Where do you see signs of hope in the church?ALL THAT REMAINS now to seal the future of the Anglican Book Centre, the Toronto-based bookstore of the Anglican Church of Canada, is just one vote by the decision makers that comprise 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 (COGS These are all the Cogs found in Disney's Toontown Online. Names that are moved forward are leaders of the HQ of that specific Cog type. Bossbots
By the time this newspaper reaches most Anglican Journal readers, CoGS will almost certainly have voted in favour of wrapping up the storefront operation of the bookstore, commonly known to Anglicans as ABC ABC in full American Broadcasting Co. Major U.S. television network. It began when the expanding national radio network NBC split into the separate Red and Blue networks in 1928. . The plan, as drafted by a group tasked with examining the church's funding and what work priorities it can afford in the long term, is to continue ABC strictly as a telephone-based and Internet operation (please see news story, p. 1). Most observers met the announcement of the plan with resignation; some were surprised, but the writing had been on the wall for some time for the book-store. Once a cash cow Cash Cow 1. One of the four categories (quadrants) in the BCG growth-share matrix that represents the division within a company that has a large market share within a mature industry. 2. for General Synod (in better years, it returned significant revenues to the church's national office), it had in recent years dissolved into a sinkhole sinkhole or sink or doline Depression formed as underlying limestone bedrock is dissolved by groundwater. Sinkholes vary greatly in area and depth and may be very large. , recording losses. Last year, it recorded sales of $2.89 million and a loss of about $222,000. Examined alongside the national office's $1.1 million deficit, it was already in peril; the decision last year to lay off six staff and cut back on the bookstore's hours, combined with the decision not to replace two managers who resigned, almost certainly sealed its fate. Although a report--commissioned by the national office's directors--recommended the creation of a director of ABC who could be involved in the store's day-to-day operations and was at the same level as the directors, management not only ignored that advice, but it decided not replace the store's two middle-management staffers. Instead, a large team of bookstore staffers and the directors of the departments of financial management and development and communications and information resources (1) The data and information assets of an organization, department or unit. See data administration. (2) Another name for the Information Systems (IS) or Information Technology (IT) department. See IT. shared oversight of the business. So, once CoGS approves the plan (and, as the primate, Archbishop Andrew Hutchison Andrew Sandford Hutchison L.Th., D.D, D.C.L. (h.c.) (born in Toronto in 1938), is a retired Primate of the Anglican Church of Canada. Prior to his election at the General Synod of 2004, he was the bishop of Montreal and metropolitan of the ecclesiastical province of Canada (which, , noted in his announcement of the plan to staff, "it is very unlikely that they are going to turn back these proposals. There is no plan B;"), what next? In the last decade-and-a-half, the national church's bureaucracy, which ticks away in the same building as ABC in downtown Toronto Downtown Toronto is the heart of the City of Toronto, Ontario, Canada. It is approximately bounded by Bloor Street (including areas slightly north of Bloor around Yonge Street) to the north, Lake Ontario to the south, Bayview Avenue - Don Valley Parkway to the east, and Bathurst , has cut and cut and cut. The last attempt at strategic planning has so far failed both the national office and the church at large. (In 2004, General Synod, the church's 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. decision-making national meeting, approved an overly ambitious six-year plan that was a bit of fantasy; it recommended that the church continue the work it was doing and that, when finances allowed, new pieces of work, many of them jettisoned in an earlier strategic plan, be added. An accompanying funding proposal has not yet realized returns, though it is meant to be a long-term initiative. The notion that a body that has been paring down for so long might one day add new work seems, well, unattainable.) But since the Journal is based at the church's national office, our focus can, all too often, rely too heavily on the workings of the bureaucracy around it. So, we need to be reminded (and, occasionally, we need to remind) that the Journal is not the newspaper of the national office of the Anglican Church of Canada; it is the newspaper of the whole Canadian church. We often hear that the media (the Journal included) focuses on bad news and ignores good news in the church. There are signs, though, of good news across the country. A diocesan summer camp is saved from closure by an ambitious and visionary group; a youth delegate is elected prolocutor PROLOCUTOR. In the ecclesiastical law, signifies a president or chairman of a convocation. of a provincial synod; a diocese raises twice as much as its fundraising goal for HIV/AIDS HIV/AIDS Human Immunodeficiency Virus/Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome projects. So, for many in the church, the vision, the expression of hope is there, but the sense of the future is hazy. It seems that after all of the budget and staff cuts at the national office since the early 1990s, and in the midst Adv. 1. in the midst - the middle or central part or point; "in the midst of the forest"; "could he walk out in the midst of his piece?" midmost of declining attendance in some urban churches and the depopulation DEPOPULATION. In its most proper signification, is the destruction of the people of a country or place. This word is, however, taken rather in a passive than an active one; we say depopulation, to designate a diminution of inhabitants, arising either from violent causes, or the want of of the rural churches, the outlook of the church has become increasingly harder to discern. The danger of that is the less visible the church, the less leadership it demonstrates, the less likely it will be that it can attract those who need it most and those whom it needs most. One person involved in the planning of General Synod 2007 complained recently that the week-long meeting' agenda--a plan that is in flux until the meeting begins--focused heavily on issues like church governance, same-sex blessings and the Windsor Report, but where, the planner asked, was the matter of declining church membership? So, we turn the question over to you: What do you see as the future of the church? Where do you see signs of hope, of resurrection, in the church? How can the church paint a compelling vision for the future? Send your ideas, your vignettes, your stories to the Anglican Journal: 80 Hayden St., Toronto ON, M4Y 3G2 or editor@national.anglican.ca. Please limit responses to less than 200 words so that we may include as many as possible. |
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