![]() Live video streaming of Episcopal Church services is being offered daily March 28 through April 1, offering everyone a chance to be part of the reverence of Holy Week and the joyful celebration of the Resurrection. Find the links below. The Episcopal Church: Wednesday through Easter Day The Office of Communications will livestream services daily beginning Wednesday, March 28. These services will originate from St. Christopher’s Church in Gladwyne, Pennsylvania. Access to all the Holy Week livestreams is here. Schedule Wednesday, March 28 at 6:30 pm Maundy Thursday, March 29 at 7:30 pm Good Friday, March 30 at 7:30 pm Holy Saturday Liturgy, March 31 at 10 am Easter Vigil, March 31 at 7:30 pm Easter Day, April 1 at 10:00 a.m. (Read more detailed descriptions of these liturgies here) Grace Church Cathedral: Easter Eve and Easter Day Grace Church Cathedral in Charleston, SC will livestream its Easter services on its YouTube channel and on its Facebook page. Schedule Saturday, March 31: The Great Vigil of Easter, 7:00 pm Sunday, April 1: Choral Eucharist at 9:30 a.m. and 11:15 a.m Updated March 27, 2018 to note that the requested extension has been granted.
The Episcopal Church and The Episcopal Church in South Carolina have been granted an extension of the deadline to respond to a petition filed with the U.S. Supreme Court regarding the South Carolina Supreme Court's decision in volving our diocese. The request (found here) asked to have the deadline set at April 30 for both The Episcopal Church and TECSC. The initial deadline was set for March 29. ![]() Bishop Skip Adams, his wife Bonnie Adams, and Episcopalians from around our diocese plan to participate in the March for Our Lives on Saturday, March 24 at 3:30 p.m. in North Charleston. Walking together – If you would like to meet Bishop and Bonnie Adams at the starting point and march together, please watch TECSC’s Facebook and Instagram pages. We’ll post information so you can find the Bishop before the march begins. Hashtag #MarchEpiscopal – Please include #MarchEpiscopalin all your social media posts at the march. This will help the Episcopal News Service in their coverage. To tag our diocese, include #TECSC. Get the App – You can download a smartphone app for March for Our Lives, with real-time updates, maps and transportation information. Download it here. Driving & parking: Everyone is encouraged to carpool, or use Lyft or Uber ridesharing (Lyft is offering one free ride for participants). If you don’t mind extra walking, or want to meet near the start and carpool, St. Thomas Episcopal Church has offered parking at 1150 E. Montague Ave. For official info and updates: Visit the Facebook page for the North Charleston march. Other marches in our diocese: Sister marches are planned for 10 am on March 24 in Myrtle Beach, Bluffton and Beaufort. Find details on them at the March for Our Lives main website. The Episcopal Church, The Episcopal Church in South Carolina, and its Bishop today asked a federal judge to expand a lawsuit in U.S. District Court in hopes of bringing clarity to the confusion caused when a group led by Bishop Mark Lawrence broke away from The Episcopal Church in 2012-13.
The legal action filed with Judge Richard Gergel on Thursday, March 1, asks the court to declare that the breakaway group has been engaged in false advertising and trademark infringement, and seeks an injunction to prevent the group from using words and symbols that cause confusion about which group they are affiliated with. The amended complaint also asks the court to identify leaders in the breakaway churches who want to remain with The Episcopal Church, so they can begin working with Bishop Skip Adams and TECSC on transitions aimed at assisting parishioners who want to remain in their churches. “We are asking the federal court to help bring a final resolution to the legal proceedings that all sides have endured since 2013,” said Thomas S. Tisdale, Jr., Chancellor of The Episcopal Church in South Carolina. “Our goal is to hasten the day when we can begin working together to heal our divisions and assist the people and parishes of our diocese through the transitions ahead.” Trusts and trustees The amended complaint asks Judge Gergel to take jurisdiction over an important part of that transition: the designation of trustees. Legally, all the property and assets of a diocese are overseen by diocesan trustees, who hold everything in trust for The Episcopal Church and its diocese. Likewise, vestries serve as trustees for each parish. For that reason, the federal action asks the court to take jurisdiction over trust issues, and order the trustees and vestries to remove members “who cannot demonstrate to this Court’s satisfaction that they are capable of and willing to carry out their fiduciary obligations” to TECSC, and replace them with members who can. This is intended to protect property and assets on behalf of the people who want to remain in The Episcopal Church and continue to worship in their home parishes. Clarifying the status of churches In all, 54 parishes are named in the amended complaint. Two-thirds of those were plaintiffs in the state lawsuit filed by the breakaway group in 2013 against The Episcopal Church, seeking to retain control of diocesan and parish property. The South Carolina Supreme Court ruled against the breakaway group in August 2017, finding that the property of the diocese and 28 parishes is held in trust for the Church. The breakaway group has filed a petition asking the United States Supreme Court to hear the case and reverse the state court ruling on parish properties. A decision is expected this spring on whether the Supreme Court will agree to review the decision or let it stand. Not addressed by the state litigation is the status of 18 parishes whose clergy aligned themselves with the breakaway group, but who were not part of the state lawsuit. The expanded federal complaint seeks to bring clarity about their status as Episcopal churches. As with all the churches that were part of the historic Diocese of South Carolina, these churches identified themselves as Episcopal Churches prior to the split, and have continued to do so even after 2012. Prior to 2012, churches in the Diocese of South Carolina agreed to be governed by The Episcopal Church’s constitution and canons. Under church law, all church properties are held in trust; that “trust interest” means that each parish owns its own property, but is legally required to use it for the benefit of The Episcopal Church and TECSC. The federal lawsuit The federal case, known as vonRosenberg v. Lawrence, initially began in 2013 when the Rt. Rev. Charles G. vonRosenberg, who was then Bishop of TECSC, filed suit against Mark Lawrence on federal false-advertising claims under the Lanham Act. In 2017, two additional plaintiffs were added: Bishop Adams, who succeeded Bishop vonRosenberg as Bishop of TECSC, and The Episcopal Church. Until last month, the federal case had been on hold since October 2017 under a stay issued by Judge Gergel so all the parties in the case could begin a mediation process. That process is still ongoing. In February, citing updates he received on the mediation from all the parties, the judge lifted the stay and issued a scheduling order so the case could proceed to trial in September 2018. About The Episcopal Church in South Carolina The Episcopal Church in South Carolina (TECSC) is the local diocese in the eastern half of South Carolina that is part of The Episcopal Church and the Anglican Communion. For the latest on TECSC, visit episcopalchurchsc.org, or on Facebook at facebook.com/episcopalchurchsc. March 1 filings in U.S. District Court: Motion to Amend Complaint, TECSC Motion to Amend Complaint TEC Memo in Support of Motion to Amend TEC Proposed Second Amended Complaint in Intervention TEC Proposed Third Amended Complaint TECSC Motion to Intervene TECSC Memo in Support of Motion to Intervene TECSC |
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