Diocese of Niagara: the inevitable fawning

The Diocese of Niagara is displaying Gene Robinson’s inaugural non-Christian prayer to an anonymous god on its web site but is strangely silent when it comes Rick Warren’s Christian prayer, a prayer that refers to Jesus. One supposes that this is because Niagara’s diocesan hegemony is more comfortable with a homosexual bishop than Jesus – someone they would demonstrably rather ignore.

It also has Obama’s address – I don’t remember Bush being given the same space – confirming my suspicion that the Niagara diocese is more interested in the kingdom of man than the kingdom of God, and left-wing political agitation than the salvation of souls.

Correction: Rick Warren’s prayer was put on the Niagara site a day later.

Freebie Friday at St. Hilda's

A baby girl was baptised at St. Hilda’s ANiC this morning. Her mother is a young Christian woman who has been attending St. Hilda’s during the last year or so. A little less than ten years ago, every Friday lunchtime she used to walk from the high-school she attended to St. Hilda’s building for a free lunch at Freebie Friday. Part of the free lunch is a short talk on the Gospel by St. Hilda’s Pastor Paul; seeds sometimes fall on fertile ground, take root and grow, resulting in a saved sinner and great joy in heaven. The student who used to come for free lunches is now a fine young Christian who has baptised her baby and brought other Freebie Friday alumni to Sunday worship.

The last court ruling on the dispute between the Diocese of Niagara and St. Hilda’s ANiC, was that – until final ownership of the building is settled – the building must be shared between the diocese and St. Hilda’s. The diocese was given the Sunday morning time slot, so St. Hilda’s is meeting in a school gymnasium for Sunday worship. But St. Hilda’s ANiC is still present in the church building during the week and, for the moment, Freebie Friday continues.

Freebie Friday began just over ten years ago. St. Hilda’s building is located close to a high-school; every lunchtime there was a steady trickle of children past the church on their way to the mall. We wanted to try and convey to the children the idea of the free gift of salvation that Jesus offers us as the result of his atoning death on the cross: just as salvation is free, so is lunch.

The lunch is run and paid for by volunteers from St. Hilda’s and it quickly became popular: there are two sittings which attract about a hundred children every Friday. The principal of the high school regularly expresses his gratitude for this ministry.

The children sponsor two World Vision kids with their own money and buy yearly Christmas gifts for them. Recently they paid for three wheelchairs for the Free Wheelchair Mission, an organisation that provides wheelchairs as a gift of mobility for the physically disabled poor in developing countries.

Which brings me to the reason why we are fighting in the courts to keep our building. The diocese of Niagara has a congregation of about five people using St. Hilda’s building; it is managed by two priests. If they win ownership of the building, Freebie Friday, along with other ministries will stop. St. Hilda’s ANiC would not be able to continue it because it has to take place at a location close to the school; the diocese will not continue it because, even if they had the inclination, they do not have the people needed to keep the building open, let alone engage in time consuming ministries. Even their own priests admit that their congregation is not viable.

If the diocese wins the court battle for the building, after a decent interval it will be sold and bulldozed; God’s work in that place will cease.

This is why we fight.

Niagara: Bishop Michael Bird responds to statement from Canadian House of Bishops

From Here

Dear Friends:

I write to you with a few brief reflections coming out of the House of Bishops meeting and in particular my thoughts with regards to the released statement that this meeting has generated.

I believe it is important that I express to you my profound disappointment with this statement and the deliberations that took place.  My own words in response to the first draft of this statement, spoken on the floor of the House of Bishops, make this clear:

“I do not believe that this statement honours the faithfulness that the Diocese of Niagara has brought to this particular issue. I do not believe it honours the faithfulness we have offered to the Anglican Church of Canada.  I do not believe that it honours God’s Mission for the Diocese of Niagara as we have discerned it.”  These comments apply equally to the final draft as well.

I wonder, how does one honour what the Diocese of Niagara perceives is God’s mission for it: to have been instrumental in the breakup of a 400 year old communion is a rare and unusual calling. And it is one that the Diocese of Niagara has prosecuted with such rigour and diligence; Michael Bird is right, it should have been mentioned in the HoB statement.

While I agree that the statement does represent the majority view of the bishops present, I want to state clearly that I do not support the moratoria as it has been articulated.  Even more disappointing is the fact that an opportunity has been missed to find a creative and generous solution to one of the most momentous challenges our church has faced in many years.

And the Diocese of Niagara is nothing if not creative and generous in finding a solution to its little problem; it was the first thing that came to mind as I was sitting in the court, listening to their lawyer argue the diocesan case for seizing the ANiC buildings.

Since Bishop Bird intones: “I do not support the moratoria as it [sic] has been articulated”, we can only assume that his agenda for SSBs will closely follow that of Ottawa, Montreal and New Westminster.

I will be making a more formal statement on this subject and the direction I believe the Diocese is now called to undertake in a few days time.

I want to express my sincere gratitude for the outpouring of support and the level of engagement that we have experienced as our new vision for the Diocese continues to emerge and I look forward to continuing this process at our synod this weekend.

Please continue to pray for the guidance of God’s Holy Spirit in the days and weeks to come.

Yours faithfully in Christ,

+Michael Bird,

Bishop of Niagara.

Unexpurgated version of Essentials blog post