Closing the Gender Gap in Church Leadership

Closing the Gender Gap in Church Leadership

I N T H I S I S S U E The nature of the primacy and episcopal leadership An interview with The process of electing Archbishop Fred Hiltz 8 a primate PM# 40069670 7 The history and role Episcopal leadership in the 8 of the primacy 10 age of social media ANGLICAN JOURNAL Since 1875 anglicanjournal.com @anglicanjournal vol. 145 no. 3 march 2019 Closing the Beginning the Lenten journey gender gap in “…every year at the time of the Christian church leadership Passover we celebrate our Joelle Kidd I could sit STAFF WRITER redemption through the at the back When Canon Judy Rois was a student death and resurrection of “ in the late 1970s, she wanted to take a quietly and not our Lord Jesus Christ… say anything preaching course. But when she went to We begin this holy season sign up, she discovered she wasn’t allowed and not make because she was a woman. by remembering our need any noise, After much lobbying, she recalls, she for repentance, and for because a man was let into the class—the only stipulation the mercy and forgiveness might see me. was, she had to wait until everyone else had entered the room, then sit at the back, proclaimed in the Gospel —Canon Judy Rois, so as not to “distract” her male classmates. of Jesus Christ.” executive director “I could sit at the back quietly and not say of the Anglican anything and not make any noise, because — p. 281, BAS, Foundation of Canada a man might see me.” Ash Wednesday liturgy Rois was ordained in 1985 and was the first female vicar of St. James Cathedral in Toronto. She is now executive director of the Anglican Foundation of Canada, and teaches at Trinity College of the University of Toronto. In 2014, she was named one of Canada’s 100 Most Powerful Women by Women’s Executive Network. IMAGE: BLUE DESIGN/SHUTTERSTOCK Throughout her career in the Anglican Church of Canada, she’s experienced plenty of gender discrimination. People ‘The Christian Passover’ have walked out or shouted things while she was preaching, crossed the church to With the imposition of ashes, Christians renew their life in the paschal mystery of Lent. See Women, p. 6 Lynne McNaughton elected bishop of Kootenay Forgotten altar stone found in Toronto Tali Folkins Canon F.G. Scott and then forgotten. Its Tali Folkins STAFF WRITER discovery last spring, and the piece-by- STAFF WRITER The chance discovery of a mysterious piece unravelling of the mystery behind The Rev. Lynne McNaughton, rector of artifact in the office of a Toronto church it, allowed church members to bring it St. Clement’s Anglican Church, North has resulted in speeches, songs and tears home in time for the 100th anniversary Vancouver, and deputy prolocutor of General of gratitude in a Belgian village—and of the war’s end. Synod, has been elected the 10th bishop of 5 Chaplain has left the church’s rector pondering the Walker says his former secretary, Audrey Gizzie, came upon the altar the diocese of Kootenay. She was elected on and writer mysteries of providence. stone after deciding to replace the old the second ballot during an electoral synod Canon F.G. Scott Canon Peter Walker, rector of office lamps. held Saturday, Jan. 19 at the Cathedral of St. is believed to Grace Church on-the-Hill in Toronto, says research undertaken last year by “She said, ‘Oh, these are really ugly 5 The coat Michael and All Angels, Kelowna, B.C. have brought of arms of the McNaughton told the Journal she felt— parishioners and staff at the church lamps—we need to get rid of these.’ And the altar stone then she said, ‘What’s this?’ ” Walker diocese of citing, with a laugh, the Godly Play children’s revealed that the small, black, marble to Canada from recalls. “She picked it up, and I immedi- Kootenay ministry text for the Annunciation—like slab that had been sitting under his old a destroyed office lamp—which he had taken for the ately knew what it was.” IMAGE: CONTRIBUTED Mary, “scared, but happy…stunned, but Belgian church lamp’s base—is actually the altar stone of The slab had all the markings of the blessed.” in 1915. She added, “I have a steep learning a Belgian church destroyed in the First stone that rests in every altar of a Roman PHOTO: World War. He and other members of Catholic church, on which the chalice curve—and I’m excited about that!” MARK TULLIS Her first priority, she said, will be to visit his church believe the stone was brought and paten are laid during the prepara- the parishes of the diocese, meeting clergy to Canada by chaplain and writer See Solving, p. 2 See Kootenay, p. 14 2 anglican journal • march 2019 WORLD4 Solving the mystery of the altar stone To Walker and his parishioners, the A chance discovery mystery seemed finally solved—but the altar connected Belgium stone’s story wasn’t over. “We began to think, ‘Really what’s it doing and Canada here? This is the 100th anniversary of the end of the First World War; we should really Continued from p. 1 determine to give this back to where it came tion of the Mass: crosses at the edges and from,’ ” he says. “So then we contacted the in the middle, with a recess for holding the p ar i s h .” relics of a saint. Where was it from, and why Members of the church in Nieuwk- was it sitting under a lamp at Grace Church erke, which was rebuilt in 1925, were both on-the-Hill? surprised and appreciative to hear about the The first clue, Walker says, came when altar stone—and excited about the prospect Gizzie turned it over. On the back of the of getting it back, Walker says. MacLaren stone, written in orange chalk, read the organized a small delegation from Grace words “from the altar of La Neuve-Église, PHOTO: TALI FOLKINS Church on-the-Hill to return it in Novem- Belgium, 1915,” plus the initials “F.G.S.” “Why did that thing sit in this office for decades, with a lamp ber 2018, and to attend ceremonies at Vimy Looking up La Neuve-Église on the on it, and no one knew about it?” Canon Peter Walker asks. Ridge, France, and Mons, Belgium—where Internet, Gizzie discovered it was a village in “Why did we stumble on that in the spring of 2018?” MacLaren’s own father had fought a century Belgium, now known as Nieuwkerke—and earlier—marking the centenary of the war’s that Canadian soldiers were in the area in end. 1915. The village is about 14 km southwest The group arrived in Nieuwkerke on of Ypres, site of a series of First World War Nov. 9 to a warm, and, Walker says, moving battles, including the Second Battle of Ypres, welcome: a service at the church with songs, which saw the Germans assault French, including “O Canada,” sung by local chil- British and Canadian trenches in April and dren (who had been given the day off from May of that year. school); prayers; and speeches in French and Flemish by church leaders and the may- Canon F. G. Scott connection or. The warden of the Belgian church was moved to tears as he tried to give his speech. A possible explanation of the letters “F.G.S.” “It was very, very poignant,” Walker says. came a few days later, when Roy MacLaren, “They were very appreciative of our effort, a historian and former federal cabinet min- that we took the time and the trouble to go ister who worships at the church, walked 5The church at over there and give it back to them.” into Walker’s office. La Neuve-Église, The members of the Belgian church had “Roy, you’ll never guess what we just Belgium, after it created a special place for the altar stone, discovered here in my office,” Walker said, was destroyed near the current altar, and a display case tell- showing him the stone with its mysterious by shellfire in the ing the story of the stone, F.G. Scott and the writing. “We can’t figure out what ‘F.G.S’ is.” First World War. role of Canadians in the First World War. On Immediately, MacLaren replied, “That’s PHOTO: NATIONAL the day of the ceremony, Walker says, a local Canon F.G. Scott.” LIBRARY OF SCOTLAND, history teacher spoke to the children about Canon Frederick George Scott, an An- LICENSE: CC-BY-NC-SA the war, and how it had affected the commu- glican priest and poet, was one of the best nity. The children, who had made their own known chaplains of the First World War, 4 The altar Canadian flags, planted them at the nearby and his memoir, The Great War As I Saw stone in a box grave of a Canadian soldier. Afterward, the It, is widely used by historians researching for presentation delegation was treated to lunch by the mayor. Canada’s role in the conflict. A staunch to the church in there one night with an officer friend of mine, imperialist, Scott volunteered as soon as Belgium. to see the scene of desolation…My friend the war broke out in 1914, though he was PHOTO: GINNY WALKER Planting and remembering and I went down the street of the broken and already in his 50s. Chaplains were expected For Grace Church on-the-Hill, Walker says, deserted village, which, from its position on to stay back from the action, but Scott in- the discovery of the altar stone has meant the hill, was an easy mark for shellfire.

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