A Word from the Office of the Bishop Suffragan for Armed Services, Healthcare, and Prison Ministries


Current Bishop's Diary Page + Diary 7 September + 15 September + 22 September + 29 September

Earlier Bishop's Diary Pages + Diary 26 May - 23 June + Diary 30 June-27 July +
Diary 4 August-18 August

 

   

29 September, Ramstein, AFB, Germany

This will have to be brief since this visit is full of wonderful activities and the official day is about to begin.

Originally this trip was to be a "one location" event at which all our chaplains in Europe would convene here in Germany for a spiritual respite, and perhaps, a planning session for the Spring Family Conference. Logistically that couldn't occur this year so instead I have put together this shuttle tour of Germany-Italy. At least I'll visit with all seven chaplains by the end of this junket.

I'm writing to you mid-way in this scenario and enjoying being on the ground with our larger family of Faith. I carry your prayers to the continuing Episcopal presence here at Ramstein in St. Alban's Congregation. Currently they are without a priest, but they are not without heart in the Lord. Bill Humphreys, the senior lay leader here, has put together an impressive Rota and is determined to see it through to the Spring when a reassignment should assist things. My visit with the USAFE Chaplain, John Blair, confirmed the reliability of that hope. This may be news to our own Air Force chaplains, but we'll see.

The real message here is not the placement of an Episcopal priest, vital as that is, but rather the indomitable spirit that is of our people. I can think of a number of locations throughout the globe where this is so. We can count ourselves in a long line of survivorship, Anglican outposts which have remained faithful.

Tomorrow it's on to Naples with a Confirmation the next day. I ask for your prayers on this journey, always know that you have mine.

+gep

Diary 22 September

A quick trip to Washington, DC, yielded a rich harvest of experience. This was the occasion for the Annual Convocation of first line supervisors in Veteran's Administration Hospitals. This year 140 persons attended the four-day conference at an "inside the beltway" hotel. Episcopalians distinguished themselves with two recognitions. First, CH Babs Meirs, in absentia, for her innovative spinal chord injury program and particularly CH Bill Mahedy and his career-long advocacy for creative responses to "Post Traumatic Stress Disorder." Bill, as many of you know is the author of the acclaimed, "Out of the Night, The Spiritual Journey of Vietnam Veterans." It was an honor to be in attendance with CH Mike Carr and CH Tom Rardin as Bill received the applause of his peers.

Later that evening I had dinner with a candidate for the Executive for the Military job. You have all been very patient as I sift through the credentials of all these worthy applicants. I say "patient" because, despite the summer, I believe we have slowed our response time to some military correspondence-save for "A-1 priority"-as we fill the vacancy created by Bill Noble's leaving for his new program job here at 815. We will have a replacement by the end of the month. Not only is this person important to me but he/she must be well regarded by those of you in the field. Besides the senior chaplains of all Branches, I have sought the counsel of Bob DuBrul, our team consultant and Dr. Ken Ruge, already known to many of you for his psychological insight and good sense of who we are.

The next day, still in Washington, I spent the morning with The Rev. Lloyd W. Lyngdal, my Lutheran counterpart in the ELCA. Besides clarifying what our next, practical steps might be as we live into the "Called to Common Mission" agreement, we set out on a course of regular exchanges between our offices intending to learn more from each other. Just as I inferred in last week's "Notebook" article, the actual exchanges between our two churches will develop in gradual, but assured, incremental steps. We Episcopalians must be aware of the ever sensitive relationship ELCA Chaplains might be experiencing with their Missouri Synod counterparts. That being the case, I believe any cooperation between our two Communions will be coming from the Episcopal Chaplain as an invitation to our services. I'll need to know how that proceeds, so let me know.

Finally, I caught the Shuttle back to New York and though I was tired upon arriving home, Clara convinced me "to play soccer for a little while." The object lesson here of course is that no matter how prominent the day, we all have to go home and do the important things.

+gep

Diary 15 September

Despite all the rousing news over the summer about relations with the Lutheran Church I’m receiving news from the field about hesitancy and confusion on how to proceed. This stems in part from guidance to the Chiefs of Chaplains that as far as they are concerned "swapping" an Episcopal chaplain for a Lutheran and vice versa is not advisable.

To their credit the Chiefs are advised well that this historic document of Inter-Church Communion is not comparable to a machine shop of interchangeable parts. Yet, I’m not worried about at this stage and you shouldn’t be either. First of all the "Called to Common Mission" agreement doesn’t go into effect until 1 January 2001, and second, I am already hearing of some field situations where bringing Lutherans together in a practical way is solving knotty logistical problems. The bottom line here is that we have time to work things out, and, in some instances already have.

We look forward to rejoicing in the bonds of love we share in the same Lord.

I wish I had the same optimism with the Roman Catholic Church. At an audience on 9 June 2000 with His Holiness Pope John Paul II, the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, as a formulary for doctrine and policy statements for the Vatican, received approval of the "Note on the Expression "Sister Churches.’" The 29 page document is not light reading but in effect it seeks to refine the Vatican II declaration that, "outside the structure (of the Church), many elements can found of sanctification and truth." There is no retraction of that stance except that the Note goes on to say that "efficacy (comes) from the very fullness of grace and truth entrusted to the Catholic Church."

The puzzling part of this piece comes with this phrase on the 15th page, "…ecclesial communities which have not preserved the valid Episcopate and the genuine and integral substance of the Eucharistic mystery, are not Churches in the proper sense." That is a distressing thing to read, not that we have ever expected Rome to validate our Orders, but neither do we expect such abruptness in an atmosphere of warmth and ecclesial conversation. With this information you may be better informed than many Roman Catholic chaplains, which says a lot about the way things are.

Yesterday was Holy Cross Day, or, as it used to be called, "The Exaltation of the Holy Cross." It’s not that we "exalt" the means Our Lord’s death, but we marvel that even a cross was converted to the means of salvation and freedom. God’s very nature is this abiding goodness intending to redeem that which appears resistant. Doesn’t it follow that the prayerful relationship of two chaplains (whatever denominational obstacles they face) based on pastoral need, determines the sensitive and faithful sacramental course of action to any challenge? I sure hope so. +gep

Bishop's Diary, 7 September

Persons over the centuries have returned from Russia with a sense of wonder and puzzlement.

Certainly that was true for me, and, there are a variety of other adjectives to describe my recent trip with CH Roger Kappel. From the start a Visa predicament made me worry if enough staff support was available. (You may know we are simultaneously interviewing for the new Executive Assistant for the Military-Bill Noble's old job.) Undaunted, and thanks to Roger's
optimism, we embarked on the trip anyway. Although initial news of the sinking of the submarine Kursk occurred upon our arrival and subsequently curtailed some ceremonies, the whole bunch of days could be summed up as a hearty exchange between friends.

I have always wanted the "Russia connection" to have relevance for our chaplains at home and overseas. My goal was to find some means of exchange that would not only be substantive but economical. These trips are pricey and time consuming. I had been to Russia before with Bishop Keyser but this was before Bishop Saava, the new bishop with responsibility for "federal" ministries, had been consecrated.

Whenever you leave the cocoon of your own culture the gift of new perspective arrives. Our greeting at the airport and consistently throughout the trip celebrated that an American delegation was attending this worldwide Orthodox event thus affirming the Council of Bishops recent edict that the Church has a special relationship with the military. Now I had a colleague in Bishop Saava, across the table who worried-like I do-about the responsiveness of the bureaucracy surrounding our priests. Naively I shared my sense of things but quickly realized he remained preoccupied with a Communist presence in the ranks.

The itinerary was impressive: first day, recognition banquet; second day, consecration of the Cathedral of Our Savior; third day, canonization of saints persecuted during the Soviet era; fourth day, briefing at the Ministry of Defense; last days, visiting troops in the field.

Perhaps Americans are always a surprised by continental hospitality. When I say that one event occupied a whole day it sounds spare, except when you're in Russia. Each occasion had its own liturgy or travel-usually three hours-followed by meetings and always a banquet and toasts. My first few attempts at a toast were fumbling affairs, but soon you catch on to the grandeur of the gesture. It is partly descriptive of the current moment, some humor if you can manage it, but most of all it is the statement of a longing hope residing in God. Many poets (Pushkin and Achmanova, particularly) have given voice to this yearning. I think Russians are not so romantic as practical in this regard because they make deposits in the future, a time which makes more sense than anything happening now. That was certainly true of the erratic updates we were receiving about the Kursk.

Our final days included field visits, which I especially enjoyed as it allowed me to express your prayers for the sailors and families of the downed submarine. I also marveled together with Bishop Saava that these military men and women look so young, just as they do in American uniforms. Rotating groups of our chaplains, through future exchanges, to exclaim that point with Russian counterparts might be ultimately why God has thrown us together.

+gep

 
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