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The Presbyterian Outlook

The Presbyterian Outlook

Creating and curating trustworthy resources for the church, the Presbyterian Outlook connects disciples of Jesus Christ through compelling and committed conversation for the proclamation of the Gospel.

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Pre-Assembly event highlights work of theological task force

RICHMOND, Va. — The Theological Task Force on the Peace, Unity and Purity of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) challenged Presbyterians to think about "doing church in a new way" — and to consider the possibility that unity is what God wants from the church, and that Jesus Christ is the source of that unity, even if the people in the church don’t get along.

Rick Ufford-Chase

RICHMOND — A 40-year-old elder who exhorted Presbyterians to "get in the boat with Jesus, to risk crossing borders and to go out into the world " — to scream with fear and joy as they take risks — was elected moderator of the 216th General Assembly.

Rick Ufford-Chase, the co-founder of the BorderLinks ministry along the United States-Mexican border, defeated two candidates — David McKechnie and K.C. Ptomey, both pastors of tall-steeple churches and more than 20 years his senior — who represented to some the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) as it has been.

Quiet prelude to 216th GA may be broken by commissioners with much to say

Some General Assemblies announce themselves well in advance. One would have to be truly asleep at the wheel not to know what the big headlines would be about in those years.

Other Assemblies, and this may be one, are more shy starting off — they’re not so quick to reveal their passions. There’s much in the news, and the 544 commissioners may show up with much on their minds.

27 former GA moderators endorse re-election of Kirkpatrick as stated clark

Twenty-seven former General Assembly moderators have signed a letter endorsing the re-election of Clifton Kirkpatrick as stated clerk of the Office of the General Assembly, Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.).

The letter, which was initiated by former moderator Marj Carpenter, an elder from Big Spring, Texas, says that Kirkpatrick has done "an excellent job under very difficult circumstances and much pressure."

The Home of Religious Freedom

Homecoming: a bittersweet word, connoting remembrance and celebration of things past and strengthening of bonds intended to stretch far into the future.

It is a word that applies in a sense to the 216th General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) to be held in Richmond on June 26-July 3. For by convening in Virginia’s capital, Presbyterians will be returning to the birthplace of their religious freedom.

‘Re-Forming Ministry’ project considers meaning of ‘one holy catholic and apostolic church’

LOUISVIILLE — So what does it mean to believe in the one holy catholic and apostolic church, as the Nicene Creed presents it — and what’s involved in trying to be that church?

A new group that’s been put together for theological reflection, with funding from the Lilly Endowment, started off by talking about that famous phrase from the Nicene Creed and about some of its implications for Presbyterians now.

Accountability

There is an invitation on The Outlook Web page inviting guest viewpoints on the war in Iraq, in response to the reports of torture and abuse in the Abu Ghraib prison in Baghdad. One of you remarked that I had not declared where I stand.

This editorial is a declaration, taking its cue from the Ascension of Jesus into heaven, where he sits at the right hand of God, and shall come to judge the living and the dead. For (1 Corinthians) Christ must reign until he has put all his enemies under his feet. The last enemy to be destroyed is death.

A Historic Perspective on the Role of Stated Clerk

The office of Stated Clerk of the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) is many faceted and seldom understood. Anyone elected to this position must wear many hats and wear them well.

As commissioners prepare for the election of the stated clerk at this year’s General Assembly in Richmond, Va., some historical background on the complexity of this office may be useful.

Three vie to become first moderator to serve two-year term in PC(USA)

Two pastors and one elder have been nominated for moderator of the 216th General Assembly, which will meet June 26-July 3 in Richmond, Va. This year's election, on the evening of June 26, will be unique in that because of the switch to biennial General Assemblies, the moderator will serve a two-year term.
As in years past, The Outlook asked each nominee to provide a brief biographical sketch and to answer three questions from the editor. That information and their answers follow in alphabetical order by last name.

Crowded field of evangelicals challenges incumbant stated clark

Passion, drama and Presbyterian? Those aren’t often words used in the same sentence.

Folks can get right worked up over the sports playoffs, politics and the price of gas, the return of the cicadas (and of Prince), carbs vs. fats.

But the stated clerk’s election in the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.)? Why get hot and bothered over that?

The PC(USA) and the Messianic Jewish Movement

In late 2003, a Messianic Jewish congregation, Avodat Yisrael, was approved within the PC(USA) by the presbytery of Philadelphia. In response to the possibility of Jews, who also believe in Jesus, evangelizing other Jews, a group of concerned Presbyterians organized. They were led by Cynthia Jarvis, also of the Philadelphia presbytery.

Presbyterian – In Name Only?

Every year I try to explain "Orwellian" to my students. I end up with something like "a systematic perversion of language to hide what is real and replace it with an illusion — an illusion that is often the exact opposite of the reality. Its long-term effects are, first, a sense of unreality, then, cynicism, and finally, apathy and despair." I might do better just to hand them The Presbyterian Outlook's annual Higher Education Issue.

Reflections on the 2003 PC(USA) Statistics

The Office of the General Assembly has just completed the collation of the 2003 statistics for the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A). While the numbers will be readily available to all, the figures themselves do not tell the whole story. Underneath these statistics are real live Presbyterians, who make up our churches and who are faithful disciples of Jesus Christ. The fact that there are fewer active members in the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) than a year ago should call us to prayer and repentance.

Church-related higher education revisited

Do you need to be told that even such modest attainments
As you can boast of in the way of polite society
Will hardly survive the Faith to which they owe their significance?

— T. S. Eliot, choruses From "The Rock"’


The debate raised in this issue of The Outlook about how "Christian" a church-related college is (or should be) is no stranger to these pages.

CREDO

Bill Coffin is a man of intrepid one-liners and steadfast, exuberant faith. "Credo, I believe," as he says in the preface of this slim volume, "best translates 'I have given my heart to.'" (p. xv). Or, I would venture, two hearts. What comes through clearly in this compilation of sentences and paragraphs is God's incredible love for us, all of us, and, in gratitude, one person's giving of his "heart to the teaching and example of Christ" (ibid).

Presbytery calls on Presbyterian College to halt implementation of proposed changes

Trinity Presbytery passed a resolution Tuesday, June 1, expressing concern with the proposed changes in Presbyterian College's educational program.

The resolution — drafted by a minister-member of the presbytery and amended by the presbytery's general council — was
amended by the presbytery to include a call for Presbyterian College to “halt the implementation” of the proposed changes and calls for the formation of a consultation at the synod level "concerning what it means, in a practical sense, for Presbyterian College to be ' ... a church-related institution committed to the Christian faith,' and a college 'related to the Christian Church' in the context of the Presbyterian Church (USA)."

The Purpose of Reformed Worship

There is division among us over what constitutes authentic Reformed worship. I have witnessed this firsthand while — as moderator of the worship planning work group for the Committee on Local Arrangements for the 216th General Assembly — balancing competing demands of representation and inclusivity for the Assembly in Richmond in four weeks. The variety of Presbyterian worship today is extraordinary. We’ve made choices.

Desegregation and the 1955 GA in Richmond

Fifty years ago, in 1954, the United States Supreme Court handed down a landmark decision. In Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka the court set aside Plessy v. Ferguson (1896) which established the "separate-but-equal" racial relations policies for the nation. (Associate Justice John Harlan, a Kentucky Presbyterian, cast the only negative vote against the 1896 decision.)

Proposal to end Bible requirement renews debate about church-related higher education

A proposal to change the academic requirements at Presbyterian College in South Carolina — a proposal that, among other things, would eliminate the current requirement that students take courses in both Old and New Testament — has some at the school troubled, and wondering, what exactly does it mean to be a "Presbyterian-related college?"

The proposal is still under discussion and wouldn’t take effect before the fall of 2006.

Services held for former PCUS evangelism director, Christian education professor Al Dimmock

BLACK MOUNTAIN, N.C. — Albert Eugene Dimmock, 83, former director of PCUS evangelism efforts and a professor emeritus of Christian education at Union Seminary-PSCE, died at his home here Friday, May 21.

A service of witness to the resurrection was held Sunday, May 23, at Black Mountain church.

Dimmock was born on Nov. 17, 1920, in Norfolk, Va., to Presbyterian minister Thomas Herbert Dimmock and Martha Amis Dimmock. During World War II, he worked in the shipyards at Newport News, Va.

The Need for Dialogue

I first encountered African Church hostility to our debates over ordination in 1998 from the courageous editor of the Presbyterian Church of Ghana’s newspaper. He and I talked of many things, not least of which was the fact that for years his was the only voice in Ghana that spoke truth to power. He was hounded, threatened, and would have been shut down, had his funding not been from the Presbyterian Church. A Reformed Christian, he was a tireless advocate of freedom of the press.

Remembering our Heritage

A couple of years ago an elder at Second church, Richmond, introduced himself, saying he and his wife had lived in Rich-mond for over 30 years, and felt at home in a place they had come to love very much. Then he said, "I know that for many of you, that’s no more than a long weekend." It’s true. We don’t forget history or lineage.

Reshaping the Vsion of how we’re connected

Part of what ails our denomination is rooted in confusion over how we are connected to one another. Over the past 20 years, our shared judicatory mission efforts increasingly have been replaced by congregationally based mission programs. Today, far more mission work is rooted in congregations than judicatories. This process has been enabled and empowered by affordable transportation to any part of the world as well as instant communication through the Internet and e-mail.

What unites us

What, besides God’s Spirit, God’s providence and God’s purpose for the PC(USA), will hold us together in a recognizable form through the next 20 years? Does God need the PC(USA) to continue to make a Reformed witness that has been our hallmark since long before John Witherspoon signed the Declaration of Independence?

Learning to Speak about God

Last month Leslie Scanlon reported on The Greenhoe Lectures given at Louisville Seminary by Nancy Ammerman. I found her summaries helpful in a variety of ways, not the least of which are some interesting demographics. Less than 20 percent of American households are families with children living at home, and nearly 30 percent of American households are occupied by two adults without children. In addition Ammerman commented on the religious perspectives of Americans. We overwhelmingly believe in God, and at least one-third of us are mainline Christians.

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