ASIAMERICANS
IN THE EPISCOPAL CHURCH: CHALLENGES AND HOPES IN THE 21ST CENTURY (3rd of a Series)
(Editor's Note: This is the 3rd and final installment of Series of 3 articles on Asiamericans in the Episcopal Church. The first part is about the history of Asian immigration to the United States; the second part is about the birth and growth of the Episcopal Asiamerica Ministries; and the third part is visualizing the challenges and hopes for the 21st Century.)
At his
installation as the second Asiamerica Missioner in 2004, the Rev. Dr. Winfred
B. Vergara wrote an article. “Asiamerica Ministries in the 21stCentury.” He
predicted that the “the 21st century is going to be the Asia-America Century.” By
that, he meant that Asia will join the United States of America as a partner in
the global search for a truly free, humane, just and peaceful world community.
Here is an
excerpt from Vergara’s article:
"The Asia-America Century will alter the way we do politics, religion and
theology. My faith
statement is not without basis. Over thirty years ago, as a Filipino missionary
priest serving in the Anglican Church of Singapore, I listened to a lecture
from a noted economist, Gunnar Myrdal, author of a celebrated book, The Asian Drama. When asked why he wrote Asian Drama and not
African Drama or Latin American Drama or European Drama, he replied, “I got
impressed with this idea that the destiny of humankind will come to be decided
in Asia because it is such a tremendously large part of humanity.”
“That Asia and
Asians dominate the geographic and demographic milieu is a statement of fact.
Asia covers 29.4% of the Earth’s land area and has a population of almost 2/3rd
of the world’s seven billion people. Together, China’s and India’s populations
alone are estimated to be almost three billion. The majority languages of the
world are Mandarin, Hindi, English and Spanish in that hierarchical order.”
"China and India
also complement each other (yin yang) as the via media of Asian pragmatism and
wisdom tradition. Chinese pragmatism is exemplified by Deng Xiaoping who opened
China to globalization. As China’s foremost leader in 1978-1992, Deng
instituted China’s “open door” policy and introduced free enterprise into China
socialist economy with such words “It doesn’t
matter if they are black cats or white cats, so long as they catch mice,
they are good cats.” On the other hand, India’s wisdom tradition is expressed
by one of its many sages, Mahatma Gandhi, who saw God in everything, has an
advice to Christian evangelists: “To a hungry person, God appears in a loaf of
bread.”
Deng Xiaoping: Asian Pragmatism Tradition |
Mahatma Gandhi: Asian Wisdom Tradition |
“Today, both
China and India are leading the world in reaping the fruits of globalization.
China with its manufacturing industry saturates the world’s retail shops with
its products. Someone jokingly said, “In the beginning God made the world.
After that, everything was made in China!” India, for its own distinction, has
greatly improved its computer industry. It is a fact that when Silicon Valley
in California had its computer glut in Y2K (Year 2000), the savvy American
computer engineers turned to their counterparts in Bangalore, the technopolis
of India.”
Theology and Ministry
Vergara relates
the secular phenomenon to the spiritual realm. He said, “It is my belief that
whenever something new happens in the external world, what follows is something
new in the internal world. Religion often precedes science but sometimes it is
the other way around. The spirit often precedes the flesh but sometimes it is
the other way around.”
“In the
Christian world, whenever there is a spiritual awakening, there also follows
material prosperity. As a nation seeks the kingdom of God, “all these things
are added” (Matthew 6:33). But sometimes the reverse is true. When the world
awakens to the truth and expresses it in arts and literature, the church also
experiences revival of its own understanding of God. The Church often
prophesies to Society but sometimes the reverse is true; Society also
prophesies to the Church.”
“Church is
oftentimes the avant garde for
social change; sometimes the opposite is true; Society can also lead the Church
to change. There are prophets in both sides.”
“One example was
the renaissance and the religious reformation in Europe. When Italian arts
awakened to the works of Michelangelo, Leonardo Da Vinci, Donatello, Botticelli
and the Medici family, the religious realm of Europe also brought the German
Reformation of Martin Luther and the English Reformation of Henry VIII and
Bishop Cranmer. “
It is therefore my belief that the Asia-America Century will bring forth a new revival of humanities and the arts as well as new doing of theology. Already, there are more important discourses happening across the Pacific than across the Atlantic, presenting new possibilities for Asiamerica Ministries of the Episcopal Church.
It is therefore my belief that the Asia-America Century will bring forth a new revival of humanities and the arts as well as new doing of theology. Already, there are more important discourses happening across the Pacific than across the Atlantic, presenting new possibilities for Asiamerica Ministries of the Episcopal Church.
CHALLENGES FACING ASIAMERICA MINISTRIES
Last June
2013, the Episcopal Church celebrated the 40th Anniversary of the
Episcopal Asiamerica Ministries with the theme, “Remember the Past, Celebrate
the Present and Visualize the Future.”
It was in 1973 in 1973 when the first
missioner, The Rev. Dr. Winston Ching founded the infrastructure on which the
Asian ministries would be established. It was in 2004 when second
missioner, the Rev. Dr. Winfred Vergara
strengthened the foundations and enabled ministries to flourish. As the bible
says, “Paul planted, Apollos watered, but it is God who gives the growth.”
We remembered the life and works of the pioneers,
including Ah For of Nevada, the railroad worker who became the first Chinese
missionary in the United States until the Chinese Exclusion Act; and the Rev.
Hiram Hisanori Kano, the first Japanese American priest ordained in the United
States and who figured as priest, pastor and evangelist in the Japanese
Internment Camps. At the recent 78th General Convention of the Episcopal Church held in Salt Lake City (June 23-July 3, 2015), the Rev. Hisanori Kano was approved to be included in the Calendar of Holy Women Holy Men.
With Kano's inclusion, there are now four Asian "saints" in the Episcopal Church calendar: The Rev.Florence Li Tim Oi, the first woman to be ordained in the entire Anglican Communion; the Rev. Daniel G.C. Wu, the first missionary priest of True Sunshine Church in San Francisco & Church of our Savior, Oakland; the Most Rev. Gregorio Aglipay, the founder and first Obispo Maximo of the Iglesia Filipina Independente which is in concordat of full communion with TEC; and the Rev. Kano, from the Diocese of Nebraska, the saint among the internees and prisoners of the Internment camps during World War II.
With Kano's inclusion, there are now four Asian "saints" in the Episcopal Church calendar: The Rev.Florence Li Tim Oi, the first woman to be ordained in the entire Anglican Communion; the Rev. Daniel G.C. Wu, the first missionary priest of True Sunshine Church in San Francisco & Church of our Savior, Oakland; the Most Rev. Gregorio Aglipay, the founder and first Obispo Maximo of the Iglesia Filipina Independente which is in concordat of full communion with TEC; and the Rev. Kano, from the Diocese of Nebraska, the saint among the internees and prisoners of the Internment camps during World War II.
Today, there
are over a hundred churches and ministries in the Episcopal Church that
identify themselves as ethnic Asian, pan-Asian or Asian-led multicultural
churches. In some dioceses, there are diocesan Asian Commissions whose task is
to assist the bishops in understanding the needs and hopes of the Asian
community; to promote collegiality among Asian clergy and lay leaders; and to
advise the Asiamerica Missioner on program priorities.
Asiamerica
Ministries features the following programs and activities:
(1) Planting new churches and
strengthening existing ones;
(2) Leadership training through
Consultations and Convocations;
(3) Collegial fellowships through EAM
Diocesan Commissions;
(4) Online Ministry training through Asiamerica
Virtual Classroom;
(5) EAM-EDS (Episcopal Divinity School)
Partnership Doctor of Ministry Course;
(6) Asia-America Theological Exchange
Forum in partnership with the Partnership Office for Asia and the Pacific
(Canon Peter Ng, Officer);
(7) Hmong and Southeast Asia Church
Planting Enterprise (The Rev. Toua Vang, Hmong Missioner);
(8) Asiamerica Mission to End Modern
Slavery (AMEMS) (based in Queens, New York, with Ms. Bern Ellorin, Consultant)
in partnership with the Episcopal Diocese of Long Island in building coalition
with grassroots organizations in the campaign against Human Trafficking.
In his
message to the 40th EAM anniversary celebration held in San
Francisco in 2013, Missioner Vergara summarized the endeavors of Asiamerica
Ministries into three acronyms:
1.
ARISE which means “Asiamerica Renewal
In Strategic Evangelization.”We shall prioritize discipleship, evangelism and
witness by planting more Asiamerican and Pacific Islanders churches and making
new missionary inroads to new immigrants as well as established ethnic
communities;
2. AFIRE which means “Asiamerica Focus
on Immigrant Rights and Education.” We shall find new ways to advocate for the
immigrants including the millions of undocumented immigrants who are “harassed
and helpless like sheep without a shepherd.” One lesson we learned from Chinese
Exclusion Act and the Japanese Internment is that “congregational development
and leadership advocacy” are inextricably intertwined. If the church welcomes
and advocates for the immigrants, the church will flourish. But if the church
is hostile and apathetic to immigrants, the church will decline.
3. ATONE means “Asiamerica Theology
Online Networking and Exchange.” We shall continue to emphasize new ways of
sharing our voice in the complexities and pluralities of faiths, cultures and
ideologies in Asia Pacific Basin. Through Asia-America Theological Exchange
Forums and other media, we will continue to connect with Asia and the Pacific.
As a network of congregations and ministries, we shall continue to promote
mutual responsibility and interdependence in pursuing the Christian mission of
reconciliation, drawing wisdom from the past and celebrating the present gains.
Quo Vadis Episcopal Asiamerica
Ministries?
As the time
of this writing, we are informed by our colleagues in the Anglican Church in
Canada that a similar structure like the EAM is being formed through the ACAM –
Asian Canadian Anglican Ministries. We hope that similar structures can happen
in Europe and the England among the Asian clergy and lay leaders.
If leadership
is “influence,” then we at EAM shares the credit. Starting with EAM in Hawaii,
we are also hoping to extend our ministries with the Pacific Islanders,
something which we actually began in the early work of EAM from 1973.
On September
30-October 5, 2015 the EAM Churchwide Consultation will be held in Seoul,
Korea. Set to coincide with the celebration of the 125th anniversary
of the establishment of the Anglican Church of Korea, the theme of the EAM gathering
is “Celebrating our Partnership; Uniting our Missions.”
With God’s help and the leading of the Holy Spirit, Asiamerica
Ministries will continue to help build the Kingdom of God among Asiamericans
and Pacific islanders in North America, Asia and the world.
Asiamerica Missioner: The Rev. Canon Dr. Winfred B.
Vergara
EAM Council (2015):
Executive Committee:
President:
The Rev. Bayani D. Rico
Vice-President:
Mimi Wu
Secretary:
The Rev. Irene Tanabe
Treasurer:
Inez Saley
Ex-Officio:
Canon Peter Ng
Ex-Officio:
The Rev. Canon Dr. Winfred Vergara
Convocation Conveners:
Chinese: The
Rev. Ada Wong Nagata and the Rev. Peter Wu
Japanese:
Dr. Gayle Kawahara and Dr. Malcolm Hee
Korean: The
Rev. Aidan Koh
Filipino:
The Rev. Leonard Oakes and Evelina Fradejas
South Asian:
The Rev. Anandsekar J. Manuel & The Rev. John Sewak Ray
Southeast
Asian: Teng Lo and Hanh Tran
Youth &
Young Adults: Longkee Vang
EAM
Advocates:Warren Wong