More Light Presbyterians
Judicial attacks continue: charges filed against MLP board member Rev. Janet Edwards for marriage ceremonyPosted Wednesday, September 13 2006 @ 06:00 PM by MLP AdminThis just in from our field organizer Michael Adee. Extracts from an Associated Press article also appear below. An earlier web site article about Rev. Edwards' case
is
available on our site, as is some information about the
Spahr case ruling mentioned in the AP article.
Rev. Janet Edwards Minister charged by church for performing gay marriage rites 9/13/2006 By Dan Nephin The Associated Press PITTSBURGH (AP) - A Presbyterian minister was charged with breaking church law for performing a marriage for two women, a decision that comes as the church struggles with an ongoing feud over the Bible and homosexuality. Janet Edwards, a parish associate at the Community of Reconciliation Church in Pittsburgh, said she was charged Tuesday with presiding at the June 2005 wedding in contradiction of the church's position on marriage... "For me, scripture teaches that the message of marriage is the covenant - the love and commitment between the partners" and not their gender, Edwards said Wednesday. "I want to participate in the working out of this disagreement over the place of gays and lesbians in the church," said Edwards, an advocate for gays and lesbians during her 28 years as a minister. Nancy McConn, 66, a retired computer software developer from Dallas, W.Va., said "Having a spiritual marriage was so important to both of us. We're both spiritual people." Her partner, Brenda Cole, 52, a clinical psychologist and Buddhist, said she was confident that if they "continue to speak the truth" - that love and commitment, not gender, matters - "the church will come to see that reality." Edwards is also charged with irregularities contrary to the constitution for language she used because the marriage was interfaith; but she said the church allows such leeway. In March, a longtime Presbyterian minister who was the first of her faith to be tried for officiating same-sex marriages was acquitted of the same charge. A regional judicial commission of the Presbyterian Church ruled 6-1 that the Rev. Jane Spahr of San Rafael acted within her rights as an ordained minister when she married two lesbian couples in 2004 and 2005. Read the full AP article... |