Church practicing what they preach
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Perhaps one thing is a given about faith. “The one unifying factor in
all religion is divisiveness,” said Rabbi Mark Miller of Temple Bat
Yam, a reform temple in Newport Beach.
The freedom to make that divide, engrained in our own
Constitution, is very much a part of why we feel that St. James
Church in Newport Beach has a right, with its refractory stance
toward the Episcopal church, to break from it. St. James Pastor
Praveen Bunyan and his flock of 1,200 congregants broke away last
month when they removed “Episcopal” from the church’s name, parted
ways from Episcopal Diocese of Los Angeles and the Episcopal Church
USA and took harbor with the Diocese of Luweero in the Anglican
Province of Uganda, Africa. St. James administrators and congregants
overwhelmingly voted to break away, citing the Episcopal Church’s
refusal to acknowledge Jesus Christ and the Bible as the only way to
salvation.
All Saints’ Church in Long Beach and St. David’s of North
Hollywood joined St. James in the exodus, which has riled Episcopal
church governors and surprised local church officials in the diocese.
Bishop J. Jon Bruno of the Los Angeles Diocese refused to release the
three churches, a prohibition supported by U.S. diocese Presiding
Bishop Frank T. Griswold.
But the decision isn’t theirs. While the issue of who owns the
church land and other belongings may be a matter for a court to
decide, the issue of what to believe is each person’s to make.
It was America, after all, that was a refuge for those fleeing
religious persecution in Europe in the 17th century. Roger Williams,
a 17th-century religious leader infused a rebel spirit into his own
writings, railing against uniformity of religion in the colonies. It
was the Church of England -- Anglicans -- that broke away from the
Roman Catholic Church, and the Puritans who broke away from
Anglicans. Judaism’s split into orthodox and reform strains is
another example of a break within a faith. In fact, we can find such
schisms in all faiths, Miller said.
But some words of caution.
“It can be a healthy thing, but often it is used to bash one
another, which I hardly think is pleasing to God,” Miller said,
referring to similar historical breaks. We trust it won’t come to
such a harsh ending and that congregation members’ desire to take
their own course -- to divide themselves from their church -- will
not lead to a divisive group in the community.
Most notably, though St. James opposed the Episcopal Church’s
appointment of an openly gay bishop, Bunyan said the break was not
because of a liberal attitude on homosexuality. We hope not. We also
hope he makes sure that the minority in his church, who did not vote
for a break, are not alienated, and that any gay members of his
church also are not pushed to a fringe.
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