Tuesday, August 31, 2021




DIOCESE OF UPPER SOUTH CAROLINA ANNOUNCES NOMINEES FOR BISHOP



The Episcopal and Anglican dioceses in eastern South Carolina are not the only dioceses seeking new bishops these days. The Episcopal Diocese of Upper South Carolina is too. It recently announced its slate of nominees for bishop's election. Find it here .


There are five names on the list:

---Furman Buchanan, St. Peter's, Greenville SC.

---D. Seth Donald, St. Michael and All Angels, Lake Charles LA.

---Thomas A. Lacy II, St. Anne's, Tifton GA.

---Daniel P. Richards, Christ Church of the Ascension, Paradise Valley, AZ.

---R. Jemonde Taylor, St. Ambrose, Raleigh NC.


First, note they are all men. Bucking the trend in episcopal elections these days, no woman made it to the list. A bit surprising.

There are four white men and one African American man. All are rectors of parishes.

Only one of the names is resident in the diocese. Apparently, he is the only one with "roots" in the diocese.

According to the timeline, the "Walkabouts" for the nominees will be on 11 and 12 September. 

The election of the bishop will be on 25 September, at Trinity Cathedral, in Columbia. Hopefully, it will be live-streamed.

Curious to note only four weeks' time between the announcement of the nominees and the election.  


Even though the upper diocese was not involved in the schism of 2012, it was, and still is, uniquely important to the Episcopalians in the lower state. The outstanding Bishop of USC, Andrew Waldo, made a heroic effort to keep the peace in the lower diocese before the break, to no avail. The pre-determined movement to schism was well beyond his, or anyone else's influence. Sadly, Waldo's best efforts to prevent schism failed.

The state of South Carolina is divided into two Episcopal Church dioceses: the Diocese of South Carolina is the eastern half of the state and the Diocese of Upper South Carolina is the western half. 

I suppose everyone has heard the rumors that the lower diocese of SC may reunite with the upper diocese (there was only one diocese before 1922). As far as I can tell, there is no evidence to support such rumors. One should fully expect the Diocese based at Charleston to continue on as its own entity. The incoming bishop is evidence of this. 

UPDATE NOTE. I have been informed by the DUSC office that both walkabouts and the election convention will be live-streamed. The details about these will be posted soon on the diocesan website.

Monday, August 30, 2021




NOTES, 30 AUGUST 2021



Greetings, blog reader, on Monday, August 30, 2021. We are inundated with bad news these days: wars, plagues, earthquakes, storms, you name it. Sometimes it seems it is all too much to bear. 

In Afghanistan, we see heartbreaking scenes of terrified and desperate people about to be left behind. Tomorrow is the last day of the American military presence there. It gives me no pleasure to remember I predicted this scenario twenty years ago when the U.S. started this misbegotten adventure. Throughout history, no outside force has ever controlled Afghanistan, from Alexander the Great to today. The U.S. attempt was always bound to fail. We just did not see it doing so in such an ignoble and terrible way. This is a dark day for America and even darker for the people of Afghanistan.

The COVID-19 plague still ravages the world, and America in particular. We are now in the third great surge of the pandemic. In some places, as Alabama, this is the worst surge of all. Every hospital in the state is in crisis. There is not a single ICU bed free in the entire state, still, after weeks. The state's health care system is on the verge of breakdown. Yet, vaccination rates remain stubbornly low, mainly in our southeastern states. Alabama still brings up the rear, at 37.9% of the people fully vaccinated. South Carolina is at 43.1%. The U.S. as a whole is over 50%. I go out in public only for necessities.

In the last fourteen days, the plague has worsened in SC: new cases up 48%, hospitalizations up 54%, and deaths up 169%. Alabama seems to have hit a (very high) plateau with +36% cases, +17% hospitalizations (no room left), and +28% deaths.

In addition to all of this, Hurricane Ida slammed into the Louisiana and Mississippi coasts yesterday. My brother and sister in Bay St. Louis MS weathered the storm in my sister's house, on high ground. She has not lost electricity. However, there was a strong storm surge of water; and, as of this morning, my brother has not been able to get back to his house which stands on stilts on a water front. He does not know yet whether water reached the floor of the house which is fourteen feet above sea level (Update. He has learned that the storm surge did not reach the floor of his house, whew). The diminished storm is now heading my way as we anticipate a great deal of rain.

On top of all of that, my family member who went to the hospital nearly two weeks ago is still there. The person is making good progress and I expect will be discharged soon. Still, no visitation is allowed in the age of Covid.

So, in the face of this deluge of woes, I search desperately for good news. I refuse to be vanquished by adversity even though the burden may seem too heavy to bear. Some items of good news are the efforts of the two diocese in South Carolina to move forward into the future. One has chosen a brand new leader, and the other is about to do so. This is hopeful. There are better days ahead in SC. Same at the Advent in Birmingham where "normal" corporate worship is gradually returning. There, the search for the new dean seems to be progressing nicely. All of this is good. 

I think we should bear in mind, as we have for a year and a half now, we did not ask for any of this. It fell in our laps. We wish it would all go away and leave us alone but it will not. These adversities were given to us in the days of our lives that were allotted to us. As Job, we had no choice. Our choice now, is to respond in the best way we know, just as Job did. We must not be overwhelmed by these hard times. Peace.

Friday, August 20, 2021




NOTES,  20 AUGUST 2021



Greetings, blog reader, on Friday, August 20, 2021. This has been a tough week in many ways. There is no point in trying to pretend otherwise. We are in a hard time both at home and abroad and we must endure what we wish we could avoid. We did not ask for this, but here we are.


PANDEMIC. Getting worse by the day, particularly in our southeastern states. 

South Carolina is on track to surpass the worst peak of the pandemic of last January. Find the chart for SC here . In the last 14 days, cases in SC were up 53%, hospitalizations 87%, and deaths a staggering 366%. In all, 10,182 South Carolinians have fallen victim to the coronavirus. Stop for a moment and let that sink in.

In spite of the terrifying sweep of the virus, South Carolinians remain vaccine hesitant. While in the United States, more than half the population has been fully vaccinated, in SC the figure is 41.9%.

In Alabama, the emergency is even worse. Find the chart for AL here . In the last 14 days, AL has seen 33% more cases, 59% more hospitalizations, and 228% more deaths. AL is now at the same level of infection as the highest peak of last January and on track to exceed that point greatly. In all, 11,914 Alabamians have died in this plague. Pause for a moment in remembrance.

In spite, or at least in full disregard, of this terrifying health emergency, Alabamians remain the most vaccine hostile of all Americans. The state has the lowest rate of the fully vaccinated, at just 35.8%.

Now that school is back in session, all indications are that the pandemic will worsen, at least in our local states. I know two children who returned to school greatly excited to be back after a year and a half out. A few days on, this kindergartner and third grader tested positive and are now at home in quarantine. They are not happy campers. No one would be.


On top of the world-wide plague comes the humanitarian disaster in Afghanistan. Who can watch the pictures on television from Kabul without heartbreak? Countless thousands of terrified and desperate people, men, women, and children, are risking life and limb to escape from a ruling force infamous for its harsh and murderous tactics. We all want to help the people trying to flee but can only look on in horror. And, on top of this, we weep at the ghastly scenes of the earthquake in Haiti. One may wonder what more can the Haitian people endure. It is one hardship after another.


So, the news this week has been especially hard to take: plagues, wars, earthquakes. Yet, we must go on and do so with the courage and faith we claim. 

Finally, at long last, the Episcopal Diocese of South Carolina has a diocesan bishop. Ruth Woodliff-Stanley took up residence in Charleston last Monday. All Episcopalians in South Carolina should shout at once, Welcome Happy Morning! To be sure, she is not officially in office. Her ordination and consecration will be on 2 October at Grace Church Cathedral, in Charleston. The Standing Committee sent out a letter this week announcing a scale back of the festivities. The ceremony will still be at Grace on the 2nd, but with highly limited seating. The church holds 600-700 people but with "covid" spacing can accommodate perhaps half that. The attending bishops, diocesan clergy, and local delegates should have priority. This will not leave much space for others. Thankfully, the event will be live-streamed. I plan to stay home and watch on my computer.

The Anglican Diocese of South Carolina is likewise forging ahead. They have scheduled a "walkabout" for their three candidates in preparation for the election of the bishop to follow Mark Lawrence. Both parts of the pre-schism diocese are bravely moving forward with new leadership.


On a personal note, in RE to my last blog past, my family member who is in the hospital is doing well. However, under "covid" rules of the hospital, I cannot visit.


So, we are in a hard time. Let's just accept that grim reality. The question is how we cope with all this adversity. We do it in different ways. As a student of history, I am drawn to the hard times of the past for information and inspiration. Lately, I have returned to the Second World War in books and TV documentaries. Eric Larson's recent bestseller "The Splendid and the Vile" is an excellent account of Churchill and Hitler. The moral won over the immoral but only after a superhuman effort. We are in a situation now that, although it does not come close to the seriousness of WWII, still calls for our own superhuman efforts. We must go on. As Churchill, we will go on. 

Indeed, life does go on, at least in my garden now in its late summer  mode. For whatever reason, dragon flies are abundant now. Here is a male Window Skimmer (Libellula luctuosa) with its beautiful black and white markings. The beauty of God's great creation is all around us, even in the humble dragon fly. Peace.








  

Wednesday, August 18, 2021




MY VISIT TO THE E.R.



On yesterday, 17 August 2021, I had to visit the Emergency Room of a local major hospital on a matter completely unrelated to COVID-19. I needed to get a family member admitted to the hospital for a relatively minor problem and the admission had to be done in the E.R. I thought you might find my experience in the E.R. interesting and/or useful if you should need to go to the E.R. these days.

My stay in the E.R. lasted six hours. This was relatively short according to my waiting-room mates. One had been there fifteen hours, others nearly as much. The place was packed and movement was fast-paced. Ambulances formed a parade as they backed into the bays to discharge their sick riders. After each ambulance pulled out, it stopped and the attendants disinfected the entire inside of the vehicle. I could not tell how many of the incoming were COVID patients but I knew many of them were.

There was a separate waiting room for the COVID patients adjacent to the main room, but patients had to come and go through the main room. One incoming patient was so weak she had to be brought in on a stretcher and laid out on chairs as a makeshift bed while a room was found for her (she was still there hours later when I left). Apparently hospital rooms were in very short supply. In fact, on yesterday every single Intensive Care Room in the state of Alabama was taken. There was not one free bed in an ICU in the state. There were no tents set up outside at this hospital, but I would not be surprised to see them soon.

The main waiting room had two large air purifiers in the middle of the room going full blast. I sat as close as I could to one. Of course, everyone is required to wear face covering at all times. 

I was lost in admiration of the staff members who were run ragged but refused to show it. The doctors, nurses, attendants, all the way to the janitors did heroic service in the E.R., all at risk to themselves. All of us owe them a big debt of gratitude. I honestly do not know how they hold up under this day after day. 

Intake procedures have become much more involved and complicated in the E.R. during COVID-tide. Incoming patients are checked repeatedly for vital signs. They were also given other tests and scans and chest X-Rays. There must have been a half-dozen steps involved in these checks. This alone ate up hours of time.

Finally, my family member was admitted to the hospital and was taken to the appropriate unit (incidentally, doing well today). I was dismissed and fled from the place as fast as I could. Six hours had seemed as an eternity.

So, after all this time of exposure to numerous people with COVID, I will be fortunate indeed if I do not come down with this terrible disease. I have had my two shots of Moderna. If I am invaded by the coronavirus, I should have a relatively minor bout. I am counting on this.

My advice to you, do not go near an Emergency Room unless it is a dire necessity. It will likely be overrun with COVID patients who will remain in the E.R. for a long time as rooms are found for them. Although the hospital may go to great lengths to protect incoming patients and their attendants, there can be no absolute protection in this kind of radioactive environment. Too, as everyone knows, the new Delta variant is far more contagious and damaging than the original strain of the coronavirus. It is the predominate strain nowadays.

We are  now in the third great surge of the COVID-19 pandemic. It is getting worse by the day particularly in our southern states. I have seen it first hand and it is not a pretty picture. God help us.     

Friday, August 13, 2021

 



NOTES,  13 AUGUST 2021



Greetings reader, on Friday, August 13, 2021. This is a convenient moment to check in on the crises in our lives we have been following for a long time. So, how do we stand now?


PANDEMIC. Our early summer of joy is turning into our late summer of trauma. The plague is rapidly worsening, particularly in our southern states. We are now in the third great surge of the pandemic. Moreover, this spike is on track to be the worst of all. Find the chart for South Carolina here . In the last 14 days, SC has seen +123% in cases, +161% in hospitalizations, and +186% in deaths. According to the chart, this third spike is rising faster than either of the earlier two. The future looks grim. 

Alabama's chart looks even worse. Find it here . There, cases are up 65%, hospitalizations 112%, and deaths 213%. Hospitals all over the state are overflowing with covid patients, even children (some in ICU on ventilators). According to the graph, within the next two weeks, AL will be in the midst of its worse surge of the plague bypassing the horror of last January. It is a nightmare.

As everyone knows, this new phase is the pandemic of the unvaccinated. However, children under 12 cannot be vaccinated. In our southern states, vaccine hesitancy is becoming vaccine hostility. In the United States as a whole, 50.4% of the population is now fully vaccinated. In SC, it is 41.4%. AL is in the very last place, still, at just 35.1%. 

In trying to understand this vaccine hostility, I have studied the map of vaccination rates among the Alabama counties. In the first place, contrary to common belief, rates are not based on race. The counties across the Black Belt (named for soil not people, but inhabited mostly by African Americans) have relatively high vaccination rates. In fact, there is a direct correlation of vaccinations and voting. The "redder" the county, the lower the vaccination rate. This shows that the pandemic is seen by many people in AL as a political rather than a health issue. The most conservative Republicans are the most resistant to vaccines and masks. This is a shame and disgrace; and Alabama is paying a terrible price for this collective lunacy.


SCHISM IN SC. Nothing new. Still waiting on the SC Supreme Court to make a decision on the Episcopal Church's appeal of Judge Dickson 2020 order. I doubt that we hear anything from the SCSC before the end of summer.


THE ADVENT. Happy to report that the clergy and Staff of the Episcopal Cathedral of the Advent, in Birmingham AL, are continuing to work on implementing the Covenant recently signed by the vestry and the bishop of Alabama, Glenda Curry. As one small but important symbolic gesture of healing, the Episcopal Church flag has returned to the front doors. It has been gone so long, no one can remember how long. The previous deans had tried their best to remove names, signs, and symbols of the Episcopal Church (from the Episcopal cathedral).



My thanks to the thoughtful correspondent who made this photo and shared it with me. 

____________________________________


A couple of other happy notes for the day. 

Today is International Lefthanders Day. Happy ILD to my daughter Elizabeth and all the other lefties out there. Today is your day. I must hasten to say you are in very good company indeed. Many of the greatest geniuses of history were lefthanders:   Napoleon Bonaparte, Leonardo da Vinci, Michelangelo, Aristotle, Mozart, Julius Caesar, Marie Curie. Closer to home, how about Barack Obama, Bill Gates, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, and the greatest Alabamian of all time, Helen Keller.

On another happy note, tomorrow, my wife Sandy and I celebrate our fifty-fifth wedding anniversary. We were married on August 14, 1966, at the Chapel of the Resurrection, Ruge Hall, in Tallahassee. Although we had been born and brought up in Pensacola and our families were well-connected there, we wanted to marry in our new church home. As students at FSU, both of us had been confirmed in the Episcopal Church at Ruge. So, fortunately for us, lots of family and friends made the drive over to Tallahassee for the day. We were exceedingly honored and grateful that they joined us in celebrating our special day. The Rev. Lex Matthews, chaplain, was the officiant. (After the wedding we drove, that day, to Orlando where I was to start a job teaching at a junior college.)



Ruge Hall stands across the street from the old campus of Florida State University. This building was constructed in 1931 as the Episcopal student center. Behind it, out of sight in this picture, is the Chapel. It was built in the 1950's in moderne/minimalist style.

So, we are remembering fifty-five years. There is a lot to be said for long-term relationships. Through thick and thin, we would not have wanted it any other way.

So, life goes on and we go with it. We are still in a dark night of crisis on crisis. No one knows where all of this is going. I have always believed it best we did not know the future. However perilous the seas around us now, we are all in this ship together. No one is alone. Peace.


Tuesday, August 10, 2021




R.I.P.   BOBBY BOWDEN



For years during my academic career, when people learned that I had been educated at Florida State University, the first words that came out of their mouths were "Bobby Bowden." Everyone in the south knew his name. Bowden died two days ago. A legend has passed.

When I first went to FSU in 1963, it had 11,000 students and was a respectable but not great university, always overshadowed by the larger University of Florida. Today, FSU has over 40,000 students and a world-class academic reputation. Strange to say, it was football, and Bobby Bowden specifically, that made this come about. 

Bowden was at FSU from 1976 to 2009. All the while he led the football program in a stellar record. He became the second winningest coach in college football history. As the other great southern coaches, e.g. Bear Bryant, Bowden was not just a football coach, he was a life mentor and the young men who were privileged to serve under him became his "sons." He, as Bryant, taught his sons ethical and moral values as a way of life. Bowden was a devout Southern Baptist and long-time devoted member of the First Baptist Church of Tallahassee. He took his Christian faith very seriously.




Until 1947, FSU was the state's "girls' school," Florida State College for Women. After WWII, the GI Bill sent countless thousands of veterans to college and FSCW turned into co-ed FSU. The History Department quickly flourished with young professors from far and near. When I was there, 1963-1971, my professors came from the Sorbonne, Harvard, Johns Hopkins and the like. I was fortunate beyond measure to be guided by an A-list team.

My graduate work was rigorous. I had to show proficiency in two foreign languages and mastery of five fields, four of history and one outside of history. My Ph.D. exams, preliminary and final, written and oral, were exceedingly demanding and went on for weeks. I managed to get through and then faced the hurdle of a dissertation (doctoral thesis). Since my major field was French Revolution and Napoleon, I had to go to France for months of research, then to compose and defend a lengthy original composition on an aspect of the period. I finished and successfully defended my 333-page dissertation exactly fifty years ago. My brilliant major professor, Donald D. Horward, a world authority on Napoleon, is still alive and well, in Tallahassee. My gratitude to him knows no bounds.

Back to Bobby Bowden. Outstanding faculty did not put FSU "on the map." Bowden did. With him, money started pouring in and the university expanded beyond anyone's wildest dreams. Of course, this kind of explosion was not limited to FSU. It has occurred repeatedly across the south.

So, a good life has come to an end, but in another sense goes on ever greater. We southerners are known for the "three F's," faith, family, and football, and not in any particular order. Bobby Bowden was the quintessential examplar of our three F's at their best. He made us southerners proud, made us FSU alumni proud, and made us Christians proud. RIP, Bobby Bowden. 






Friday, August 6, 2021




ZAC HICKS LEAVING THE ADVENT



The Rev. Craig Smalley, interim dean of the Episcopal Cathedral Church of the Advent, in Birmingham AL, released a letter this afternoon, via Advent Communications, announcing the departure of the Rev. Zac Hicks from the Advent. Hicks's last day will be Sunday, 15 August 2021. The parish will hold a reception for Hicks and his family on that day. Find the letter here .

The letter did not provide any details on how this decision came about.

Hicks, a clergyman in an evangelical Presbyterian denomination, was hired several years ago as canon in charge of worship at the Advent. He did not gain Holy Orders in the Episcopal Church. For one, he led the "praise band" (the hootenanny band) which will remain for the time being as part of the 9:15 a.m. service, along with organ and choir.

One will recall that, upon the departure of the Rev. Andrew Pearson as dean, on May 16, Hicks produced a half-hour video denouncing Rite I in the Book of Common Prayer as "anti-Christ." He called for the continuation of Pearson's "Our Liturgy" in the Advent's Sunday morning worship services. The vestry refused Hicks and concluded the Covenant with Bishop Glenda Curry. The Covenant included provisions returning only prayer book worship to the cathedral services. Pearson's liturgy is to be phased out. Hicks's shocking video was soon deleted, but, at least as of recently, could still be found on the Internet.

Hicks's future remains unclear although Smalley indicated Hicks, his wife Abby, and their four children would remain in Birmingham for now. One can only wonder what the relationship between Hicks and Andrew Pearson will be as Pearson is busily building a new congregation in the Birmingham area.

I expect the departure of Pearson and Hicks will affect the Advent in two significant ways. In one, a certain but unknown number of Advent parishioners who were fondly attached to the two will leave the parish to follow Pearson in his new church. Although one cannot tell at this point how many people will quit the Advent, so far there does not seem to be a stampede out.

Perhaps most importantly, the theological tenor of the Advent is likely to move back toward the mainstream of the Episcopal Church. Pearson and Hicks had led the parish to the far evangelical edge, arguably beyond the edge, of Episcopalianism/Anglicanism in their zeal to move to more Protestant religion. 

Nowhere was this more apparent than in the liturgy of the Holy Communion/Eucharist. Far evangelicals, and many Protestants, consider this service just a symbolic remembrance. However, in traditional Episcopal/Anglican religion, the Eucharist is much more than a remebrance. It is a transformative event. When the priest consecrates the bread and wine, the Real Presence of Jesus Christ becomes part of the elements. Communicants receive the Real Presence as they receive the bread and wine. All consecrated bread and wine must be consumed or held in reserve. What is held in reserve is placed in the Ambry (wall box) and the Sanctuary Lamp over it is lit to signal the Real Presence. I expect at the Advent we will see a return to the more mainstream norms common in the Episcopal/Anglican churches. If so, this will be the most consequential outcome of the personnel shakeup going on now.    




NOTES,  6 AUGUST 2021



Greetings, blog reader, on Friday, August 6, 2021. We are in the Dog Days of summer now. This is not my favorite time of the year. By this point, we southerners have grown weary of the hot and humid weather we have endured for months on end. Even worse, the mockingbirds do not sing at this time of the year. They are molting. My garden is still in its lush summer mode but noticeably transcending into its early fall phase as daylight wanes. Meanwhile, it is time for us to check in on the crises we have been tracking for many months.


PANDEMIC. The euphoria we felt at the arrival of the vaccines a few months ago has vanished. In fact, we are now in the ghastly third surge of the pandemic. The first peaked in July of 2020, the second in January of 2021. The third, we are in now, is still skyrocketing with no end in sight. If tends continue on for several more weeks, this will be the worst surge of all. By all metrics, this plague has surpassed the great flu pandemic of 1918-19. More horrifying of all is the new reality that variants of the original coronavirus are now spreading like wildfire bringing much more contagious and deadly conditions. Scientists have no idea how many more variants will appear or how bad they will be. We are all on edge.

The United States is now counting 631,879 deaths, according to Worldometers, bypassing the 600,000 who died in the flu pandemic of a century ago (when there was no vaccine). 

The figures for our southern states are disheartening. South Carolina is listing 631,037 cases and 9,939 deaths. While the rate of fully vaccinated is now over half in the U.S. (50.5%), SC is reporting only 40.9%. The present surge is very clear in SC: in the last 14 days, cases up 270%, hospitalizations +156%, and deaths up 32%.

Alabama is reporting similar figures. Of all 50 states plus D.C., AL has the lowest fully vaccinated rate, at 34.6%. AL is listing 599,633 cases and 11,574 deaths. In the last 14 days, cases have arisen 145%, hospitalizations +162%, and deaths +100%. A few days ago, my local hospital in Anniston reported four deaths in one day from COVID-19, the most ever. It is clear in SC and AL, the pandemic is surging out of control. As children and teens are returning to school, we can expect this to get even worse.

Unfortunately, much of the trouble stems from the politicization of this pandemic that has been going on since day one. Public health crises should never become political issues, but this one has. This is a national disgrace. Nothing says this more than the case of Florida, the new epicenter of the plague. There the governor has actually banned mandates to mitigate the spread of the virus. The governor is running to be the next Trump and he thinks this is the way to do it. Meanwhile just look at the appalling statistics coming from the state. If one looks at the charts, one sees that this third surge is already the worst of all three in FL. Florida has a history of bad state government, but this is no excuse for this incredible dereliction of duty in Tallahassee.


SCHISM IN SC. Still waiting on the SC Supreme Court to rule on the Episcopal Church's appeal of Judge Edgar Dickson's outlandish order of 2020. I doubt that we will hear anything from the court until summer is over. Meanwhile, we have no choice but to stand by until the justices move. Remember, it took 22 months last time for the court to go from the hearing to the written decision. We have not had a hearing yet on this go-around and I rather doubt we will have at this point. 

Meanwhile, both parts of the old diocese are moving ahead with new leadership. Incidentally, be sure to read Steve Skardon's insightful description of the Episcopal diocese's election. Find it here .

Two points need to be made here. The first is that the old diocese has settled down into two parts. The hope and expectation I held long ago that the two sides wold reconcile and reunite has faded away. The anti-Episcopal Church vitriol among the breakaways is as strong now, if not stronger, than it was a decade ago. This may well be a defensive strategy to mask, or rationalize, the disastrous decisions of the schism. Nevertheless, I think the Episcopal side should accept the reality that the majority of people in the breakaway congregations will not return to the Episcopal Church.

The second point is that both parts of the old diocese have consciously and decidedly rebuffed their old leadership in favor of new faces. The Episcopal diocese elected a bishop who had nothing at all to do with the history of the diocese, and in the interviews showed remarkably little knowledge of or interest in the schism. The Anglican diocese likewise nominated three candidates who had little to nothing to do with the schism. 

It is entirely clear both dioceses want new leadership, and new life. I suspect this comes from a weariness with the schism. In a couple of months, it will have been nine years since the division of 2012 occurred. Even after countless court actions and millions of dollars spent, sadly there is no closure on the legal front. The Episcopal Church won in both state and federal courts. In state court, the SC Supreme Court awarded the bulk of the local properties to the Episcopal side. However, the breakaways convinced the circuit judge to ignore this and to hand over the properties to the local congregations. The Episcopal side is now in the SC Supreme Court with an appeal of the circuit judge's mind-boggling order. In federal court, a district judge in Charleston recognized the Episcopal Church as hierarchical and the Episcopal diocese as the one and only heir of the pre-schism diocese. The schismatic side then appealed this to the U.S. Court of Appeals in Richmond, where it remains awaiting a decision of the SC Supreme Court. So, after all these years of legal warfare, people are simply exhausted and ready for new life. I suspect that explains the two elections for bishop.


THE ADVENT. The leadership of the Episcopal Cathedral Church of the Advent, in Birmingham AL, is trying its best to restore calm in the parish after the storm of the Pearson years. The Rev. Andrew Pearson, dean of the Advent until May, has not departed Birmingham. Quite the contrary, he and his spouse are busy organizing a new congregation. Pearson sent a letter to some parishioners of the Advent inviting them to join him. He has also set up a number of meetings this month obviously to encourage people to join his new church. No doubt, the concern in the Advent is how many parishioners will leave with the former dean who certainly had a devoted following of Adventers during his tenure at the cathedral.


So, here in the dying days of summer in the year 2021, we are surrounded by crisis on crisis. If you are growing fatigued of all of this, it is perfectly understandable. We long so much for life to return to "normal." Yet, this is not to be, not for the foreseeable future. Please remember, no one asked for all of this. It was given to us in our hour to live. We had no choice. What we should do now is respond the best we can in this hour of adversity. When all of this is over, we must be able to say we passed through as the people of faith we claimed to be. Peace.



Ginger (Hedychium "Beni-oiran'). This beautiful and aromatic specimen came from Hawaii, brought back by my phenomenal county agent who travels the world in search of unusual plants. Ginger is typically a tropical plant, but there are kinds that endure the winters we have.



Unusually generous rain and mild weather have resulted in a robust and lush garden this year. When I feel a bit troubled, I have only to go to my garden. In the Bible, life began in a garden (Eden) and, in a sense, ended in a garden (Gethsemane). Indeed, the first person to encounter Jesus after the Resurrection, Mary Magdalene, at first thought he was the local gardener. The wonders of God's great creation are all around us if we can only see them.



Wednesday, August 4, 2021




ANGLICAN DIOCESE OF SC 

REJECTS OLD LEADERSHIP



The new breakaway "Anglican Diocese of South Carolina" has shunned its old leaders. On 2 August, the bishop coadjutor search committee announced the three finalists for election as bishop coadjutor and successor of Mark Lawrence as II bishop of the diocese. The three are all young(ish) clergy (straight white males to be sure) who had little, if anything, to do with leading the schism. Not one prominent figure of the diocese before, during, or after the schism of 2012 made it to the final list.

Find the names and biographical info on the three here . The candidates:


Charles "Chip" Edgar III. Dean of Holy Apostles Anglican Cathedral in Columbia SC. This is in the Diocese of the Carolinas, in the Anglican Church in North America. Steve Wood, rector of St. Andrew's, in Mt. Pleasant SC, is the bishop of this diocese. Edgar is the only candidate presently outside of the ADSC. He has served at Holy Apostles since 2004, so was not part of the schism. 

Robert "Rob" Sturdy. Chaplain at the Citadel since 2017. Served as curate and rector of Holy Trinity, Myrtle Beach SC, from 2006 to 2012. Holy Trinity was one of the parishes that participated in the break from the Episcopal Church in 2012.

Christopher "Chris" Warner. Rector of Holy Cross, Sullivans Island SC where he has served 2001-2007 and 2011 to present. He has also served as director of Camp St. Christopher. 


So, one of the three is from outside the diocese while two are internal candidates. The one from outside is interesting because of the possibility that the Anglican Diocese of South Carolina could combine with the Diocese of the Carolinas which are overlapping dioceses affiliated with the Anglican Church in North America. Presently, Steve Wood is bishop of DC while Mark Lawrence is bishop of the ADSC.

This slate is a surprise to me as I was almost certain one of the old guard power brokers would gain the nomination and election to follow Mark Lawrence. My bet was on Jeff Miller, now at St. Philip's, and once at St. Helena's, and friend of Alan Runyan, who was a search committee member. In fact, Miller and all the other prominent leaders of the schism were passed over by the search committee. I must point out, however, that the names of all of the nominees considered by the search committee were not released, so one cannot know for sure that Miller and other prominent clergy from the schism period were nominated. Only the names of the three finalists were announced.

What does this slate of candidates tell us? It suggests to me a cry for new leadership, and that signals a disappointment with the old leadership. The simple data alone reveal the disastrous trajectory of the breakaway contingent under the old leadership. When Lawrence arrived in 2008, the Diocese of South Carolina listed 27,000 communicants (active members). At last count, in 2019, the Anglican Diocese of South Carolina listed fewer than 12,000 communicants. Since the schism of 2012, the ADSC has lost a third of its communicants and remains on a steady and relentless decline in membership and resources. It has lost in court twice. In federal court, it lost the legal rights to the pre-schism diocese. In the state supreme court, it lost the bulk of the local properties. While the SC Supreme Court has not ruled on the Church's appeal of the Dickson decision, chances are the high court will uphold its earlier order recognizing the Episcopal Church ownership of the properties. By every empirical measure, the schism of 2012 has been a disaster for the schismatics. It is no wonder that the people of the breakaway church want new leadership.

Who were the people who selected the three candidates? Find the members of the search committee here . There were seventeen members of the committee. Five were women. Eight were clergy. One member was Alan Runyan. For these seventeen to agree on this slate tells us that change was the order of the day, and it would be change from the established old order that had controlled the diocese for many years.

It seems to me that something similar happened in the Episcopal Diocese of SC. In the recent bishop's election, only one candidate was local (one other was a native but had not lived in SC in many years). She was the well-known archdeacon of the diocese. All of the other candidates were "from off." Yet, on the first ballot, the majority of clergy voted for one of the off candidates who won easily on the second ballot. This shunning of the only local candidate suggested a restlessness with the old internal leadership and a longing for new blood to lead the diocese in a new direction. Apparently, this is the same attitude now in the breakaway part of the schism. If so, neither of the two parts that came out of the schism of 2012 came out as strong and successful as they might have been. If so, this is the sad legacy of the schism.