![]() Hollywood session's complaint wants commission action voided By John H. Adams The Layman Online Thursday, May 12, 2005 The session of Hollywood Presbyterian Church has filed a remedial complaint with the Permanent Judicial Commission of the Synod of Southern California against the Presbytery of the Pacific. The complaint asks the synod court to overturn the presbytery's decision to appoint an administration commission to take over the governance of the evangelical congregation. The complaint also seeks a stay of enforcement that would allow the session to resume its role of handling the church's affairs and to reinstate Alan Meenan, the senior minister, and David Manock, the top-ranking associate minister, whom the administrative commission placed on indefinite leave. The session, anticipating that the presbytery would support the church's minority that opposes Meenan and Manock, authorized filing the complaint, if necessary, before the presbytery established the administrative commission. The complaint was filed by Dennis R. Kasper and Bryan S. Hance of Lewis Brisbois Bisgaard & Smith LLP in Los Angeles. They are Presbyterians of other congregations who specialize in church cases. In a summary of their argument, they said:
It also cites the decision in a 1979 remedial case, Jose A. Cao v. the Presbytery of New York City (1979) describing that case as "identical" to the facts in the Hollywood case. In Cao, the General Assembly Permanent Judicial Commission held that a presbytery's action did not meet constitutional requirements of fundamental fairness. The complaint listed several ways that fundamental fairness was lacking:
Management by an administrative commission, the request says, "forecloses on any opportunity for reconciliation and healing;" "condemns the congregation to an unending revolving door of pulpit supply;" and provides "no meaningful pastoral care outside of worship." The request for a stay also expresses the concern and "belief" that eventually the minority in the church identified as no more than 10 percent will become the new session. "This [possibility] has created an atmosphere of fear which will inhibit the session and the church from moving forward if it is allowed to continue. Such action also will severely inhibit reconciliation and healing in the church." |
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