|


"One
Hope in God's Call"
Eighth
Annual Educational Institute
Global
Episcopal Mission Network
June
16-18, 2004, at the Seminary of the Southwest

As the
controversy swirling around the Anglican Communion over the General
Convention's sexuality decisions approaches its first year anniversary,
missionaries from America and their partners in mission bring
unique perspectives to the current process of reconciliation.
"The
quality of presence we must have in the current turmoil must be
that of companions" who listen, ask questions, and listen
some more. "We need to honor the missional concerns of those
on all sides of the controversy," said the Very Rev'd Titus
Presler during his keynote address at the recent conference of
the Global Episcopal Mission (GEM) Network at the Episcopal Seminary
of the Southwest.
Many people
"have been caught by surprise" by the feelings in other
parts of the Communion. "Many
Episcopalians are global in their professional lives but parochial
in their Christian lives
They often know little about Christians,
let alone Anglicans," throughout the world, said Presler,
dean of the Seminary of the Southwest.
Presler
urged the conference attendees to continue to "initiate and
nourish" companion diocese relationships that have done much
to bring Anglicans around the world together in the past 30 years.
Twenty dioceses across the United States were represented among
the 50 people who gathered at the seminary for the GEM conference.
"Mission
is ministry in the dimension of difference." As the world
struggles with difference and "people are dying over difference,"
"reaching out and embracing difference is still the heart
of mission," said Dean Presler, former chair of the church's
standing commission on mission.
"God
created some kinds of difference as an expression of the rich
diversity of existence"
but "the human family
has constructed differences of wealth, privilege, status and power
that are maintained by oppressive structures of wealth, privilege,
status and power," he said during the conference's keynote
address titled "One Hope in God's Call: Mission is Ministry
in the Dimension of Difference."
"The
people of the Episcopal Church who participated in the GEM conference
are genuinely concerned about the life and ministry of the church,"
said the Rt. Rev. Dr. Ikechi Nwachukwu Nwosu, bishop of the Diocese
of Umuahia in Nigeria who led Bible study through the three-day
conference. "We came together and studied together - prayed
together and reflected together."
"People
in Nigeria don't hate the Episcopal Church. My coming here to
the conference shows that we still want to hold all hands because
we are all pilgrims seeking the common good. We can't do it alone,"
he said.
"It's
'We' not 'I,'" Bishop Nwosu emphasized. "The Episcopal
Church is 'I' -- The Anglican Church in Nigeria is 'I' -- The
Church of England is 'I' -- but the Anglican Communion is 'We.'
This is also true for Roman Catholics, Methodists and all other
faiths - we all are inquiring about what God wants of us. We must
be patient, listen and be open minded because God is always taking
us to new territory if only we are open to it."
Echoing
the Nigerian bishop's call for unity, the Rt. Rev. Leo Frade,
bishop of Southeast Florida, pointed out how mission can unify
the church during a GEM conference talk.
Volunteers
flocked to Honduras in 1998 when Hurricane Mitch killed thousands
and destroyed nearly 80 per cent of its buildings and crops when
Frade was bishop of that country. He recalled that four separate
groups of volunteers with widely differing perspectives arrived
by plane and were assigned to build two houses next to each other.
Members
of the South American Missionary Society of the Episcopal Church
(SAMS), Integrity USA, a charismatic church in America and church
center staff from the then Presiding Bishop's Relief Fund (now
ERD) made up the four groups. "No matter what their differences
were, they mixed cement and worked together for a single mission,"
Bishop Frade said.
Reflecting
on the current turmoil within the Anglican Communion, Frade spun
a tale of Jesus and his brother ("let's call him James,"
the bishop said) during their youth. James caught a lizard and
in boyish bravado killed it. Jesus picked it up, blew a breath
into it and the lizard returned to life. After this death and
resurrection was repeated twice more, James asked Jesus "how
can I do this?" "What?" Jesus replied. "Beat
up the lizard or bring it back to life?"
"Three
billion people -- half the world -- live on less than $2 a day.
One third of those people live on less than $1 a day," Bishop
Frade said. "Do we have time to deal with what we're dealing
with while we're waiting for September and the Eames Commission
report? Let's stop beating the lizard and learn how to breathe
life into the mission of the church," the bishop said.
"It's
up to us to make a difference in the world," he said. "The
Episcopal Church is a small church but so what? Don't be deterred
when some say 'We can't do that.'" Recalling what it's like
when a mosquito hovers around you, Frade urged the mission advocates
to be "mosquitoes for mission" by persistently saying
to God "Yes, I will serve you" again and again and again.
"The
antidote to cynicism isn't optimism -- it's action," he concluded.
"Action is born of hope and obeying the Great Commission.
When you hoist your sail of faith, what counts isn't you -- it's
the wind."
Photos
of the conference
Keynote
address by the Very Rev'd Dr. Titus Presler
Pre-conference
notice
Particulars about
registration, logistics, housing, meals and transportation.
|