Merry Christmas! Tonight Update will begin and end with uplifting positive stories. The other news is in the middle.
The Presiding Bishop's Christmas Message of Love
Presiding Bishop Michael Curry taped this Christmas message for us all. Of course, there were many other messages from Church leaders, but Curry's sets the tone.Controversy at the Anglican Center in Rome
Archbishop Ntahoturi, formerly of Burundi, stepped down as the director of the Anglican Center in Rome after only a year. The archbishop has been accused of sexual misconduct. Just a few weeks before, Michael Burrows, a bishop from the Church in Ireland had been named as the new Chair of the Board of Directors for the Center. Conservatives, however, are raising a fuss because Burrows was the first Irish bishop to support repeal of the anti-abortion clause in the Irish constitution, and because he has come to support same-sex marriage. The ultra-right wing Catholic media source The Church Militant is questioning the appointment of Burrows as an affront to the Catholic Church. However, Burrows, who was faced with the task of healing a diocese wounded by a sex scandal involving the previous bishop, may have experience that is sorely needed at the Center right now.South India Bishop Arrested
The former moderator of the Church of South India has been arrested for theft. Bishop Govada Dyvasirvadam who has retired had been detained a year ago as state officials began an investigation of fraud and misappropriation of church funds after the sale of a church property for $32 million. The bishop was accused of diverting most of the money into personal accounts. The Church of South India is a "united" church, combining Anglican, Presbyterian, and Methodists. It is recognized as a province in the Anglican Communion. However, the province has a terrible reputation for corruption, with many of its leaders under investigation for diversion of church monies.Christmas Travel Restrictions in Gaza
Palestinian Christians living in Gaza traditionally visit family in the West Bank on Christmas. But this year the Israeli government is only issuing travel permits to the very young and the very old, and even those have been very few in number and late arriving. The result is that many families will spend Christmas divided.Updates on Continuing Stories
The papers and filings are piling up as the two sides try to convince the Texas Supreme Court whether or not it should hear an appeal by the break-away group from the appellate court decision granting the Fort Worth church and diocesan property to the Episcopalians. The latest was filed by the Episcopal Church. It argues that the appellate court properly decided what matters were to be decided by "Neutral Principles" and which were ecclesiastical matters requiring a deferential approach.The Update has been tracking the latest in a saga where St. Paul's Episcopal Church in Darien is out of step with the diocese. The parish earlier had defied the diocese opposing LGBTQ inclusion, and tried to get the courts to rule Dennis canon invalid. The parish never left The Episcopal Church, but its rector moved on. The parish found its most recent rector in England. Within a short time, the parish and rector were at odds, and Bishop Ian Douglas intervened. When parish leadership defied the bishop by locking out the rector, Douglas took control of the parish. The ousted parish leadership went to court trying to remove their rector, but the diocesan convention stripped the congregation of parish status in October and made it a mission under the control of the bishop. The suit filed by the former leaders is now being heard in the state courts.
The Episcopal Church continues to reach out in various ways to Immigrants and refugees. Most recently the Update noted the statement by bishops in Central America, including those in the Episcopal Church, supporting the refugees then traveling towards the U.S. border. Now all of the Episcopal bishops in the five dioceses in California have joined with the Episcopal Policy Network in a new statement in support of the refugees. There have been numerous actions at detention centers and along the border, including periodic church services at the border in California involving people on both sides of the barrier. The most recent service with an interdenominational service for Christmas. Episcopalians helped organize it. In Ohio, an Episcopalian couple took up the cause of a Haitian refugee who was being threatened with deportation, and have had him released from detention into their custody while awaiting his appeal for asylum.