20180903-0919 📧 TEC Contact Form

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20180903-0919 📧 TEC Contact Form

Name: Logan Isaac
   Describe Yourself: Congregant
   Interested in: The Presiding Bishop's Office
   Comments / Questions:
   I am contacting you as a communicant in good standing of the Protestant
   Episcopal Church in the United States to request that Stanley Hauerwas be
   removed from the speakers list for the September RADVO Conference in Dallas,
   TX. He is currently scheduled to speak Thursday, September 20th at 6pm.

   On May 22, 2016 I reached out to Hauerwas “in the spirit of Matthew 18,"
   following multiple public statements by him which dehumanized myself and
   other members of the military. On June 15 and July 25 he and I met on campus
   at Duke University, where we were both teaching at the time, with the stated
   goal of reconciliation. The fruit of these two meetings was an agreement to
   “co-teach” a course on the virtues of military formation. After
   developing the course together, on November 3, 2016, Hauerwas demanded an
   exchange of favors from me, which would have substantially reduced student
   enrollment and, consequently, the likelihood of that course being taught
   again. His demand was coercive, including an explicit condition which an
   ordinarily prudent person would have known carried substantial risk to my
   future employment as a whole. Another faculty member has told me I likely
   have been “blacklisted” from doctoral programs for reporting the abuse,
   which effectively has denied me the opportunity to pursue a career in my
   profession of choice.

   In January, 2017 I involved my priest, the Reverend Karen Barfield, who
   convened several members of Saint Joseph’s Episcopal Church in Durham, NC
   to serve as a small discussion group to discern steps forward. As a result of
   that discernment process, I contacted Hauerwas’ priest, the Reverend Clarke
   French on July 29, 2017, asking for a mediated conversation in the continued
   hope of reconciliation. Rev. French relayed to me that Hauerwas was
   “unwilling” to meet. The week of August 5, 2017, I was referred to Bishop
   Suffragan Anne Hodges-Copple via the pastoral response team, as she was the
   acting Diocesan Bishop at the time, who expressed similar concerns about
   Hauerwas’ behavior and indicated that others have had comparable
   complaints. The current Diocesan Bishop, Bishop Sam Rodman (CCed), was
   involved starting on February 20, 2018 and he continues to impress upon
   Hauerwas my request for a mediated conversation. The fruit of those efforts
   are unknown to me.

   This is ecclesiastically significant because the requirements of the
   Eucharist, outlined explicitly in the Anglican Catechism, include
   self-examination, repentance, and living in love and charity with others, two
   of which Hauerwas has refused to display toward fellow Communicants. This is
   also significant because the exchange of favors that Hauerwas demanded is a
   secular crime. Because Hauerwas and I were each employed by a "program or
   activity receiving Federal financial assistance,” his actions also reflect
   the crime of intimidation as described by 18 USC § 245 (b)(4). Furthermore,
   as a disabled combat veteran, I am protected by other federal laws which this
   behavior violates, including, but not limited to, the following
   * Vietnam Era Veterans Readjustment & Assistance Act of 1974
   *  Sections 503 & 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973
   *  Title I & II of the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990

   Hauerwas' behavior has trivialized our tradition & doctrine time and time
   again, and has himself directly undermined the exclesiastical authority with
   which priests are divinely ordained; neither the Holy Orders of two parish
   priests nor two diocesan bishops have yet proven sufficient to compel him to
   reflect the qualities of membership in the Anglican communion by being
   reconciled to a person against whom he had abused his power and influence.
   Furthermore, this contrasts sharply with Archbishop Justin Welby’s stated
   priority of reconciliation.

   There are plenty of platforms and events which he is uniquely qualified to
   address, especially within the academic arena, but a gathering to celebrate
   and inspire the next generation of priests is no such venue. I must insist on
   a response in writing, given the short amount of time left before the event.
   If no reply is given to this private correspondence, or indicated by email
   prior to 11:59pm on Wednesday, September 5th, it will be converted to an
   "open letter" that I will share with journalists as well as the general
   public. Thank you for your consideration, and I look forward to your
   considered response, or an indication that one is pending.

   In Christ,

   The results of this submission may be viewed at:
   https://www.episcopalchurch.org/node/8596/submission/176841

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