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BISHOP'S
LETTER |
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Bishop
Schofield's Palm Sunday Sermon. March 16, 2008
Printable copy
here.
PASTORAL LETTER TO BE READ IN ALL
CHURCHES THE DIOCESE OF SAN JOAQUIN
(Or, published with attention drawn to it from the pulpit) Sunday,
December 16, 2007
Greetings in the name of Jesus Christ, our one and only Lord and
Savior.
By an overwhelming majority of nearly 90% (173 to 22), our Annual
Convention voted Saturday, December 8th, to uphold the authority of
Holy Scripture and thereby preserve our place in the worldwide
Anglican Communion and with the See of Canterbury by realigning our
Anglican identity through the Anglican Church of the Southern Cone
of the Americas under the Most Rev. Gregory Venables, Archbishop and
Primate.
This historic and momentous decision by our Annual Convention was
the culmination of The Episcopal Church’s failure to heed the
repeated calls for repentance issued by the Primates of the Anglican
Communion and for the cessation of false teaching and sacramental
actions explicitly contrary to Scripture. However, we are no longer
operating under the looming shadow of this institutional apostasy
because our Annual Convention wisely and prayerfully accepted the
gracious invitation for sanctuary from the Southern Cone. Under a
plan developed with their House of Bishops and ultimately discussed
between Archbishop Venables and a number of other Primates and
Bishops we were offered hope by the Southern Cone. I wish to
emphasize that Convention’s action is not a schism over secondary
issues but a realignment necessitated by false teaching as well as
unbiblical sacramental actions that continue to take place in The
Episcopal Church. As our new Archbishop so succinctly put it:
“Christianity is specific, definable and unchanging. We are not at
liberty to deconstruct or rewrite it. If Jesus was the Son of God
yesterday then so He is today and will be forever.”
After our Annual Convention voted to accept the invitation from the
Southern Cone, the first words to the Diocese of San Joaquin from
our new Archbishop were these:
"Welcome Home. And welcome back into full fellowship in the Anglican
Communion.
“But whatever things were gain to me, those I counted loss for
Christ. But no, rather, I also count all things to be loss for the
excellency of the knowledge of Christ Jesus my Lord, for whose sake
I have suffered the loss of all things, and count them to be dung,
so that I may win Christ and be found in Him; not having my own
righteousness, which is of the Law, but through the faith of Christ,
the righteousness of God by faith, that I may know Him and the power
of His resurrection and the fellowship of His sufferings, being made
conformable to His death; if by any means I might attain to the
resurrection of the dead. Not as though I had already attained
either were already perfect, but I am pressing on, if I may lay hold
of that for which I also was taken hold of by Christ Jesus. My
brothers (and sisters), I do not count myself to have taken
possession, but one thing I do, forgetting the things behind and
reaching forward to the things before, I press toward the mark for
the prize of the high calling of God in Christ Jesus.”[Philippians 3:7-13]’
Your Father in God.
++ Gregory”
The orders of all Diocesan clergy have been recognized by the
Anglican Church of the Southern Cone and appropriate certificates
have already been issued. A period of discernment for those who
request it and agreed to by the bishop has been provided for those
clergy who desire more time to consider whether or not to accept the
invitation welcomed so heartily by the majority of Convention.
Likewise, all parishes will be given a similar discernment period.
No one is being asked to act against his conscience. Surely, if
there is one outstanding mark of this recent decision to realign
with the Southern Cone it is freedom from oppression and threat.
As your Bishop, I would ask you to treat those in the minority with
graciousness and love and keep them in your prayers. It is a
difficult time for all of us. We have to deal with a turn of events
that no one wanted. For the majority who travel with the Diocese,
however, nothing will change. The familiar ways in which you
worship, your clergy, the Book of Common Prayer, Hymnal, lectionary
and place of worship will all remain the same with one notable
exception. In the Prayers of the People, “Gregory our Archbishop” is
to appear where the Prayer Book offers intercession “For N. our
Presiding Bishop”. Among those things that will remain the same is
the solid teaching of the word of God free from worldly compromise,
giving priority to your spiritual well being, faith, and salvation
along with a future in the Anglican Communion. You may well
discover, too, what it is like to witness to your faith without
having to apologize for or feel embarrassed by the decisions of a
Church over which you had no control. All of this has been assured
by the courage of your Annual Convention, which –in turn– could have
done nothing without Archbishop Gregory Venables and his Province of
the Southern Cone going before us first and by their taking the bold
step of faith they did on our behalf. We shall be forever grateful
to them and trust that we will prove as much a blessing to them as
they have been for us.
While there may be a degree of uncertainty over the future of our
material possessions, we are not to despair. We all know there are
no guarantees in this life, only the next. Time and again God has
provided us with what we have needed to do His work for the
advancement of His Kingdom and the building up of His Church. Why
would we question whether the One who identifies Himself as “the
same yesterday, today, and forever” would change now?
Faithfully yours, in our Lord Jesus Christ,
+John-David Schofield, Bishop
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