Tuesday, December 15, 2020

 The Anglican Church Annual Diocesan Council: A Jaffna Perspective


By S. Ratnajeevan H. Hoole –

Prof. S. Ratnajeevan H. Hoole

Disruptions of the Mass by COVID

For some time now the obligatory Sunday Mass had been suspended because of COVID-19. Christians have been under some restrictions. First services were totally disallowed. Then, while those in Colombo were allowed services with 25 communicants, in Jaffna the PHIs restricted it to 5. Then two Sundays ago, at St. James’ Nallur, the Vicar, The Rev. Fr. Stephen Jebachelvan, said “Come what may, we will start with 5 communicants.” Hearing about it, last Sunday (6th) he had to hold two services. Next Sunday (13th) it is expected to be more to cater to the demand ignored by the Church.

Disruption of Council

While the regularity of the Mass is from the Bible, of lesser order is the Diocesan Constitution that demands that the annual conclave (the Diocesan Council) should be during July and October is a demand of the Diocesan Constitution. It was disturbed by the retirement of the former Bishop Dhilo Canagasabey. The election for his replacement was held on 15 Aug. although there was good reason for holding it earlier. DV, nothing will stop the new Bishop’s attending the prestigious diennial Lambeth Conference originally scheduled for 2018, and then 2020 but now postponed to 27th July – 8th August 2022. 

Questions on Consecration

The Consecration and Enthronement of the Bishop-Elect, Rev. Fr. Dushantha Rodrigo, was delayed. The constitutional requirement that three “Bishops” should lay hands needs clarification. Only 2 Diocesan Bishops and other retired Bishops really laid hands. While a Bishop is always a Bishop even after retirement, the constitution defines Diocesan Bishops but not “Bishops.” The doubt could have been solved by inviting the Diocesan Bishop The Rev. Dr. Daniel Thiagarajah of Jaffna of the [Anglican] Church of South India, but that seems to have been avoided for political reasons. Instead there were diocesan bishops from abroad waving their hands on a computer screen via Zoom rather than laying on hands. The solution raises more question than it answered. We appear to have a new Bishop anyway, with the Archbishop of Canterbury signing the relevant instrument. In our “intellectual church,” these are not discussed. 

Mass on Zoom

The Council meeting to be chaired by the new Bishop, now The Rt. Rev. Dushantha Rodrigo, did not have health authority permission because it involves about 300 delegates. So we had a meeting in 16 locations, going Rural Deanery by Rural Deanery with two venues for the larger ones. It will be on Zoom they announced making it unclear if the Bishop crossing the host and wine in Colombo will invoke the presence of Christ in the elements in Jaffna. In the end it was separate masses, each presided by a priest.

Jaffna Rural Deanery

Unlike the normal 3-day conclave, 11 December’s, was for a day only. Each Rural Deanery was allowed only 2 speakers on resolutions. This time there is  only one resolution on giving us an opportunity to revise our constitution. I had been nominated by the Jaffna Rural Deanery to summarize our discussions on Friday 4th. Here is my prepared text for my allotted 5 minutes.

Text of Speech

May it please Your Lordship: I speak on behalf of the Jaffna Deanery to summarise our meeting last Friday on the Resolutions by Fathers Selvan and Sathivel.

The “Aye” Argument

Already dealt with by the proposer, their argument is that we have already seen problems in the constitution of Dec. 2007and call for making it current. It is only in English and awaits translation.  I say this lapse is because of lack of capacity in the Church in translation. Most of us cannot understand its archaic English and will need translations if we really want a discussion beyond the minority English-speakers. Principally three faults are alleged:

1. In the election of bishop, the process is alleged to be a disgrace. Until the day of election we pretend we do not know who the candidates are and as a result allowed one of them to send out letters of invitation for the election. But there was a lot of campaigning. This slanted the election. The senior-most archdeacon did not chair as constitutionally required. The system allowed only one day for nomination, debate, and voting. The proposers want a simple majority to determine who is elected. 

2. The role of clergy in Christ-centered Service needs to be investigated and brought into the constitution with mandates. The rules for the Sabbath and lay-workers must be adequately addressed.

3. A periodic review of the constitution is not provided for. A committee should be appointed and mandated to perform this review, and that review should be brought to the Diocesan Council in 2022.

The “Nay” Argument

The “Nay” argument is that the mature American constitution, ratified in June 1788, has only seen 27 amendments over its 232 years. Sri Lanka’s constitution, however, from 1978, has had 20 amendments in its 42 years.  It is said to be a periodical. I think as a people we do not keep to our work commitments and rush changes. That is why we cannot get things right at one go. We will fix one problem and create another. Assignments of such importance must go to the competent and not be used to give exposure to favorites.

The Church and the Rule of Law

Why a revision when we do not read our constitution and stray often from it? Consider:

1. Two and half years ago, we passed a resolution on the Tamil eucharistic liturgy. It called for an immediate stop to praying to God as “God without holiness.” We continue to do that even though the then Bishop assented to the resolution. We Tamils still have a liturgy where god is not almighty, and Christ is not “The Most High in the Glory of God the Father.” We have nine commandments not ten. And most of us do not even notice this. The constitution requires the implementation of that near-unanimous resolution. But it has not been done. It is a most severe indictment on the intellectual capacity of our “intellectual church” that we cannot implement obvious mistakes even when they are spoon-fed in writing. Finish what is on our plate before taking on new projects. Picking favorites ignoring capacity is what led to a prayerbook with spelling, grammar and thought mistakes. The CMS Board for Schools, last I looked, had non-degreed housewives and a chairman calling himself doctor with an honourary degree. The advertisement for Principal of CMS St. John’s College had 7 grammar mistakes. No wonder our schools are failing. Tap the national university graduates among clergy for cerebral tasks, not socialites.

2. I am a dual US-Sri Lanka citizen. The Sri Lankan constitution never precluded my serving on the Election Commission. An archdeacon tweeted on twitter like Donald Trump that I was unlawfully functioning on the Election Commission. It hurt me professionally. So, I filed a written complaint with the then Bishop. No response as mandated by the Constitution.

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