CHAPTER 4
Parental Disappointment: The Problem of Goals
Gideon`s Gang: A Case Study Of The Church In Social Action | ||
Live or Let Die: An Administrative Dilemma
The role of the denominational officials responsible for the mission congregation is also important. Clearly, they recognized at an early date that the Congregation had strayed significantly from the objectives approved by the Presbytery. The handling of this problem understandably presented a serious dilemma. To have intervened with a heavy hand would have been to run the risk of smothering the Congregation before it had a chance to breathe. Such actions would no doubt have stifled any future possibilities for experimental congregations in the Miami Presbytery. On the other hand, to let the situation ride meant imminent conflict
Summarizing the feelings of a review team after the mission's first year of operation, the Ministry Consultant for the Synod of Ohio wrote:
Reviewing the past tension and anticipating the future, he continued, "There has been some hot discussion along these lines already and we fully expect more of the same when the depth review is conducted in 1970." Since that time, the tension between the Congregation for Reconciliation and the Presbytery has continued unabated.
This is not to say that the Congregation is totally lacking in support among Presbyterian executives and some Presbyterian lay persons. We sense considerable sympathy. However, the complex and delicate politics of working with laity-and some clergy adamantly opposed to the Congregation makes continued support of the mission virtually impossible.
CHAPTER 4
Parental Disappointment: The Problem of Goals
Gideon`s Gang: A Case Study Of The Church In Social Action | ||