I've spent the past week in North Carolina -- the purpose of my
trip was threefold:
1. To see my good friend from the Church Pension Group Board
Martha Alexander in Charlotte and go to church with her before heading out to
Hendersonville/Kanuga,
2. To work with the most talented group of people on a project
which will result in a book (we refer to ourselves as the "dream
team" -- after this past weekend it fits!), and
3. To attend Nuevo Amanecer -- a biennial gathering of
Episcopalians and members of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA),
both lay and ordained, who work in/live in/love Hispanic/Latino ministry.
It seemed that one thing flowed so beautifully and naturally into
the other. It was as if I had planned it that way (although I didn't) -- that
it would be as wonderful and life giving as it was and will be as I continue to
unpack the last week.
It began by flying into Charlotte on Saturday between storms.
Yes, really. We made it to the gate right before they stopped planes from landing
and taking off until the thunder storm passed. I rented a car and then the real
fun began. I hadn't driven in the combination of heavy thunderstorms and very
high temperatures which cause your windshield to fog up badly enough that you
can't see in quite a while. It was over 90 out, and I quickly discovered that
having the air conditioning on during a bad thunder storm was, well, not smart.
I made it to the hotel in Charlotte after white-knuckling it over there and
settled in for a night of reading and writing. What a great gift that time was
to me!
The next day I attended the 8:30 service at Christ Church in
Charlotte. They were on their summer schedule. It is a beautiful church which
during the non-summer months offers 6 services each Sunday. I got there early, sat in the back and enjoyed the quiet time to pray before people began coming into the sanctuary. I rarely have this kind of time in a church any more. I used to go into the sanctuary of St. Clement's when I was rector there just to sit and pray -- it was a beatutiful, peaceful time. So was Sunday Morning!
My friend Martha
told me after services that the number of members is about 4,000. I can
understand why. The church is connected to the community. It is reflected in
their buildings and in the welcome you receive. They have many and varied
educational and group offerings, catered to all ages and walks of life. After
the services the clergy and laity (assigned greeters) welcomed newcomers and
showed them around the buildings and talked to them for quite a while. I was
impressed! The buildings and grounds are beautiful -- but more, the work done
there is gospel work. Martha years ago started a bookstore/gift shop at the
church which has grown over the years. I met one of the managers as I walked
through the gift shop -- they donate 100% of their profit each year to local
social service agencies in Charlotte -- which totaled $109,000 last year. What
a gift! And yes, they have Pokemon there!
I hugged my friend Martha goodbye after she treated me to lunch
and a tour or Charlotte (talk about Southern hospitality), and I headed to
Hendersonville. Part of the reason I fly into Charlotte and drive over to
Kanuga (about 1 1/2 hour drive) is that it is cheaper to fly into there than to
Asheville, they have more direct and varied flights than Asheville and
Greenville, and the drive itself (BEAUTIFUL!) helps me "separate"
from the rush of my life in the diocese and transition to a peace-filled
center. I found the one NPR station I can listen to while driving all the way
-- although sometimes to maintain the "peace" I will turn it off!
I met up with the "dream team" Sunday afternoon and we started our work on our project. I
won't reveal the content, but let me say that as a bishop who oversees
multicultural ministry, I am excited by this work and by the care and commitment
of this talented group! Here we are with Nancy Frausto taking group selfie.
The next day we spent most of the day continuing the work we
began the night before -- listening to the work we have each undertaken over
the last few months. I am so impressed by the members of this "dream
team"! The depth of their life experience, combined with their research
and theological reflection is rich and is a gift to our church. I hope when our
work is done you will think so as well.
Monday evening we all headed over to Kanuga to "sign
in" for the gathering. There were over 460 brothers and sisters in Christ
who gathered for this event! Yes, you read that right. Most were from the Episcopal Church, the rest from the ELCA.
The opening welcome and Eucharist were wonderful. This was made
especially great because five bishops attended the opening evening: myself,
Porter Taylor, Marianne Budde, Rob Skirving and Allen Shin. Two years ago three
bishops attended. This year, five. Perhaps in 2018 there will be ten? Okay --
that's my pitch. This is a life-giving, love-sharing, gospel-message-driven
gathering of the faithful involved in this ministry. Let's support it!
The plenary sessions and workshops were chock-full of helpful
information. People were energized! Our clergy and laity who came commented
enthusiastically about the gathering, the offerings, the networking -- it was a
boost for them and their ministries. Here's our own Nancy Frausto leading a workshop! I heard from members of the "team" from Los Angeles who came that the workshops were extremely worthwhile and diverse enough that they were able to split up and learn, then come back together and share what they had learned. Exactly what I hoped and prayed for!
I had the great honor and privilege of being on a panel: LGBTQ+ people and the Church. The depth of sharing from all the members and the conversation we were able to have was remarkable in the short amount of time we had to present (about an hour and fifteen minutes). Two priests, one seminarian, a lay person and me. Humbling yet much-needed work, indeed.
I was especially proud of the members of the Diocese of Los
Angeles who attended. The Diocese of New York sent 30 -- we were represented by
14 (Anthony Guillén being the "jefe extraordinaire). Part of the problem
is the cost of the airfare and getting all that time off of work for the laity.
We gathered for an LA group photo, but alas Anthony was "directing
traffic" after the larger group photo and couldn't join us.
I'm humbled by the work God has given me to do. I'm more humbled
by the commitment and hard work of our clergy and laity. We are very blessed to
have them in our diocese!
Last but not least, I want to thank the Rev. Anthony Guillén for
work as The Episcopal Church Missioner for Hispanic/Latino ministry. He
assembled a team of people among which work was distributed -- for as large as
this gathering was, he was present and pastoral throughout the event -- as were every member of the
team. Job well done!
I can't wait for 2018!!