Monday, August 4, 2008

Lambeth Is Almost Over


This is the time that Lambeth Conference is winding down and the packing and the Goodbyes are being said. This evening the pubs on campus will be full with many of us gathering to wish each other well. Above photo: Final plenary session
The conversation however will have a tinge of the last minute points being made and in truth work will be done in a quiet way about the tables. It may look like it is over, but that is not the way it feels or appears to those on the ground.


Tomorrow my Bible Study group will meet for the last time and we will complete our study of the Gospel of St. John. We will pray together, share our thoughts on the Holy Scriptures and share our hopes and dreams for the work of the Anglican Communion. We will regret not being with each other to continue our work and mini
stry and we will all know that our work and ministry is back in our diocese "back home." Lambeth is almost over, but not just yet.

Tomorrow following the Bible Study our Indaba Group (the joining together of five Bible Study Groups) will meet for another two hours. This will be the last time for this group and we will continue our work and conversation on who we are as bishops of the Anglican Communion and bishops in our Provinces (for me that is The Episcopal Church) throughout the world. We will speak from the heart and listen with our inner ears to those we have come to love and respect. We will value each other and hold one another in our prayers knowing that we are not all of one mind and in agreement on many issues that could divide us. We know that context is important and non of us can fully appreciate the other's position for we each live only in our own place.

Tomorrow we will take group photos and give simple gifts (I am giving bookmarks and lapel pins from our diocese) as a token of our affection and respect for one another. We will pledge to each other that we will pray for each other weekly and stay in touch monthly via the internet. Perhaps, even use Skype once and a while to gather across the miles to share our stories, study and faith. Tomorrow there will be a time to gathering the entire Lambeth Conference to worship and pray and sing and listen and share the Peace of Christ. We will be dismissed - sent forth - from this place to bring the Gospel to the places in which God has called us to serve. That is the joy of leaving and the wonder of going home to be in the places which differ and yet which are ours to serve. Photo above right: Doddington Gardens


Tomorrow I will return to London and then go on the Ireland to both vacation and to work in a local parish in Tralee, Ireland. At the end of the month Kathy and I will come home and rejoice in being among family and friends. For others they go back to dangers I cannot even imagine or contemplate. They go in the name of Christ to share the Gospel and they carry our love and the hope and grace of Jesus with them. May God bless us all in the ministries we share in Christ.


Friday, August 1, 2008

Relationships Teach Us Who We All Are



[ABOVE: Bishops' Group Photo ACNS/Sweeney]

[Canterbury, England] One of the vital aspects of the Lambeth Conference is to get to know other bishops from around the world. It is exciting and it is a joy, and at times it is humbling. My Bible Study group has a wide variety of people from throughout the Anglican Communion. People whom I knew before, but most of them whom I have met here for the first time. All of us have stories to tell. All of them have become friends whom I can and am now working with, and will continue to pray for when we disperse and go from Lambeth back to our dioceses throughout the world.


[Below left: Bishop Duncan
in the Bishops' Processional
a
t Canterbury Chapel]


One is from the Belfast area of Ireland and was and is involved in the reconciliation work between the Protestants and Roman Catholics. He is continuing to work for peace and justice in his diocese and throughout the area where hostility has caused the death of so many people over this past century. The second is from Zimbabwe, and is working to bring his people into a place of safety and economic sustainability. He is concerned about his clergy and people, that they will have enough to eat and a place that is secure for them to live and enough food to eat. The political situation is in turmoil. Both of these bishops live with the constant possibility of imprisonment, death and isolation. Both are grounded in prayer and the study of scripture. Both are bishops who seek to do God's will and share the love of God with their people. They both understand fear and because of that, understand hope. I have come to value and appreciate both of them, for they are men of faith and they are a delight to be with in prayer, study and "relaxing times as well."

"And what does the Lord require of you, but to do justice, love mercy and walk humbly with your God."

So it is for these last few days we have been engaged in looking at the environment, ecumenical and interfaith dialogues and relationships, violence both domestic, national and international, and the meaning of covenant relationships. All of these relate to Episcopalians and Anglicans living together, working together,
and staying together as Church. What is most interesting for me has been that all of us, despite our differences, are interested in each other and the areas and people whom we serve. None of us believes we have all the answers and none of us believes we can go this ministry that God has given us to do,without the others whom we call brother and sister bishops.

[Photo left: Chaplaincy Team from the Church of Melanesia performs for Bishops during group photo setup]



Please continue to keep us in your prayers over the next week as we continue to work at the building up of the Anglican Communion, and work to discern God's will for whatever the future may hold for us all.

With my love and blessings, I am in Christ,

Bishop Duncan
August 1, 2008