Diocese of B.C. Setting the record straight on Venerable Bruce Bryant-Scott’s letter
Feb 28th, 2009 by David
In his letter, the Venerable Bruce Bryant-Scott implied that Rev. Ron Corcoran, in his sermon and in other parts of the service of Feb 22, used the theme of “be not afraid” to be an “encouragement to not be afraid of schism”. In other words, as an encouragement to join ANiC. In actual fact, Rev. Ron Corcoran was saying “be not afraid” as an encouragement to parishioners who were experiencing job, family or medical difficulties.
The diocese of B.C. has deliberately twisted the facts to suit its own ends.
Here is the sermon, so you can judge for yourself (names have been removed):
“MY PEACE I GIVE TO YOU”
Once in a while, I like to share with you some of the experiences the members of our Church family are going through. Let me tell you a few stories about the last couple of weeks and yes I do have permission to tell these stories. A couple of people have approached me who have recently lost their jobs. Two of them were working for a company that had never laid off employees before. But times are tough and for small companies the bottom line is paying the bills, keeping a roof over their family’s head and food on their table consequently some employees get their ‘pink slip.’ I met with a woman who is struggling with chronic fatigue syndrome and she finds it impossible to do her job and she may have to go on long term disability. The problem is you look at her and her affliction is not apparent. I had a conversation with a mother and a little boy that has to undergo brain scans to find out what is causing minor seizures. I had communion a little while ago with a woman who is going through her second battle with breast cancer. The radiation treatment has been tough and she waits on a long list hoping for surgery so the pain will be relieved. I prayed with a couple (who are clearly devoted to each other) this past week because the doctor found cancer in the wife’s breast and now she is waiting for surgery and so they hold hands and hope. This past week on the way home from a meeting I discovered that one of our beloved senior members was in the hospital with mysterious internal bleeding. A few of weeks ago a parishioner began experiencing chest pains and has recently been diagnosed with heart problems and is awaiting more tests. Two weeks ago, the husband of a couple I married this year was suddenly facing heart surgery. Every Sunday morning, I anoint and pray with a man who had knee surgery a year ago and is still waiting for relief of pain and healing. A little while ago I had communion with a mother who is grieving over some very misguided decisions her daughter is making in her life. Unfortunately her daughter lives a great distance from Victoria so communication and maternal guidance is difficult.
The reason I am telling you all these stories is that in the midst of life, furious storms erupt and from time to time they attempt to overwhelm us. It has been like that for a number of people in this Church and then on top of their own personal storms, we have been engaged in a storm of our own. In the last couple of weeks, I have exchanged emails, telephone calls and had a number of one on one conversations with many who are struggling with the discernment exercise we have been going through. I do have very good news about our process; sooner than you think we will break through the ribbon at the finish line.
One of the very interesting things that I have discovered as we have gone through this process is how many of you have been very kind in asking about the Staff, the Wardens, the leaders of our Discernment Team, the Parish Council, Rodney and myself. I want you to know on their behalf that we are all absolutely fine. We have not said very much unless we have been asked because we wanted this process to be your process and we are very proud of the work you have completed. As you have been very concerned about us, we also have been so concerned about you. We know that this has been difficult process and we are very proud of your commitment to prayer, fasting and the other sacrifices you have made as we have tried to discern our way through these troubled days. I want you to hear how grateful your leadership team is for each one of you. Since they all cannot stand here and offer their individual thanks I am pleased to do it on their behalf.
Permit me to be bold enough to say to you that I feel a little bit like the Apostle Paul who wrote this Epistle while in prison and I will take the liberty of using his words from our Epistle this morning: “I thank my God every time I remember you, saints of St. Matthias. In all my prayers for each of you, I always pray with joy because of our partnership in the Gospel from the first day until now, being confident of this, that he who began a good work in us will carry it on to completion until the day of Christ Jesus.” (Phil 1:3-6) I hope you know that you are delightful brothers and sisters in Christ and are very easy to love. I love your genuine care and consideration for each other. I love how you listen to and are sensitive with each another, even when you do not necessarily agree with another’s point of view. I love how you meet together in home groups, Bible Study groups, book clubs, opera groups, golf groups, cooking groups, knitting groups and the list goes on and on. With your social fellowship, your Bible studies and your prayers, you have learned to bear each others burdens. I love on Sunday morning when we go to pray for someone and anoint them with oil how you automatically gather around them and lay your hands on them and join in the prayers. I love how you open your homes to each other and bless each other. I love our partnership in the Gospel. It is not just Clergy in this Church who preach the Gospel. Many of you preach it by your lifestyle and your example; you are living, walking Gospel messages. Our partnership in the Gospel is reflected in your tithes and offerings so that we can send missionaries off into the mission field. Our partnership in the Gospel is reflected in our reaching out to overseas work and work locally among the poor as well as in hospitals and care homes. You are true Ambassadors for the cause of Jesus Christ and for the building of His Kingdom.
One of my great joys is coming here on Sunday morning and from my position up here, I get to watch you, and you are beautiful to behold. I love watching you ‘listen’ to the sermon; watching you ‘sing’ the music, watching you ‘read’ the lessons, watching you ‘pray’ the prayers and finally watching you coming with outstretched hands to receive the broken body and poured out blood of Jesus Christ. One of the privileges of a long pastorate is watching the hand of God in your lives. You may not appreciate it and you may even disagree and think that I am not talking about you, but year after year, I see Christ being formed in each one of you. Yes, in your life! I confess to you that I boast about you all the time. I boast about you in my conversations with God, I boast about you to my colleagues, I boast about you in my prayer journal and I boast about you in my personal prayers. You are easy to boast about because you are people of Grace and when I stand up here I see God’s Grace in your lives and I think who am I to deserve a congregation like you? Why has God blessed me by putting ‘you’ in my life? I stand in amazement as I see God transforming your lives-it’s not my work or your work, it is God’s work and it is a mystery and a wonder to behold.
I don’t want you to think that I am naïve and I think you are all perfect. Of course I don’t, but I know that you are on the road to perfection and with Paul “I am very, very confident that He who began a good work in you will carry it on to completion until the day of Jesus Christ.” (6)
I guess what I am trying to say to you this morning is that I appreciate and love you and I understand Paul when he says in verse eight, “that God can testify how I long for all of you with the affection of Jesus Christ.” I long for Christ’s work to be completed in you and so I pray as Paul does in verses 9-11: “I pray that your love may abound more and more in knowledge and depth of insight, so that you may be able to discern what is best and may be pure and blameless until the day of Christ, filled with the fruit of righteousness that comes through Jesus Christ—to the glory and praise of God. God not only wants us to grow in affection for one another and for Him, He also wants us to grow in knowledge and insight about who we are as children of God. I love those words that God is making us pure and blameless. Why is he doing that? He is getting us ready for the Day of His coming. The Father with the Holy Spirit is getting us ready for the glory of His Son-the Son to whom our knee will bow and our tongue will confess that “Jesus Christ is Lord” to the ‘Glory of God the Father.’
In our Gospel lesson this morning, Jesus is nearing the very end of His ministry and the writer John uses chapters 13-17 to reveal to us Jesus’ intimate time with His disciples. He is leaving them and they are confused because they do not want Him to go away. Who would ever want Jesus to go away? But Jesus has to go away, because He has a mission to complete. He has come into the world to die for the sins of the world and as He said earlier in this Gospel, the ‘hour is at hand.’ I had that long passage read this morning, just so you could hear it, but it is the very last verse in that chapter I want to draw to your attention: “I have told you these things, so that in me you may have peace. In this world you will have trouble or tribulation, but take heart! I have overcome the world.” (16:33) Jesus, our Messiah, our King of Kings and Lord of Lords has overcome all the trials and tribulations of this world and when He finished, He sat down at the right hand of the Father and He now spends His days and His nights praying for us. Yes, He is praying for you, for me, for this Church and for our discernment process. What a Savior!
I am going to conclude early this morning and I want to go back to the very beginning of my sermon and I want to ask a couple of people to stand and to listen to me very closely: A and M, “in this world, you will have tribulation, but take heart, Jesus has overcome the world.” L “in this world, you will have tribulation, but take heart, Jesus has overcome the world.” R “in this world, you will have tribulation, but take heart, Jesus has overcome the world.” M “in this world, you will have tribulation, but take heart, Jesus has overcome the world.” S & J “in this world, you will have tribulation, but take heart, Jesus has overcome the world.” R and D “in this world, you will have tribulation, but take heart, Jesus has overcome the world.” R “in this world, you will have tribulation, but take heart, Jesus has overcome the world.” M “in this world, you will have tribulation, but take heart, Jesus has overcome the world.” K “in this world, you will have tribulation, but take heart, Jesus has overcome the world.” B “in this world, you will have tribulation, but take heart, Jesus has overcome the world.”
Would you all now please stand and let me give you a final word from the Lord and again it is from the Gospel of John. My brothers and sisters in Christ, this morning Jesus says to each of you: “In this world, you will have tribulation, but take heart, Jesus has overcome the world.” “Peace I leave with you; my peace I give you. I do not give to you as the world gives. Do not let your hearts be troubled and do not be afraid. (John 14:27)

That brought tears to my eyes.
He is a truly a Man of God
Bless him !!!!
I am the wife of the couple whom Cannon Corcoran was referring to who he had married this past summer and was suddenly facing heart surgery. Cannon Corcoran phoned me in advance of the sermon to ask my permission to use our story. Of course I consented! I felt very blessed and cared for to stand and receive the scripture he repeated to me- that Jesus has overcome every trouble in the world that I, or anyone else, will ever encounter. The interesting note, is that my husband does not regularly attend church with me because he is the organist at another church, of another denomination in the city. This has never deterred either Cannon Corcoran, or another clergy member, or a single parish family member from sharing and expressing the same love and care to HIM as they do to me. Venerable Bryant-Scott’s comments were completely removed from the context of the sermon.
I am a member of St. Matthias. I was there that Sunday Cannon Corcoran’s sermon was in a word “awesome”. There were not many dry eyes where I and other family members sat. We all felt and feel on a day to day basis blessed out of our socks to have such a fantastic pastoral team. I am also the son of an Anglican minister and the grandson of another Anglican minister. Despite having attended, tried, many denominations in my youth and twenties I’ve always returned to my cradle faith. My point being that in this journey I’ve been ministered to by many and in all these travels never once have I felt as loved and cared for as I am at St. Matthias. At one dark point in my life I was living in a fishing community on the west coast of Vancouver Island with several churches in the area. I was drawn, no other way to explain, to make the 4 Hr drive (one way) to attend St. Matthias.
Reading the Venerable Bryant-Scott’s comments was one of the times when I was ashamed of being an Anglican. He took words spoken with God’s love for his children and corrupted them. He took something good and made it sound evil. I wonder if the Venerable Bryant-Scott will ever realize that words used such as his serve the purposes of another master.
This situation is an excellent example of the difference between the ACoC’s version of Christianity and that being practiced by orthodox ANIC churches such as St. Matthias. How the Diocese of B.C could respond to Cannon Corcoran’s sermon and the Christian way in which this congregation is attempting to discern God’s call on their ministry is stunning. I am appalled by the vindictiveness of the Ven. Bruce Bryant-Scott and the diocese of B.C. and humbled by the Christian charity being exhibited by Cannon Concoran and his flock. May God continue to bless St. Matthias in the days ahead and may the Holy Spirit fall on them with fresh power and guard and protect them from all who would do them harm.
I was one of those at St Matthias whom Pastor Ron had stand in the service when he spoke on “My Peace I Leave with You”. The words “Be not afraid” were spoken to me in the midst of a time of crisis in my life. I find that I am still often singing or humming the words of the hymn we sang, “Be not afraid, I go before you.” When Pastor Ron gave me those words, he was being just that, my Pastor. A few days following that service I happened to speak with another member of St Matthias whom Pastor Ron, in that service, had indicated was going through a deep crisis, and she too shared how comforting and strengthening were those words given to her.
The following day I was astonished to read in Bruce Bryant-Scott’s letter that he had interpreted these words of comfort to be a subtle encouragement by Pastor Ron to the congregation to not be afraid of schism. Pastor Ron is a true pastor. He cares for his congregation and he points us to the One who walks with us through difficulties in life. I am so grateful for him and it is very difficult to see him so misunderstood and maligned.
I pray that the leadership of the Diocese of the Anglican Church of British Columbia would somehow come to experience the humility and compassion of Christ in their own lives so that they in turn could demonstrate this to those under their authority rather than using their power and anger to control and dictate.
After thirty years as a member of another parish, God saw fit to
“move” me to St. Matthias. The very first impression I had was that
the Holy Spirit was palpable in the church - a new experience for me, and one that has continued. Pastor Ron was away when I
arrived, but his first Sunday back still evokes a lot of emotion for me
with the memory of the overwhelming love his parish family conveyed to him and his wife, Deirdre. It quickly became apparent
that this man was a gentle, loving, caring teacher and shepherd who richly deserved the love of his parish family.
On February 26th I happened to be at St. Matthias church when the
bishop’s designate, Mr. Bryant-Scott, along with his two associates
arrived and requested Pastor Ron to vacate the premises. Seeing
how this was carried out was a very painful thing to witness. As he
was leaving, Pastor Ron shook hands with the associates and
Mr. Bryant-Scott. Even in this very difficult situation, Pastor Ron
demonstrated the quiet strength of someone who knows without a
doubt the One Whom he serves.
I too found this a moving sermon. i’m far removed from the anxieties in Canada but these words apply to many situations and struggles both personal and communal.
The truth will out. It appears to have been done so at the very hands of those who would suppress it!
May I remind all that fear is cast out with love.
Finally may I suggest that Vulnerable Venerables’ and the many others who have made similar mistakes should seek remedial training for the sake of their immortal souls. Childrens Sunday school in a Baptist Church (Im not sure how far back our corrupt teaching goes) may be a good place to start.