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Churches Together on target
for launch
The Christian Century
May 3, 2005
The fledgling Christian Churches
Together—a painstakingly crafted amalgam of U.S. mainline Protestant,
Catholic, Orthodox, racial/ethnic and evangelical/Pentecostal
churches—will organize formally behind closed doors early in June and
publicly celebrate the milestone in September.
Its goal has been to have 25 Christian
organizations committed to the CCT-USA by this spring. The June 1-3
steering committee gathering at a Jesuit retreat house in Los Altos
Hills, California, might exceed that goal, with 27 or 28
representatives, said Wesley Granberg-Michaelson, a Reformed Church in
America executive, who chairs the committee.
If there is a weak spot in the five
categories of churches and Christian organizations,
Granberg-Michaelson said, it is in the racial and ethnic group. A
broad Hispanic coalition and a Korean-American church have joined, but
as of early April none of the African-American Methodist or Baptist
denominations had signed on. “We hope they will at least send
observers,” he said.
However, the general board of the
Memphis-based Church of God in Christ, the fastest growing black
Pentecostal denomination, is scheduled to consider joining at a late
May meeting in Atlanta, said Bishop George McKinney of San Diego, a
CCT-USA steering committee member.
At a meeting of the denomination’s
general board the first week of April, McKinney said he “strongly
recommended” that COGIC join the CCT-USA. “I’m optimistic; I think
there is real need for this organization,” said McKinney, who is also
a pastor and author.
The Pentecostal beliefs and
conservative cultural views of some denominations have not deterred
them from seriously considering the CCT-USA initiative. In Africa and
Latin America, some Pentecostal churches work in coalitions with
Catholics and mainline Protestant churches.
Besides McKinney, two other Pentecostal
clergy are on the steering committee: Bishop James Leggett of the
International Pentecostal Holiness Church and Jeffrey Farmer,
president of the Open Bible Churches. Farmer said he was “extremely
excited” about CCT-USA when he was interviewed last year by Charisma
magazine. “It’s an historic thing, and this time it appears it’s going
to happen,” Farmer said.
The most recent founding member is the
Episcopal Church, whose Executive Council in February voted for
participation. It may be “too soon” to know exactly how the
groundbreaking organization will fare, said Bishop Christopher Epting,
ecumenical officer for the Episcopal Church.
“But CCT-USA could have the potential
of moving beyond the old, institutional structures and bureaucracies
of the ecumenical movement and tapping into the new energies of a
spiritual ecumenism which would realistically reflect the entire
Christian landscape today in this country and beyond,” Epting told
Episcopal News Service.
Granberg-Michaelson, whose denomination
bridges both ecumenical and evangelical approaches, said participants
in the meetings since January 2003 have spent much of their time
praying together and getting acquainted with one another’s traditions.
Such trust-building sessions are crucial, he said, before the CCT-USA
is to even contemplate making consensus statements on moral and social
issues in the years ahead.
“All the major Orthodox churches have
become CCT-USA participants,” Granberg-Michalson said. “The
Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) can’t make that decision until [the
summer of 2006], but it is very clear that the Presbyterians will
join.”
Under the direction of Todd Bassett,
national commander of the Salvation Army, plans are under way to
launch CCT on September 18 in the nation’s capital with a celebration
at Washington National Cathedral.
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