6 February 2015 A.D. Episcopal Church to Appeal Recent Ruling Favoring
Breakaway Episcopalians in South Carolina
Episcopal Church’s local
parishes plan to appeal judge’s ruling
Local Episcopal
parishes, led by the Right Rev. Charles vonRosenberg, plan to appeal a judge’s
ruling Tuesday that allowed breakaway parishes to retain ownership of churches
and other property. Brad Nettles/Staff
The
divorce might be finalized, but who gets what isn’t settled yet, not with The
Episcopal Church’s local parishes pledging Wednesday to appeal a circuit court
judge’s ruling.
Judge
Diane Goodstein ruled late Tuesday in favor of the Protestant Episcopal Diocese
of South Carolina, which left the national church in 2012. She ruled the
diocese and two-thirds of area parishes that left with it had the right to
depart and take more than $500 million in property with them.
But that ruling
marks just one step in a longer journey, said the Right Rev. Charles G.
vonRosenberg, bishop of The Episcopal Church in South Carolina, which comprises
area parishes still aligned with the national church.
“We
will persevere as we seek justice, even though the personal and financial costs
will be significant. The present cause requires us to respond in this way,”
vonRosenberg wrote in a pastoral letter distributed Wednesday.
With
an appeal ahead, those costs for both sides will keep mounting.
So
far, the Diocese of South Carolina and 38 parishes that separated from the
national church have spent $2 million on legal fees, Bishop Mark Lawrence said.
They will continue to raise money to fight the appeal and noted that The
Episcopal Church has spent far more nationwide to fight similar lawsuits.
“It’s
shameful to continue using church money in this way,” Lawrence said.
He
added that the diocese just wants to move on, independent of The Episcopal
Church, which is the North American province of the global Anglican Communion.
“While they speak peace, they engage in litigation,” said Lawrence, whose
diocese filed the lawsuit.
Holly
Behre, a spokeswoman for vonRosenberg’s diocese, couldn’t say how much they had
spent. “Some of that information is confidential, and some we just don’t have
the data available for at this point,” she said.
After
voting to leave, the Diocese of South Carolina sued the national church and the
diocese vonRosenberg now heads, arguing that those leaving had legal right to
parishes’ properties along with the diocesan name, seal and other identifiers.
That
lawsuit has dragged on for more than two years. It has included a three-week
nonjury trial last summer that tapped 59 witnesses, spanned 2,523 pages of
transcripts and 1,200 exhibits.
Both
sides say it has threatened to distract them from the church’s larger mission.
“I
have tried zealously and steadfastly to focus on the mission at hand — to make
disciples and spread the good news of Christ,” Lawrence said.
Steeped in history
At
issue is the church’s earliest history in Charleston, dating back to 1680. The
lawsuit’s plaintiffs include some of the South’s oldest colonial congregations,
sanctuaries and graveyards.
The
original diocese used the name Protestant Episcopal Diocese of South Carolina —
and its various iterations — for 229 years, even before it joined The Episcopal
Church. And so it can continue using it, Goodstein ruled.
In
1789, the Diocese of South Carolina voluntarily joined The Episcopal Church as
a founding member. In 1841, the diocese added a clause to its constitution
saying that it “accedes to, recognizes and adopts the general Constitution and
Canons of the Protestant Episcopal Church in the United States of America, and
acknowledges their authority accordingly.”
So
it went for 169 years.
But
by 2010, deep divisions had formed between the diocese and national church over
scriptural interpretations, including over homosexuality and salvation, and
most local officials voted to remove that so-called “accession clause.”
Instead, they added that the diocese’s own bylaws would prevail in any dispute.
They
also removed language that said parish property should be held in trust for the
national church. Lawrence then issued quitclaim deeds to every parish so that
church properties were held in the name of their parishes — and not The
Episcopal Church.
The
national church’s disciplinary board charged the bishop with abandonment, and
the diocese opted to leave.
Journey continues
Goodstein
ruled those actions were legal and appropriate.
“The
Constitutions and Canons of (The Episcopal Church) have no provisions which
state that a member diocese cannot voluntarily withdraw its membership,” her
ruling says. Instead, national church officials have referred to its dioceses
as “autonomous.”
“TEC
is not organized in a fashion that its governance controls the Dioceses or the
parish churches. Authority flows from the bottom, the parish churches, up,”
Goodstein wrote. Church authority comes from diocesan bishops — Lawrence, in
this case — and he exercised his right to leave.
Under
South Carolina law, members of The Episcopal Church “may unilaterally withdraw
from the association at any time,” the ruling says.
“Freedom
of association is a fundamental constitutional right,” Goodstein adds in her
order.
Of
course, vonRosenberg disagrees. He remains patient The Episcopal Church and its
local diocese will prevail as the case is appealed.
“Our
biblical heritage tells of journeys experienced by faithful people,”
vonRosenberg said in a statement. “Those journeys often were difficult and
filled with setbacks, but people of faith were called to persevere on the way.”
Reach
Jennifer Hawes at 937-5563 or follow her on Twitter at @JenBerryHawes.
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