PCUSA in full panic mode
I have written quite a bit about the Presbyterian Church (USA), its abandonment of orthodox Christianity, its greed and delusions of power, and our church’s eventual escape from it (see here, starting with "The 556-member church …") Since that glorious day in November, 2008, when we left the PCUSA (without their permission), I have had little reason to write about this hollow shell of a Christian denomination.
But now, in their boundless greed and lust for power, the PCUSA asserts veto power over decisions of the faithful, vibrant Christian denomination to which we now belong, the Evangelical Presbyterian Church. In a letter to the highest elected officer of the EPC, the Stated Clerk, the PCUSA boss man (same title – Stated Clerk) complains about the very process that brought us out of the PCUSA and into the EPC fold.
First, a little political history. The national government created by the U.S. Constitution was loosely modeled on the Presbyterian form of government. The EPC and PCUSA each have a document (Book of Order) that describes its system of government. Members of each local church elect Elders to represent and govern them. These Elders in turn select representatives (Commissioners) to govern the presbytery to which the church belongs. Presbyteries select representatives to the General Assembly (GA Commissioners) to govern the national denomination. The GA elects the Stated Clerk.
The PCUSA and the national government of the United States also have this in common – both have lost sight of their founding documents and both have forgotten that the source of their ruling power is invested in the members/voters and not in themselves.
One of the PCUSA’s spurious claims is that a local church cannot leave without permission from its presbytery, and the presbytery’s discretion in such matters is nearly absolute. We tried for two years to get the Presbytery of Wabash Valley to let us leave, but our good-faith efforts were met with deceit, political maneuvering, and stalling. Even after our church voted by a large margin to leave the PCUSA and join the EPC, the presbytery maintained the fiction that our church was still part of their organization and our members were too. They huffed and puffed about dismissing us but there was nothing they could do.
Since we left, the PCUSA has been losing members and whole congregations at an unprecedented rate. Since both individual members and congregations are regarded by the PCUSA as assets to be used for its benefit, it doesn’t like to see them leave – especially congregations, which take with them two classes of assets, members (cash) and buildings (real property).
So the PCUSA is huffing and puffing again, demanding that the EPC not accept churches like ours that unilaterally choose to disaffiliate. The EPC’s position is that such churches are independent – we certainly were – and can freely choose a denomination to affiliate with. But no, an increasingly desperate PCUSA demands that the EPC leave disaffiliated churches in their chains, pretending that the PCUSA still has jurisdiction. And it accompanies its demands with veiled threats of ecclesiastical and civil court action.
Churches are leaving and courts are finding that the PCUSA can’t just steal a church’s property by claiming to have a trust the owners never granted. The PCUSA’s Berlin Wall (built to keep its people in, not to keep others out) is coming down and they don’t like it.
Thanks to the Layman Online for the story.
This entry was posted on Thursday, July 11th, 2013 at 1:16 pm and is filed under Christianity, EPC, PCUSA. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.