revsdd
Well-Known Member
I suspect that is so because of the general lack of oversight of lay behaviour. .
That's an interesting point. Lakeridge Presbytery (and my pastoral charge) dealt with the remit around Office of Vocations in the last few weeks. In both discussions comments were made about discipline of clergy having to be moved out of Presbytery/Regional Council (depending on the fate of the 3 Court remit) because of (1) discipline needing to be arms length (2) you can't effectively discipline your peers because it will hurt your relationship with them (3) it sounds like an "old boys club" with clergy protecting other clergy. All those comments were made and a few others. It's curious that no one sees a problem with lay people in a congregation being under the discipline of other lay people in the congregation. I mean, if we're going to be consistent and say that clergy are to be accountable to some body that they aren't part of because that makes discipline more fair and effective then shouldn't we apply the same thinking to the discipline of lay people? Except that - revjohn is right - we don't discipline lay people very effectively (if at all) in the United Church. I've known lay people who should have been disciplined. I've pointed the behaviour out and asked for action to be taken. The one case I'm specifically thinking of was of a lay person who routinely verbally abused and tried to bully staff members (including me) sometimes to their face - more often, as everyone admitted, behind their backs both within the congregation and in the wider community and who would do the same to other lay people just to get their way. My simple request was for the Board to remove this person as Chair of the bloody Flower Committee just to at least make the point that your behaviour is unacceptable and you should have no leadership position in the congregation (even a simple one.) No one denied the bad behaviour on the individual's part. Responses, though: "That's not very Christian." "We can't do that. They might leave the church." "Aren't we supposed to be about forgiveness?" (In the back of their minds I suspect: "We might lose their offering.")
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