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Making connections with the primate: 'Michael knows the people and their stories'.


IN A CHURCH that places great importance on its records, its archives, Archbishop Michael Peers The Most Reverend Michael Geoffrey Peers (born 1934) was Primate of the Anglican Church of Canada from 1986 till 2004.

Born in Vancouver, British Columbia in 1934, Archbishop Peers completed an undergraduate degree in languages at the University of British Columbia in 1956
 can trace every town and country he has travelled, every rectory he has slept in, each night spent on an airplane, and how many nights he has spent away from his home and family in almost 18 years as the 11th primate of the Anglican Church-of Canada.

Only he can interpret the code of the journals, kept--forgive a pun--religiously in tidy columns in his small, careful script. The notes are kept in a leather-bound calendar that goes with him everywhere he goes.

Here, a partial entry for 1991: 28, 1991; O5a J6a; (which translates as follows: On Jan. 28 (OSA 1. OSA - Open Scripting Architecture.
2. OSA - Open System Architecture.
), he was in the region of Oceania (O), in the town of Noumea (New Caledonia New Caledonia, Fr. Nouvelle Calédonie, internally self-governing territory of France (2005 est. pop. 216,000), land area 7,241 sq mi (18,760 sq km), South Pacific, c.700 mi (1,130 km) E of Australia. ) (5), in the local college residence (a); on Feb. 28 (J6a), he was in the region of Asia (J), in the city of Rangoon (Myanmar) (6), at the Strand Hotel Strand Hotel (also known as The Strand) is a Victorian-style hotel located in Yangon, Myanmar (Burma), built in 1896 by Aviet and Tigran Sarkie, two of the Sarkies Brothers.  (a)

The journals, obscure they may be, are testimony to a churchman who, by his friends' and colleagues' accounts, deeply cares as much about the church and its history as its people and their stories and relationships.

For Rev. Randall Chase, who served one triennium tri·en·ni·um  
n. pl. tri·en·ni·ums or tri·en·ni·a
A period of three years.



[Latin : tri-, tri- + annus, year; see at- in Indo-European roots.
 as a partner from the Episcopal Church Episcopal Church, Anglican church of the United States. Its separate existence as an American ecclesiastical body with its own episcopate began in 1789. Doctrine and Organization
 in the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area.  (ECUSA ECUSA Episcopal Church in the United States of America ) to the Anglican Church of Canada and who has become a close friend of Archbishop Peers, the primate is at his happiest when he is making connections.

"It impresses me that in everything he does, he connects with people and talks about their relationships," said Mr. Chase. "It's really remarkable. He knows the history and uses it to illuminate the present and more the church forward toward the future. I've seen it at Lambeth; Michael knows the people and their stories."

(The Lambeth Conference Lambeth Conference, convocation at Lambeth Palace, London, that brings together all the bishops in the Anglican Communion. It meets about every 10 years at the invitation of the archbishop of Canterbury and is the principal instrument of international Anglican life,  is the meeting every 10 years of all the bishops in the Anglican Communion Anglican Communion, the body of churches in all parts of the world that are in communion with the Church of England (see England, Church of). The communion is composed of regional churches, provinces, and separate dioceses bound together by mutual loyalty as .)

That willingness to make connections spills over into leisure time as well. Mr. Chase hosts the primate regularly when the latter travels to New England New England, name applied to the region comprising six states of the NE United States—Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and Connecticut. The region is thought to have been so named by Capt. , to his spiritual retreats in Cambridge, Mass. One of their favourite pastimes together is to spread open a few roadmaps and go for a drive.

"He loves maps and to see where he's going," said Mr. Chase. "He loves to see the Anglican church wherever it is, so we've seen churches I'd never seen before in Rhode Island Rhode Island, island, United States
Rhode Island, island, 15 mi (24 km) long and 5 mi (8 km) wide, S R.I., at the entrance to Narragansett Bay. It is the largest island in the state, with steep cliffs and excellent beaches.
, Massachusetts, all that area, to see places he's read about."

Across the Atlantic, the head of the (Anglican) Church of Ireland Noun 1. Church of Ireland - autonomous branch of the Church of England in Ireland
Anglican Church, Anglican Communion, Church of England - the national church of England (and all other churches in other countries that share its beliefs); has its see in Canterbury
 echoes that admiration for Archbishop Peers' knowledge of people and places.

"He is well-versed in Irish affairs and I have so valued his prayerful prayer·ful  
adj.
1. Inclined or given to praying frequently; devout.

2. Typical or indicative of prayer, as a mannerism, gesture, or facial expression.
 concern and interest in our periods of violence and division," said Archbishop Robin Eames Robin Henry Alexander Eames, Baron Eames, OM, PhD, DD, (born 27 April 1937) was the Anglican Primate of All Ireland and Archbishop of Armagh from 1986 to 2006. Education
Robin Eames was born in 1937, the son of a Methodist minister.
, Primate of All Ireland Primate of All Ireland is a title held by the Archbishops of Armagh, in both the Roman Catholic and Church of Ireland traditions, to signify that within their respective churches they are the senior churchmen in the island of Ireland.  and the only primate in the Anglican Communion who has served a province longer than Archbishop Peers. "The Church of Ireland has many links with Canada and its church and Michael's phenomenal memory for names and place, people and events, have impressed us all here."

For Rev. Douglas Fenton, a Canadian priest who is staff officer for young adult and higher education higher education

Study beyond the level of secondary education. Institutions of higher education include not only colleges and universities but also professional schools in such fields as law, theology, medicine, business, music, and art.
 ministries with ECUSA, those connections come in the form of simple postcards. When he left Canada for the U.S. church in March 2002, Archbishop Peers "asked me to write him a postcard from every diocese I went to as a way to stay connected with the Canadian church. As a result, I do feel connected."

Mr. Fenton said Archbishop Peers genuinely wants to know people. He tells of a meeting of the Council of General Synod The General Synod is the title of the governing body of some church organizations. Church of England
In the Church of England, General Synod was instituted in 1970 and is the culmination of a process of rediscovering self-government for the Church of England that had
 (the church's legislative body between the triennial tri·en·ni·al  
adj.
1. Occurring every third year.

2. Lasting three years.

n.
1. A third anniversary.

2. A ceremony or celebration occurring every three years.
 meetings of General Synod) where, for the first time publicly, he said he is part aboriginal, or Metis Metis (mē`tĭs), in astronomy, one of the 39 known moons, or natural satellites, of Jupiter.

Metis

goddess of caution and discretion. [Rom. Myth.: Wheeler, 242]

See : Prudence
. The primate approached him at a break to ask about his background. "He wanted to take the time to hear that story)'

Canon Gordon Light, who served as principal secretary to the primate from 1992 to 2001, said he considers Archbishop Peers a friend and mentor.

"I value him as someone of the faith, for his ability to teach," said Mr. Light, now suffragan suf·fra·gan  
n. Abbr. Suff. or Suffr.
1. A bishop elected or appointed as an assistant to the bishop or ordinary of a diocese, having administrative and episcopal responsibilities but no jurisdictional functions.
 (assistant) bishop to the metropolitan (senior bishop) of British Columbia and Yukon. Often, those teaching moments were subtle. When some parishes considered doing away with the common cup for fear of contracting AIDS, the church's doctrine and worship committee released a medical opinion on the minute risk the practice posed. Archbishop Peers took if one step further. "If he received communion at the beginning, he would take the cup at the end," said Mr. Light. "Intentionally, so that in a non-verbal way he was saying there's nothing to fear."

As principal secretary, Mr. Light dealt with correspondence, organized house of bishops meetings and collaborated with Archbishop Peers on writing reports and public addresses that the primate delivered. He is careful to point out that the primate himself always wrote his Anglican Journal column, Grace Notes, and carne up with his own sermons. Mr. Light particularly remembers the primate drafting, then taking great pains to memorize his 1993 apology to native people for the church's role in the residential school system.

"I didn't understand it then, but he did. He said if you're going to say something to the aboriginal community, you say it, you don't read it," said Mr. Light. "He listened for two solid days to their stories and what he ultimately said grew out of that context."

Indeed, Archbishop Peers's role in mending the church's fragile relationship with aboriginal Anglicans is recognized throughout the Anglican Communion, said Archbishop Desmond Tutu.

"For me, his lasting legacy would be especially his leadership of the Anglican Church of Canada with regard to expressing contrition con·tri·tion  
n.
Sincere remorse for wrongdoing; repentance. See Synonyms at penitence.

Noun 1. contrition - sorrow for sin arising from fear of damnation
contriteness, attrition
 to native Canadians," said Archbishop Tutu, the retired Archbishop of Cape Town The Archbishop of Cape Town is the Primate / Metropolitan of the Anglican Church of Southern Africa. The current Archbishop is the Most Reverend Njongonkulu Winston Hugh Ndungane

Robert Gray (1809-1872) was the first Anglican Bishop of Cape Town.
 and primate of the Church of the Province of Southern Africa.

Michael Peers is highly respected as an elder statesman in the Anglican Communion, noted Archbishop Tutu, particularly for chairing a 1988 Lambeth session in a language other than English. "The Archbishop of Canterbury The Archbishop of Canterbury is the main leader of the Church of England and by convention is also recognised as head of the worldwide Anglican Communion. The current archbishop is Rowan Williams.  did not give (the chair) to any Tom, Dick, Harry, Mary or Jane, and (Michael) was able to do it with aplomb a·plomb  
n.
Self-confident assurance; poise. See Synonyms at confidence.



[French, from Old French a plomb, perpendicularly : a, according to (from Latin ad-; see
," said the archbishop. "I can still picture Michael on the dais at the university, holding forth in a way that embraced the francophone people in a way that had not happened before."

A legend in the Anglican Communion and on the world stage for his role in defeating apartheid in his own country, Archbishop Tutu said he learned a great deal from Michael Peers.

"I learned to be gentle, even to be gentle when you are right," said Archbishop Tutu. "It's so very easy to become self-righteous when you are right."

Diane Maybee also had the opportunity to see Michael Peers on the international stage. As prolocutor PROLOCUTOR. In the ecclesiastical law, signifies a president or chairman of a convocation.  of General Synod from 1986-1989, it was Ms. Maybee who announced to the gathered bishops in 1986 that Archbishop Peers had been elected primate.

"He just sat down, quite stunned," she said. Later, she was to serve with him as lay representative of the international Anglican Consultative Council The Anglican Consultative Council or ACC is one of the four "Instruments of Communion" of the Anglican Communion. It was created by a resolution of the 1968 Lambeth Conference. . At one meeting, it might be said that the primate sowed the seeds of the Canadian church's reputation for transparency.

"The issue of sexual abuse carne up, and one African bishop asked in disbelief, 'Do you mean abuse in the church?'" recalled Ms. Maybee. Archbishop Peers rose and told the gathering about a horrific case of a choirmaster in Kingston, Ont., convicted of abusing choirboys. "Just before he sat down, he said, 'Yes, there is abuse in the church.' He sat down to stunned silence."

Ms. Maybee said she was struck by the primate's commitment to the church's processes, which led to his 1997 resignation as chair of the inter-Anglican finance committee. After the national church cut its overseas spending, largely because of a large drop in income, then Archbishop of Canterbury George Carey publicly criticized Anglican provinces which were thought not to be paying their way. The Anglican Church of Canada was the fourth largest contributor to the Anglican Consultative Council. "Michael accepted that we have a process by which we develop the budget for the church, for example with overseas funding," said Ms. Maybee. "In England, bishops have more ability to make adjustments to that funding."

That belief in process extends to his presidency at home, too, Ms. Maybee noted. As a one-time officer of General Synod, she sat with Michael Peers for meetings of General Synod and the National Executive Council. Particularly at General Synod, the primate would never declare a motion unanimous--"because there will always be someone in some dark corner who disagrees"--and he never took sides in any debate while sitting in the president's chair (although, to the displeasure of some, he did step down from the chair at the 1995 General Synod to voice his views on full inclusion of gays and lesbians in the church).

Few would understand the rigours and responsibility of a church's senior bishop as much as another primate, said one retired American presiding bishop.

Upon their respective elections only months apart in 1985 and 1986, Michael Peers and Edmond Browning, the former presiding bishop (primate) of ECUSA, became close friends and mutual confidantes.

"He was a friend, a pastor and a colleague in a way that many people dream of," said Bishop Browning.

The contrast between Ed Browning and Michael Peers--the former, small and dapper Dapper

lawyer’s clerk; swindled into believing himself perfect gambler. [Br. Lit.: The Alchemist]

See : Dupery
, and the larter, described by one friend as "reassuringly rumpled"--prompted one church observer to comment once that "Ed Browning goes to a house of bishops meeting in suit and clerical collar and everyone calls him Ed. Michael Peers goes in sweatshirt and slippers and people call him Your Grace."

The Canadian and U.S. churches remained close under their two primates, each sending two representatives to the other's governing-council meetings.

Bishop Browning said Archbishop Peers' involvement as president of the Metropolitan Council of Cuba (a council that oversees the episcopal work of the Episcopal church in Cuba, once a part of ECUSA) has done nothing less than keep that church alive. "When the American church had to withdraw because of government relations, he just stepped in," said Bishop Browning.

Ran Chase echoes Bishop Browning's assessment of the Cuban situation. Mr. Chase, a member of ECUSA's pension board, said that Archbishop Peers has challenged ECUSA bishops to think about the role they might play in changing U.S. policy on pension funds belonging to the Cuban church. "Michael has kept pushing us," said Mr. Chase. "He has challenged the legality of us waiting for the courts to allow us to release those funds."

Challenging the status quo [Latin, The existing state of things at any given date.] Status quo ante bellum means the state of things before the war. The status quo to be preserved by a preliminary injunction is the last actual, peaceable, uncontested status which preceded the pending controversy.  earned Archbishop Peers much respect from many in the church, particularly in the late '80s and early '90s, when he and other Canadian bishops refused to preside at eucharists in England as long as women priests were not allowed to function there. In 1994, he celebrated eucharist for the first time in seven years.

"That gave a sense that the province (of Canada) was solidly behind women clergy," said Canon Alyson Barnett-Cowan, director of General Synod's faith, worship and ministry department. "That people would take that personal step was very moving. He didn't just send a letter (of protest) but he actually took action about something that is very close to the life of a priest."

Ms. Barnett-Cowan allowed there is also an edgy, grumpy side to the primate, though she said, 'Im very grateful never to have been on the receiving end of it." In 1995, in the wake of church restructuring, layoffs and transitions at the national office, she recalled, he had a particularly difficult time.

"Because he's an introvert introvert /in·tro·vert/ (in´tro-vert)
1. a person whose interest is turned inward to the self.

2. to turn one's interest inward to the self.

3. a structure that can be turned or drawn inwards.
, he compresses it," said Ms. Barnett-Cowan.

That quietness was evident even in his early years. Governor General Adrienne Clarkson traces her friendship with Archbishop Peers back to 1956, when they both attended Toronto's Trinity College. "He was quietly and intensely intelligent, and that quality he has of listening is just phenomenal. He always had that." For a year, Ms. Clarkson, then a 17-year-old arts undergraduate, casually dated the primate, then a first-year divinity student. Their friendship was such that, decades later, Archbishop Peers was the second, last person to see her mother, Ethel Poy, alive he presided at Ms. Poy's 1988 funeral and at the 2002 funeral of Ms. Clarkson's father, William Poy.

Michael Peers, said Ms. Clarkson, was admired by his peers at Trinity and was even seen to be a bit exotic, having previously studied in Germany. When her mother met him in his final year, she told her daughter, "He's going to be Archbishop of Canterbury."

For her own part, Ms. Clarkson said, "I thought he might go far. He had this intelligence that shone through."

Many years later, after Archbishop Peers was elected primate and he and Dorothy moved to Toronto, Dorothy--previously a secretary in a law firm--found herself looking for Looking for

In the context of general equities, this describing a buy interest in which a dealer is asked to offer stock, often involving a capital commitment. Antithesis of in touch with.
 work. "I said, come work for me," said Ms. Clarkson, then a producer, host and writer with CBC (1) (Cell Broadcast Center) See cell broadcast.

(2) (Cipher Block Chaining) In cryptography, a mode of operation that combines the ciphertext of one block with the plaintext of the next block.
 television. That working relationship lasted from 1987 until 1999, when Ms. Clarkson was made Governor General. She says she and husband John Ralston Saul John Ralston Saul, CC , Ph.D (born June 19, 1947) is a Canadian author and essayist.

As an essayist Saul is particularly known for his commentaries on the nature of individualism, citizenship and the public good; the failures of manager-, or more precisely technocrat-, led
 have much in common with the Peers, whom they visit frequently.

While most people who have encountered the public Michael Peers--perhaps at a parish anniversary service or church meeting--have seen a man who is curious and has all easy manner, a few others have semi his playful side.

Gordon Light recalls a surprise performance in a play performed at Sorrento Centre, a retreat centre in British Columbia. The play called for two angels. "My daughter was one of the angels," said Mr. Light. "She had a circle of. daisies in her hair and she was on top of a stepladder." Archbishop Peers, cast as the second angel, was similarly attired.

Years earlier, while still a parish priest in Winnipeg, Michael Peers oversaw the 1970 shared-facility agreement between two churches that foreshadowed the 2001 agreement on full communion between the Anglican and Lutheran churches in Canada. Initially, said Neil Bardal, a lay leader in the Lutheran parish, the proposed union was not an altogether happy one for the smaller Lutheran church; some St. Stephen's parishioners felt they would be swallowed up by the Anglican church of St. Bede's. They did not yet see the "big picture" that they later realized was envisioned by Michael Peers and the Lutheran church's Rev. Winn Mott.

Like most marriages of convenience, there was some discomfort at the ceremony that brought the two congregations together under one roof. "You can imagine the tension. We were leaving behind our beloved building," said Mr. Bardal. "We all had big banners and we were at our building and were going to march over to St. Bede's church.

"I was to lead the march and I was sitting there fidgeting. (Michael) came up to me and said, 'You know, there are two ways you can get out of this. One is to drop dead and the other has just happened. Your wife is having a baby as we speak and you better get over there or she's never going to forgive you.'"

In his new appointment, as the first ecumenist-in-residence at the Toronto School of Theology History
The school was originally constituted as the Toronto Graduate School of Theological Studies in 1944, in order to promote collaboration around advance degree programs among the theology schools affiliated with the University of Toronto.
, Archbishop Michael Peers expects to put his years of experience to work for anyone who wishes to talk about ecumenical matters.

The appointment will allow him to continue a long career of making connections, becoming a real, live, human resource for churches and church people wishing to learn more about ecumenism ecumenism

Movement toward unity or cooperation among the Christian churches. The first major step in the direction of ecumenism was the International Missionary Conference of 1910, a gathering of Protestants.
, or the re-union of all believers in Christ.

With files from Solange De Santis
COPYRIGHT 2004 General Synod of the Anglican Church of Canada
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2004, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Article Details
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Title Annotation:Farewell, Archbishop Michael Peers
Author:Larmondin, Leanne
Publication:Anglican Journal
Date:Feb 1, 2004
Words:2610
Previous Article:Turning a page on a churchman's career.(Farewell)
Next Article:Her vocation was a ministry of quiet participation.(Farewell, Archbishop Michael Peers)



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