FRESNO, Calif. — Headed into a critical vote, an Episcopal diocese in central California is poised to split with the national denomination over what its bishop sees as the threat of moral decay in the church.
The Episcopal Diocese of San Joaquin is expected to vote by Saturday to secede from the U.S. church, becoming the first full diocese to do so because of a conservative-liberal rift that began decades ago and is now focused on whether the Bible condemns gay relationships.
An affirmative vote would place San Joaquin under the leadership of a like-minded, conservative Anglican diocese in Argentina. It is almost certain to spark a court fight over control of the diocese’s multimillion-dollar real estate holdings and other assets.
In a letter to parishioners, Bishop John-David Schofield said “those who claim they want to remain Episcopalians but reject the biblical standards of morality … will — in the end — be left solely with a name and a bureaucratic structure.”
The head of the U.S. denomination has warned Schofield against secession.
“I do not need to remind you as well of the potential consequences of the direction in which you appear to be leading the Diocese of San Joaquin,” Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori, head of the U.S. denomination, wrote in a letter Monday to him. “I do not intend to threaten you, only to urge you to reconsider and draw back from this trajectory.”
Schofield responded that the diocese would go forward with the vote during its annual convention, which starts today. He all but predicted that delegates would choose to break with the Episcopal Church, the U.S. member of the global Anglican Communion.
“It is The Episcopal Church that has isolated itself from the overwhelming majority of Christendom and more specifically from the Anglican Communion by denying Biblical truth and walking apart from the historic Faith and Order,” Schofield wrote.
The Fresno-based congregation has explored breaking ties with the American church since 2003, when Episcopalians consecrated the church’s first openly gay bishop, Gene Robinson of New Hampshire. The resulting uproar throughout the world Anglican fellowship has moved the 77-million-member communion toward the brink of schism.
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