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Renewing the Body of Christ: Sharing of Ministries Abroad (SOMA) USA and Transnational Charismatic Anglicanism, 1978–1998
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 October 2017
Abstract
Sharing of Ministries Abroad (SOMA) was formed in the late 1970s as an international organization for the cultivation of charismatic renewal amongst leaderships within the global Anglican Communion. This article explores the ethos and activities of its American national body. It argues that its short term, cross-cultural missions increasingly displayed mutuality and long-term partnership rather than one-directional American influence, and thus reflected a developing shift in the understanding and practice of global mission in the late twentieth century. The organiztion shaped awareness of the global Church amongst some US Episcopalians and constructed an influential transnational network within charismatic Anglicanism. Furthermore, SOMA's network was one context for the emergence of global North–South conservative solidarity in the politics of the Anglican Communion.
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- Journal of American Studies , Volume 51 , Special Issue 4: Exploring the Global History of American Evangelicalism , November 2017 , pp. 1243 - 1266
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- Copyright © Cambridge University Press and British Association for American Studies 2017
References
1 SOMA USA minutes, 29–30 April 1985, SOMA USA archive, Fort Worth, Texas (hereafter SOMA USA archive).
2 SOMA International: Consolidated List of Missions and Other Visits by the SOMA National Bodies (1994). During the same period, for example, around 55 missions and visits were organized by SOMA UK, 42 by SOMA Australasia, and 11 each by SOMA Canada and SOMA Ireland.
3 See discussion in Au, Connie Ho Yan, Grassroots Unity in the Charismatic Renewal (Eugene, OR: Wipf and Stock, 2011), 14 Google Scholar.
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7 List of leaders attending AICSR, Box 7, Fountain Trust archive, Donald Gee Centre, Mattersey Hall, Doncaster (hereafter Fountain Trust archive).
8 Michael Harper to Donald Coggan, 11 April 1977, Coggan Papers, Lambeth Palace Library, London, f. 292.
9 See Harper, “Introduction,” 3.
10 “Why Lambeth 1978 Will Be Different,” Yes, July–Sept. 1978, pp. 4–5. This was the magazine of the Church Missionary Society.
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13 See deliberations in minutes of early committee meetings between Nov. 1978 and June 1979, SOMA file, Box 7, Fountain Trust archive.
14 “SOMA: The Sharing of Ministries Abroad,” Acts 29, Summer 1980, 10. Acts 29 was a publication of the Episcopal Charismatic Fellowship.
15 Anglican Consultative Council, quoted in Presler, Titus, “The History of Mission in the Anglican Communion,” in Markham, Ian S., Hawkins, J. Barney IV, Terry, Justyn and Steffensen, Leslie Nunez, eds., The Wiley-Blackwell Companion to the Anglican Communion (London: Wiley-Blackwell, 2013), 15–32, 28CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
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18 Quoted in Harper, Jeanne, Visited by God: The Story of Michael Harper's 48 Year-Long Ministry (Cambridge: Aquila, 2013), 51 Google Scholar. See also Tammie M. Harvey, “Gresford Chitemo (1927–2009),” Online Dictionary of African Christian Biography; Chitemo, Gresford, The Rt. Rev. Gresford Chitemo, Bishop of the Diocese of Morogoro in Tanzania: My Short History (Morogoro: Anglican Church of Tanzania: 1986)Google Scholar.
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20 Michael Harper to James Haigh-Ferguson, 13 Nov. 1983, Box 7, Fountain Trust archive.
21 SOMA UK had been set up in 1980. SOMA Canada and SOMA Pacific (SOMA Australasia from 1988) were established in 1986; SOMA Ireland (Colann Ministries) in 1991); SOMA Southern Africa in 1992; SOMA New Zealand in 1994 (SOMA Australasia had become SOMA Australia in 1991 in readiness).
22 SOMA meeting minutes, 29–30 April 1985, SOMA USA archive.
23 “New Council for Mission forms in St. Louis, Will Promote Cooperation,” Episcopal News Service, 21 June 1990, no. 90158.
24 On Church of the Apostles see “An update … Church of the Apostles, Fairfax, VA,” Acts 29, Summer 1982, 1, 3; Tom Beckwith, “Poised for Greatness,” Acts 29, Sept.–Oct. 1993, 12–15.
25 National Board meeting minutes, 18 Jan. 1993, SOMA USA archive.
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30 For example, see Joan R. McKean, “Bishop Pytches and Team to Return,” Acts 29, March 1988, 7; Michael Green, “The Thump of the Avocado,” Acts 29, Sept. 1981, 1, 6; Watson, David, “Called and Committed,” Acts 29, 1, 3 (1983), 5–10, 14Google Scholar; “International Renewal Conference set for LA in ’85,” Acts 29, 3, 1 (1985), 5 Google Scholar. Pytches and Tay both became involved in the leadership of SOMA.
31 Hassett, 35.
32 Some explicitly Anglo-Catholic parishes have been, and continue to be, involved in SOMA USA. See “SOMA: The New Breed of Missionaries,” Sharing USA, Winter 1988–89, 1. It follows that not all those individuals discussed in this article necessarily identified, at least primarily, as “evangelical.”
33 Linda Kaufman, “Waiting on God,” Sojourners, July 2013, available at http://sojo.net/magazine/2013/07/waiting-god, accessed 26 Jan. 2015.
34 Beckwith, “Poised for Greatness”; David Harper, “Three Streams, One River: A Statement of Identity, a Model for our Life” (May 2003), at http://storage.cloversites.com/churchoftheapostles/documents/Three%20Streams%202007%20in%20Verdana.pdf, accessed 26 Jan. 2015.
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43 Thomas, 408.
44 Richard Hines interview.
45 Thomas, 407.
46 Richard Hines interview.
47 Province IX is a province of ECUSA made up of various dioceses in the Caribbean and Latin America.
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51 See SOMA International: Consolidated List of Missions and Other Visits.
52 See John and Valerie Lowe, The Role of SOMA in Anglican Renewal (1992). The authors were administrators for SOMA International from 1986 to 1991.
53 On the Diocese of Argentina see Judson, Sheldon F., “Southern Cone,” in Okorocha, Cyril C., ed., The Cutting Edge of Mission: A Report of the Mid-point Review of the Decade of Evangelism (London: Anglican Community Publications, 1996), 119–20Google Scholar; list of leaders attending AICSR.
54 Richard Hines, “A SOMA Mission to the Ends of the Earth” (1989), SOMA USA archive; “Church Planting in Argentina,” Sharing USA, Spring 1989, 1.
55 Edwina Thomas interview.
56 Edwina Thomas, report on Latin American mission, March–April 1992, SOMA USA archive.
57 Interviews with Edwina Thomas and Richard Hines. Team members were often selected according to particular “gifts” or specialisms required; see Edwina Thomas, “Effective Training for Short-Term Missions,” in Stockdale, New Wineskins for Global Mission, 197–206, 198–99.
58 Edwina Thomas interview.
59 Richard Hines and Edwina Thomas interview.
60 Ibid., 407.
61 “Mission to Argentina and Uruguay,” Sharing USA, Summer 1988, 1.
62 Thomas, “SOMA: Sharing Renewal Overseas,” 410–11.
63 Edwina Thomas, status report and operations plan for Sharing of Ministries Abroad USA, 24–26 January 1994, SOMA USA archive; “Fruit of Recent SOMA/USA Missions,” Sharing USA, Fall 1988, 3; “Storm Harvey in Ecuador,” Sharing USA, Spring 1988, 1.
64 By the 1980s the Diocese of Ecuador was already widely recognized for the effective leadership of Cáceres. The church-growth principles of Roland Allen had been applied to plant flexible indigenous churches, growing between 1971 and 1988 from just 394 members to 240 congregations with 20,000 members and 48 clergy. See Long, Charles H. and Rowthorn, Anne, “The legacy of Roland Allen” in Francis, James M. M. and Francis, Leslie J., Tentmaking: Perspectives on Self-Supporting Ministry (Leominster: Gracewing, 1998), 362 Google Scholar.
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66 Thomas, “Effective Training for Short-Term Missions,” 198–99.
67 Edwina Thomas interview.
68 David Harper, SOMA USA: report on the ninth Ecuador mission, 5–16 June 1989, SOMA USA archive.
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70 Edwina Thomas interview.
71 David Harper interview; Edwina Thomas interview.
72 See, for example, Edwina Thomas, “Reflections on a SOMA Mission to East Africa,” Acts 29, July 1987, 10–11.
73 Thomas, “Sharing renewal overseas,” 410.
74 “SOMA: The New Breed of Missionaries,” 1.
75 “Fruit of Recent SOMA/USA Missions,” Sharing USA, Fall 1988, 3.
76 Thomas, “Reflections on a SOMA Mission to East Africa,” 11.
77 “Third World Ministry for SOMA Teams,” n.d., material provided by Mrs Jeanne Harper, reproduced with permission.
78 Edwina Thomas, SOMA mission report, SOMA USA archive.
79 For the example of a Nigerian priest concerned about such practices see Ezeigwe, Augustine C., “The Challenge of Evangelism in Nigeria,” Acts 29, 22 (1984), 6–8 Google Scholar (reprinted from a SOMA newsletter). This article described how “cultural revival has called for a re-drawing of the battle lines in the war with syncretism.”
80 Edwina Thomas interview.
81 “Fruit of Recent SOMA/USA Missions,” 3. Brian Cox, SOMA USA's first national director, went on to work extensively in the field of faith-based conflict resolution after leaving SOMA.
82 Brewin, Don, It Will Emerge … the Joys and Heartaches of over 15 Years of Short-Term Mission, 2nd rev. edn (Lulu.com, 2014)Google Scholar, chapter 9.
83 Richard Hines interview.
84 “A Way Ahead for SOMA,” 1993, SOMA USA archive. Furthermore, in 1993 a SOMA national body was formed in Southern Africa.
85 Edwina Thomas, report on a Latin American mission, SOMA USA archive.
86 Interview with Richard Hines.
87 On the Province of Uganda see Kew and Okorocha, Vision Bearers, 90–92; “Milestones in Mission,” Sharing, 20, 1 (2013), 4 Google Scholar.
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91 Edwina Thomas, “SOMA Has Changed Our Church,” Sharing USA, Summer 1991, 1–2.
92 Edwina Thomas interview.
93 “First SOMA Mission to the USA,” Sharing, Autumn 1996, 1.
94 See, for example, “Operation Breakthrough,” Sharing USA, Summer 1992, 3.
95 Quoted in Nan Cobbey, “Convention Learns Mission Works Both Ways,” Episcopal Life selections, at http://arc.episcopalchurch.org/episcopal-life/GC-2way.html, accessed 10 Nov. 2015.
96 “Canterbury ’88 draws participants from 67 nations,” Sharing, Summer 1988, 1.
97 Quoted in Brian Cox, “The Message of Canterbury ’88,” Sharing, Summer 1988, 3.
98 On the politics of sexuality see, for example, Brittain, Christopher Craig and McKinnon, Andrew, “Homosexuality and the Construction of ‘Anglican Orthodoxy’: The Symbolic Politics of the Anglican Communion,” Sociology of Religion, 72, 3 (2011), 351–73CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
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102 David Harper interview.
103 The programme for the conference was wide-ranging, covering various issues concerning mission and ministry. Furthermore, not all those present, or otherwise linked with SOMA or ARM, were necessarily of the same opinion on issues of sexuality.
104 Andrew Carey, “African Christians? They're Just One Step Up from Witchcraft: What Bishop Spong Had to Say about His Fellow Christians’, Church of England Newspaper, 10 July 1998, 13. For Spong's response to the article see David Skidmore, “Bishop Spong Apologies to Africans,” 28 July 1998, at www.anglicannews.org/news/1998/07/bishop-spong-apologizes-for-perceived-insult-to-africans.aspx, accessed 17 Aug. 2016.
105 See report in “The Canterbury ’98 Conferences,” Sharing: The Newsletter of SOMA UK, Oct. 1998. See also a discussion in Hassett, 73.
106 Hassett, 10.
107 Hassett, 34, also notes the importance of preexisting ties between renewal-minded Anglicans in the United States and Uganda. Another network whose significance might be examined in this respect is the Evangelical Fellowship in the Anglican Communion (EFAC), formed in the 1960s, which also organized a pre-Lambeth meeting for bishops in 1998 which reportedly provided “an opportunity for evangelicals to confer on key Lambeth agenda items.” See “Pre-Lambeth meeting for Evangelical Bishops,” Church of England Newspaper, 8 May 1998, 3. On the history of EFAC-USA see Cook Kimball, “The Revival of the Episcopal Church, 1961–1999: A History of EFAC-USA,” Evangelical Episcopal Journal, Sept. 1999, 7–11. On the significance of long-term links between Anglican evangelicals in the US and the global South see also Jason Bruner, “Divided We Stand.”
108 Edwina Thomas, “Director's Corner’, Sharing USA, Sept. 1998.”
109 Edwina Thomas, “What Has Changed?”, Sharing USA, Fall 2003, 4.
110 Douglas, Ian T., ‘W(h)ither the National Church – Revisited: Changing Mission Structures of the Episcopal Church,” in Varghese, Winnie, ed., What We Shall Become: The Future and Structure of the Episcopal Church (New York: Church Publishing, 2013), 29–46 Google Scholar. See also Presler, Titus, “The Impact of the Sexuality Controversy on Mission: The Case of the Episcopal Church in the Anglican Communion,” International Bulletin of Missionary Research, 33/ 1 (2009), 11–18 CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
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