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Fidelity-chastity on the ropes, nFOG holds slim lead, Belhar teeters: An update on amendment voting
Written by Outlook staff   

UPDATED APRIL 19, 2011 – The Presbytery of deChristo voted on Saturday to a 62-62 tie – which counts as a collective “no” vote – becoming the third presbytery to turn away from supporting elimination of the fidelity-chastity ordination requirement (in 2009 it voted 59-48 to overturn the policy).

However, given that 16 presbyteries have reversed their vote in the opposite direction, time is running out for those who hope to retain the constitutional prohibition adopted in 1997 that has denied ordination of all those sexually active outside of heterosexual marriage.

The proposed new Form of Government amendment continues to hold a slim lead in presbytery voting. The Belhar Confession is drawing a solid majority, but it continues to track just below the two-thirds margin required to be added to The Book of Confessions.

So far, 80 presbyteries have voted to support Amendment 10-A, which would delete from the PC(USA) constitution the requirement that candidates for ordination practice “fidelity in marriage between a man and a woman or chastity in singleness.” Sixty (60) presbyteries have disapproved the amendment. Compared to the last round (in 2008-09) of voting on that proposed change, sixteen (16) presbyteries have switched from opposition to support, while three (3) presbyteries have withdrawn their support.

Passage of the amendment requires 87 affirmative votes, including a minimum of net nine presbyteries to switch from opposition to support, so the net change so far of 13 presbytery votes indicates a strong trend toward passage. Thirty-four presbyteries have yet to vote.

Support for the proposal to replace the Form of Government section of the denomination’s Book of Order holds a slim 72-62 margin. A simple majority of 87 votes is needed for approval, and 48 presbyteries have yet to vote.

Support for adding the Belhar Confession to The Book of Confessions leads 68-43 in voting so far. The confession was written to guide the anti-apartheid movement in South Africa and was recently adopted by the Reformed Church in America and will be considered at the 2012 general synod meeting of the Christian Reformed Church in North America.

The proposal to add it to The Book of Confessions requires support by two-thirds (116) of the presbyteries to pass. Of the presbyteries that have voted, 61 percent have endorsed its adoption. In order to pass, 48 of the 62 presbyteries that have yet to vote on the proposal must approve it. For final adoption, the 2012 General Assembly must also approve the change.

                                                           Summary as of April 19, 2001

Amendment

Yes

No

Needed for approval

Ordination Standards

80

60

87

New FOG

72

62

87

Belhar Confession

68

43

116

Do you want to track the voting on these amendments? The official tabulation of votes is managed by the Office of the General Assembly (OGA). Some affiliated advocacy organizations are also tracking the votes on their Web pages.


Office of the General Assembly



Covenant Network – which supports ratification


Presbyterian Coalition – which opposes ratification

 

Comments  

 
#3 p.w. gregory 2011-04-22 09:35
The breathless reporting of the counting of the numbers is rather pointless, it is not a baseball game where one side keeps score. One side wins and gets the trophy, the other goes home. No, the plurality of one vote or 100 one way or another is irrelevent to the body.

The affect of the votes upon the body- the "a" and not the "e", effect, is what matters. History and experience bear out that the final votes is not the final word on any matter in the church, all will get worked out in the courts of the church in the years to come, as the churches, synods, Presbyteries stake their territory in the new system.

Yes, it seems 10-A will carry the day, but be warned. One cannot be proto-baptist in matters of ordination and membership, and semi-episcopal in matters of the the "P"s. Property, per capita, and process. You cannot have it both ways at the same time.

The Progressives are fond of talking about their big-tent and room for all that their table. We will see just how big that tent will be. And maybe they will not like who sits next to them all that much after all. Peace in the absence of justice for both sides of the issue is an illusion, and their will be no peace until what is right is done for all.
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#2 Thomas Fultz 2011-04-02 12:48
The issue facing the PCUSA goes beyond ordination standards, but as my pastor said in a recent newsletter article: "That is a symptom. The underlying disease is conforming the church to the secular culture - erosion of Biblical authority." Presbyterians are children of the Reformation, looking to Scripture for what we believe and do. God has spoken to us through the Bible. Christianity is God's idea. The church is God's. We are not free to change things to suit our tastes or to fit in better to our secular culture. The church must proclaim that God loves everyone so much that Christ died so we could be set free and be transformed. We are all broken and need GRACE! I urge the presbyters in the Presbyteries still to vote - Vote NO! on these three amendments to the Constitution.
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#1 Reverend Patricia Slomanski 2011-03-29 10:03
I want to thank my Minister and Elder colleagues of Coastal Carolina Presbytery. On Saturday you not only affirmed what the Bible teaches on human sexuality, but you remained steadfast in what the Church Universal has taught for over 2,000. I was born and raised in this Presbytery, and I love it dearly. I am a cradle Presbyterian and have grieved about the direction in which the PCUSA is headed. The vote on Saturday was like the balm of Gilead. From my heart I thank you.
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