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KENTUCKY: Presiding Bishop brings message of reconciliation on three-day diocesan visit By Mary Jane Cherry, May 30, 2008
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Share [Episcopal News Service] Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori, during the third weekend in May, crisscrossed the western half of Kentucky, speaking with the people of the Diocese of Kentucky who greeted her with an abundance of joy and thanksgiving at each stop on her three-day visit.
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From May 16-18, accompanied by Kentucky Bishop Ted Gulick, Jefferts Schori traveled by car and then plane from Louisville to Paducah at the far western edge of the diocese and back, with a stop in between for a "Tent Meeting Episcopal Style" at the diocese's camp and conference center.
All told, more than 1,600 people turned out to meet her, listen to her preach and worship with her during five public gatherings, which included two "Conversations with the Presiding Bishop" (at St. Matthew's Episcopal Church, Louisville, and Grace Episcopal Church, Paducah, and three worship services at Grace, Paducah; Christ Church Episcopal Cathedral and Church of the Resurrection, both in Louisville. At each location, the Presiding Bishop brought a vision of a church and its people in conversation and community. The "Conversations" were held on the first and second evenings of her visit. Moderated by local news media personalities, the Presiding Bishop was asked a series of questions -- ranging from the tensions within the church to her prayer life and vegetarianism -- that had been submitted in advance by email as well as presented during the forum. When asked the first evening to comment on the amount of in fighting within the Episcopal Church, Jefferts Schori replied that fighting only takes place in an institution "centered in power." "There is no need to fight if we continue to ask 'how can we serve the poor?'" she said, adding that churches focused on "serving the least among us" thrive. Having just come from a summit on domestic poverty, Jefferts Schori reported that a major conclusion reached at the conference was that when Christians focus on the needs of others, the Lord's work can be done and community can be built among those doing that work. She noted the example of people from conservative and progressive congregations who work together in New Orleans to provide relief for the victims of Hurricane Katrina. "The growing parts [of the church] are focused on loving God and their neighbors. And when we do that, we can have different opinions about things and do the work that God sets before us." Questioned about whether lawsuits are the way to resolve disputes, she explained, "The role of the Episcopal Church as a denomination is to support dioceses in their mission…We will support the actions of local dioceses
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