Presbyterian News Service: Given the choice
LOUISVILLE — A task force charged with revising the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.)’s Form of Government (FOG) has backed away from its proposed rewrite of the PC(USA) Constitution’s theological underpinnings (chapters 1-4 of The Book of Order).
The task force was authorized by last summer’s 217th General Assembly to revise the FOG to make it more flexible for presbyteries and congregations. Some members of the task force had drafted a new section to replace the first four chapters.
But instead of recommending this new section entitled “The Foundations of Presbyterian Polity,” the nine-member Form of Government Task Force tentatively decided at its April 12-14 meeting here to submit both “Foundations” and the existing first four Book of Order chapters to the 2008 assembly and let commissioners decide which they prefer. ….
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Borrowing from renowned Presbyterian missiologist Darrell Guder, the task force posits five characteristics of missional polity:
Biblical — “there should be explicit biblical foundations for what we believe about the church”;
Historical — polity must acknowledge that “we come to the church as the latest in along tradition of Christians who have struggled with what it means to be faithful and from whose struggles we can learn”;
Contextual — “the Church is not an abstraction but exists in particular…settings” so polity “must provide the flexibility to enable the church to adapt…”;
Eschatological — “polity must have at its core the conviction that the Church is moving toward God’s promised new creation and should bear witness to that new reality in all that it does”;
Practicable — “what the polity envisions can be put into regular and effective practice by the Church.”
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