Tuesday, July 10, 2012

So, How was General Assembly?


So, How was General Assembly?

As it happens, the question is not an easy one. I loved being in Pittsburgh, reliving fond memories while marveling at the transformations. I appreciated the opportunity to speak to representatives of our agencies – the Board of Pensions, the General Assembly Mission Council (now called the Presbyterian Mission Agency), The Presbyterian Committee on Congregational Song, the folks responsible for the new hymnal, Glory To God - and others involved in mission and witness. I got to see some old colleagues and truly enjoyed the fellowship of our commissioners. I even enjoyed reading (some of) the committee reports, and listening to (some of) their presentations during our plenary sessions. On balance, I think the decisions reached were probably best for a church still seeking to live out the promise and pitfalls of the new form of government. But I was also disappointed.

Almost before the Assembly began, there were opportunities lost; for pastoral sensitivity, and transparency; for open minds and open hearts; for a willingness to trust in the theology behind our polity. Far too many debates were derailed by parliamentary procedures intended to short circuit the process of discernment; far too much was heard from the same few people on the farthest fringes of our denomination, while the vast majority of were held hostage to their take no prisoners attitude.

In the end, I think the things which unite (most) of us Presbyterians are:

A deep and abiding love of Jesus Christ, and for the world

A true appreciation for doing things decently and in order, and

An almost visceral reaction to the extremes
which seek to either purge or re-imagine our denomination

I saw this at work within the delegation from Shenandoah Presbytery. While no one would ever accuse us of agreeing on much of anything, we were able to pray together, look after one another, talk – and listen – about divisive issues, then vote without fuss and bother. In the end, I think it safe to say we found ourselves in one accord: when it came to the anger and frustration, the parliamentary wrangling, and dire predictions about the future we all wished those folks had come from a Presbytery where people treat each other better than that.

Like ours.





Monday, July 9, 2012

The Elephant in the Convention Center


It’s now time to address perhaps the most controversial issue before the 220th General Assembly: the issue of same gender marriage. But first, a few obvious observations.

Context is profoundly important.

A conversation is a very different thing than a public speech, or a sermon. With a small group of friends (or even strangers), our style is more relaxed and we are able to make subtle points much more easily. Likewise, sermons preached to small congregations are much different than sermons to large groups; before a multitude, one must speak slowly and broadly, and certain subtleties are easily lost.

This is also true when it comes to the deliberations of councils within the church.

It is much easier to make subtle distinctions in the context of a Session meeting, where there is a built in reservoir of trust, and explanations are much easier to make and hear. At the general assembly level, there is no subtlety, and trust is often in short supply.

The Committee on Civil Union and Marriage Issues came to three important decisions in their deliberations. First of all, they recommended the rejection of so-called ‘relief of conscience’ overtures, designed to give Presbyterian ministers tacit permission to conduct same gender marriages in places where they are legal. Secondly, they recommended that presbyteries be directed to engage in a serious two-year study of the nature of Christian marriage; but in order to ensure that discussion would be undertaken with the diligence they believe is necessary, they made their third recommendation: that marriage be redefined in our Book of Order, from being a civil contract between a man and a woman to being between two persons.

Aimee Moiso, a teaching elder from San Jose Presbytery was the chair of the committee, and it was clear to me from her presentation that the committee’s intent in recommending this change to the Book of Order was to prompt a discussion – to provide for the largest possible forum in which the Holy Spirit might operate as the church seeks discernment about this issue. This would have been the functional equivalent of moving a proposal at a Session meeting, for the purpose of opening it up for discussion. But I’m afraid, in the cavernous expanse of Plenary, that subtle point was lost on many commissioners, and would almost certainly have been missed by most congregations, not to mention every media outlet in the country. As it turned out, the debate lasted for several hours before the assembly voted 338-308 against the committee proposal to change the constitution, agreeing instead to commend the two years study by itself.

This will be no easy task.

The culture around us is changing: more and more localities permit same gender marriage, while most churches do not. As evidenced by the tenor of debate at General Assembly, many Presbyterians have strong and deep convictions about the issue, and find the notion of dialogue and discernment almost nonsensical. Pastor to Pittsburgh Presbytery Sheldon Sorge has written, I believe our chances of exercising real spiritual discernment are much better when we’re seeking the Lord’s will not because we are arming for a vote, but simply because it’s what God calls us to do.


I pray he’s right.


It is Monday.



And I have entered and exited the fugue state that followed General Assembly to find you, my readers, are clamoring for an update.

Actually one person sent me a message on Facebook, 
but I’m running with it.

Many of the most critical decisions made by the 220th General Assembly were decided by the thinnest of margins. What does that mean, you might ask? Well, obviously, it means Presbyterians are not of one mind about anything, except perhaps that a mushroom mousse popover makes a lousy entrée. What I do not think it means is the church is divided into two camps; there was a lot more going than any liberal/conservative dichotomy explains.

Of course, it is just my luck that the Assembly’s most significant actions were clustered in the surrealistic marathon of Thursday and Friday; as you may have heard, after a full day Thursday, Friday at the Assembly began at 8:30 a.m., broke for worship, lunch and dinner - all at the convention center - and did not adjourn until around 1:45 a.m. Saturday. I will do my best to summarize the discussions and decisions taken; my apologies if I miss something.

First up: Divestment.
The Middle East Peacemaking Issues Committee proposed the PC(USA) become the first U.S. mainline Protestant denomination to divest from companies doing business with the State of Israel. Specifically, they recommended phased divestment from three corporations: Caterpillar, whose heavy equipment is used by the Israeli military to destroy Palestinian homes and livelihoods in the Occupied Territories; Hewlett-Packard, which sells communications, logistics and planning hardware used in the ongoing Israeli naval blockade of the Gaza Strip; and Motorola Solutions, which sells surveillance equipment used to protect Israeli settlements in Palestinian territory.
For eight years, we were told, The Mission Responsibility Through Investment  Committee (MRTI) used proxy votes, shareholder resolutions, and calls for dialogue to persuade these companies to limit non-peaceful uses of their products by the Israeli government and military, but to no avail. The proposal, which had the backing of the General Assembly Mission Council (GAMC), would have meant the selling of more than $17 million worth of stock by the Presbyterian Board of Pensions and Foundation – a lot of money to be sure, but just a tiny fraction of the Presbyterian Portfolio, and only .018% of CaterpIllar, .014% of HP, and .003% of Motorola Solutions. In addition, this divestment would be phased, meaning the vast majority of stock in the companies would be retained until it could be sold without losing value.
Believe me, the lobbying was intense.

People came from all over the world to influence this decision – Presbyterians; Palestinian Christians; Jews both for and against Divestment. And they were doing a lot more than singing out front: they were at breakfasts and other meals, in the exhibition hall and even in Plenary, engaging commissioners with arguments on both sides of the issue.
After the Committee’s presentation, several commissioners presented a minority report from the Middle East Committee based on an overture that had actually been approved by the Committee. Instead of combining divestment from the corporations with a strategy of investment in the West Bank and Gaza; the minority report replaced divestment with ‘creative engagement’ and investment. After much, much, much debate, the assembly voted by a vote of 333-331 (with two abstentions) to make the minority report the main proposal. And then there were still more hours of debate.

The arguments as I understand them break down this way: 


Divestment would demonstrate the church’s moral oppo­si­tion to the Israeli occupation; it would focus attention on how these corporations make money from the violence and injustice of the occupation;  and would demonstrate sup­port for the Pales­tin­ian Chris­tians and oth­ers seek­ing peace with jus­rice. Investment is fine, but what Palestinians really need is freedom.


Divestment would do nothing to change Israel's actions, and would unfairly stigmatize corporations who are doing legal business with a trusted ally, and which employ hundreds, maybe thousands of Presbyterians. It would remove the PC(USA) from the discussion with these corporations, alienate ecumenical partners, especially in the Jewish community, and would give political cover to extremists who deny Israel's right to exist.


Divestment, as described by MRTI, doesn't really make a clear statement, since it occurs over time, and is accomplished in such a way that our investment income is not adversely effected. As such it seems to be a hollow symbolic gesture, which may make some people feel better, but will do little to make things better. 


In the end, three statements may well have reframed the entire argument. First, Teaching Elder Sue Krummel of Great River Presbytery (and candidate for moderator) pointed this out:'


as Presbyterians, we know about divestment 
– we call it ‘Withholding Per Capita,’ and we know it doesn't work. 

Then, Teaching Elder Susan Andrews, Moderator of the 215th  General Assembly, truly surprised me. A well know liberal in the denomination, Rev. Andrews stated her opposition to divestment, advising the church to remember both the current suffering of Palestinians and the centuries of Christian persecution of Jews.

Finally, and perhaps most tellingly, the Stated Clerk warned the Assembly
that the last shuttle buses would be leaving soon for the hotels.

In the end, the vote was 369-290 (eight abstentions) to adopt the minority report calling for investment and not divestment. To his credit, Teaching Elder Jack Baca of San Diego Presbytery, moderator of the Middle East Committee, told reporters while it might seem there division in the church on this matter, in fact the assembly was unified in its desire for peace, security of Israel and independence for Palestinians. The apparent division was simply a matter of the best strategy that the church can pursue to help attain those goals.

Next up: Same Gender Marriage.

Saturday, July 7, 2012

You can pick your friends, but you can’t pick your family.




The next big issue from my Committee addressed the concept of Non-Geographic Presbyteries. 

Now, for those of you who need a bit of a refresher course in Presbyterian History (and who doesn’t need a little refreshment in weather like this?), almost as soon as the earliest Presbyterian congregations were formed in the American colonies, they organized themselves in geographical bodies: Presbyteries, and then Synods; General Assembly came a little later, as the most universal expression of American Presbyterianism. All the congregations in a locality were part of a Presbytery; all presbyteries in a region (later a state) were part of a Synod, and everybody was under the authority of the General Assembly, where each Presbytery had both voice and vote. It just made sense; in a world where both distances and hardships were greater, one coveted the support of neighboring congregations.

As the  nation grew, and immigrants began to stream in from the four corners of the world, Presbyterians recognized the difficulties of assimilation; as early as the 19th century Hungarians were joined together in one presbytery – as safe place for the first generation to worship, and begin the process of becoming American Presbyterians. Such Presbyteries were based, not on geography, but on language, and culture, and ended up being a transitional step in their integration into the life and work of the Presbyterian Church. Of course, the unity of language and culture had a price; often congregations were located too far from one another to enjoy true fellowship. Immigrants still stream into the United States; language and culture differences still pose a barrier to fellowship and representation in the church. We still have non-geographic presbyteries, for the same reasons – and with the same shortcomings.

Of course, the world has changed.  Distance is no longer the barrier it once; through telephone, e-mail, text, Facebook®, Twitter® and Skype,® the question who is my neighbor? has taken on a global dimension. We can be present in many ways with people in every corner of the world; we make connections with sisters and brothers we may never meet face to face. 

The issue at hand was not whether or not the church should take advantage of technology and social media to expand or transform our ministry; the issue was whether to expand our understanding of connection in such a way as to replace proximity with interest; specifically to extend the use of non-geographic presbyteries beyond language and culture, to what was termed particular missional purposes. 

The Mid Council Commission was clear in its report that it did not consider the theological implications of allowing churches to align themselves in novel ways; as a matter of fact, they were enthusiastic about what they saw as an opportunity for experimentation – for imaginative new initiatives, for thinking outside the box, seeking to adjust rapidly to a rapidly changing world. But for me, at least two questions arose:

Where do one turn when a church burns,
or a hurricane blows it away, or a pastor is murdered,
or any of the myriad bad things that can happen in this world
happen to one's congregation?

And

What exactly IS a particular missional purpose?

I happen to think both are serious questions, but it was the second with which many wrestled, both in our committee and in Plenary; like so many other Presbyterian concepts, it was left open for interpretation. From what I gathered, a missional purpose could be a passion for service to the urban homeless; it could be the call to minister to the aging in the community; but it could also be a desire to do as we will, free from the interference of all those stubborn, pigheaded, sinful *insert label here* in my geographic presbytery.

Although a tempting notion, especially when things are tough
and one’s voice seem to be ignored or ridiculed,
in the end, it just isn’t Presbyterian.

In his remarks at the Pittsburgh Theological Seminary Luncheon, Dr. Edwin Chr. van Driel, assistant professor of theology, contrasted the church is his native Netherlands with the American church. He recounted the unique experience of arriving here and having to choose, for the first time, where he would worship. In the Netherlands, one’s membership is a geographic parish; when one moves, so does one’s membership – into the local parish to which you have moved. Without entering into a discussion of the merits such an ecclesiastical model, I was struck by this statement by Dr. van Driel:

The church is not a voluntary organization.

We may think it was we who decided which church was right for us; we who decided to become part of the family of God; we who decide to serve; but that is just not so. God called out of darkness into light; God forgave us and commissioned us to follow His Son; God made us into his family; and it is as a family that we must wrestle with even the most painful, divisive subjects, loving the stubborn, pigheaded, sinful people around us, because God loves them just as much as He loves the stubborn, pigheaded, sinful person that IS us.


A note about Friday: The Assembly began it's work at 8:30 a.m. Friday and concluded around 1:30 a.m. Saturday. It's going to to take some time to process all the actions, so look forward to another entry as soon as I am able.


Friday, July 6, 2012

I think I am experiencing what is known as ‘hitting the wall.’


Enforced extroversion is taking its toll, and the weight of the denomination’s concerns would have my head spinning, if the muscles in my neck weren’t keeping a vise-like grip on my brain pan.

So, how are you?

Seriously, we’ve gone through a crush of business here on Thursday, including, but not limited to, General Assembly Procedures, Mission Coordination, Church Polity, Social, Justice and the Board of Pensions, Presbyterian Publishing Corporation and the Presbyterian Foundation.This morning, my Committee was on the clock. Committee 5, Middle Councils, dealt with a variety of issues, most of which were not controversial, like churches transferring from one presbytery to another. There were a few issues of some particular interest, though. Let's look at one.  

The first controversial item was what to do with Synods?

The Report of the Middle Council Commission had an answer: scrap them. Their recommendation was to eliminate the synod as a council of the church (what we used to call a Governing Body) and reserve their necessary ecclesiastical functions to a series of regional Administrative Commissions – leaving presbyteries free to form mission cooperatives in whatever direction their collective hearts desire. At first reading, this was quite appealing to me; my opinion about synods is much like Rick’s opinion of Ugarte, if you catch my meaning. But there were a lot of unanswered questions in their recommendation – the kind of constitutional holes that drive clerks crazy, and end up making the congregations and presbyteries suffer. Then we heard from a lot of people how much they love their synod, how vital and active they are, how mission-minded and helpful they are, how clean and bright and beautiful all synods could be. We found ourselves on the horns of a dilemma: take the word of the Mid Council Commission, who undertook one of the most thorough surveys ever of our denomination, or heed the experience of so many (both on our committee and in open hearing) who weren’t asked what they thought.

My head still hurts.

In the end, Committee 5 recommended not eliminating synods, but reducing their number, recommending a Task Force to figure out how best to accomplish this. And then the Assembly got hold of it, deciding to simply refer the matter without recommendation to a new task force, to figure out just what to do about Synods – whether to scrap them, reduce their number, or perhaps reduce their mandates, giving them more flexibility to thrive where they are strong, and retract where they are not.

Thursday, July 5, 2012

I woke up this morning with a Presbyterian hangover.



No, not that kind.

But if the lobby of the William Penn last night was any indication, a lot of Presbyterians were ‘blowing off steam,’ as one overheard commissioner put it. The Tap Room was full; the noise level high, the message unclear.

At the Pittsburgh Seminary lunch yesterday, I sat next to a fellow alum many years removed from my time there. She recalled a visit to the Allegheny County Jail as a part of the Church and Society Requirement, and how her classmates got into such a heated argument that the inmates tried to mediate.

We had Baccalaureate and Commencement on the same day…
because we couldn’t stand to be with other.

When asked from whence this ambivalence came, she suggested the seminary had emphasized diversity in admissions that year.

We had the youngest student ever admitted, and one of the oldest;
the most liberal and the most conservative;
the most devoted to gender equality, and the most chauvinistic…

and so on.

Now, that’s just her story, and I know for a fact that there a lot of Methodists at Pittsburgh Seminary these days; but even so, I think this describes a worrying undercurrent in our church,  one which has erupted in a place almost no one would have imagined: the election of a Vice Moderator – a position that I would be willing to bet few commissioners could describe, about which even fewer would profess to care.

The Belhar Confession of Faith will now be commended to the Presbyteries again for inclusion in the Book of Confessions. It’s overarching theme is unity:

…unity is, therefore, both a gift and an obligation for the church of Jesus Christ;
that through the working of God's Spirit it is a binding force,
yet simultaneously a reality which must be earnestly pursued and sought:
one which the people of God must continually be built up to attain…

Therefore, we reject any doctrinewhich denies
that a refusal earnestly to pursue this visible unity
as a priceless gift is sin…

Now, without making any suggestions about the advisability of asking our presbyteries to vote a second time on this document, I would suggest we all prayerfully consider this line from the confession:

that this unity can be established only in freedom and not under constraint…

At what point does working toward unity and reconciliation become the seeking of tactical advantage in an all or nothing fight? Are we seeking the Peace, Unity and Purity of the Church, or fighting over who will control the wreckage of this once great denomination?

These are some of the questions we really need to answer for ourselves.




So. It’s the Fourth of July, and the fireworks started early here in Pittsburgh.




OK, so that was too easy, but Holy Cow.

I ducked out of our ‘picnic’ dinner here at the David Lawrence Convention Center to begin the process of interpreting today’s Plenary Sessions here at General Assembly – that is the extraordinary commitment I have to you, my faithful (if only imaginary) readers.

You’re welcome.

As the more tech savvy of you may already know, the big news of Wednesday’s first Plenary was the resignation of the Vice Moderator Tara Spuhler McCabe. While this came as a surprise to many – there were audible gasps and cries of protest – it was apparently decided sometime yesterday and was kept under wraps to the point that the Committee on the General Assembly was blindsided by the announcement. It does seem that some people were apprised in plenty of time to prepare statements which hit the twitterverse and the blogosphere almost immediately. For example, the full text of her speech before the GA can be found at 218 GA Moderator Bruce Reyes Chow’s blog, http://www.patheos.com/blogs/breyeschow/.

I am afraid this is an example of just how serious the disconnect is between good and faithful servants of God in the Presbyterian Church (USA). One side simply cannot understand how one could even consider turning one’s back on the time-honored interpretation of Scripture and historic witness of the church to preside over a same gender marriage in the church; the other cannot understand how one could turn one’s back on children of God entrusted to their care as they seek His blessing on their love.

And here we are, in the same very large room, 
talking right past each other.

Rev. McCabe defended her decision to preside over a same-gender marriage as a pastoral decision. She said,  I think I’m embodying the reality of a growing number of pastors who find ourselves caught. We are caught between being pastors –being with couples in those sacred moments when they make their vows to one another…and having a polity that restricts us from living out our pastoral calling – especially in states where it is legal for everyone to be married. The tension over this is real, and clearly the energy and passion of this issue runs deep – and isn’t going away…

The tension is real – and talking like this won’t make it go away.

Now friends, I voted for Rev. McCabe. As the choice of the Moderator, I thought it was the right thing to do; I voted for the new Vice Moderator Candidate, The Rev. Dr. Tom Trinidad, for the same reason. I don’t know Rev. McCabe (or Dr. Trinidad, for that matter), but I have no doubt that she is a fine pastor and would have served ably and well as Vice Moderator. And I am all about God being the Lord of the Conscience - as Christians, as Presbyterians and as Elders.

But there’s this thing that bothers me about what’s happened.

As Presbyterians and especially as Elders, we agree to bind our consciences in a variety of ways – including abiding by the disciplines of the church, and being held accountable for our actions. If there is a tension, it seems to me that one resolves it not through defiance, but through overture, as will be done here at GA. I have to say; I do not believe civil disobedience is an acceptable strategy in the church. We pray; we study; we petition; we pray; we advocate; we pray; we vote; we pray; we respectfully disagree; we pray; and if necessary, we graciously withdraw, praying all the while.
  
The choice to act may have been a pastoral decision, but it wasn’t the only pastoral decision; and to suggest that it was deeply offends many of our brothers and sisters in Christ, who are trying to deal with the same tension in a way that honors their Call.

This is not to say they are all are trying very hard, 
or dealing with it very well. 

In her resignation, the Rev. McCabe made reference to pervasive poisonous activity directed at both GA and the Moderator in the wake of her election, and  unhelpful and frankly divisive blog and twitter comments which she suggested have been growing since Saturday. While I was unable to find such comments, I’m sure many people have expressed varying degrees of dissatisfaction, frustration and even rancor about the issues surrounding her election - both in conversation and in the ether. Let me be clear: If the accusations are true, some of the people opposed to Rev. McCabe’s election have also violated their ordination vows by betraying the Peace, Unity and Purity of the Church, through rumor, invective and disrespect.


Whenever and wherever such expressions cross the line 
from respectful disagreement into something dark and ugly, 
that is wrong, and awful, and not to be borne.


I couldn’t help but see a certain irony in the liturgy to commission our Young Adult Volunteers and Missionaries, where we proclaimed and called upon our essential unity as Christians. If there is an essential unity, and I believe there truly is, I think we better start trying to find it.

Or maybe we should just hush up, and let it find us.




Tuesday, July 3, 2012

Tuesday at the Assembly


I have just returned from dinner with the Presbytery Cohort up on Mt. Washington or Mahnt Worshington, as my grandfather used to say, and he should have known- he was born up there. Its probably just as well that I was late and had to walk all the way from the convention center; the day made for some reservoirs of nervous energy.




Today was devoted to Committee work, which is like the mortar which holds the bricks and stones of the Assembly together. Of course, if you've ever seen my masonry work, you know that some people are better with mortar than are others; so, too it is with committee work.

Alas.

I commend the leadership of Mid Council Committee Teaching Elder Larry Hayward and Ruling Elder Ariel Mink. They did a very good job helping us get comfortable with each other and with the process. Our Presbytery neighbor Carson Rhyne likewise did an excellent job as our parliamentarian, and the GA staff were helpful and accommodating. In particular, our moderator did his level best to keep us moving through the decision- making process. Nevertheless, I found myself frustrated early on, not with the direction of the debate, but rather with the clumsy use of parliamentary procedure - both by YAADS ( that's Young Adult Advisory Delegates, for those scoring at home) and by Elder Commissioners, at least some of whom should know better.

Some lessons learned by experience:

First, dont be in a rush to make a substitute motion.

I think it is important to actually discuss a motion before suggesting a substitute. Often, the discussion will help clarify exactly how best to accomplish the change one wants to make.

Second, dont be in a rush to Call the Question.

I know how easy it is to tire of endless pro and con comments, but I have learned from experience people feel better about a decision, whatever it turns out to be, if they have had the opportunity to have their say. Sometimes, its the last person to speak who has been thinking the longest, and may have the crucial insight.

Finally, dont take yourself too seriously.

Our committee was able to get past some of the tense times because the moderator gave us permission to laugh not explicitly, but by laughing at himself, and allowing us to find the humor in our own anxiety.


In the end, our Committees recommendations wont please everyone; Im sure the Mid Council Commission thinks we blinked when faced with their exciting new future of experiments and bold initiatives; a few presbyteries are going to be annoyed we recommended their boundaries change to accommodate their requests to move churches from one to another; I understand even members of the Committee are planning to submit a Minority Report. As for me, I can attest that we did our work decently and in order, and that our deliberations were fair and thorough. It is up to the Holy Spirit, working through the Plenary Sessions, to make of it what is needed for our church.

Monday, July 2, 2012

Some thoughts on Sunday...


The Plenary Session Sunday afternoon began with considerably less energy than did the first session. No doubt, this was due, in part, to the rather low-key nature of the business at hand; the fact that commissioners were still rolling in after the GA worship invasion of Pittsburgh was also a factor. On a personal note, I was privileged to worship with Friendship Community Presbyterian Church, a fascinating multi-cultural congregation which for fifty years has been ministering to the  neighborhoods beyond the University of Pittsburgh in West Oakland.



Thanks, Friendship!

Our primary item of business in Plenary was the election of the Stated Clerk, where, for the first time since reunion in 1983, there was only one nominee: the current Clerk, Gradye Parsons. On his good days, I’m sure Rev. Parsons is gratified that, after four years on the job, the church appreciated his energy, intelligence, imagination and love enough to endorse a second term without opposition. On his bad days, I wonder if he looks at the state of the denomination and understands why no one else wants  his job. At any rate, he was given a glowing introduction by the nominating committee, and elected by acclamation, after which he was given, of all things a pair of binoculars.

It will be interesting to see if he uses them during Wednesday’s Plenary.



The other item taken up was the election of the Vice Moderator, which requires a bit of explaining to the uninitiated.  When someone stands for Moderator (no one runs for Moderator, as it is considered unseemly to chase after the office), they announce in advance their choice for Vice Moderator. Thus, the two stand as a sort of ticket, in contrast, say, to a system where the candidate with the most votes becomes Moderator, while the candidate with the second highest tally is Vice Moderator. However, unlike every other system with which you might be familiar, the Vice Moderator is not elected by the vote for Moderator; they must be elected in a separate action, in which the moderator asks the Assembly to ratify their choice, and the Assembly does. Usually.

This year was a bit different.

As mentioned in a previous blog post, the Vice Moderator Candidate, the Rev. Tara Spuhler McCabe created some controversy when it was revealed that, while Associate Pastor at New York Avenue Presbyterian Church, she had signed a marriage certificate for a same-gender couple. While same-gender marriage is now legal in the District of Columbia, such an  action is generally understood to be contrary to the Constitution of the PC(USA).

Prior to the vote, a commissioner asked the question, can we vote no – that is, can we not ratify the choice of the new Moderator? The answer, proffered by Shenandoah Presbytery’s own Tom Hay (acting as Clerk for this session) was, to paraphrase, of course; we actually have a procedure for when the Assembly says no: basically, the moderator tries again, picking another commissioner, and asking the Assembly to accept them.

Then, another commissioner asked if there was a way for the assembly to discuss the pros and cons of such a vote – to debate the choice for Vice Moderator. This, Tom told us, we could not do, unless two-thirds of the registered commissioners were willing to suspend the standing rules, which say clearly that the Moderator tells us who they have selected, and we say yeah or nay, right then. So it was moved and seconded that we suspend the rules and allow debate.

Fifty four percent voted to do so, which, although significant, fell short of the supermajority required.

We then proceed to vote on the question of the Vice Moderator. In a simple yes or no vote, Rev. McCabe received sixty percent – more than enough to allow her to be installed, but a strong signal about the ambivalence of the assembly during these difficult and uncertain times.

Committee work has begun, so things might be a bit quiet for a few days. Look for the fun to resume Wednesday, when the Assembly begins to tackle the big stuff in Plenary.


Sunday, July 1, 2012

When you come to Pittsburgh...


When you come here, everyone will tell you ‘Yinz guys have to eat at Primanti’s n’at!’ To be sure, Primanti Brothers is a uniquely Pittsburgh institution: a restaurant which, for years, thrived as an open secret – serving its distinctive sandwiches-with-fries-and-slaw as lunch to the workaday world downtown, late night snacks to the bar and club crowd, and that unnamed, pre-dawn meal to the produce vendors and truck drivers who came to work in the Strip District around 3:30 a.m. As Pittsburgh has evolved, and the Strip has transformed into a destination, so has Primanti’s. It’s crowded more often than not these days, full of touristy people trying to figure out a menu which changes so rarely that it’s painted on the wall. (It's also expanding, with satellite locations all around the area.) 

Now, don’t get me wrong, I love Primanti’s. But I would like to give a little shout out to what I think is Pittsburgh’s most significant contribution to the sandwich world:

I present, for your consideration, the Hoagie.



Philadelphians take credit for the genesis of this culinary contribution to our culture, but they can’t seem to figure which creation story to pronounce as true; if you believe Wikepedia, the Hoagie showed up in Pittsburgh around 1961 (the sandwiches, not the Philadephians); I wasn’t there, so I don’t know. For the uninitiated, a ‘Hoagie’ is a subset within the loaf-of-bread genus of sandwiches. Take a twelve, fourteen or sixteen inch loaf of Italian bread, sliced long ways, add Italian cold cuts, shredded Italian cheese, oil and vinegar. So far, it sounds just like what the rest of the world calls a ‘sub’ (and Philadelphia types call a hoagie). AHHHH, but then you take that lowly sub and throw it in a pizza oven for 10-15 minutes, garnish with shaved lettuce, tomatoes and thin sliced onions, an’at dere is a Hoagie!

The Hoagie was my childhood feast, my perennial picnic choice; it was how my high school marching band raised money, and the one thing I try not to miss when I come home. And the beauty of it is, you can get one just about anywhere! It is an open source sandwich – a specialty in almost every pizza shop in the city. I happen to think the best Hoagies come from Danny’s on Library Road in Bethel Park, but I could be wrong.  If you get to Pittsburgh, try Primanti’s – but check out a Hoagie, too.