The calendar of presbytery events is at the foot of the page

Contact stated clerk Pete Wells to add events to the calendar

Wednesday, July 7, 2010

Committess finish their work, time for a break

On Wednesday the committees finished their work.  There are many proposals being presented to the General Assembly which starts meeting at 1:30 today, Central Time (11:30 at home).   All commissioners with whom I talked are happy to be done with committee work and are ready to move to the next phase of the Assembly.


There are many proposals to be considered by the General Assembly, all of which will change the current policy or structure of the church.   Not all will be adopted.  Some will be adopted after having been amended.  Those that are policies, as opposed to changes in the form of government, go into effect when approved by the General Assembly. Those that require a change in the Constitution of the church go into effect July 10, 2011 only if approved by majority of the 170+ presbyteries (area-wide groups of churches and ministers) vote to approve them.  If you want a change that has been approved by committee don't rejoice yet.  If you don't want the change, don't panic yet.   Committee approval is only the first of two or three steps in the process.

Some of the high-profile issues coming before the plenary session will be a revised study on Middle East peace, changing the definition of marriage from that between a man and woman to be between two people, change the definition of those eligible to serve as an officer of the church to remove the specific reference to sexual standards, and the minutia of the relationship between the highest courts of the church and the General Assembly.  

For the geeks, the order in which the committee reports will be considered in the following order: Church Growth, Theology Issues, Form of Government, Review of Permanent Committees, the role of middle government bodies (synods and presbyteries), ecumenical issues, qualifications for ministry, etc.  I will list the rest later.  We would do well to get this through this list on Wednesday afternoon or evening.  Updated detailed information is at www.pc-biz.org

On another note, we are continually reminded that the theory of 6 degrees of separation changes to about 2 degrees of separation for those who participate in the wider church.   I met a friend of my pastor's today whose wife  was a seminary roommate of a colleague in work in Eastern Oregon.

Pray today for the General Assembly, its commissioners, and the church.

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