THE MCJ

Christian scholarship is the Church’s prodigious invention to defend itself against the Bible. - Søren Kierkegaard

DEATH SPIRAL

The Episcopal Diocese of Florida recently lost six parishes.  The Episcopal Diocese of Florida may shortly lose eight more:

A "good-sized second wave" of at least eight conservative Northeast Florida churches will be following six that have already quit the Episcopal Diocese of Florida to realign themselves with Worldwide Anglican Communion, two local priests said Friday.

One of the original "Florida Six" cut ties with the Jacksonville-based diocese and its denomination, the Episcopal Church USA, in November and now worships at the University of North Florida.

The remaining five -- All Souls and Church of the Redeemer in Jacksonville, Grace Church in Orange Park, St. Michael’s in Gainesville and St. Luke’s Community of Life in Gainesville -- formally ended their relationship with Bishop John Howard’s diocese on Dec. 31 or will do so by Sunday, said the Rev. Sam Pascoe, rector at Grace Church.

All of these congregations, like many others across the country, seek to remain aligned with the Worldwide Anglican Communion, most of which has condemned the American denomination for electing an openly gay man as New Hampshire bishop in 2003.

Pascoe said more parishes are on their way to "disassociating" with the diocese and the denomination.

"The second wave is what we call the churches that have made up their mind to do what we’re doing, but have to get their ducks in a row to do it and have put the bishop on notice they are going to do it," Pascoe said.

The Rev. Mark Eldredge, rector at the Church of the Epiphany in Jacksonville, said it will all come true as 2006 unfolds.

Eldredge said his parish and up to seven others are actively making plans to follow the first six churches out of the Episcopal Church.

One of those congregations, St. James in Macclenny, announced its realignment in a Dec. 31 letter to Howard.

Two more congregations, which wish to remain anonymous, may cut ties as early as next week, Eldredge said.

Another five -- his own, Good Samaritan in Orange Park, St. Teresa in Wakulla County and two that wish not to be identified -- will wait until after June to see if the Episcopal Church repents for its actions at its next General Convention.

"We have no expectation of repentance," Eldredge said.

And there could be even more leaving in the fall and beyond, he said.

At this rate, Howard should be able to finish his visitations in a month.  But not to worry.  The Panel of Reference will fix all this any day now.

UPDATE:  Meanwhile in Michigan, Zach Frey and St. Andrews Anglican Ministry begin the adventure.  No word from the P of R as of yet but I'm sure they're just dotting the I's and crossing the T's.

Posted on 1/9/2006 12:39:49 PM , 15 comments

Submitted by Dale Price at 1/9/2006 12:53:32 PM

And so it begins in Michigan, too--check out Eclectic Amateur today regarding the Bishop of the Michigan diocese dropping the inhibition on an Ann Arbor priest. Back on topic: while I'm the furthest thing from an expert, I had heard that the Diocese of Florida was an oasis for the orthodox. How did Bp. Howard get the job?
Submitted by Christopher Johnson at 1/9/2006 1:13:20 PM

Really good question that I wish I knew the answer to. Howard came to Florida from Clown College Trinity-Wall Street so his orthodoxy has got to be on the dicey side.
Submitted by David+ at 1/9/2006 1:50:20 PM

The Diocese of Florida will have plenty of company after GC2006 in June. After the current agenda and gospel of ECUSA is confirmed, the outward tide will pick up more and more steam until one diosces after another declares bankrupcy.
Submitted by WannabeAnglican at 1/9/2006 2:07:29 PM

Wow! Bishop Howard sure is doing wonders for his diocese! He ought to go national with a Reverse Church Growth seminar.
Submitted by Zach Frey at 1/9/2006 2:16:48 PM

Actually, Pastor Allen is in Livonia, not Ann Arbor. In a wonderful intertwining of Providence, a fellow parishioner's sister is at one of the Florida parishes which started the adventure Sunday also (don't remember which one, unfortunately). On Saturday, as we were helping Pastor Allen pack from St. Andrew's, someone asked him the question "so, how do you feel right now?" He gave a big grin and said "Uninhibited." :) peace, Zach
Submitted by Uncle Dino at 1/9/2006 3:20:23 PM

Oh, no! There must be a mis-print! People are supposed to be FLOCKING TO ecusa after its spirit-filled new deal! What happened?
Submitted by Bill (not IB) at 1/9/2006 4:39:16 PM

Uncle Dino,

You misread things somewhere. People aren't supposed to be flocking to ECUSA. The actual statement was that ECUSA is supposed to be moving forward with fleecing its' flock. ;)
Submitted by Duane at 1/9/2006 5:38:19 PM

Howard is sending nasty letters to Grace about the church property, I guess if he wants to assume the mortgage he can go right ahead
Submitted by Philip at 1/9/2006 7:28:44 PM

Well, starting with 77 parishes, first 6 leave last year, or a 7.79% drop. Now, 8 more are teetering at the doorway. If they all go, that will represent a further 10.39% reduction in the diocesean roll of parishes. There may well be more DoFlA parishes, who bail either before or after GC2006. Even if no others jump ship, +Howard will have been able to claim a 18.18% reduction in his flock, in less than 1 year. WannabeAnglican is right on.... +Howard is the current leader in the Reverse Church Growth sweepstakes.
Submitted by JM at 1/10/2006 12:36:52 AM

Anyone for a chorus of "99 Bottles of Beer on the Wall?"
Submitted by The Real Patrick at 1/10/2006 4:58:26 AM

Y'know, first +Jecko retires, and then it all starts to go to hell in a handbasket.
Submitted by James Manley at 1/10/2006 4:56:06 PM

Philip, 9 left last year, not six, not counting 2 new AMIA congregations. I don't have a calculator handy to do the math :) In the counting, though, +Howard insists that parishes that leave haven't really left. He'll still count St. John's, St. Michael's, St. Barnabas, etc., even though the pews are now empty now that members have moved out.
Submitted by Tom Roberts at 1/10/2006 9:34:01 PM

from a commenter at T1:9 "Losing six parishhes is unfortunate. Losing fourteen is carelessness." to paraphrase Wilde
Submitted by Philip at 1/11/2006 3:36:04 PM

James, if your numbers are correct, then the numbers stand thusly, said he working the handy calculator). 77 Parishes to begin with. -9 Parishes last year, or 11.69% of the total. -8 Parishes possibly this year, or 10.38%. Total loss in 1 year of 17 of a 77 parish total or 22.07% Losing so many parishes in such a short period of time, is unconscionable. The person in charge is the person responsible and such management skills exhibited by +Howard, lead one to wonder as to hs motives and intentions. "Unfortunate", "careless", or something perhaps more baleful than that, quien sabe? +Howard's crisis handling skill however, is on a par with ex FEMA director Brown and +Howard too, ought to get the axe.
Submitted by Ben at 1/17/2006 8:13:59 AM

The pews are not empty at St Michael's. We had 40 on Sunday. I'm sure that reports of empty churches elsewhere is also a bit exagerated.
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