L.A. bishop fires leaders of churches
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Deepa Bharath
An Episcopal bishop on Friday sent out individual letters to the
clergy and board of directors of three churches -- including one on
Via Lido -- that seceded from his diocese, saying that they are all
fired from the church. Newly appointed priests will continue the work
of his church in the respective communities, Bishop J. Jon Bruno said
in the letter.
Three Southern California churches -- St. James in Newport Beach,
All Saints’ in Long Beach and St. David’s in North Hollywood -- broke
away from the Episcopal Church of the United States because of its
liberal views relating to the Bible, the divinity of Jesus Christ and
homosexuality, church administrators said. The churches then placed
themselves under the Diocese of Luwero in the Anglican province of
Uganda, Africa.
The secession has set off a heated debate over who owns the
churches and the surrounding properties. Bruno maintains that the
Episcopal Church still owns the churches and their properties, but
St. James administrators say the property is owned by a nonprofit
organization that was formed in the late 1940s, not by the diocese.
On Friday, Bruno, who heads the Episcopal Diocese of Los Angeles,
opened a new chapter in the debate by sending out letters to each
priest and member of the vestry, which is the church’s board of
directors. He informed the churches that he has appointed the Rt.
Rev. Robert M. Anderson and the Rt. Rev. Sergio Carranza as
“priests-in-charge” to form a new board of directors and new
ministries in those communities.
The letter is not a threat to disrupt services or operations in
any of the churches, said Janet Kawamoto, media director for the
diocese. The bishop last week deposed the deacons and ministers of
the church, she said.
“This means that the diocese will work with those who wish to
remain faithful to the Episcopal Church,” Kawamoto said.
The bishop’s letter does not state how, when or where these
Episcopal ministries will operate.
But at St. James, the bishop’s letter certainly appears
threatening, said the church’s Pastor Praveen Bunyan.
“We have no problems or issues if they want to continue the
Episcopal ministries in Newport or Balboa or wherever they want,” he
said. “They have the right to do that. The problem arises when they
interfere with our operations here in St. James.”
The bishop sent out letters to each priest and each board member
of the church on Friday informing them that they have been fired,
Bunyan said.
Eric Sohlgren, attorney for the seceded churches, responded to the
bishop’s letter with a statement saying that Bruno is curtailing the
churches’ freedom of religious choice. Bruno had also sent out a
letter of warning last week to each of the churches saying that they
should cease services, business operations and even using the prayer
book and submit all financial statements and documents to the
diocese. The churches declined to do so.
Kawamoto said the diocese plans to send no one to Sunday services
in Newport Beach, Long Beach or North Hollywood.
But Bunyan said he has reason to believe that the bishop is going
to send his priests and new directors to disrupt church services on
Sunday, Bunyan said.
“Sending out letters to each one of our board of directors, to me,
is interfering in our business,” he said. “We are under the Anglican
Communion now. The bishop has no authority over us. All we’re asking
is, you go your way and let us go our way.”
* DEEPA BHARATH is the enterprise and general assignment reporter.
She may be reached at (949) 574-4226 or by e-mail at
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