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RP Synod 2003
RP Synod 2003: Tuesday, July 1
A DAY FOR CLOSURE
A lot of significant work came to completion today. Some
reports that have been before the Synod for days or years
saw resolution during the Tuesday sessions of the 172nd RPCNA
Synod at Geneva College in Beaver Falls, Pa.
A devotion on devotion, penetrating words on prayer-that
is how Pastor Matthew Kingswood (Russell, Ont.) described
Psalm 66, one of the "Psalms of Our Lives" that
the Synod selected for its devotions this week. Pastor Kingswood
challenged delegates at a personal level with the weightiness
of the warning not to "regard sin in our hearts"
(vv. 16-20), as God will not hear us. Yet he also brought
out the actual mercies of God even in this, as it actually
is a warning for our blessing.
After nine years of work, a new Book of Discipline has been
completed and has been approved by the denomination. This
constitutional book was approved at the 2002 Synod but had
to be approved by sessions. The session votes were announced
today. The Committee to Revise the Book of Discipline was
then dismissed after 9 years of work. Committee members included
Bob McFarland, Dick Weir, Dennis Olsen, Bob Hemphill, Bob
Tweed, and Phil Pockras.
Work continued, and was completed, today on the report of
the Study Committee on the Doctrine of Worship. Some areas
of delegates' minor concern were noted, such as the purpose
and particulars of two orders of service at the end of the
document. There was related discussion about what level of
uniformity in worship was being sought by the committee. Eventually
the word "uniformity" in the report was changed
to "unity." Another change was to include specific
references to Christ in several places where they had been
implied before.
This major position paper on worship, then, was adopted by
the Synod, and the committee was thanked with a round of applause.
The position paper is to be available soon on the RPCNA web
site.
Earlier in the week, the fate of three communications to
Synod was placed in the hands of one "committee of the
day," the Judicial Committee. Today that committee rendered
its judgments and made its recommendations to Synod.
Communication 03-2 had asked for slight changes in the Directory
for Church Government to reduce the possibility of an error
in procedure regarding the announcement of congregational
meetings. The judicial committee ruled that these changes
were unnecessary and overly restrictive of session/congregation
liberty. The judicial committee's recommendation passed without
discussion.
Communication 03-3 asked the Synod to delete a sentence in
the Directory for Church Government. The Judicial Committee
said we ought to "guard against any hint that church
courts are secret societies." (See the section on Communications
in Saturday's report.)
"The meetings of the courts of the church are public
meetings," said the Judicial Committee. "Sessions
may politely request observers to dismiss themselves when
the session is discussing delicate counseling matters."
Some delegates disagreed with committee assertion that session
meetings are public. The nature of session's purpose involves
people and sensitive matters and they should not routinely
be open to third parties while those discussions are taking
place, the delegates said. Many other Reformed/Presbyterian
denominations don't have this kind of openness in their meetings.
In the end, however, it was the Judicial Committee's recommendation
that overwhelmingly passed.
Communication 03-4 expressed a need for Synod to reaffirm
query 4 and to protect the query in an ongoing way by having
presbyteries check with all officers of the church to ascertain
any current doctrinal diversion from that query. The Judicial
Committee disagreed with three of the four recommendations
of this communication, and Synod upheld the committee's judgment.
The committee's position was that the concerns of the communication
regarding protection and enforcement of the query were already
provided for in our government and in relationships within
a presbytery. Some members of the originating presbytery,
however, expressed that the current safeguards have not been
enough to avoid a number of problematic situations.
The committee did see some merit in the concerns of the communication,
and dealt with those by making the following recommendation,
which was overwhelmingly passed by the Synod:
"That Synod remind all officers of the church that if
they find themselves out of accord with the Confessional Standards
of the church, their beliefs and commitments have changed,
it is their duty to declare their scruples and differences
with the Westminster Confession of Faith, the Larger and Shorter
Catechisms, or the Testimony of the Reformed Presbyterian
Church to their presbytery if a teaching elder, or to their
session if a ruling elder or deacon."
The Committee on Congregational Officers, whose report was
sent back earlier in the Synod, asked that two members be
added to their committee to bring the committee to five. Synod
did so.
The evening focused on relationships with other denominations.
Two fraternal delegates addressed the court-Irfon Hughes of
the Presbyterian Church in America, and Rob Broline of the
Orthodox Presbyterian Church. Pastor Hughes reported that
the PCA had just approved two overtures recommending pursuit
of union with other NAPARC churches, including the RPCNA.
Two pastors from the United Reformed Churches are present
at this Synod. In remarks to the Synod, one of the pastors
said that the URC intends to establish closer ties with the
RPCNA. A letter of greeting was read from the Reformed Church
of Quebec, a denomination that is currently seeking membership
in NAPARC.
For the final report of the evening, Youth Ministries Committee
chairman Andy McCracken reported his great encouragement in
working with the youth of the denomination and in seeing their
growing interest in service to the RPCNA. "I'm available;
what will the church have me to do?" is the attitude
of an increasing number of RP youth, he said. Often, however,
these youth have not been given enough encouragement or direction
in answer to their question. McCracken, recounting a time
in history when the opportunities were more plentiful, encouraged
the denomination to provide places where youth and young adults-men
and women--can enter into the mission and ministry of the
denomination.
With a day and a half of Synod still scheduled on the docket,
but few reports left to be delivered, the estimation of the
clerk of Synod at the beginning of Synod might prove true-that
this year's relatively light docket could mean that Synod
will end by tomorrow night. Major reports due tomorrow include
those on education and finance.
--Drew and Lynne Gordon, editors
Reformed Presbyterian Witness
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