Tag Archives: Episcopal church

3rd Day at General Convention: International Social Justice

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Today was the first legislative day for the 78th Episcopal General Convention (GC).  It was the third day in Salt Lake City for the Deputation from the Diocese of El Camino Real (ECR) . 842 were certified and seated in the House of Deputies from 110 diocese. Much of the morning and afternoon legislative sessions were taken up with procedural matters.

I chose to attend two Social Justice and International Policy legislative committee meetings (morning and afternoon) where it was standing room only. I was one of dozens of public witnesses on the subject of Israel-Palestine.  There were five resolutions being considered by the committee.  The two sides of the question on whether the Episcopal Church should divest from Israel were: Stay at table, engage to make change vs. Divest, do not profit by occupation. I spoke about some of the understanding I have gained living and working in Israel as well as working with TechWomen mentees from the Middle East since 2010. I said that I think divestment will hurt the Palestinians even more, at least in the short-term. Also, pulling back from the table to make a moral point removes the church from the discussion: cuts off relationships we will need if we are to contribute to the solution of some very hard problems.  Mine was a minority opinion – most of the witnesses were in favor of divestment.

5 July 2015 – My witness on Israel-Palestine quoted in “Money and the Holy Land: Committee Hears Testimony” in the “House of Deputies News”.

Yesterday, I received a reader comment asking for my impressions of the four candidates to be 27th Presiding Bishop (PB) after their presentations yesterday.  All four are remarkable and capable men of deep faith.  I was able to speak personally with three of them today. Here are my notes some of what I observed yesterday and today (ask other members of the ECR Deputation for their view!):

  • The Rt. Rev. Thomas Breidenthal, 64, Diocese of Southern Ohio: Very intelligent, academic and unworldly in background and approach, kindly and thoughtful but seems somewhat frail. 
  • The Rt. Rev. Michael Curry, 62, Diocese of North Carolina: Energetic preacher and social activist, demonstrated capability for administration through building a solid team, focused on measurable financial and operational improvement in parallel with evangelism. Charismatic and inspiring.
  • The Rt. Rev. Ian Douglas, 56, Diocese of Connecticut: Personable and charming, highly educated and thoughtful academic, loves to teach, athletic and well rounded. An electric smile.
  • The Rt. Rev. Dabney Smith, 61, Diocese of Southwest Florida: Formal and measured, traditional/conservative in approach, a gracious and grandfatherly community builder.

The vote for PB is on Saturday. The church restructuring (TREC) discussion starts tomorrow.

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Images Copyright 2015 by Katy Dickinson

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2nd Day at General Convention – Hearing from 4 Candidates

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Today was the second day for the Deputation from the Diocese of El Camino Real (ECR) in Salt Lake City at the 78th General Convention (GC) of the Episcopal Church. There are 898 in the House of Deputies and about 300 in the House of Bishops at GC. Salt Lake City is at 4,327 feet above sea level. We are still adjusting to the altitude and heat here. ECR blogs from GC will be posted in the 78th General Convention category of the diocesan website.

Our morning was taken up with introductions to the GC leadership, an address by the outgoing Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori, an introduction to the iPad “Virtual Binder”, voting tools and rules, and guidance on parliamentary procedure. Bishop Katharine’s moving talk included many Star Trek references (since one of the big discussion topics for GC is called TREC). Two of her more serious thoughts were: “No matter who you are afraid of, we need each other” and “We are never whole when we exclude members of the wider community.” My favorite orientation quote is from the Rev. Canon Michael Barlowe (Executive Officer of the General Convention): “This is an iPad, within it is software, the virtual binder is on but not exclusively in the iPad”.

We had an hour and a half for lunch during which we checked out the exhibit hall some more, including seeing the Homeless Jesus sculpture which is briefly visiting GC. During the afternoon, we heard the four candidates for Presiding Bishop (PB) answer eight rounds of questions in eight topic areas. The candidates to be 27th PB are:

Last month, my fellow ECR blogger, Rev. Tom Sramek, Jr. wrote an article profiling the four candidates: “Who Will Lead Episcopalians?”.  The PB election will take place this coming Saturday. My favorite quote from Bishop Michael Curry: “I’m not the Pope, I don’t have all the answers.  The truth is, the Pope isn’t the Pope either.” ECR Bishop Mary Gray-Reeves arrived late this afternoon.

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Images Copyright 2015 by Katy Dickinson

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1st day at General Convention – Salt Lake City

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Early this afternoon, the GC Deputation from the Diocese of El Camino Real (ECR) started to arrive in Salt Lake City to attend the 78th General Convention of the Episcopal Church.  Since then, Diana Trapani and I, both first time GC participants, have enjoyed wandering around the Salt Palace Convention Center checking out the wide variety of exhibits, and meeting fascinating people.  So far:

  • I talked at length with Karen Meridith, Executive Director of Education for Ministry, about the EfM study materials my class will be using starting in September. (She and I have only communicated by email before.)
  • I met the Rev. Canon Scott Gunn, Executive Director of Forward Movement and one of the leaders of Lent Madness, who is much taller than he looks online and was very polite about speaking with a fan while unpacking his exhibit booth.
  • I bought two more books from Rev. Eric Law, Founder and Executive Director of the Kaleidoscope Institute, about whom I have written before.

What a pleasure it is to be able to speak with them in person!   I also found out that our own ECR Deputation member Celeste Ventura is a featured author at GC. Her book Deeper Simplicity, Broader Generosity – Images of Financial Wholeness is advertised in the current issue of The Living Church magazine.

It is hot here in Salt Lake City (95 degrees Fahrenheit / 35 Celsius), so we will be spending much of our time in the air conditioned buildings.  We enjoyed watching some little kids swimming in the fountain of the mall across the street.  Our first GC meeting is tonight!

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Images Copyright 2015 by Katy Dickinson

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Salt Lake City tomorrow!

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I will fly to Salt Lake City, Utah, tomorrow to attend the 78th triennial General Convention of the Episcopal Church where I am honored to join the GC Deputation from the Diocese of El Camino Real (ECR). Three of the ECR Deputation were elected from my home parish, Saint Andrew’s Episcopal Church in Saratoga, California. Yesterday, Rev. Channing Smith and the whole congregation blessed and commissioned Canon Linda, Tim, and me during service. The ECR Deputation who will be joining our Bishop Mary Gray-Reeves in Salt Lake City includes four clergy and for lay members:

Clergy Lay
Delegates .
Maly Hughes, The Rev. (Deputation Chair) Jeff Diehl, Mr.
Rob Fisher, The Rev. Celeste Ventura, Ms.
Linda Taylor, The Rev. Canon Timothy Gee, Mr.
Terry Gleeson, The Rev. Diana Trapani, Ms.
Alternates .
Thomas Sramek, Jr., The Rev. Katy Dickinson, Ms.

As the First Alternates, Tom and I will give the Delegates a break during long sessions, we can also check out GC meetings and events, and we are the official diocesan bloggers as well. As you can see from the table above, I have been collecting social media connections for everyone so that when we blog and tweet and update Facebook, we can easily feature individuals.  The Delegation are not the only ones coming from ECR to GC. I know that Melita Thorpe will be there with the Vergers and some spouses and partners (including my husband John Plocher) can join us for part of the two weeks.  (Any others?)

My blog posts will be on both my home site and on the diocesan website.  ECR readers may find it strange when I explain basics for my regular readers (many of whom are not Christian). For those who want more: GC orientation videos, and information on the 4 Presiding Bishop candidates are available, as is the GC website.  GC has a mobile website and for the first time will be distributing documents via a virtual binder on iPad rather than on paper this year.  So, there should be a great deal of information available to remote participants and lurkers.

I encourage everyone to send me comments or questions!

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Images Copyright 2015 by Katy Dickinson

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General Convention (starts next week)

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The first General Convention of the Episcopal Church was held in 1785, 230 years ago. The 78th GC will start next week in Salt Lake City. I was elected in 2014 to join the GC Deputation from the Diocese of El Camino Real (ECR). Despite being a lifelong Episcopalian, I have never been to General Convention before: I am looking forward to going!

If you are a regular reader of my blog, you will know that I am an annual delegate and roadie for the ECR diocesan convention, usually held in Salinas, California. Last year, I felt called to volunteer two weeks of my time to attend the 78th GC.   Since 2010 when I started four years of Education for Ministry studies, I have become more aware of the larger church outside of my own diocese. I want see how GC works, connect with like-minded folks in my church outside of Central California, and contribute my understanding and experience to the GC discussions as I can.

Most of the discussions this past year among the ECR Deputation members have been about the serious issues to be considered by this legislative body that meets every three years, especially:

  • Restructuring Church governance to enhance mission and ministry (TREC)
  • Marriage equality
  • Care of creation and social justice
  • Election of the next Presiding Bishop to a 9 year term

We have diligently studied and summarized the reports of the 22 Legislative Committees (I wrote the summary on “Social Justice and International Policy”):

01 – Dispatch of Business 02 – Certification of Minutes 03 – Rules of Order 04 – Constitution and Canons
05 – Governance and Structure 06 – World Mission 07 – Social Justice and International Policy 08 – Social Justice and United States Policy
09 – Congregational Vitality 10 – Evangelism and Communications 11 – Prayer Book, Liturgy and Music 12 – Formation & Education for Ministry
13 – Church Pension Fund 14 – Stewardship and Development 15 – Ecumenical and Inter-religious Relations 16 – Environmental Stewardship and Care of Creation
17 – Privilege and Courtesy 18 – Credentials 19 – Confirmation of the Presiding Bishop 20 – Special Legislative Committee on Marriage
21 – Program, Budget and Finance 22 – Alcohol and Other Drug Abuse . .

However, from the number of invitations I have gotten in recent months to dinners and receptions, I have learned that GC is not just a legislative body, it is also a meeting place for far flung associations, schools, and church interest groups to connect with alumni, supporters, and potential participants. So far, I have accepted invitations to attend our own ECR diocesan dinner, the University of the South dinner, and the reception for Education for Ministry (for which I am an Accredited Mentor). I am sure I will participate in other events as well.

In addition to invitations from organizations to which I have a direct connection, I have received a wide variety of emails about GC events and upcoming discussions.  Here are two – one serious and one humorous – that caught my eye:

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Any convention that can accommodate both the Lent Madness sillies as well as serious theological lobbyists is going to be very interesting indeed.

19 June 2015:
This blog post is also available on the RealEpiscopal.Org ECR diocesan website. Rev. Tom Sramek Jr. and I are the diocesan bloggers for GC 78.

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San Jose Night Walks

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I have been joining the San Jose Night Walks (starting from Starbird Park, at 7 pm every Friday). Night Walks are a program sponsored by the City of San Jose as a means of reducing violence. People of faith walk together through neighborhoods identified by the San Jose Police Department as hot spots for gang activity. We talk with neighbors, distribute books to kids, and pick up trash along the route.  This program has already been successful in San Jose and other cities as well. Success is measured by a drop in crime in the neighborhood while connecting with local residents. Rev. Peggy Bryan of St. Andrew’s Episcopal Church (Saratoga, CA) is our walk leader.  Starbird is the second walk route started by Reg. Peggy Bryan in San Jose.

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Preparing for General Convention: Considering TREC

IMG_9819 Episcopal General Convention 2015 logo

I am looking forward to attending General Convention (“GC”) next month in Salt Lake City, Utah. The deputation members from our Episcopal Diocese of El Camino Real (stretching from the Silicon Valley to San Luis Obispo on California’s central coast) and our Bishop Mary Gray-Reeves have been preparing for this two-week-long event for a long time, some since the last GC three years ago. Rev. Tom Sramek (Co-Rector, Good Samaritan Episcopal Church, San Jose) and I (parishioner at St. Andrew’s Episcopal Church, Saratoga) have been asked to serve as lead social media communicators, to keep the diocese informed. This is the first in a series of blog posts which will continue for several months.

There will be several major discussions at GC, the election of a new Presiding Bishop to a 9 year term being foremost. Another topic almost as important as the election goes by the acronym TREC – for the “Task Force for Reimagining the Episcopal Church“.

Episcopal Church TREC 2014

At the 2012 GC, the Task Force was charged to create a plan for reforming the Church’s structures, governance, and administration. Bishop Mary was a member of the Task Force. TREC’s charter and other documents are on their web site.  TREC was discussed in a church-wide meeting held in the National Cathedral in Washington DC in October 2014, including a video broadcast for those who could not join in person.

Episcopal Church TREC Poster October 2014

About 2,000 people participated in 2012-2014 TREC discussions, plus about 4,000 who participated in-person or remotely in the meeting at National Cathedral. The 74-page TREC Final Report was published in December 2014. The urgency of this work was well expressed by the Task Force on p.6 of that report:

“We believe that to adapt to today’s needs and to strengthen its ability to serve God’s mission as Luke described, The Episcopal Church must address how we “do the work we have been given to do” at every level—congregational, diocesan, and Church-wide. We believe that the Church must reconsider many of its current practices around congregational and diocesan collaboration, congregational and leadership development, clergy formation, Church Pension Fund incentives and initiatives, and the use of our sacred buildings.  … we believe the Church needs to address these issues directly and immediately, and the legislative process is the primary means by which we as The Episcopal Church endorse and fund our communal priorities and directions. The “perfecting” of resolutions is a process shared by members of the Church who are General Convention, bishops, priests, deacons, and lay people from around the whole Church. We recognize that what TREC presents is only one of the steps in this Church-wide conversation and process. And so we put forth three resolutions for General Convention that, if embraced as critical issues and adopted for further action, will engage the Church at every level in faithful and constructive conversation and planning.

We believe this work is at the heart of the reimagination to which we have been called as a task force…”

The Task Force put forth three resolutions for consideration at GC next month (the full text of each is in the TREC Final Report):

  1. A001: Restructure for Spiritual Encounter – more: p.7 and following
  2. A002: Reimagine Dioceses, Bishops, and General Convention – more: p.8 and following
  3. A003: Restructure Assets in Service of God’s Mission in the Future – more: p.10 and following

These are major shifts proposed for how the Church will do its work in the world going forward. Between 25 June – 3 July 2015, GC will discuss its own restructuring – including the possibility of merging the House of Bishops and the House of Deputies in a unicameral model. The TREC resolutions have already proven to be controversial, generating passionate and thoughtful discussion as well as prayerful consideration. The GC next month will surely be energetic and very interesting indeed!

Photo Copyright 2015 by Katy Dickinson

[18 June 2015 – corrections: changed “delegation” to “deputation” and 10-year-term to 9-year-term]

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