Yesterday’s Boston Globe carried an article about Episcopal parishes in the Diocese of Massachusetts disassociating themselves from the national church body on account of the latter’s “teachings on gay clergy, homosexuality, and salvation.”
Leaving aside for the moment the controversy over V. Gene Robinson and the larger issue of homosexuality in the church, what’s this business about the Episcopal Church’s teaching on salvation?
A bit further on we read:
After the ordination of V. Gene Robinson , a gay man, as bishop in New Hampshire in 2003, disaffected congregations asked that the national convention of the church return to a literal reading of the Bible that unequivocally forbids homosexuality. They also asked Episcopal leaders to affirm that the only route to salvation was through Jesus.
The 2006 convention did neither of these things, leading congregations such as All Saints of Attleboro to leave the denomination and others to request that they be overseen by traditionally oriented bishops rather than those who support the new teachings, such as M. Thomas Shaw, the bishop of the Diocese of Massachusetts.
And:
Parishioners concluded that the majority in the Episcopal Church of the United States, which backs full acceptance of gays and lesbians and does not hold that belief in Jesus is the only route to salvation, “are at odds with the vast majority of Anglicans, with the Christian community of North America, and with Christians throughout the world,” [All Saints parishoner Ron] Wheelock said.
Now, there are two possibly distinct things being claimed here. One is that the Episcopal Church denies that “the only route to salvation [is] through Jesus” and the other is that “belief in Jesus is the only route to salvation.” These aren’t necessarily the same thing. It’s possible that salvation only comes through Jesus but that explicit belief in Jesus (at least in this life) isn’t a necessary condition for that salvation. In other words, Jesus can save us even if we don’t know that it’s Jesus saving us.
So, it’s possible to affirm that Christ’s work is what opens the door to salvation without claiming that one must explicitly acknowledge that work in order to receive its benefits. I take it, for instance, that the Catholic church teaches something like this when it says that
Those who, through no fault of their own, do not know the Gospel of Christ or his Church, but who nevertheless seek God with a sincere heart, and, moved by grace, try in their actions to do his will as they know it through the dictates of their conscience – those too may achieve eternal salvation. (Catechism of the Catholic Church, Part I, Section Two, Chapter 3, Article 9, Paragraph 3)
Apparently part of the controversy has been fueled by some remarks made by new Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori about the relationship between Christianity and other religions. For instance, in a recent Time Magazine interview, Bp. Schori said in response to the question “Is belief in Jesus the only way to get to heaven?”:
We who practice the Christian tradition understand him as our vehicle to the divine. But for us to assume that God could not act in other ways is, I think, to put God in an awfully small box.
Now, that’s not as precise an answer as one might’ve liked, and I think Bp. Schori may be conflating Christ’s work and our belief in that work (just as the Globe article above seemed to be doing). But if what she means to affirm is that God can act to bring people to salvation who have never heard of Jesus, then I don’t see anything particularly problematic about that.
What would be problematic would be if Jesus was reduced to simply one manifestation of a kind of ineffable transcendence that is no more (or less) binding or normative than those claimed by other religions. In such a view, there are a plurality of “vehicles to the divine,” none necessarily better or worse than any other. This is not a tenable view in my opinion, and it’s certainly outside the historic Christian mainstream. If the Episcopal Church were in fact found to be teaching such a view, then there would be serious cause for concern.
Of course, it’s not entirely clear what it means for the Episcopal Church to teach x since there is no teaching magisterium to pronounce definitively on what the church teaches. I’m not sure what kind of force the pronouncements of the General Convention have, but failing to affirm a particular version of the claim that the only route to salvation is through Jesus is not the same as denying it.
Indeed, the proposed resolution that was defeated at the General Convention seems a bit ambiguous itself on what is being claimed:
Resolved, the House of _____ concurring, That the 75th General Convention of the Episcopal Church declares its unchanging commitment to Jesus Christ as the Son of God, the only name by which any person may be saved (Article XVIII); and be it further Resolved, That we acknowledge the solemn responsibility placed upon us to share Christ with all persons when we hear His words, “I am the Way, the Truth, and the Life. No-one comes to the Father except through me” (John 14:6); and be it further Resolved, That we affirm that in Christ there is both the substitutionary essence of the Cross and the manifestation of God’s unlimited and unending love for all persons; and be it further Resolved, That we renew our dedication to be faithful witnesses to all persons of the saving love of God perfectly and uniquely revealed in Jesus and upheld by the full testimony of Holy Scripture.
One could interpret this in a polemcial way – that is, affirming that one must explicitly call on the name of Jesus in order to be saved, and affirming a particular understanding of Christ’s work (“the substitutionary essence of the Cross”), in which case it’s understandable that the delegates would have problems with it. I myself would be wary about setting conditions on what people have to do in order to be saved, or requiring that everyone adhere to a particular Atonement theory (something the larger church never saw fit to require in any of its creeds or councils). Or, one could read it as mushy boilerplate that essentially says “Yay, Jesus!” which, while not being a bad thing for the church to say, doesn’t seem to require being affirmed by a church whose entire raison d’etre is the good news of Jesus.
More to the point, I think one would be better off looking at the daily practice of the church to determine what it believes about Jesus. The Prayer Book liturgy, the preaching, the sacraments all presuppose and proclaim that Jesus saves. In my admittedly limited experience, that seems to be the primary way in which the Episcopal Church teaches what it believes. If that’s the case, why the need to reaffirm the basic foundation of the church’s mission in a General Convention resolution?
It could be that the controversy over soteriology is a stalking horse for the issue of homosexuality. Otherwise, it’s sort of hard to account for the outrage over a position which, on a charitable reading, isn’t really any different from the position of the Catholic Church, who almost no one has accused of selling out the exclusive claims of Christ.
On the other hand, it’s possible to imagine a case where a church does fall outside the bounds of orthodoxy. If the Episcopal Church were to promulgate a statement explicitly denying the unique mediatorial work of Christ, then I think you whould have such a case. But as far as I can tell it hasn’t done that, and its life and practice presuppose the opposite.

Leave a reply to Joshie Cancel reply