BISHOP JOHN PALMER CRONEBERGER’S CONVENTION
ADDRESS
TO THE
133RD DIOCESAN CONVENTION – DIOCESE OF NEWARK
JANUARY 20, 2007
And he said good-bye to them in parables….
1.) As the missionary approached the village, he saw
the villagers running toward him, fear written across
their faces, screaming, “There’s a monster
in the field !!! There’s a monster in the field
!!!” Looking about, the missionary spied a giant
watermelon. Laughing, he called the villagers to stop – pulled
out his knife, hacked the watermelon in two, and prepared
to eat it. The villagers looked horrified, and screamed
ever more loudly – “He’s killed the
monster, and now he’s going to kill us !!” They
set upon the missionary – beat him….and
killed him.
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2.) As the missionary approached the village, he saw
the villagers running toward him, fear written across
their faces, screaming, “There’s a monster
in the field !! There’s a monster in the field
!!!”… Looking about, the missionary spied
a giant watermelon, and he began to run with the villagers.
After some time, the missionary said to the villagers, “I
think we are safe – I think we can stop running
now.” He invited the villagers to sit with him,
to engage in conversation, to tell each other their
stories, to care, and to love. In the midst of all
of that, the missionary was given the opportunity to
share the experience of the rich, sweet, juicy taste
of the watermelon.
More than eight years ago, I told that parable in
the walk-abouts when we were then in the process of
discerning who God might be calling to be Bishop. As
we approached the last group to be visited that day,
the person who was shepherding me through the schedule
said, “Jack, why don’t you sit this one
out?" (You’ve been really working hard today.) “I’ll
go in and tell your stories.”
Well, you see the thing is… at the end of the
day you can’t really tell anybody else’s
story. You can only tell your own. Over the years,
I have discovered that telling our stories requires
at least the following:
1. A place of trust - Sometimes that happens very
quickly; sometimes it takes a long time and a lot of
effort.
2. A person or people ready to listen – The challenge
here is that oft times those of us who have learned
how to speak may not have learned how to listen; and
those of us who have learned how to listen have significant
difficulty finding our voices to speak.
3. A willingness for the storyteller to become a story-listener – as
noted above.
4. A climate which encourages the celebration of one’s
story far more than the critical analysis of that story
- Parts of the world seem to have gotten better at
negativity and destructive criticism than affirmation
and praise.
5. A place where our stories might find similar stories
even though each might have unique circumstances.
6. A possibility for the emergence of a common story
which honors the uniqueness of each, yet celebrates
the weaving of the separate threads into something
stronger and larger and more life-giving.
I believe that during my time as your Bishop we have
been developing a safer place for us to tell our stories
to each other. Much of our recent life as a diocese
has been ordered not so much around a particular issue
or program but around a call from deep within the Baptismal
covenant…a call to listen...a call to love…a
call to develop relationships…a call to trust…a
call to experience shared leadership…a call to
build healthy, life-giving communities of faith. All
of this describes the need we have experienced for
some time to imagine and discover new ways to live
together.
Some of the results of our living together deeply
within the Baptismal covenant include the following:
A.) A focus on life-giving, healthy, growing, ministries
complete with expectations for local congregations.
The transformation beginning here is due to a wonderful
combination of finding the right person to lead the
charge for congregational development; together with
a sum of money made available by the Trustees to encourage
congregational initiatives; and a very hard- working
committee of the Diocesan Council to provide leadership.
There is so much more to be done, but some key ingredients
for success are in place.
B.) A second result of our living together within
the covenant has included an ongoing conversation about
the meaning of Confirmation, its appropriate setting
and its relationship to Episcopal visitations. Here
I must confess to you that I will walk away from this
one as an unrepentant child of God. I believe I am
right about this one…..and I will take with me
the vivid memory of faces standing before me, faces
of young and old, faces filled with excitement and
wonder, (and, yes, a few faces which seemed to be bored
to tears;) faces with unique persons attached; faces
complete with stories: Thelonius Monk, bling bling, “Are
you going to slap me today?” ….and my face…wide-eyed
in awe and wonder and frequently in tears at the privilege
which has been mine.
C.) A focus on the four orders of ministry in the
Episcopal Church, (lay persons, Bishops, Deacons, Priests)
with special attention to the revival of a distinctly
diaconal ministry within these four orders. Twenty-five
(25) deacons are now among us with more to come, expanding
our capacity for ministry, calling us to a renewal
of our servanthood ministry, bestowed on us at Baptism.
Here I want to pay special attention to one among us
who has served the diocese with untold hours of work,
to assist us in a process of recovering a real diaconal
ministry… the Archdeacon of Newark for the past
three years, The Venerable Herb Tinning. Herb, please
come forward to receive the well- deserved thanks of
the Diocese of Newark. In most dioceses today, archdeacon
is not an honorific title, but a working one. Archdeacon
Tinning will soon become Deacon Herb Tinning as he
relinquishes the position of archdeacon. Thank you,
Herb, for assisting us through our infancy in diaconal
ministry. Please accept this stole, created by Carol
Homer, and offered with the love and gratitude of Newark.
After consultation with Bishop-elect Beckwith, I am
pleased to announce to you today that The Rev. Nancy
Read, Deacon, will become the next Archdeacon of Newark,
serving with Bishop Beckwith. Nancy will be installed
and seated at the Cathedral with Bishop Beckwith in
February.
In our journey of shared leadership, lay ministry
has been raised up and celebrated…thanks in part
to the very long and much-revered tradition of lay
ministry in the Diocese of Newark; thanks also in part
to the establishment of a subcommittee of the Commission
on Ministry on Lay Ministries.
D.) Over the past months and years, this diocese has
stood firmly and spoken clearly for (a.) the abolition
of the death penalty, which, as we speak, is closer
and closer to a reality in the State of New Jersey – Praise
God!; (b.) support for the blessing of same sex unions – now
legally possible in the State of New Jersey; and (c.)
support for the position taken by our Presiding Bishop
calling upon our President and our country to bring
an end to the war in Iraq and to be thoroughly engaged
in the work of peacemaking. All of these are matters
of justice and speak to concerns raised out of the
heart of the Baptismal covenant. Perhaps I might leave
just two concerns with you. Somehow we must not allow
the Anglican Communion to determine that one description
of human sexuality will be the Litmus Test for inclusion
in the Communion. We ought to be concerned about our
participation in a new covenant to be developed by
the Communion (or, more likely, by a selected part
of the Communion) if that covenant makes unreasonable
demands upon us for uniformity rather than unity in
the midst of recognized diversity. That would be too
great a price to pay for some kind of artificial union,
and it would be a betrayal of who we are.
Having noted some of the ministries we have been about,
I renew my belief that our lives are not so much a
matter of issues or causes, but rather relationships
and shared visions. It is about the Baptismal covenant
calling us to be such a people committed deeply to
Jesus Christ.
Please allow me to share a rather strange personal
story that might illustrate what I am seeking to describe.
Some years ago, I attended a Friday/Saturday conference
at a retreat center. I awakened early Saturday morning,
and wandered down to the chapel. As I walked about,
I noticed above the wall of the Baptismal font, these
words: God’s promise; Roots and Wings. Several
years later, I attended another conference at what
I thought was the same retreat center. When I entered
the chapel this time, I noticed that there was no inscription
over the font. When I asked the sisters what happened
to the inscription, they told me that there never was
such an inscription. Explanation – I don’t
know. Several possibilities, but none really make sense.
Whatever the truth, I believe the inscription was for
me… God’s Promise; Roots and Wings. At
your baptism and at mine, God’s promise has been
made and kept: Roots and Wings. Certainly, the Biblical
prophecy speaks repeatedly of a root springing forth,
a root of Jesse, a root of David, for us, a new strength,
a new beginning, Jesus. This root from which new branches
blossom. Paul wrote, “…if the root is holy,
so are the branches.” Remember, it is not you
that supports the root, but the root that supports
you.
I remember a particular wedding at the Church of the
Atonement in Tenafly. An eager mother of the bride
wanted so much to be helpful. She also wanted the Church
to look beautiful for her daughter’s wedding.
She asked if she could adorn the rood-screen with branches
of dogwood blossoms. They really did look beautiful.
After the liturgy when everyone was gone, the sexton
asked me what to do with the dogwood branches and I
said, well, since they are so pretty, let’s enjoy
them at the Sunday morning services, and then you can
take them down. The next morning I arrived at the Church
to find the dogwood blossoms on the floor and the ugly
sticks attached to the rood-screen. As branches, we
do not support the root, it is the root that supports
the branches. So, at our Baptism, we are called to
be rooted and grounded in Christ. It is important in
life to be rooted and grounded. It’s also important
to know in whom you are being rooted and grounded.
Sometimes, in fact, we seek to be rooted and grounded
in ourselves.
Our Baptism calls us to be rooted and grounded in
Christ, established in the faith, welcomed into this
huge family, this glorious communion of saints on earth,
not lost, not alone, not blown away, rooted, grounded
in Christ and then, just when we think we figured that
part out, the inscription reminds us of God’s
promise, roots and wings. Here we find imagery in the
Scriptures of being held and comforted in the shadow
of God’s wings. Here we hear Jesus weeping over
Jerusalem… How often would I have gathered your
children together as a hen gathers her brood under
her wings and you would not? “Baptism offers
us the security of a source and place of comfort beneath
the wings of God, but the imagery also becomes more
expansive. Not long ago, we sang Hark the Herald Angels
Sing and the words from Malachai, “Risen with
healing in his wings.” Added to that are numerous
Biblical passages which speak of being born on angels’ wings.
My favorite which comes from Isaiah is: “They
who wait for the Lord shall renew their strength. They
shall mount up- with wings like eagles, they shall
run and not be weary, they shall walk and not faint.” You
see, it is the promise of wings at Baptism that we
shall have our strength renewed, that we shall mount
up with wings like eagles, and be empowered to undertake
whatever tasks God places before us, as part of the
Baptized community.
Our work in the Baptismal covenant has been to claim
both our rootedness on the one hand and our wings on
the other. I believe it has been faithful to the Gospel
and faithful to God’s call to us for the work
that is now before us.
Let me close with one last parable. The story comes
from West Africa. It is the legend of the Sky Maiden:
The members of a certain West African tribe tell the
legend of the Sky Maiden. It happened once that the
people of the tribe noticed their cows were giving
less milk than they used to. They could not understand
why. One young man volunteered to stay up all night
to see what might be happening. After several hours
of waiting in the darkness, hiding in a bush, he saw
something extraordinary. A young woman of astonishing
beauty rode a moonbeam down from heaven to earth, carrying
a large pail. She milked the cows, filled her pail,
and climbed back up the moonbeam to the sky. The man
could not believe what he had seen. The next night,
he set a trap near where the cows were kept, and when
the maiden came down to milk the cows, he sprang the
trap and caught her. “Who are you?” he
demanded.
She explained that she was a Sky Maiden, a member
of a tribe that lived in the sky and had no food of
their own. It was her job to come to earth at night
and find food. She pleaded with him to let her out
of the net and she would do anything he asked. The
man said he would release her only if she agreed to
marry him. “I will marry you,” she said, “but
first you must let me go home for three days to prepare
myself. Then I will return and be your wife.” He
agreed.
Three days later she returned, carrying a large box. “I
will be your wife and make you very happy,” she
told him, “but you must promise me never to look
inside this box.”
For several weeks, they were very happy together.
Then one day while his wife was out, the man was overcome
with curiosity and opened the box. He saw nothing in
it. When the woman came back, she saw her husband looking
strangely at her and said, “You looked in the
box, didn’t you? I can’t live with you
anymore.” “Why?” the man asked. “What’s
so terrible about my peeking into an empty box?” She
said, “I’m not leaving you because you
opened the box. I thought you probably would. I’m
leaving you because you said it was empty. It wasn’t
empty; it was full of sky. It contained the light and
the air and the smells of my home. When I went home
for the last time, I filled that box with everything
that was most precious to me to remind me of where
I came from. How can I be your wife if what is most
precious to me is emptiness to you?”
I have come among you for a time, carrying my box,
offering to open it and share some of myself with you.
My intent has been to encourage each of you to open
your boxes, sharing some of the important stuff of
your life with one another and especially with the
one who is always eager to listen, inquisitively concerned
for each of us. You have blessed me by allowing me
to open my box and share my stuff with you. It has
been a wondrous experience, but now I invite you to
look over the horizon…Here comes Mark Beckwith
and he is carrying a large box. You have invited him
to open that box and share his story with you, as he
listens to yours, and together bear witness of God’s
love to a world desperately needing to hear of that
love and to see it in action. What great joy!