogue, including with the assistance of an outside facilitator, and again requested a meeting with the board.
But that particular meeting never happened. By early this week, rumors were swirling that the eight faculty members – some 70 percent of the faculty – had been fired. The board soon confirmed in a statement that the faculty members would not be returning. But instead of saying that the faculty members had been fired, the trustees wrote that they had voted, “with great regret to accept the resignations of eight members of the seminary faculty.”
“The board came to this decision with heavy hearts, but following months of internal divisions around the future direction of General Seminary, some faculty member's [sic] demands for action not possible under the governing structure of the seminary, and the eight faculty members’ refusal to teach, attend meetings, or even worship, it has become clear that this is the best path forward in educating our students and shaping them into leaders of the church,” the statement reads.
The trustees noted that they’d be willing to talk to any affected faculty member about reversing the resignation. But by Wednesday, the institution was taking steps to make the action permanent, including by deactivating the professors’ email accounts. Dunkle also sent an email to students letting them know how their courses would proceed. He said half of classes would be uninterrupted, while he had either developed or was developing a plan for the other half. “Remember, being in the heart of New York City affords us access to educational and formational resources second to none throughout the country,” Dunkle added.
Despite quickly moving forward, it appears the board has not completely ignored the departed faculty members’ concerns. In their statement, the trustees said they would conduct an “internal investigation into certain allegations of statements made by the dean and president.” The board declined to name specific allegations, saying it would not be helpful to do so.




The Faculty's Allegations
But on Wednesday, the former faculty members – who previously had been publicly silent about their case – put up a website offering detailed complaints and copies of earlier correspondence with the trustees. Many of their concerns are summed up in a letter they sent in mid-September.
“Dean Dunkle’s public manner of expression seriously discomforts us and diminishes the reputation of the institution,” the letter says. “Specifically, his references to women, non-white cultures, and the LGBT community are absolutely inimical to the commitments of our church. He once described Asian transit passengers in the San Francisco Bay area as ‘slanty-eyed.’ In a large community meeting last spring, he compared the technical side of theological education to ‘looking up women’s skirts.’ Before several faculty members and students, he spoke, as an obvious act of intimidation, of how ‘black people can do such interesting things with their hair,’ a comment about which students complained.”
The letter alleges Dunkle has said the General Seminary should not be “the gay seminary,” and that it should emphasize “normal people.” It also alleges that he told a female faculty member that he “loved vaginas,” and said her consequent objection to the statement was “her problem.” The letter describes a pattern of denying having made inappropriate comments and threatening the job security of faculty members who complained.
“We have consistently communicated to him that such language undercuts our practices of hospitality and inclusion of those who are gay and lesbian, people of color, those who are differently-abled, or socially non-conformist,” the faculty letter says. Indeed, the General Seminary has long prided itself on diversity and inclusivity, saying on its website that a "significant" number of its faculty are gay or lesbian.
The professors also allege that Dunkle is “controlling” in day-to-day seminary life “to the point of making our jobs impossible,” and has violated student privacy laws by sharing a student’s educational details via email with the entire seminary.
“Simply put, we must respectfully inform you that if Dean Dunkle continues in his current position, then we will be unable to continue in ours,” they said, making a series of demands. The requests included meeting with the board and securing primary control over the curriculum, in line with the standards set by their accrediting body, the Association of Theological Schools.
In a later letter, the faculty members also informed the board that they are forming a union, and that a lawyer will field further communication.
A university spokesman said he could not comment on the allegations against Dunkle, due to the pending investigation. He referred questions about the departed faculty members to the board's earlier statement.
A Trustee's Point of View
Addressing the controversy on her own Facebook page, the Rev. Ellen Tillotson, a General Seminary board member, said that the professors’ language in communications with the board differed greatly from how they described their position in emails to students. That left the board little choice other than to act as it did, she said.
“Which were we to believe?” Tillotson wrote. “The spoken and unofficial communiques with the students or their strict and repeated statements to us that the conversation could only happen according to their stated limits? On which were we to act? When offered such an ultimatum, what were we to do? No, they never used the word ‘resign.’ But over and over they said they were unable to continue to do their jobs unless we met unmeetable conditions.”
Tillotson’s defense has done little to quell backlash against the General Seminary on blogs, Christian news websites and social media. Alumni demanded more information about why and under what circumstances the faculty members had been let go on Facebook, for example, even while offering prayers. David J. Dunn, an Orthodox theologian who is friends with one of the departed professors, published an op-ed in The Huffington Post, saying the seminary displayed an astonishing lack of leadership in dismissing the professors rather than meeting with them.
Via email, Dunn said he could only see his friend “doing something like this when he feels he has no other choice. He cares about justice, but he also cares about his family. He knows that he would have a very hard time finding another job as a professor. This could not have been an easy decision for any academic to make (also, massive student loan debts).”
Dunn said tenure, which some of the professors reportedly had, should have protected them from immediate dismissal. A spokesman declined to say how many of the eight professors were tenured or tenure-track, saying his human resources department had advised him not to release information about terms of employment. (Note: This sentence has been updated from a previous version to reflect that the seminary has a tenure track.)
Anthea Butler, a prominent associate professor of religious studies and Africana studies at the University of Pennsylvania, also weighed in on the University of Southern California-affiliated Religion Dispatches blog, saying “it is clear that the group has tried to have a sustained conversation with the dean and the board, but been ignored. Now the dirty laundry of the seminary is out for the whole denomination and other interested parties to sift through.”
Butler continued: “If I remember my Reformation history correctly, it was The Act of Supremacy in 1534 that made Henry VIII head of the Church of England. Firing eight faculty members unjustly is not an Act of Supremacy, but an Act of Shame. Perhaps the board of trustees and Dean Dunkle should ponder the twists and turns of church history before they land definitively on the wrong side of it.”
Commentary on the Episcopal Café also questioned Dunkle’s leadership style. The Rev. Canon Andrew Gerns, a regular blogger and a General Seminary graduate, said that among other concerns, the faculty objected to unilateral changesthat Dunkle had made to the prayer and Eucharist schedule, in an attempt to modernize worship at the seminary.
Dunkle, who also graduated from the seminary, returned to lead it last year after serving as rector of the Grace Episcopal Church in Orange Park, Fla. That parish experienced growth under his leadership, according to information the seminary released upon his being named dean; some 965 of 1,000 members reportedly left the church prior to his arrival, due to a larger schism in the Episcopal Church over gay marriage. At the time of Dunkle's appointment to the seminary, the parish had grown to 450 members.
Dunkle also faced a challenging environment when he arrived at the seminary as dean. It suffered from financial woes, and had just sold off significant chunks of its property in Manhattan's Chelsea neighborhood. Other Episcopal seminaries have felt a similar pinch in recent years. But if General Seminary's board was looking for someone to take charge and lead the seminary into the future, it appears the faculty felt it overshot.
“Now, this is not to say that worship is at the heart of the tensions with the faculty,” Gerns said. “The pinch comes when decisions about worship that have a significant impact on the fabric of the community are made by mere fiat. That's a recipe for turmoil.”
Eliza Smith Brown, a spokeswoman for Association of Theological Schools, said the body hadn't been able to independently verify reports about what was happening at General Seminary, but that it was "very concerned."
"ATS is an accrediting agency with standards related to governance and institutional integrity, including procedural fairness; faculty, including their role in curriculum and degree program requirements; and students, including the educational quality of the programs in which they have enrolled," she said via email.
"ATS has its own standards of procedural fairness for dealing with issues like those presented at General Seminary, and it will carefully follow those procedures to determine what has happened and to pursue appropriate accrediting implications."

General Seminary "Chapel."

Wednesday, October 8, 2014

Does This Fit Every WELS-LCMS-ELS Situation I Know About? - Yes.

Archbishop R. Weakland, covered up for his priests
and blamed child abuse on the children.
His selection as a speaker for Wisconsin Lutheran College (WELS)
suggests friendships in WELS based on abuse.



Shattered Pulpit Blog

I was abused for many years by my father, a WELS pastor. I was too young at the time to do anything, but be the "good girl" and do whatever was asked of me. Many years later when I did tell my"secrets", the DP, along with others, turned it all around and made it become my wrongdoing. Please do NOT give into them. You are the victim and the WELS is doing everything it can to turn it around and placing the blame on you. I pray that you talk to those who believe you and your safe pastor and reconsider your plan to stop writing your blog! You have opened the eyes of many people: people who DO believe you. The hierarchy of the WELS is trying to cover up anything which reflects negatively on them. You have many people praying for you. God is on your side and He will continue to be there for you. I will continue to keep you in my prayers. May God be with you and give you strength to accept His help!

***
His son, the first VP of WELS,
thought Floyd Stolzenburg was the victim.
The apple does not fall far from the tree.

GJ - Three messages will always come through:
1. The victim of abuse is the sinner, even when he or she is a child.
2. The pastor or teacher is an honored member of the Brotherhood and could not possibly be guilty of anything.
3. If someone dares to do something about the abuse, that action and those words are so heinous and wrong that the person objecting becomes the villain. The abuser is the helpless, innocent victim.

Lillian and Jane told their stories, which fit into these parameters quite well. I have experienced #3 first-hand.

Remember, worshipers of WELS - Al Just confessed to murdering his wife, lied at the trial, and was defended at the trial by Lloyd Huebner, the president of Martin Luther College in New Ulm. Al Just spent a short time in prison for murdering the mother of his children. He married the baby-sitter of his children, but she wised up soon and left him.

Lloyd Huebner got on the stand in court and served as a character reference, even though Al Just claimed that his wife rolled over on a steak knife - in bed - dozens of times and bled to death. A busload of WELS supporters came to his trial. 


Mainline Seminaries Broke and Closing - Just Like WELS, LCMS, ELS
ELCA Will Have a Love Letter Soon






General Theological Seminary in New York.
General Theological Seminary in New York.Photo courtesy of Eden, Janine and Jim via Flickr
NEW YORK (RNS) General Theological Seminary’s campus in the Chelsea neighborhood of Manhattan is everything you’d want in an urban seminary.
Handsome buildings, a chapel at the center, quiet walkways in a noisy city, calm places to read and pray. All serving a wonderfully diverse student body eager to minister in a changing world.
It’s like the best of historic church properties: harking back to a day of noble architecture and tradition and yet looking outward to a frenetic city and changing religious environment.
Why, then, is GTS on the verge of financial collapse and, now, paralyzing internal conflict? Its dean is under attack, 80 percent of its full-time faculty were dismissed, its board is floundering — all in the glare of press and blogosphere.
Why? For the same reason that historic churches and denominations are trapped in “train wrecks.” Their time has passed.
As other major denominations are finding, the days of the residential three-year seminary are ending. Fewer prospective ordinands can afford the cost and dislocation of attending a residential seminary.
Fewer church bodies are willing to subsidize such an education, because they, too, face budget shortfalls. Fewer congregations have jobs for inexperienced clergy wanting full-time compensation.
Episcopal dioceses have been seeking other ways, such as diocesan training centers, nearby schools run by other denominations and online learning. They’re seeking professional skills training, not academic prowess.
A view on the campus of the Episcopal Divinity School in Cambridge, Mass.
A view on the campus of the Episcopal Divinity School in Cambridge, Mass.Photo courtesy of Tim Sackton via Flickr
By my rough count, it appears fewer than half of newly ordained Episcopal clergy in recent years came out of the church’s 11 official seminaries. My alma mater — Episcopal Divinity School in Cambridge, Mass., also embroiled in conflict — trained an average of just eight ordinands a year, one-fifth the number when I graduated in 1977.
Does the Episcopal Church — or any mainline denomination — need all of its seminaries? Probably not. To judge by recent graduation rates, it probably needs only four. Two of the eleven have already closed. Hence the anxiety leading to conflict, as tenured faculty, cost-cutting deans and anxious trustees collide.
Many congregations are in the same situation. The needs they filled 60 years ago — neighborhood churches providing a mobile postwar world with a place to belong and to ground the family — have largely vanished.
Some congregations welcomed new purposes in a world of new lifestyles, new expectations, new family structures, new employment patterns and new attitudes toward Sunday morning, and they are thriving.
Most, sad to say, resisted change and now find that time and tide haven’t waited for them. Like GTS, they find themselves broke, conflicted, hoping for a future and yet mired in disdain and distrust.
Episcopal Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori. RNS photo by Adelle M. Banks
Episcopal Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori. RNS photo by Adelle M. Banks

 This image is available for Web and printpublication. For questions, contact Sally Morrow.
Seizing a new moment is never easy. It requires entrepreneurial leaders who risk being shot down and declared “other.” It requires mold-breaking ministry providers who move beyond the “way things used to be.” It requires constituents whose drive to serve stirs voices for change.
The tragedy at General Seminary isn’t that its time has passed — for a new time is breaking in, if the seminary will let it. Nor is it that the seminary is trapped in dysfunction and conflict — for God can redeem such moments. Or that money is tight — for God’s work is never limited by money.
The tragedy is that stakeholders at the seminary are belittling each other, questioning each other’s worthiness and allowing hubris to be their guide. Such behavior cannot end well.
Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori visited GTS recently and did the right thing: She listened. As combatants issued lengthy statements, she modeled the holy restraint that all need to learn.
Tom Ehrich is a writer, church consultant and Episcopal priest based in New York. He is the president of Morning Walk Media and publisher of Fresh Day online magazine. His website is www.morningwalkmedia.com. Follow Tom on Twitter @tomehrich.
Tom Ehrich is a writer, church consultant and Episcopal priest based in New York. He is the president of Morning Walk Media and publisher of Fresh Day online magazine. His website is www.morningwalkmedia.com. Follow Tom on Twitter @tomehrich.
(Tom Ehrich is a writer, church consultant and Episcopal priest based in New York. He is the president of Morning Walk Media and publisher of Fresh Day online magazine. His website is www.morningwalkmedia.com. Follow Tom on Twitter @tomehrich.)
KRE/MG END EHRICH











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Anglicans sign mass 'love letter' to gay bishops - urging them to come out


Anglicans sign mass 'love letter' to gay bishops - urging them to come out
300 clergy and parishioners sign unprecedented appeal to Church of England hierarchy, urging gay bishops to publicly acknowledge their sexuality
By John Bingham
Religious Affairs Editor
THE TELEGRAPH
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/

Oct. 4, 2014
More than 300 Anglican priests, parishioners and other Christians have signed an open "love letter" to bishops in the Church of England who are secretly gay urging them to "come out" about their sexuality.

In one of the most unusual petitions ever addressed to the leadership of the established church, they have issued a direct plea to members of the episcopate who are gay or bisexual to have the "courage and conviction" to acknowledge it publicly.

The signatories, who include at least 160 priests and several members of the Church's governing General Synod, pledge to "welcome and embrace" those bishops who decide to go public but strongly object to any attempt to involuntarily "out" anyone.

It follows the publication of a new book by the serving Bishop of Buckingham, the Rt Rev Dr Alan Wilson, last week which said that around one in 10 of his colleagues could be gay but unwilling to speak publicly.

The book sets out a theological argument for a major reassessment of the Church of England's teaching on homosexuality accusing the hierarchy of "hypocrisy" and "duplicity" on the subject.
Dr Wilson remarked that there are currently "said to be a dozen or so gay bishops" but that events had left many trapped behind "episcopal closet door".

The letter, disclosed today in The Sunday Telegraph, will reopen an intense debate within the Church over its stance on sexuality.

The Church of England officially teaches that any sexual relationship outside of traditional heterosexual marriage is "less than God's ideal" - an Anglican euphemism for "sin".
But the Archbishop of Canterbury, the Most Rev Justin Welby, has pledged to clamp down on homophobia in the Church of England.

Although Anglican clergy can be in same-sex civil partnerships, they must claim to be celibate if they wish to become bishops.

There are no openly gay bishops in the Church of England and the current Dean of St Albans, Dr Jeffrey John, who is in a celibate same-sex relationship, was twice forced to turn down promotion to the episcopate because of opposition linked to his sexuality.
The Rev Dr Keith Hebden, a priest from St Mark's and St Peter's Church in Mansfield, Notts, has been gathering signatures for the letter which will be formally submitted to the Church's House of Bishops.

Last night 282 Anglicans, 29 Methodists and around 25 members of other Christian Churches, as well as representatives of Jewish groups, has already signed the letter. Dr Wilson is among the signatories.

It acknowledges "growing pressure" on gay bishops to come out publicly but expresses strong opposition to any threat to "out" them.

"We write to assure those bishops who may choose to openly acknowledge their sexual orientation as gay or bisexual that you will receive our support, prayer, and encouragement," the signatories pledge.

Bishops who have kept their sexuality secret have, they say, having borne a particular personal "cost" and could face "hostility by a vocal minority" if they were to go public.
But they add: "We have no doubt that the vast majority of Anglicans will welcome and embrace those of you who are gay or bisexual for your courage and conviction if you come out: weeping with you for past hurts and rejoicing in God's call as witnesses to Christ's transforming love and compassion.

"If you stand out we will stand beside you."

Rev Hebden said: "I'm a straight, white middle class man -- I'm not saying to particular individuals 'you should come out'.

"What this letter is saying is that if you feel it is the right thing, through your thought and prayer and conversations with people you love, there is an immeasurable number of people out there who will love and support you."

The Rev Colin Coward, director of the Anglican campaign group "Changing Attitude", said: "It is really important for bishops both straight and gay to live with integrity and openness about their identity and their beliefs about the full inclusion of lesbian and gay people in the church.

"Those of us who are lesbian and gay long to be supported by openly gay bishops and we know from our own experience how much energy and Christian integrity is released when you live openly with your sexuality."

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http://www.religionnews.com/2014/10/08/stanley-hauerwas-drops-general-theological-seminary-lecture-series-controversy/

(RNS) Theologian Stanley Hauerwas has declined a series of lectures he was scheduled to give at New York’s General Theological Seminary in November in the wake of the crisis roiling the school.
Theologian Stanley Hauerwas has decided to not to give a series of lectures he was supposed to give at General Theological Seminary. Photo © Duke University, Photography by Jim Wallace
Theologian Stanley Hauerwas has decided to not to give a series of lectures he was supposed to give at General Theological Seminary. Photo © Duke University, Photography by Jim Wallace

 This image is available for Web and printpublication. For questions, contact Sally Morrow.
On Wednesday (Oct. 8), the Christian ethicist said he does not want to get in the middle of a controversy involving the resignations or firings of eight faculty.
Two weeks ago, the eight faculty members quit teaching classes and attending official seminary meetings or chapel services until they could sit down with the Board of Trustees.
Hauerwas, who is professor emeritus of divinity and law at Duke Divinity School, said he pulled out of the lecture series so he would not appear to take a side.
“I was looking forward to going because I’ve known of General for my whole academic life, but I had never been there. At one time, it represented a commitment to an Anglo-Catholic tradition with which I’m very sympathetic,” said Hauerwas, who attends an Episcopal church in Chapel Hill, N.C. “I think the situation is one of deep pathos; it’s just pathetic. I’m sorry that I’ve gotten caught in it.”
GTS, the flagship seminary that has produced generations of bishops and noted theologians, is the only Episcopal seminary overseen by the national church.
“It’s been the seminary of record for the national church,” Hauerwas said. “Symbolically what’s happening there has reverberations throughout the church. I think that’s the primary reason people are taken aback by the fact that in some ways what has happened is the death toll of General Seminary. What student is going to go there?”
During the turmoil, the board said it accepted the faculty resignations, but the faculty members said they never resigned.
Hauerwas was invited by Joshua Davis, one of the professors whose positions were terminated, to give the seminary’s Paddock Lectures, but Hauerwas wrote Bishop Mark Sisk, chair of the GTS board, to bow out.
“I have not wanted to do anything that might be interpreted as ‘taking sides’ because I am on the outside of this situation,” Hauerwas wrote on Friday. “However, I am aware that the faculty has made a constructive response that might offer a way forward. As things now stand, if there is no possibility of reconciliation, I would find it very difficult to give the Paddock Lectures.”
Hauerwas said that Sisk responded, saying the board is seeking a way forward.
“This is truly sad if not actually tragic situation,” Sisk wrote in his letter.
Hauerwas also wrote to the seminary’s dean and president, the Very Rev. Kurt Dunkle, on Monday, saying he saw little hope in a constructive way forward.
“Bishop Sisk’s letter in return offered little hope that a resolution would be possible between the faculty and administrators,” Hauerwas wrote. “I very much regret that this is the case.”
Dunkle has yet to reply to Hauerwas. A representative for the seminary said Dunkle would not be available for comment.
The eight faculty charged that Dunkle shared a student’s academic records with people who were not authorized to see them, which would violate federal academic privacy standards. The faculty also said he speaks in ways that have made women and some minority groups uncomfortable on several occasions.
“As a longtime faculty person, I can’t help but feel sympathy with the faculty,” Hauerwas added. “I do not know enough about the details of their concerns and about Rev. Dunkle to be able to say I’m on the faculty side. I think it was extremely unfortunate that their letter was phrased in a way that sounded as if they were resigning from their positions.”
Some 900 scholars from across the country have signed a letter of support for the eight faculty, saying they will not lecture or speak at the seminary. Noteworthy scholars who signed the letter include James H. Cone of Union Theological Seminary, Gary Dorrien of Union Theological Seminary and Francis Schüssler Fiorenza of Harvard Divinity School.
During the 2013-14 school year, GTS enrolled 70 students and had $10.6 million in expenditures and $27 million in investments, according to the Association of Theological Schools, an accrediting organization. GTS had faced about $40 million of debt that it was attempting to pay down through property sales and redevelopment.
YS/MG END BAILEY
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What The Hell Is Happening At General Theological Seminary?


Posted: Updated: 
GENERAL THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY


Faculty members at the country’s oldest Episcopal seminary are facing off against the school’s President, blasting him for his allegedly bullying, heavy-handed leadership style.
Eight professors at New York’s General Theological Seminary announced Friday that they are not going to teach, attend meetings, or participate in common worship until they can meet with the school’s Board of Trustees, according Anglican Ink.
In a letter distributed to students, the professors accuse the seminary’s Dean and President, The Very Rev. Kurt H. Dunkle, of failing to collaborate or take their grievances seriously, creating a climate “fraught with conflict, fear, and anxiety.”
“Simply put, the working environment that the Dean and President has created has become unsustainable,” the professors wrote.
After the announcement, Dunkle allegedly told students that the Board of Trustees had accepted the eight faculty members’ resignations. But Dr. Andrew Irving, an assistant professor of church history, countered that the professors had never handed in their resignations.
“We wish to underline that we have not resigned,” Irving wrote in a statement obtained by Episcopal Cafe. “Our letters did not say that we would resign. We requested meetings with the Board.”
Dunkle was installed as the 13th dean of the seminary last October. Before coming to General, his ministry was based in the Episcopal Diocese of Florida, where he claimsto have become particularly adept at managing conflicts that arise between clergy and their congregations.
According to an analysis by Episcopal priest and blogger Rev. Canon Andrew Gerns, Dunkle appears to have a tendency to push through “Lone Ranger” decisions in order to fulfill his vision of what is best for the school.
“The leadership is so intent on their goal and so committed to a single over-riding vision, that they appear to have forgotten who it is they serve, who it is that makes the mission happen and who must live with the decisions in the long run,” Gerns wrote for Episcopal Café.
During his short time at the helm, Dunkle has instituted a number of new initiatives. One of the biggest changes is “The Wisdom Year,” a program that sends third-year seminarians out into the real world to work as part-time ministers.
The faculty members on strike didn’t name a specific policy that they disagree with, instead referencing a “number of very serious incidents and patterns of behavior which have over time caused faculty, students, and staff to feel intimidated, profoundly disrespected, excluded, devalued, and helpless.”
The professors also complain that their concerns haven’t been properly addressed by the school’s Board of Trustees.
“Our work stoppage could be ended immediately if the Board of Trustees would commit to meeting with us for a frank discussion of these serious matters, as previously requested,” the letter stated.
General Theological Seminary has graduated over 7,000 men and women since 1822. The Manhattan institution is the only seminary overseen by the national Episcopal Church, according to RNS.