30 April 2008

PERMISSIVE POWERS 101 (PART I)

Note: The posts in this series are the opinion of the author.They do not reflect, nor should they be construed to reflect, the opinions or positions of Cozen O'Connor, Forks of the Brandywine Presbyterian Church, the New Wineskins Association of Churches, or the Evangelical Presbyterian Church.

In a recent post, I discussed the growing disregard of the Constitution of the PC(USA) by imperial Louisville and its barons in some synods and presbyteries. I observed that in response, some churches have decided to forego requesting that their presbyteries dismiss them with their property and have exercised their “permissive powers of the congregation” to simply disaffiliate from the PC(USA).

A number of folks have posed a very astute question, to wit: “Huh? What are ‘permissive powers’?”

Good question. So following a practice of many pastors, I will begin a sermon series entitled “Permissive Powers 101.” Shall we begin?

Today’s reading comes from Chapter VII of the Book of Order.

Section G-7.0304a, provides:

a. Business to be transacted at meetings of the congregation shall include the following:

( 1 ) matters related to the electing of elders, deacons, and trustees ;
( 2 ) matters related to the calling of a pastor or pastors;
( 3 ) matters related to the pastoral relationship, such as changing the call, or requesting or consenting or declining to consent to dissolution;
( 4 ) matters related to buying, mortgaging, or selling real property (G-8.0500) ;
( 5 ) matters related to the permissive powers of a congregation, such as the desire to lodge all administrative responsibility in the session, or the request to presbytery for exemption from one or more requirements because of limited size. (Emphasis added.)


As you now peruse your well-thumbed copy of the Book of Order looking for the definition, I bid you a fond adieu.

PROPERTY TRUSTS AS AN ANCIENT AND ESSENTIAL TENET, SANTA CLAUS, AND OTHER MYTHS

Recently, a number of PC(USA) presbyteries and at least one synod have begun to sing a new song in four part harmony with Louisville. Sandwiched in between old favorites such as “The NWAC And EPC Are Breaking Up That Old Gang Of Mine” and “There’s No Business Like The Real Estate Business,” they have added to their repertoire, “My Old Kentucky Home (That Is Held And Always Has Been, Nonetheless, In Trust For The PC(USA).”

A new myth has been added to the pantheon of Santa Claus, the Easter Bunny and the Tooth Fairy. More and more PC(USA) boosters make the claim that "the PC(USA) clearly owns the property of the local church" or "the 'property trust' has always been a part of presbyterian polity."

Looking at their claims, I have noticed a pattern. The folks spouting this myth are mainly the bureaucrats at presbyteries, synods and in Louisville, or folks who have aspirations in that direction.

“Why,” you may ask, “the need to convince people that the existence of a trust has ‘always’ been part of presbyterian polity?”

Quite simply stated, if there is no coercive property trust, the PC(USA) has no means of blocking disaffiliation, one of the permissive powers of the congregation. The civil courts cannot enforce purely ecclesiastical rulings by church courts, so any decision by, e.g., the General Assembly Permanent Judicial Commission that a congregation has improperly terminated its affiliation with the PC(USA) would be unenforceable in the civil courts.

Let’s set the record straight. The so-called property trust provision in the PC(USA) Book of Order (G-8.0201) is a very recent reaction to the decision of the United States Supreme Court in Jones v. Wolf (1979).

When compared to the rest of the Book of Order, Chapter VIII is clearly a modern legal afterthought dropped into a political system that had developed over centuries. From the glorious language describing the “Great Ends of the Church” found in G-1.0200 to the discussion of historic organizational practices throughout the Book of Order, what is traditionally referred to as “presbyterian connectionalism” is apparent. It is a system based on political comity and shared theological beliefs. See, e.g., Book of Order § G-1.0307 (“. . . all church power . . . is only ministerial and declarative”).

The repeated assertion of a centuries-old trust is demonstrably false. The idea that the lands and wealth of deposed bishops of the English Roman Catholic Church were simply going to be handed over to a new centralized authority rewrites the history of the 16th Century reformation.

In fact, the PCUSA historically rejected a property trust. The Westminster Confession of Faith, which was “the” sole confessional document of American presbyterianism until 1967, demonstrates that the concept of a property trust is not an historic position within the denomination. The 1647 text of the Westminster Confession of Faith (still in effect today) states:

Nor doth their communion one with another as saints, take away, or infringe the title or property which each man hath in his goods and possessions. Book of Confessions, §C-6.148.

It is undisputed that no trust provisions were to be found in the constitution of any presbyterian denomination prior to the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision in Jones v. Wolf in 1979. The UPCUSA (May 23, 1981) and, later, the PCUS (1982) adopted markedly differing assertions of a property trust just before the 1983 reunion. They were the only “presbyterian” denominations to do so. The PC(USA) version became G-8.0201 after the 1983 reunion.

If such a trust “has always been part of the Presbyterian theology and practice,” there was no need for the General Assembly of the PCUSA to attempt to amend its constitution to include an express trust provision in the late 1920s. That attempt failed of ratification in the presbyteries, Minutes, 142nd General Assembly at 54-55, 59 (1930). So, as late as 75 years ago, the historical record affirmatively confirms that in the American presbyterian church, the presbyteries wanted no part of a property trust.

The trust provision proposed by the 141st General Assembly (1929) and rejected by the presbyteries declared

Each particular church shall cause a corporation to be formed and maintained under the laws of the state where it is located, so as to enable it to receive, hold, and transfer property and to facilitate the management of its temporal affairs. The charter or articles of incorporation shall declare that its property is held in trust under the constitution of and for the Presbyterian Church in the United States of America.

It is interesting to note that this “trust” provision was mandatory, placing the onus on the congregations and corporations to take some affirmative action to create the trust (“[t]he charter or articles of incorporation shall declare. . .”)(emphasis added).

A comparison of the 1930 and 1980 proposals is telling. The 1930 proposal required individual congregations to affirmatively act to place their property in trust for the denomination. The 1980 amendment (now G-8.0201, et seq.) simply and unilaterally asserted the existence of an aspirational trust, that is, the hope that congregations would see fit to place their property in trust. It did not take the necessary step of obtaining some assignment of an interest in local property.

The idea that a trust provision adopted by an entity that had no existing interest in property could unilaterally impress a trust upon property purchased prior to the adoption of the constitutional amendment has been recently rejected.

"In the first instance, we note that a member of a voluntary association is bound by the amendments to the association’s rules so long as the amendments (1) are duly enacted; and (2) do not deprive the member of vested property rights without the member’s explicit consent." In re: Church of St. James the Less, 888 A.2d 795, 807-808 (Pa. 2006).

Accordingly, having stated its desired result (a trust), it was incumbent upon the PC(USA) and its presbyteries to complete the process. They should have obtained from the individual corporations trust deeds or other instruments manifesting their respective intent to transfer their property into a trust for the benefit of the PC(USA). Until that event occurred, the property remained the sole property of the congregation/corporation holding title to it.

“On Dasher, on Dancer……..”

28 April 2008

TO ARMS! TO ARMS! GA IS COMING!

In June 2006, the General Assembly of the PC(USA) voted to approve the controversial Report of the Task Force on the Peace, Unity and Purity of the Church. It also “received” a report on the Trinity. Taken together, these reports revealed a disconnect between many members in the pews and the national leadership of the denomination.

Many evangelical, orthodox members of the PC(USA) were appalled by the continuing shift away from orthodoxy. The family of renewal organizations within the PC(USA) voiced strong concern. One, the New Wineskins Association of Churches (NWAC) took action, appointing a National Strategy Team with a commission to examine a myriad of theological, Biblical, congregational, historic and legal issues that faced churches affiliated with the PC(USA).

When the National Strategy Team submitted its Report in February 2007, it concluded that Biblically-faithful congregations in the PC(USA) had two options.

● Those called by God to do so should remain in the denomination and work for the renewal and reformation of a flawed and straying denomination.

● Those called by God to do so should leave the PC(USA) and take up the work He ordained for them in a new part of His vineyard.

Starting in the Summer of 2006, at least 60 congregations, with 30,020 members began to take steps to leave the PC(USA), either by dismissal or disaffiliation. When the Evangelical Presbyterian Church created a non-geographic transitional presbytery to offer safe harbor to departing PC(USA) congregations, many of those who were departing moved to the EPC. After the Report was published, 44 congregations (24,662 members) moved to either the New Wineskins Presbytery of the EPC (currently 29 congregations and 21,532 members), to geographic presbyteries of the EPC, or to other Reformed bodies.

The churches that have left have followed two paths. Some have requested that their presbyteries dismiss them in accordance with the exclusive authority granted to presbyteries by §G-11.0103i of the Book of Order. Others have exercised their permissive powers (§G-7.0304a(5)) and have simply disaffiliated from the PC(USA). Those churches who have clear title to their property have taken their property with them. At least 5 in states whose law favors the denomination have simply walked away from their property to form new congregations.

In response to these losses, national leadership in Louisville has scrambled to delay departures until it can fix its poorly written, ambiguous Book of Order. The goal is clearly to coerce congregations to stay in the PC(USA) under threat of loss of property or litigation. The tactics follow this scheme:

1. Beginning in late November 2007, the Stated Clerk of the PC(USA) began looking for a presbytery that would forward an overture to the 2008 GA, seeking to sever the PC(USA)’s correspondence with the EPC. Why? Because it would offer a parliamentary ploy that would allow presbyteries to refuse to dismiss congregations to the EPC. Presbytery of South Louisiana considered and rejected such an overture, but Peace River Presbytery came through for Louisville and forwarded such an overture.

[Technically, Peace River’s overture did not ask for severance of correspondence. Rather, it asked that the GA send a request to the World Alliance of Reformed Churches (WARC) for investigation of whether the EPC was “recruiting” PC(USA) churches. Clif Kirkpatrick, the out-going Stated Clerk of the PC(USA), just happens to be the president of WARC.]

2. In presbyteries that allowed congregations to leave with their property (with or without payment of a ransom), a tiny minority of disgruntled commissioners were encouraged to delay the dismissal by appealing the presbytery’s action to the synod. This was the procedure followed in Synod of the Pacific when Presbytery of Sacramento approved monetary settlements with Fair Oaks Presbyterian Church and First Presbyterian Church of Roseville. Redstone Presbytery (southwestern Pennsylvania) has seen a similar appeal of its overwhelming dismissal of St Paul’s in Sommerset.

3. Finally, exercising what one astute blogger has called the “nuclear option,” the Synod of the Sun has installed an Administrative Commission to exercise original jurisdiction over the Presbytery of South Louisiana’s powers to dismiss churches with property. The AC is also empowered to inquire into other alleged discord and dissatisfaction within the presbytery and to report back to the synod. Presumably, the synod will then allow the AC to assume expanded original jurisdiction over the presbytery, the lack of constitutional authority to do so notwithstanding.

4. At the 2008 GA, a completely re-written Form of Government (FOG) will be presented. Although a number of presbyteries have sent overtures asking the GA to merely receive the proposal and to then send it to the presbyteries for two years of review and discernment, I am betting that Louisville will engineer a quick referral to the presbyteries for ratification. Why? Because the new (FOG) makes several changes that inure to Louisville’s game plan. The reference in the current Book of Order to “permissive powers of the congregation” have quietly disappeared. Moreover, in an ambiguously written revision, it appears that payment of per capita by congregations can be enforced.

The usurpation of the constitutionally delegated power of a presbytery’s functions with respect to property is particularly troubling. It clearly evidences a disdain for the constitution and an intent to maintain the status quo until the GA acts in June.

Churches that want to leave the PC(USA) with their property had better act quickly. They can no longer trust that the constitution means anything to those people in Louisville. More and more, disaffiliation appears to be the only constitutionally permissible means of severing a congregation’s voluntary affiliation with the PC(USA).

Corrected 4/30/2008

26 April 2008

LET IT BEGIN HERE

In the early morning hours of an April day nearly two and a quarter centuries ago, a confrontation between the most powerful temporal kingdom on earth and small group of its citizens loomed. These Englishmen (for that they would remain for a few more minutes) were accused of the most heinous of crimes: they demanded their rights as citizens under the unwritten constitution of the British Empire. The King's representative in Boston had ordered his troops to squelch the increasingly bothersome assertion of rights that threatened the peace, unity and purity of his royal dominions in New England.

I can imagine those "Minute Men," perhaps shivering from the combined effects of the cool spring morning and the measured tramp of boots marching to the cadence of fifes and drums. Then Captain Parker issued his famous order.

"Stand your ground. Do not fire unless fired upon. But if they mean to have war, let it begin here."

The rest is, as they say, history.

In 2006, a congregation in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, had the temerity to challenge the improper assertion by the PC(USA) of a right to control the property purchased and maintained by and in the name of the congregation alone. The Presbytery of South Louisiana (PSL), recognizing that the congregation had the moral and legal high ground, decided to avoid unnecessary and probably unsuccessful litigation and conceded that the congregation owned its property free and clear of any so-called property trust contained in the Book of Order.

Shortly thereafter, the Synod of the Sun appointed an Administrative Review Commission (ARC) to determine whether PSL had acted properly. The PC(USA) sent one of its officers (and one of the authors of the infamous "Louisville Papers") to sit with the ARC as a "resource." To the surprise of no one, the ARC took the Louisville position. In a remarkable declaration, the ARC found that by exercising powers delegated to it by the Book of Order, PSL had destroyed "presbyterian connectionalism." In effect, the ARC decided that in the PC(USA) "connectionalism" had a single element: property and the coercive power over property to be used to command obedience to denominational control.

Yesterday, history repeated itself. As so many of us are aware, for several years now the Stated Clerk of the PC(USA) has begun to imagine himself the king of the denomination. The General Assembly (disregarding a vocal minority) has taken positions that are an affront to the "citizens" of the PC(USA) (Pete and Patty in the pews). It has ignored the constitution, failing to enforce it when violations occur and asserting rights and limitations thereunder that do not exist.

One is tempted to compare this change with Julius Caesar's change of a Roman Republic into an Empire with himself as the Emporer. Suddenly, a representative General Assembly, which had been created in Philadelphia in 1787-89 and modeled on the federal system of the Constitution of the United States at the same place and time, was in danger of becoming the mouthpiece of a new episcopal denomination with a single Pope at its helm.

To enforce the Louisville plan, the Synod of the Sun has now assumed original jurisdiction over the PSL, at least with regard to property resolution matters. The AC is empowered to act as follows:


ADMINISTRATIVE COMMISSION FOR PRESBYTERY OF SOUTH LOUISIANA

(approved by the executive Committee of the Synod of the Sun on 04/24/08 and adopted by the plenary on 04/25/08)

In response to the April 8, 2008, letter from pastors and elders in the Presbytery of South Louisiana to Synod Executive Fletcher and to the April 22, 2008, letter from the Council of the Presbytery of South Louisiana, the Synod of the Sun approves the establishment of an Administrative Commission under the general provisions of G-9.0500.

A commission is empowered to consider and conclude matters referred to it by a governing body. The appointing body shall state specifically the scope of power given to a commission. A commission shall keep a full record of its proceedings, which shall be submitted to its governing body to be incorporated in its minutes and to be regarded as the actions of the governing body itself. (G-9,00502)

The decision of an administrative commission shall be the action of the appointing governing body from the time of its completion by the commission and the announcement, where relevant, of the action to parties affected by it. Such decision shall be transmitted in writing to the stated clerk f the governing body, who shall report it to the governing body at its next meeting. A governing body may rescind or amend an action of an administrative commission in the same way actions of the governing body may be modified. (G-9.0505).

This commission, by the review of records and by whatever face-to-face conversations the commission deems helpful, shall determine the validity of the presbytery’s procedures and decisions (past, present, and future) regarding various congregations and their properties. All pending and future decisions regarding property in the Presbytery of South Louisiana shall require the approval of the commission. This commission also shall listen to other expressions of concern and/or dissatisfaction with presbytery leadership and make suggestions as to ways the presbytery can move toward a fuller expression of the ministry of Christ’s church.

This commission shall make either an “in progress” or a final report to the adjourned meeting of the Synod, October 24, 2008, and at each stated meeting thereafter until the work is completed.


It is chilling to note that the power to resolve property disputes is merely the camel's nose under the tent. "This commission also shall listen to other expressions of concern and/or dissatisfaction with presbytery leadership and make suggestions as to ways the presbytery can move toward a fuller expression of the ministry of Christ’s church." Thus, the ARC appears to be authorized to recommend to the Synod that it take on additional powers to punish leaders of the PSL who act in any way contrary to the desires of a small number of "pastors and elders" who have complained to the Synod.

So, what does this mean?

I suggest that it brings to an end the presumption in congregations, sessions, and presbyteries that the delegation of powers contained in the Book of Order still exist. Imperial Louisville intends to come down hard on any congregation that asserts its rights. Any presbytery that acts on its conscience and good judgment to apply the Book of Order in any way other than that demanded by Louisville will also be suppresssed.

Coupled with the scheme cooked up by Louisville to get a presbytery to make the unfounded allegation that the EPC is "recruiting" PC(USA) churches as a basis of referring the matter to the WARC (C. Kirkpatrick, propt) for a "fair investigation," this action by the Synod of the Sun signals that the Empire is striking back.

It is time for the minute men to assemble on the green. Congregations, protect your property from confiscation by immediately disaffiliating. If they mean to have war, let it begin here.

25 April 2008

SPINNING LIKE A TOP

It has been a very interesting seven weeks as the Democrats came to Pennsylvania for the primary. Six months ago, no one would have expected the game to still be in play by now, and with no reasonable expectation that either candidate will quit, the fun will continue until at least June.

I am intrigued by the pass that Clinton's campaign is apparently getting on misfilings with the Federal Elections Commission (FEC). On Monday, the day before the primary, we were told that while Hillary's campaign owed $10 million, it had some $9 million in the bank. She had lots of money and was still a viable and desired candidate. Wednesday, the media and the airwaves (I love XM Radio's POTUS 08 network!!!) were alive with Clinton mouthpieces extolling her ability to raise $2 million in just 24 hours, thus putting her back in the black.

Today we learn that because her campaign "mistakenly" put her $5 million loan to herself in the wrong block on the report to the FEC, she actually owes over $15 million. So much for financial viability and credibility.

Now, if anything is certain, it is that this campaign staff knows the ins and outs of campaign operation. I am confident that the information was placed where it was knowingly. Whether or not this constitutes a violation of federal campaign law remains to be seen, but no one can convince me that the folks running this campaign made such a bush league "mistake."

23 April 2008

“WHO ARE WE?”

As I contemplate the lethargy and placidity of the mainline protestant churches as they drift toward the rocks and shoals of secular humanism, my thoughts turn to a Kipling poem, "Et Dona Ferentes" — a phrase taken from the Aeneid:

“ timeo Danaos et dona ferentes” (“I fear Greeks and gift bearers.”)

Virgil's speaker was warning about the placid exterior of Greeks; Kipling was warning about the placidity of Englishmen.

Oh, my country, bless the training that from cot to castle runs—
The pitfall of the stranger but the bulwark of thy sons—
Measured speech and ordered action, sluggish soul and unperturbed,
Till we wake our Island-Devil—nowise cool for being curbed!

When the heir of all the ages “has the honour to remain,”
When he will not hear an insult, though men make it ne’er so plain,
When his lips are schooled to meekness, when his back is bowed to blows
Well the keen aas-vogels know it—well the waiting jackal knows.

Build on the flanks of Etna where the sullen smoke-puffs float—
Or bathe in tropic waters where the lean fin dogs the boat—
Cock the gun that is not loaded, cook the frozen dynamite—
But oh, beware my Country, when my Country grows polite!


Today, the guiding principle of many main line protestant denominations (UCC, PC(USA), ECUSA , et al.) is politeness rather than offending some non-believer. They want consensus, not Biblical orthodoxy. In all they do, they strive to be polite and to avoid offense. For them cultural and spiritual relativism is the preferred norm.

The great advantage of cultural and spiritual relativism is if all ideas and beliefs are equally valid, then argument is rendered impossible. There is no longer an agreed reality. But the relativists do not really apply a neutral standard. Rather, they demand that their agenda be accepted as the standard. It's a lot like playing a game with my nine year old, as he creates new rules and norms to stay ahead in the game.

For instance, in the world of the cultural and spiritual elites, tolerance is the ultimate goal. Oh, there are some things that even they will not tolerate, such as racial and sexual slurs or religious intolerance. Unless ...

Racial and sexual slurs (e.g., the despicable “N”-word) are to be rejected, except when rich young “performers” shower our children with the same slurs. Then it is a valid expression of a culture. Religious intolerance is to be despised, except when the intolerance is directed toward Israeli Jews and American evangelicals. The hypocrisy of the left is such that while it is acceptable for Hezbollah “freedom fighters” to target civilians, Israel may not defend itself.

To the moral relativists, it is acceptable for the world of Islam to subjugate women and make homosexuality a crime with a death sentence, but the Christian church must be totally blind to any differences between the sexes and accord total and complete recognition and benefits to those who engage in homosexual conduct.

In the PC(USA), for instance, civil law must be upheld—if it is Roe v. Wade. If the civil law seeks to properly and constitutionally protect our borders and control immigration, it is to be despised. The PC(USA) condemned Caterpillar for selling tractors to Israel, but sought out Palestinian leaders for photo ops. These were the same Islamic leaders who had encouraged their followers to rocket Israel and to turn themselves into human bombs to kill Jews. (Note: the PC(USA) later withdrew its boycott of Caterpillar, but not its apparent preference for the Hexbollah.)

“Who are we?”

The crux of the problem is that we have changed our identity—from a society who knew who we were Biblically, spiritually, and historically, into an amorphous mass that has no identification standards whatsoever. When someone self-identified as an American and a Christian, we knew who he or she was. Cultural and spiritual relativism strips the question of any legitimacy.

To quote Robert Heinlein’s character, Lazarus Long, “Spartan mothers used to tell their sons, ‘Come home carrying your shield, or on it.’ Later, that tradition died. So did Sparta.” Sparta as a society knew who it was, what it stood for, and what was needed to preserve it. There were standards of behavior, standards of conduct, and a common belief of what was right and wrong.

Until the early Twentieth Century, the protestant Church in America had certain common standards. Christ was the Son of God, fully human and fully divine. His death on the cross atoned for the sin of believers. He died, was buried, descended into Hell, and was then bodily resurrected from the dead.

While non-believers were free to practice their non-belief, we did not feel compelled to acknowledge that their beliefs were equally correct. The growing belief that “What is good for me is all that matters” or “If it feels good, do it” were to be criticized and our children were to be brought up secure in the Good news of Jesus Christ as the one savior of mankind. It was taught and reinforced from the cradle, and sustained by the broader institutions of society.

But then the West's elites began to reject the virtues of their own civilization and religious history. Religious belief was no longer worth the effort of standing firm. Our American culture, we were told, was no longer worth fighting and dying for. Starting in the 1960s, our youth were raised to believe in nothing but their own advancement and desires. There was no “right” and “wrong.” Every belief and standard was equally acceptable.

As a result of our moral confusion, we have lost our self-confidence and sense of moral honesty. Civic virtue is no longer the norm for our secular leaders and Biblical orthodoxy is no longer the norm of many of the main-line denominations. We reject and disdain controversy and real debate. In a world of “gotcha” politics, candidates are penalized for being too candid. In a society that prizes evasion and self-introspection as its supreme values, confrontation in the arena of ideas will not be tolerated for fear of giving offense.

As a result of the new call in the PC(USA) for discernment and forbearance, consensus and compromise, the greatest sin of which one can be guilty is not saying the right thing but of taking a stand and advocating for it. It is the Rodney King standard: “Can’t we all just get along?” We are called upon to be always "polite."

To be polite, we must acknowledge the equal validity of all sides of a question. To be polite, we must not challenge the propriety of the demands of proponents of one faction; to do so disturbs the peace, unity and purity of the denomination.” To call “wrong” wrong and “sin” sin is to be impolite.

The tipping point will come when Pat and Patty in the pews wake up. It will come when the passive middle feels threatened in a real and immediate way. They won't get there easily because they will twist and turn for some rationalization that will let them think things will get nice again without any effort on their part. For the PC(USA) it may be an amendment to the Book of Order changing the ordination standard, or an amendment making it mandatory that congregations affirmatively put their property in trust for the national church, or an amendment that makes payment of per capita mandatory.

Currently, the orthodox evangelicals make many of them uncomfortable by talking about fidelity to Scripture, the need to affirmatively state what it is we believe (in the form of declared essential tenets of the Reformed faith), and unpleasant issues such as abortion and homosexual marriage. They would prefer that the orthodox evangelicals just go away, or better yet, that they just shut up, stop rocking the boat, and validate a broad spectrum of beliefs and conduct.

There comes a time when we must take a stand. When we must choose obedience to and acceptance of the sovereignty of God over our own selfish desires. When we must call a spade a spade, no matter whom we may offend through our impoliteness.

Now is the time.

Oh, beware, my brethren when my brethren are polite.

19 April 2008

A RESPONSE TO ROBERT MERRILL, PNNE, PC(USA)

I am a sinner who finds it hard to resist temptation. I was in that very predicament after reading a series of comments posted by Reverend Robert Merrill of the PC(USA)'s Presbytery of Northern New England over at The Reformed Pastor (http://reformedpastor.wordpress.com/) at an April 16, 2008 post entitled "Memorial Park, Presbytery Settle."

I had resisted pretty well until Rev. Merrill’s last comment led me to take pen to paper—or bits and bytes to the electronic universe.

For the PC(USA),the strenuous attempts to coerce congregations into staying and to punish congregations that are called by the Master to labor in some other part of His Vineyard are founded in the so-called property trust of the PC(USA)’s Book of Order. It is interesting to note that the PC(USA) is the only presbyterian denomination that asserts such a claim. Mr. Merrill and his cohorts at PNNE are dancing to Louisville’s tune.

He says:

In the case of Memorial, Presbytery owned the property. Always did, going back a 100 or so years varing (sic) rendetions (sic) of the BO, and it was strongly implied even before this. This was the northern practice. This is not “ransom” it is the purchase of a piece of property from one owner to new owner. The presbytery had every right to sell or not sell for a price of their own choosing. Is this not the same when you sell your own home?

If Mr. Merrill speaks for PNNE, then the members of the churches in that presbytery ought to be shaken to their roots. He claims a unilateral and unfettered right of the presbytery to sell any church’s property at any time for any reason.

Happily, he is wrong as a matter of PC(USA) polity and of the law of many States and Commonwealths.

The statement above is full of rampant error and wishful thinking.

First and foremost, Chapter VIII of the Book of Order has never claimed that a Presbytery “owns” the property of a member church. Rather, the Book of Order acknowledges that most churches hold title to their property in fee simple. Chapter VIII states as its aspiration, that the congregation holds that property “nonetheless” in trust for the national denomination, not the Presbytery.

Because of fatal defects in Chapter VIII, the trust alleged is aspirational only, unless the owner of the property (the local congregation) has taken affirmative steps to place that property in trust for the national denomination.

The claim that a trust has existed for a hundred or more years is false. The so-called trust is a modern creation, dating from May 23, 1981 when the Form of Government of the United Presbyterian Church in the United States of America (UPCUSA) was amended by adding the language that is now Section G-8.0202 of the Book of Order of the PC(USA). While the denominational bureaucracy, probably in recognition of the unenforceability of the so-called trust, has adopted the big lie principle, all the talk in the world cannot unilaterally convert the wishes and dreams of Louisville into an enforceable reality. (The “big lie” principle is simply stated "If you tell a lie long enough and loud enough, the people will come to believe it is true." It is frequently resorted to by tyrants and despots.)

The assertion of a long-standing “property trust” is also belied by the modern judicial record. If such a trust “has always been part of the Presbyterian theology and practice,” there was no need for the General Assembly of the PCUSA to attempt to amend its constitution to include an express trust provision in the late 1920s. That attempt failed of ratification in the presbyteries, Minutes, 142nd General Assembly at 54-55, 59 (1930); accord, Presbytery of Beaver-Butler v. Middlesex, 489 A.2d at 1325. So, as late as 75 years ago, the historical record affirmatively confirms that in the American presbyterian church, the presbyteries wanted no part of a property trust.

The trust provision proposed by the 141st General Assembly (1929) declared

Each particular church shall cause a corporation to be formed and maintained under the laws of the state where it is located, so as to enable it to receive, hold, and transfer property and to facilitate the management of its temporal affairs. The charter or articles of incorporation shall declare that its property is held in trust under the constitution of and for the Presbyterian Church in the United States of America.

This proposed amendment was rejected, having failed to receive the affirmative votes of a majority of the presbyteries. It is interesting to note that the “trust” provision was apparently mandatory, placing the onus on the congregations and corporations to take some affirmative action to create the trust (“[t]he charter or articles of incorporation shall declare. . .”).

A comparison of the 1930 and 1980 proposals is telling. The 1930 proposal required individual congregations to affirmatively act to place their property in trust for the denomination. The 1980 amendment (now G-8.0201, et seq.) simply and unilaterally asserted the existence of an aspirational trust. This may reflect a recollection by the UPCUSA that a demand to congregations that they place their property in trust would lead to another rejection of the proposed amendment.

As discussed below, it was the failure of the denomination to obtain the affirmative consent of the legal owners of the property, the church corporations, that led several courts to hold that no trust existed. See, e.g., Presbytery of Donegal v. Calhoun, 99 Pa. Cmwlth 300, 513 A. 2d 531 (1986); Presbytery of Donegal v. Wheatley, 99 Pa. Cmwlth 312, 513 A. 2d 538 (1986). See, also, First Presbyterian Church of Schenectady v. United Presbyterian Church, 62 N.Y.2d 110, 120-121, 476 N.Y.S.2d 86, 464 N.E.2d 454, cert. denied, 469 U.S. 1037, 105 S.Ct. 514, 83 L.Ed.2d 404 (1984).

Chapter VIII was adopted in an attempt to obtain some interest in property that the denomination had never before perfected. Inserted in response to Jones v. Wolf, 443 U.S. 595, 603 (1979), it seeks to impose constraints on the ability of churches to exercise their legal rights in their property for no reason other than to preserve an otherwise voluntary association of congregations. The idea that a trust provision could unilaterally impress a trust upon property purchased prior to the adoption of the constitutional amendment has been recently rejected by at least one court.

"In the first instance, we note that a member of a voluntary association is bound by the amendments to the association’s rules so long as the amendments (1) are duly enacted; and (2) do not deprive the member of vested property rights without the member’s explicit consent."In re: Church of St. James the Less, 888 A.2d 795, 807-808 (Pa. 2006) (citing, Leatherman v. Wolf, 240 Pa. 557, 564 (1913); Marshall v. Pilot’s Ass’n, 206 Pa. 182, 183 (1903)).

The so-called trust provision of §G-8.0200 cannot be said to be a perfected trust. With respect to property owned by a congregation or its corporation, “. . .a trust may be created by . . . a transfer inter vivos by a property owner to another person as trustee for one or more persons. . . .” Restatement Third, Trusts, § 10 (emphasis added). Thus, unless the owner of the property, the congregation, transfers the property into the trust, there is no trust. Neither the PC(USA) nor any of its presbyteries can do so because they are not the owners of the property.

Accordingly, having stated its desired result, it was incumbent upon the PC(USA) and its presbyteries to complete the process by obtaining from the individual corporations trust deeds or other instruments manifesting their respective intent to transfer their property into a trust for the benefit of the PC(USA). Id. at § 13. Until that event occurred, the property remained the sole property of the entity holding title to it. See, e.g., Presbytery of Donegal v. Calhoun, 99 Pa. Cmwlth 300, 513 A. 2d 531 (1986); Presbytery of Donegal v. Wheatley, 99 Pa. Cmwlth 312, 513 A. 2d 538 (1986). See, also, First Presbyterian Church of Schenectady v. United Presbyterian Church, 62 N.Y.2d 110, 120-121, 476 N.Y.S.2d 86, 464 N.E.2d 454, cert. den'd., 469 U.S. 1037, 105 S.Ct. 514, 83 L.Ed.2d 404 (1984) (“it is settled law that even though members of a local [church] belong to a hierarchical church, they may withdraw from the church and claim title to real and personal property, [held in the name of the local church,] provided that they have not previously ceded property to the denominational church”) (internal citations omitted).

In an attempt to defend Chapter VIII, the PC(USA) has recently invented the theory that the concept of a property trust has been a part of presbyterian theology and practice since the 16th Century. See, e.g., M. Tammen, Esquire and E. Granninger, Esquire, “Statement on church property, resources.” (“Real and personal property used by congregations and governing bodies of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) is held in trust for the whole church. This has been a basic precept of Presbyterianism (sic), grounded in the polity of the church, since its inception in the 16th Century.”) Presbyterian Outlook on line, 5/14/2007. In support of this proposition, it relies upon the post-Civil war case of Watson v. Jones, 80 U.S. (13 Wall.) 679 (1872)

Watson stands for no such broad proposition! The dispute arose out of the passions of the aftermath of the Civil War. A PCUSA congregation in Louisville, Kentucky experienced a significant division over the issue of ordination standards. The church (and its presbytery) split over the General Assembly’s addition of a standard that forbade ordination, and even church membership, to any person “found . . .guilty of voluntarily aiding the war of the rebellion [i.e., the Confederate States].” 80 U.S. at 690-691.

At the conclusion of the War, a majority of the session favored calling one particular pastor (McElroy), while a majority of the congregation favored another candidate. The majority of the session persisted in its extension of a call to McElroy. At the request of the majority of the congregation, the synod then formed a committee with power to call a congregational meeting for the purpose of electing additional ruling elders. Id. at 684-685.

The real issue in Watson was which trustees composed the board of trustees of the corporation? Which trustees were acting to faithfully carry out the will of the congregation that had elected them? “This case shows two contesting organizations, each asserting itself to be the true Walnut Street Church mentioned in the deed and charter. The question for decision, therefore, is strictly one of identity and of lawful organic succession.” 80 U.S. at 703.

Searching for guidance, the Court found that the best source of instruction in matters of presbyterian property was, not surprisingly, Scottish law. “The great field for litigation of this nature has undoubtedly been Scotland, the native home of the Presbyterian faith and form of government.” Id. at 703.

The Court then found that prior to 1813, there had been no settled rule by which church controversies, including property controversies were to be adjudged. It was only with the decision in Craigdallie v. Aikman, 2 Bligh, 529; 1 Dow., 1, that a principle was announced “which was at once recognized and has since been uniformly accepted as the true governing rule in all cases of this nature.” 80 U.S. at 704.

That property conveyed for the use of a society for purposes of religious worship, is a trust, which is to be enforced for the purpose of maintaining that religious worship for which the property was devoted, and the event of a schism (the deed making no provision for such case), its uses are to be enforced, not in behalf of a majority of the congregation, nor yet exclusively in behalf of the party adhering to the general body, but in favor of that part of the society adhering to and maintaining the original principles upon which it was founded.
Id. at 705.

In other words, there is a trust, but that trust runs to those members of the congregation who remain faithful to the purposes for which the congregation was originally created and the principles in force at the time of the creation of the congregation.

There are four points that become evident upon a detailed reading of Watson v. Jones:

1. The concept of a property trust in presbyterianism can be traced back only as far as 1813. The suggestion that it is an ancient or well-established principle is false.

2. To the extent that a trust exists, it exists in favor of the entity which originally purchased the property and its members who adhere to the religious doctrines and principles in force at the time that the property was purchased.

3. That in the event that a congregation splits over purely doctrinal matters, the civil courts must defer to the ecclesiastical courts on issues of doctrine.

4. Nonetheless, the civil courts retain jurisdiction with respect to issues that are purely civil, such as issues of corporate accountability and real property ownership.

As anyone who has taken the time to work through Watson v. Jones can attest, it is a convoluted and oft-times confusing exposition of the law. Nonetheless, the inclusion of ecclesiastical issues into what might otherwise be an easily decided civil matter caused some courts to have grave concerns. Thus, Jones v. Wolf.

The decision by both the UPCUSA and the PCUS to add property trust provisions to their respective constitutions was a direct response to the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision in Jones v. Wolf, 443 U.S. 595 (1979). It was in this decision that the Court adopted the “neutral principles” doctrine. See, Report of the Permanent Committee on Conservation of Property, Minutes, 192nd General Assembly of the UPCUSA at 104 (1980) (the addition of a new chapter unilaterally declaring the existence of a property trust [now chapter VIII of the Book of Order of the PC(USA)]”is prompted by, and in reliance upon . . .” Jones v. Wolf).

Jones v. Wolf is an elegant recognition that not all “church” disputes are doctrinal or ecclesiastical. In particular, it recognizes that the civil courts have an obligation to treat all corporations, even religious corporations, equally when the issues presented are susceptible to such equal treatment.

The primary advantages of the neutral-principles approach are that it is completely secular in operation, and yet flexible enough to accommodate all forms of religious organization and polity. The method relies exclusively on objective, well-established concepts of trust and property law familiar to lawyers and judges. It thereby promises to free civil courts completely from entanglement in questions of religious doctrine, polity, and practice. Furthermore, the neutral-principles analysis shares the peculiar genius of private-law systems in general – flexibility in ordering private rights and obligations to reflect the intentions of the parties.

443 U.S. at 603.

Accordingly, it is clear that until 1981, the “northern church” had specifically rejected the concept of a property trust. Additionally, the language of the 1929-30amendment demonstrates that the current Chapter VIII “trust” is purely aspirational. Unlike the amendment considered in 1929-30, the amended adopted by the UPCUSA in 1981 did not affirmatively require churches to place their property in trust for the national denomination.

Mr. Merrill continues

In the case of Londonderry, at least 1/3rd desired to maintain their evangelical witness within the PCUSA (sic). When the Presbytery sought to reach an agreement about the property, the EPC side would not talk. Since the EPC side had brought civil suit against the Presbytery, there was no choice but for the PCUSA (sic)congregation but to join in the countersuit.

The vote was 72% to 28% in favor of disaffiliation, closer to one-fourth than one-third. But even assuming that Mr. Merrill is correct, under PC(USA) polity that he so deeply loves, that one-third was insufficient to carry the day. The meeting at which the congregation exercised its permissive power (G-7.0304a(5)) in favor of disaffiliation, 294 members of the congregation, representing 66% of the active members on the rolls of the congregation at that time participated. That is 6.5 times the quorum for a congregational meeting mandated in the PC(USA)’s Book of Order.

Seventy-two percent of those present voted to disaffiliate. Under the Book of Order, incorporating as it does Roberts Rules of Order, that was nearly a third again the required vote to approve disaffiliation, Roberts providing for a simple majority of 50% plus one. The PC(USA) Book of Order is silent as to any other requirement for either a super quorum or a super majority, although a number of Presbyteries have attempted to unilaterally and unconstitutionally amend the Book of Order by adopting “dismissal” processes containing both super quora and super majorities.

Interestingly, although 82 members voted against disaffiliation, the group that planted the new PC(USA) congregation in Londonderry has only managed to average about 75 persons(including members, representatives of PNNE and guests) in attendance at Sunday worship in the 24 weeks after the September 30 vote. Thus, it appears that not even all the 82 members who voted in the negative saw fit to leave Londonderry Presbyterian Church when it was received into the EPC.

Mr. Merrill also objects to the decision of the trustees of LPC, Inc.to file a declaratory judgment action seeking a declaration of the respective rights of the corporation and the PC(USA) in the corporation’s property, as well as obtaining a temporary restraining order preventing PNNE from carrying into effect the scheme secretly created and distributed to Presbyteries by the PC(USA) which have come to be known (with a nod to Toby Brown) the “Louisville Papers.”

Mr. Merrill continues

Now isn’t all of this very disheartening? I find it so. When all is said and done, maybe $1,000,000 will be wasted by funding the livelihood of NH lawyers. Certainly they and the judge have better things to do. I know our Presbytery does and I imagine the EPC Londonderry congregation does as well.

Mr. Merrill’s concern about legal fees rings hollow. Both PNNE and the PC(USA) church plant in Londonderry have steadfastly refused to even consider settlement negotiations. On at least one occasion, when the judge (who Mr. Merrill states “has better things to do”) asked the parties to attempt to settle the matter, PNNE flatly refused to even consider such a resolution.

Finally, Reverend Merrill says

I should also add that at the time Londonderry “disaffiliated” the church was without a pastor (the EPC congregation still does not have a pastor). An interim of over two years had left three months prior. The Session decided not to call a new interim. The Presbytery appointed a moderator, a retired statesman/pastor who is a well-known evangelical in the PCUSA (sic). During his three months serving as moderator and ½ time pulpit supply, the Session met without his knowledge, hired attorneys, and progressed with their plans.

First, Mr. Merrill fails to state why LPC had been without a pastor for such a long time. PNNE refused to consider LPC’s CIF unless and until LPC affirmatively voted to stay within the PC(USA) and to affirmatively ratify the Chapter VIII trust. In the six and one-half months since the vote to disaffiliate, the church has moved steadily to the point that it will likely call a pastor before the middle of May, less than 9 months after it was received into the EPC.

Second, Mr. Merrill is once again flat out wrong when he says that in the three months prior to the disaffiliation vote, the Session met without his knowledge, hired attorneys, and progressed with their plans.”

In fact, the Session did not meet. It was the trustees of the New Hampshire corporation that met, the trustees of the New Hampshire corporation that retained counsel, and the trustees of the corporation that recommended to the Session that the Session call a congregational meeting on the issue of disaffiliation from the PC(USA). Thus, the only action taken by the “Session” was to call the meeting of the congregation.

Once again, under Roberts Rules of Order, the Session was well within its rights to do so. There was no objection by the congregation to the call of the meeting, or that the business to be considered was out of order. And had the interim pastor (who presided over the meeting) ruled the meeting or the subject matter thereof to be out of order, Roberts Rules provide for a member of the body to appeal that ruling to the body itself. Based on the results of the disaffiliation vote, it is highly likely that the appeal would have been granted and the meeting would have progressed.

Finally, Mr. Merrill states

The Presbytery did not become aware of the Session’s intentions until two weeks prior to the vote to “disaffiliate.” An AC was appointed to work with the Session to bring resolution to this crises. Before the AC could meet, either as a group or with the Session, the Session took the Presbytery to court. Ten or so days later on September 30, the congregation voted and about 71% approved disaffiliation. The AC never was given a chance to even speak with the Session until after the vote had been taken, and they immediately renounced jurisdiction. By that point the entire matter was taken out of the hands of the church (where it was never given a chance), and placed in the hands of a secular judgment.

Where to begin with the many misstatements contained in this paragraph?

First, once again, the Session did not take the Presbytery to court. The trustees of a New Hampshire corporation who held title to its property sought a declaratory judgment from a New Hampshire court regarding the respective interests in that property of the corporation and the Presbytery (as agent for the national denomination).

Second, on September 16, 2007, the Administrative Commission was invited to speak to a gathering of the congregation to lay out its position with respect to the desire of the congregation to disaffiliate and to answer any questions which the congregation might have. The Administrative Commission was also present at the congregational meeting to disaffiliate. In a brief, informal meeting prior to calling the congregational meeting to order, the moderator correctly observed that because the meeting was a congregational meeting, only members of the congregation would be permitted to speak, unless a question was directed to the representatives of the Presbytery, at which time they would be permitted to respond to that question. Only one such question was posed, and a representative of the Presbytery answered that question.

Furthermore, when a local mental health counselor who is an ordained minister of Word and Sacrament in the PC(USA) who had worshipped at LPC attempted to speak, the moderator correctly ruled that, as a member of the Presbytery, and not of the congregation, he was not entitled to speak as a matter of right. Upon appeal, the congregation voted to allow the individual to speak, and he did so for approximately two minutes. It should be noted that the same individual had spoken at great length during the September 16 gathering of the congregation and that that individual is now the pastor of the PC(USA) new church plant in Londonderry.

Perhaps the greatest and most glaring misstatement in Mr. Merrill’s comments is this:

The AC never was given a chance to even speak with the Session until after the vote had been taken, and they immediately renounced jurisdiction.

No such renunciation was either requested nor asserted at the meeting that followed the congregational meeting. When the Session, the Administrative Commission, and the corporation’s attorney (at the request of the trustees of the corporation) retired to a separate room to meet at the request of the AC, the chair of the Commission opened the very brief meeting with the comment that “Well, I don’t know where we go from here.” or words to that effect. It was clear to all present that the AC was stunned at the overwhelming vote of the congregation.

At no time were any members of the Session asked if they had renounced the jurisdiction of the PCUSA or the PNNE. Because the vote was taken by secret written ballot, there was no way for the AC to know how the various members of the Session had voted. I must reiterate: at no time during that meeting was the issue of renunciation ever raised by either side, and the word “renunciation” was never uttered in that meeting.

Finally, the complaint that the matter was placed in the hands “of a secular judge” points out that Mr. Merrill’s objections are unfounded. The issue in front of the court is one which even the PC(USA) concedes is a matter of state law. That is the core of the fear of Mr. Merrill and PNNE. They recognize that as soon as the Court finds, as a matter of New Hampshire law, that the property is owned by the corporation free and clear of the so-called Chapter VIII trust, they have no means whatsoever to coerce the congregation of LPC to remain within the PCUSA.

For PNNE and the PC(USA),this has never been about theology, Christology, the authority of Scripture, or any of the other subjects on which the PC(USA) refuses to take a stand. Rather, it is simply about the exercise of raw power through the coercive assertion of an unenforceable property trust. Mr. Merrill and those of his stripe recognize that they can no longer convince an orthodox, Scripturally faithful congregation of the orthodoxy of the PC(USA). Thus, they are forced to resort to coercion and the in terrorem effect of that trust.

07 April 2008

A MODEST PROPOSAL FOR THE NEW STATED CLERK

As the PC(USA) prepares to elect its first new Stated Clerk in a dozen years, more and more congregations are seeking to leave the denomination. For at least one-third of the current Stated Clerk's tenure, the New Wineskins Association of Churches has been an increasingly painful thorn in his side. As Rev. Kirkpatrick led the denomination along the path of least resistance and away from Scriptural faithfulness, NWAC became the first renewal group in a quarter of a century to propose and execute an action plan to respond to the serious infection within the PC(USA).

The response from the entrenched bureaucracy was to blame the messenger. When entire congregations opted to leave the PC(USA) for other parts of the vineyard, the bureaucrats refused to admit their culpability. Rather than concede that there were two faithful responses to the departure of the PC(USA) from the straight and narrow, they tried to blame the truly faithful.

As a result, the current Stated Clerk's administration appears to have engineered an overture that will ask the WARC to "investigate" unfounded allegations against the EPC. It is probably coincidental that Rev. Kirkpatrick is also the President of WARC. The presumed result will be a decision that allows the PC(USA) to sever correspondence with the EPC, giving presbyteries a basis to refuse to dismiss churches to the EPC.

In the meantime, the new Stated Clerk has a grand opportunity for witness and leadership. As his first act, he could ask the General Assembly to approve a season of departure. The GA could announce a request that all presbyteries dismiss any congregation, with property, so long as the request was made by a super-majority ( 67%) of the members at a meeting of the congregation called for that purpose. The season would last for one year, with the presumption that any congregation that did not request dismissal intended to ratify the so-called Chapter VIII property trust.

The question is whether the new Stated Clerk will be a leader or a follower?