EXERPTS
LEGAL DOCUMENTS
EEOC V
|
WHAT
YOU WILL FIND
|
| Nature
of the Legal Case: Defendant's Viewpoint |
1 |
| Plaintiff's
Viewpoint |
50 |
| Personalities
Involved in the Case |
13,
16, 17 |
SDA
Church Above all Laws of the Land
|
49 |
| GC
Legal Advisor (A Seventh-day Adventist)Involved in Preparation
of Briefs |
20 |
| General
Conference is the Church |
8,
10, 24, 25, 28 |
| Between
Sessions of GC, the Executive Committee "wields
all the powers of the Church" |
44 |
| The
SDA Church "hierarchical" |
37,
41, 43, 45, 53-55 |
| "First
Minister" - GC President |
15,
31, 37, 53 |
| "Ecclesiastical.
superiors" |
17 |
| "Orders
of Ministry" |
11,
33, 37, 53 |
| Clergy
of Church "administer the sacraments" |
33,
37 |
| Workers
of Church serve even as "a cloistered nun"
in Catholic Church |
18,
37 |
| Necessary
for Church (GC) "to establish its authority in
community of believers" |
26 |
| Prophetic
Teaching in regard to Papacy consigned to "historical
trash heap" |
41 |
| Not
"good Seventh-day Adventism" to have "aversion
to Roman Catholicism" |
46 |
S
PPPA
ADVENTIST
LAYMEN'S FOUNDATION
P. O. Box 789
Lamar, AR 72846
(Second Printing)
webnote:
The printed manuscript has the photocopies of the original
court document pages.
p
1 --
UNITED
STATES DISTRICT COURT
NORTHERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA
EQUAL EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY COMMISSION,
Plaintiff,
Vs.
PACIFIC PRESS PUBLISHING ASSOCIATION, et al.,
Defendants,
Civ.
No. 74-2025 CBR
OPENING BRIEF FOR DEFENDANTS IN SUPPORT OF THEIR MOTION
FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT
Introductory: This Is a Head-On Confrontation Between Church
and State, Unprecedented in the History of Our Republic
This is a suit by the United States against the Seventh-day
Adventist Church.
That
simple statement is enough to suggest that the case is unusual;
but there is more, which shows that the case is fantastic:
The Government seeks an injunction which would control the
internal affairs of the Church and dictate the manner in
which the Church carries on God's work in the world.
The
First Amendment -- without which there would have been no
Constitution -- became effective one hundred eighty-three
years ago, on December 15. 1791, and provides in its opening
words,
"Congress shall make no law respecting an astablirhment
of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof."
We cannot find that such a case as this has ever before
arisen. Not it'i one hundred eighty-three years since the
First Amendment has been part of our fundamental law, has
the Government sued a Church in the government's courts,
in order to prescribe who it
p
2 -- shall
employ to edit its religious publications, or who it shall
admit to the governing councils of religious organizations,
or how it shall deal with church members who flout ecclesiastical
authorities.
If, as we suspect, the case is absolutely unprecedented,
1 that of course is as it ought
to be.
Not
only is the case unprecedented, not only would the granting
of any relief whatever be a plain violation of the First
Amendment, the very maintenance and prosecution of the case
is unconstitutional. The haling of Ministers of the Gospel
before notaries public to respond to inquisition by attorneys
for the United States concerning divisive activities within
the church -- extending even to interrogation concerning
sermons preached in chapel worship services! -- is an impermissible
governmental entanglement in church affairs, and violates
the Establishment Clause.
At the
outset we recall that the First Amendment's history is directly
traceable to James Madison's "Great Memorial and Remonstrance"
against taxation to support an established church, See Everson
v. Board of Education, 330 U.S. 1, 11-12 (1947); that following
the defeat of this tax, "the Assembly enacted the famous
'Virginia Bill for Religious Liberty' originally written
by Thomas Jefferson," id. at 12; and that the
Supreme Court has previously recognized that the provisions
1 But cf. Mormon Church v. United States,
136 U.S. 1, (1890), in which, after a church corporation
in the territory of Utah had been dissolved by Act of Congress,
the United States applied for a receiver to take possession
of its property (except that devoted to liturgical purposes),
and liquidate it. The Court's first holding was that Congress
did have power to revoke the Articles of Incorporation.
That having been done, there could be no First Amendment
objection to proceedings to wind-up the corporation and
distribute its assets.
p
3 --
Prefatory Note on Seventh-day Adventists
The
Seventh-day Adventist Church is a recognized Christian denomination,
organized as such in 1863, but with its roots in the Millerite
movement in the 1840's.
What
distinguishes Seventh-day Adventists from other Christian
denominations is chiefly two aspects of their faith which
give the Church its name:
"Seventh-day":
The Church believes that the true Sabbath is not Sunday,
which is the first day of the week, but the Biblical Sabbath
on which God rested, Genesis 1:2-3, and which Moses, "the
lawgiver, and God's first pen", commanded the people
of Israel to keep holy. Exodus 20:8-11. This is, then, a
Sabbatarian denomination which observes the Sabbath
from sunset Friday to sunset Saturday. Its Fundamental
Beliefs include (YB 5, 116, 7): "That
the will of God ... is comprehended in His law of ten commandments;
....
"That
the fourth commandment of this unchangeable law requires
the observance of the seventh-day Sabbath ...."
This is
a tenet shared, of course, not only by all of Judaism but
also by other Christian denominations, as for example the
Seventh-day Baptists.
"Adventist":
Adventism is the doctrine which holds that the second
coming of Christ, romised in John 14:1-28 and elsewhere,
is near at hand. Adventism is deeply rooted in Hebrew and
Christian prophetism, messianism, and millennial expectations
recorded in the Bible. As to this the Fundamental Beliefs
say (YB 6 120): "That
the second coming of Christ is
the great hope of the church, the grand climax of the gospel
and plan of
p
4 -- salvation ... The almost complete fulfilment
of various lines of prophecy, ... with existing conditions
in the physical, social, industrial, political, and religious
world, indicates that Christ's coming is near, even at the
doors. ... Believers are exhorted to be ready ...."
From
a few faithful, but disappointed Millerites who awaited
Christ's coming on October 22, 1844, the Seventh-day Adventist
Church grew from some 17,000 members in 1880, to over 30,000
in 1890, to 75,000 members in 1900, 500,000 by 1940, 1,000,000
by 1960, and 2,000,000 by 1970. At the end of 1973 there
were 2,390,124 baptized members of the Seventh-day Adventist
Church throughout the world.
Seventh-day
Adventist doctrine does not permit discrimination against
any person on the basis of race, national origin, or sex.
However, only members of the Church who are in good standing
are eligible for employment by the Seventh-day Adventist
Church, its departments and institutions, which are integral
and vital organs of the Church.
Statement
of the Case
I. Founding
of the Seventh-day Adventist Church
A.
The Prophecy of Isaiah: "Only a Remnant Shall Be
Saved"
God's promise to Israel, Genesis 17, has not failed, for
the promise was not made to Abraham's physical descendants
merely as such, but to those whom God chose. God's choice
or election is not limited to the Jews: the promise also
applies to the Gentiles. Moreover, God's promise never included
all of the Israelites: "And it shall come to pass in
that day, that the remnant of Israel, and such as are escaped
of the house of Jacob, shall no more again stay upon him
that smote them; but shall stay upon the Lord, the Holy
One of Israel, in truth.
p
5 -- "that constitutes the image of Adventism.
It is not independent voices or deviating minority opinions.
That is the strength and the genius of true Adventism.
"It
is not dishonorable to have honestly held an erroneous position
- if one accepts light as it is shed upon dark problems.
It is obstinacy and refusal to advance in that light that
is wrong and censurable."
During
her lifetime, Mrs. White produced a great many books, which
have been many times reprinted, and which Seventh-day Adventists
regard as second only to the Bible in importance for the
revelation of their beliefs. She is, in fact, the only post-Biblical
person mentioned by name in the Fundamental Beliefs of Seventh
day Adventists, (YB 6, 119):
"That
God has placed in His church the gifts of the Holy Spirit,
as enumerated in 1 Corinthians 12 and Ephesians 4. That
these gifts operate in harmony with the divine principles
of the Bible, and are given for the perfecting of the saints,
the work of the ministry, the edifying of the body of Christ.
Rev. 12:17; 19:10; 1 Cor. 1:5-7. That the gift of the Spirit
of Prophecy is one of the identifying marks of the remnant
church. 1 Cor. 1:5-7; 12:1; Rev. 12:17; 19:10; Amos 3:7;
Hosea 12:10, 13. The remnant church recognizes that this
gift was manifested in the life and ministry of Ellen G.
White."
The
writings of Ellen G. White are collectively referred to
by Seventh-day Adventists as the Spirit of Prophecy.
While
Seventh-day Adventists believe that they have been especially
blessed through the visions conferred upon that Church through
its prophet Ellen G. White, and while they believe that
most of the Protestant Church is in error through failure
to obey all of the Ten Commandments, (through nonobservance
of the true Sabbath as required by the Fourth Commandment),
the Church recognizes itself as only one part of the Body
of Christ, which is the blessed company of all faithful
people.
p
6 -- Movement
of Destiny 28;
"So with bonds that cannot be broken we are tied into
God's continuing church, covering the whole of the Christian
dispensation." Indeed, Adventists do not profess to
be the whole even of the Remnant Church, for the great body
of those who will eventually be saved is still outside the
Church, but will become a part of the Remnant before the
Last Day.
E.
The Whites and the Foundation of the Publishing Ministry;
The Battle Creek Years
In
the early days of the Seventh-day Adventist Church, the
pioneers through the counsel of their prophet, Ellen G.
White, began the ministry of the printed Word. Mrs. White
writes in Life Sketches 125:
"At
a meeting held in Dorchester, Massachusetts, in November,
1848, I had been given a view of the proclamation of the
sealing message, and of the duty of the brethren to publish
the light that was shining upon our pathway.
"After
coming out of vision, I said to my husband: 'I have a message
for you. You must begin to print a little paper and send
it out to the people. Let it be small at first; but as the
people read, they will send you means with which to print,
and it will be a success from the first.' From this small
beginning it was shown to me to be like streams of light
that went clear round the world."
In 1849
the Whites were living in relative poverty at Rocky Hill,
Connecticut. "While we were living at this place, my
husband was impressed that it was his duty to write and
publish the present truth. He was greatly encouraged and
blessed as he ...
2. Cf.
Streams of Light: The Story of the Pacific Press (1958).
3. 2 Peter 1:12: "Wherefore I will not be negligent
to put you always in remembrance of these things, though
ye know them, and be established in the present truth."
p
7 --
"In 1861 the first institution in the Seventh-day Adventist
denomination was incorporated. It was not a school, not
a hospital, but a publishing house, the Review and Herald
Publishing Association. In 1863, two years later, the church
was organized into the General Conference."
F.
The Denomination Founded, and the Foreign Mission
Begun
By the
1850's there were small groups of Sabbathkeeping Adventists
in several of the States. But there was no general church
organization, and no ecclesiastical authority. The only
thing that united these believers was the Spirit of Prophecy:
it was "the one rallying point of the faithful, the
final court of appeals."- They could, at first, not
even agree on a name: several were suggested, but Seventh-day
Adventist came to be favored; and in 1861 Mrs. White "was
shown in regard to the remnant people of God taking a name
.... No name which we can take will be appropriate but that
which accords with our profession and expresses our faith
and marks us a peculiar people. The name Seventh-day Adventist
... is the line of distinction between the worshippers of
God and those who worship the beast and receive his mark."
1 Testimonies 223.
The
emergence of the General Conference in 1863 was not the
result of the imposition of authority by self-appointed
leaders, but rather of the natural and gradual unification
of the local churches into a central and representative
(hierarchical) ...
4. The
name of Elder White's periodical was foreshortened to The
Review and Herald, and the name of the corporation was changed
to that given by Elder Wickwire. In 1905 this publishing
house was moved to Washington., D.C. as was the headquarters
of the Church. The Review and Herald is one of the oldest,
if not the oldest, continuously-published denominational
periodicals in the nation.
5. Movement
of Destiny 141, quoting 1 Spalding, Origin and History 293.
p
8 -- organization. In 1859 Elder James White suggested
that the churches in each State should hold a yearly meeting
to lay plans for the year to follow. Review & Herald,
July 21, 1859. These meetings began to be held in 1860,
and the first informal gatherings grew into constituted
bodies with regularly elected delegates and leaders. Inevitably,
this led to the holding of the first General Conference,
at Battle Creek in May of 1863. There were duly elected
delegates and committees; a constitution was adopted, an
officer staff elected; and so the Seventh-day Adventist
Church came into being, as the General Conference of
Seventh-day Adventists.
In
1874, the Seventh-day Adventist Church took its first step
toward becoming a worldwide movement by sending abroad,
under the auspices of General Conference, its first foreign
missionary, Elder John N. Andrews.
II.
The Seventh-day Adventist Church Today
A. Mission of the Church
"The
object of this Conference is to teach all nations the everlasting
gospel of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ and the Commandments
of God." This is the object of General Conference as
set forth in Article II of its Constitution. (Art. ii, YB
7.)
As
stated in the affidavit of the Church's First Minister (Pierson
AE 1):
"I
am Robert H. Pierson, an ordained minister of the gospel,
and president of the General Conference of Seventh-day Aventist,
which is the Seventh-day Adventist Church, and ...
6.
Movement of Destiny 140-41.
p
9 -- which was established for the purpose of following
the instruction of Jesus Christ when he said, 'And this
gospel of the Kingdom shall be preached in all the worldd
for a witness unto all nations; and then shall the end come.'
Matthew 24:14."
The
major activities of the Church are in four areas of religious
activity:
Evangelistic
preaching, which is conducted in hundreds of languages
around the world;
Publishing
religious literature, which is printed in more than
fifty publishing houses in all principal countries, and
the sale of that literature by church members called literature
evangelists (colporteurs);
Maintaining
schools, including primary, secondary and colleges in
the U.S.A., and many other countries, plus graduate schools,
and a medical college at Loma Linda, Calif.;
Maintaining
hospitals, or sanitariums, including the first one at
Battle Creek, and one at St. Helena, California.
B.
Structure of the Church: The
Conferences, Departments, and Institutions; Signification
of General Conference
Among
Seventh-day Adventists there are five steps leading from
the individual believer to the worldwide organization of
the work of the church.
1.
The church, a united body of individual believers
in a locality.
2.
The local conference or local field, a united
body of churches in a State, province, or local territory.
3. The union conference or union field, a united
body of conferences or fields within a larger territory.
4.
The division, a section of the General
p
10 -- Conference, embracing local or union conferences
or fields in large areas of the world. (Euro-Africa Division
is one of these.)
5. The
General Conference, being the general body embracing the
church in all parts of the world. Church Manual 47 (1971).
The General Conference, then, is the Seventh-day Adventist
Church.
So the
term "General Conference" has three overlapping
meanings:
a. The
embodiment of the Remnant Church as a Christian denomination,
in a unified worldwide organization to which all baptized
Seventh-day Adventists owe spiritual allegiance:
b. The
actual quadrennial meeting of delegates, the General Conference
of the Church, the only body having authority to alter the
structure of the church either in doctrine or organization.;
c. The
permanent staff at world headquarters in Washington, D.C.,
which, acting through the Executive Committee, attends to
the work of the Church between the quadrennial conferences.
The
Departments and Institutions of the Church are listed in
the Yearbook. They include entities with such apparently
disparate names as The International Insurance Company,
Geoecience Research Institute, Home Health Education Service,
Castle Memorial Hospital, and Loma Linda Foods. But they
are all the Church, as truly as is a house of worship: Says
the Church's First Minister (Pierson AE13):...
7.
In the past the General Conference has met every four years,
most recently at Atlantic City in 1970. Owing to the heavy
cost of the quadrennial Conference it has been decided
to extend the interval to five years. The next General Conference
will be at Vienna, Austria in 1975.
p
11 -- "As stated in Article II of the Constitution
and By-Laws, 'The object of this Conference is to teach
all nations the everlasting gospel of our Lord and Saviour
Jesus Christ and the commandments of God.' All of the Divisions,
Conferences, Missions, and Institutions, including Publishing
Houses, are integral parts of the Church. We believe that
their work is God's work."
C.
The Orders of Ministry: Ministers, Missionaries, and
Evangelists
The
orders of ministry in the Church are based upon St Paul's
letter to the church at Ephesus:
"And he gave some, apostles, and some, prophets; and
some, evangelists; and some, pastors and teachers; For the
perfecting of the saints, for the work of the ministry,
for the edifying of the body of Christ; Till we all come
in the unity of the faith, and of the knowledge of the Son
of God." Ephesians 4:11-13.
The
orders of ministry in the Seventh-day Adventist Church include
Ordained Ministers, Credentialed Missionaries, Licensed
Ministers, Licensed Missionaries, and Credentialed
Literatue Evangelists. All of these are ministers of the
Church, charged by God with carrying on His work. The policy
of the Church with respect to Credentials and Licenses,
and the method of their issuance, together with certain
other aspects of Church policy, are set forth at pp. 76-87
of the General Conference's Working Policies. (See Pierson
AE 113, p.8 and Exhibit A thereto.)
An
ordained minister, is authorized, expected, and commissioned
by God to preach the gospel of Our Lord Jesus Christ, and
to administer the rites of marriage, baptism,
ordination, and communion, whether or not he is in a pastoral
p
12 -- assignment, or whether he is also a physician,
a teacher, an editor (Tobler DS6), or an administrator.
Ordained ministers in addition to any special education
and training (such as
medicine), have theological education; some of the Elders
of the Church were frontier preachers, but theology today
is learned at a Seventh-day Adventist Seminary. Licensed
ministers are usually seminarians, or others, who look forward
to ordination upon completion of their education and training.
Credentialed missionaries are ministers of the Church, in
remunerative employment with the Church or its institutions,
and who have positions
which require experience and impose responsibility. Licensed
missionaries, also ministers of the Church, are persons
in similar employment who have not yet attained the stature
of credentials. Literature Evangelists are those engaged
in the colporteur ministry. (Pierson Aff. 114, p.8.)
D. Importance of the Publishing Mission: The
Publishing Houses, Adventist Book Centers,
and the Colporteur Ministry
The
Publishing Mission lies at the very foundation of the Seventh-day
Adventist Church. The Church was founded, and it continues
to rest, on the power of the printed Word. The founders
of the Church began the publishing ministry fifteen years
before the small groups of believers scattered throughout
New England and the Midwest were welded into an organized
Christian denomination.
The
experience of the Seventh-day Adventist Church in this regard
accords with that of the whole Body of Christ's church.
Thus, Bishop John Durham Wing in his introduction to Dean
Gilman's In God's Presence:
"Like every other natural instinct, our desire to pray
needs to be cultivated, trained, and guided.
p
13 -- Moutain View which lies astride the San
Andreas Fault, was in the main shock area, and the plant
was extensively damaged. A few months later the entire rebuilt
plant was consumed by fire. Once again the plant was rebuilt.
After
this, the plant was operated only for denominational work;
and that has since been and remains the policy of Pacific
Press. It Is a Seventh-day Adventist Publishing House, and
that only.
The
officials of Pacific Press who figure in this case are these:
Elder R.R. Bietz is a retired
minister, and a former Vice-President of General Conference;
he is a chairman of the board of directors, and the President,
of Pacific Press.
The
General Manager until November 30, 1973 was Elder L.F.Bohner.
On December 1, 1973 Elder W.J. Blacker became General Manager.
The General Manager is also Vice-President of Pacific Press
Publishing Association. Its only other officer is the Secretary-Treasurer,
W.F. Muir.
Elder
Lawrence C. Maxwell is the Editor of Signs of the Times;
his secretary is Mrs. Lorna Tobler. Elder Richard Utt is
Book Editor of Pacific Press; he has two Associate Book
Editors, Elder Ivan Crawford and Elder Theodore R. Torkelson
(who also serves as Associate Editor of Sign); an
Assistant Book Editor, Max G. Phillips; an Editorial Assistant,
Mrs. Merikay Silver; and during the events leading up to
this case, as secretary Mrs. Arbie Kreye.
The
Religious Life of the Press
The
Pacific Press employs only individuals who are in good and
regular standing in the Seventh-day Adventist Church, and
(except in the circumstances of this case) retains in employment
p
14 -- only persons who maintain that standing.
The regular work day at Pacific Press begins at 7:30 in
the morning and ends at 4:30 in the afternoon, except on
Fridays when it ends at 1:30. The Sabbath, as observed by
the Seventh-day Adventist Church, begins at sundown on Friday
and continues until sundown on Saturday. The Press closes
early on Friday in order that its people may attend to their
duties preparatory for the Sabbath, which in winter sometimes
begins before five o'clock (Blacker AE 8).
The
working week at Pacific Press begins with a chapel exercise
at 7:30 each Monday morning, at the chapel which is on the
grounds of the Press. This exercise begins with a devotional
song, usually a production of Chapel Records, a department
of the Press; it is followed by a sermon by an ordained
minister, or some other presentation that relates to the
church; and the 30-minute period closes with prayer. (Blacker
AE 9.)
Contrary
to the Government's impression, these chapel exercises are
not "meetings" where "talks" are given;
they are worship services at which sermons are preached.
(Maxwell DE17-19.)
All
employees are paid for their time attending chapel services,
and they are expected to attend these services with the
same faithfulness and diligence that they are expected to
bring to the other aspects of their employment. In other
words, attendance at the chapel service on Monday morning
is part of the job, for everybody at the Press including
the General Manager. In addition, because it represents
the one occasion each week when all employees are gathered
together in one place (except the night shift, who hear
a tape recording of the chapel exercise when they come to
work on Monday), the Monday morning chapel time is used,
as appropriate, to make announcements of general
p
15 --
Adventist Church. (Blacker AE 113-6, 12-18.)
The
officials of General Conference who figure in this case
are the following:
Elder
Robert H. Pierson is the President of General Conference
and, as such the first minister of the Seventh-day Adventist
Church.
Elder
Neal C. Wilson is Vice-President for North America of General
Conference and as such, the spiritual leader of Seventh-day
Adventists in North America and the Advisor to all of its
departments and institutions, as well as to all churches
and individual church members within the Division. He holds
positions in many of the institutions including the Vice
Chairmanship of Pacific Press.
Elder
Bruce M. Wickwire is an Associate Secretary in the publishing
department of General Conference, with jurisdiction over
those publishing houses, including Pacific Press which are
direct parts of General Conference.
3. Euro-Africa Division and Hamburg Publishing House
The
Government has undertaken to sue also the Euro-Africa Division
of General Conference and something it calls "Staat-Korn
Verlag GmbH a/k/a Hamburg Publishing House." These
entities are nonexistent, not within the jurisdiction of
any Court of the United States, or both, and in any event
have not been and cannot be served with process. They should
both be dismissed out of the case...
8. We
have filed our motions to dismiss simultaneously with the
motion for summary judgment; and this subhead constitutes
our brief on the motion to dismiss.
p
16 --
Euro-Africa is not an entity, but an administrate subdivision
of General Conference. To the extent it exists at all, it
exists in Europe; its office is at Berne. (YB 125; Powers
AE 11.)
"Staat-Korn
Verlag OmbH a/k/a Hamburg Publishing House" is mere
confusion on the part of the Government. Hamburg Publishing
House is a Church publishing house under the
ecclesiastical jurisdiction of Euro-Africa Division. Saatkorn
Verlag GmbH (not "Staat-Korn") is one of several
Publishing House Departments of the Hamburg Publishing House.
(YB 406.) The translation of its name is "Seedcorn
Press, Inc." In the Parable of the Sower, Matthew 13:18-23,
and Luke 8:11: "Now the parable is this: The seed is
the word of God." In its secular :aspect Saatkorn ie
a Gesellschaft mit beschrankter Haftung (limited-liability
company) under German law. Obviously the Court has no jurisdiction
over it.
4.
Mrs. Silver
Mrs. Silver, who is in her mid-twenties, was employed by
the Church June 7, 1971. She is an exceptionally talented
Adventist writer, although her formal education, consisting
of about two years of college, is less than what the Press
considers adequate for a full-fledged editor. Mrs.
Silver's position is not, as stated in the Petition, p.3,
that of a "book editor"; she is an Editorial Assistant
to the book editor, although she receives the salary of
an assistant editor. (Blacker AE 129.)
In 1973, Sister Silver was voted a missionary license by
Pacific Union Conference, and she is a Licensed Missionary
of the Seventh-day Adventist Church. (Her name does nott
appear in the 1973-74 Yearbook, because the book went
p
17 -- to press
before her license was issued.
At the
present time, because of her activities described below,
sister Silver is at variance with the Church, the evidence
of her status as a Missionary of the Church is being withheld
by her ecclesiastical superior for ecclesias cal reasons
(Blacker AE 130, 49-52).
5.
Elder and Mrs. Tobler
Elder
Gustav Tobler is an Ordained Minister of the Seventh-day
Adventist Church (Tobler DS 5-6). He is a native of the
German speaking region of Switzerland, and is still a citizen
of Switzerland although he worked many years at Pacific
Press. His ministry is that of a writer and editor in the
German languague, in addition to preaching, teaching and
administration of the rites of the Church which are required
of ordained ministers.
At Mountain
View, Elder Tobler was the editor of Zeichen der Zeit
(Ger. "Signs of the Times"), a German language
editiorn of the Press's pioneer publication, which was addressed
to the quite substantial populace of German speaking Adventists
in North America (Tobler DS 5.)
Mrs.
Tobler is a mature Adventist worker who has served the Church
for many years. She is and for several years has been the
secretary to Elder Lawrence Maxwell, editor of Signs
of the Times. Sister Tobler by her long service and
capability has attained the status of Credentialed ! Missionary,
and is a minister of the Church. Whether her recent action
in becoming a plaintiff in this suit against the Church
requires any change in her status has not yet been determined
' by the ecclesiastical authorities.
p
18 --
Rolls-Royces and a bushel of rubies.
Those
who work for the Seventh day Adventist Church respond to
a religious vocation in exactly the same sense as does a
cloistered nun. Man's law is by its very nature not applicable.
Cessante rations legis, cessat ipsa lex.
The
1972 amendments to Title VII concededly broadened the religious
exemption. Section 702, 42 U.S.C. 2000e-l, P.L. 92-261,
Mr. 24, 1972, 86 Stat. 103. The Government will of course
contend that even the broadest reading of amended section
702 still leaves the Church subject to its coverage. But
this was not the view of either the sponsor or the chief
critic of the
language of the amendment. 118 Cong.Rec. 1982 (daily ed.
Feb. 1, 1972): "Mr.
Williams. Does the Senator deal with any activity
that a religious organization might be engaged in -- any
activity?
"Mr.
Ervin. And activity.
"Mr.
Williams. ... Let us hypothesize a
situation in which a religious order has a distillery and
produces an alcoholic beverage. Would the Senator say that
business activity of the religious order should be wholly
exempt from the provisions or would he say it cannot diacriminate
because of a person's race, religion, color, or sex?
"Mr.
Ervin. I think section 702 in the bill would
exempt it if it used the alcoholic beverage for the purpose
of communion.
"Mr.
Williams. I am certain that is true..."
If
production of wine for the rite of commemorating the Last
Supper of Jesus Christ is sacramental, so is the production
of books to spread His Gospel to all nations. The two commands,
"Do this in remembrance of me" and "Go ye
into all the world" are of equal stature. The Act of
Congress applies to neither. If it were held to do so, it
is plainly unconstitutional.
p
19 -- B.
A Church Cannot Tolerate Monitoring
of Its Affairs By Civil Authority. The Basis For This Position
Lies At the Heart of the Establishment Clause
The
Church does not consider the Government its antagonist;
but it will not compromise its position in order to comply
with regulations that weaken its mission. (Wilson DE 85.)
Elder
Maxwell's testimony in this regard would have met with applause
from James Madison, for it echoes the Memorial &
Remonstrance (Maxwell (DE 26):
"The Seventh-day Adventist Church accepts the law;
it also recognizes that there is a Constitution; it also
recognizes that there is a higher responsibility, first
to God, and when a law or the manner of enforcing that law
should conflict with either the Constitution or with the
responsibilities of the Church then the Seventh-day Adventist
Church will and must abide by its higher responsibilities."
The
Church claims exemption from all civil laws in all of its
religious institutions; although it seeks accommodation,
it draws a line of its own when dealing with Caesar. (Wilson
DE
18 74-77, 79.) It has refused Government grants rather than
accede to racial or generic quotas in its institutions (Wilson
DE 80).
This
position on the Church's part is Constitutionally sound.
"... (official and continuing surveillance" of
a religious organization by a government agency is not only
abhorrent to the Church, it is the very essence of violation
of the Establishment Clause. Walz v. Tax Commission,
397 U.S. 664, 674-75 (1970).
p
20 --
Conclusion: The Action Should Be Dismissed With Costs,
Including a Reasonable Attorneys' Fee
The
Seventh-day Adventist Church is small, as Christian denominations
go, having fewer than three million members in the world,
about half of whom are in the U.S.A. Word of something like
this case and the Silver case can spread rapidly, creating
doubt and strife. The elders of the Church are few, and
they have much to do; they have already had to spend too
much of their time, and far too much of the Church's treasury,
which comes from the tithes and offerings of faithful people,
in connection with this case. Both the pendency and the
purpose of this case are at loggerheads with the First Amendment
guaranties of rellgious freedom.
The
action should be forthwith dismissed with costs, including
a reasonable attorneys' fee, for which judgment should be
entered jointly and severally against the United States
and the intervenor-plaintiffs.
A proposed
order is served and filed herewith.
Respectfully
submitted
(signed)
MALCOLM T. DUNGAN
One of Counsel
23.
Act §706 (k), 43 U.S.C.§2000e-5 (k); Van Hoomissen
v. Xerox Corp., 8 EPD # 9688 (9th Cir 1974); United States
v. 0perating Engineers, 6 EPD # 8946 (N.D. Cal. 1973), per
Peckham, J.; Jonson v. Georgia Highway Express, 5 EPD #
8444 (N.D. Ga. 1972); Allen v.
Braniff International, 5 EPD # 8053 (N.D. Tex. 1972). For
the information of the Court, we certify that, as of the
date this brief is filed, Mr. Noland, who in the salaried
General Counsel of General Cenferenre, and who was admitted
to practice in 1943, had expended approximerely 240 hours
on the case, and had incurred $1,736.17 in out-of'-pocket
expense on three trips to the West Coast; Mr. McNeil admitted
1962, 20 hours; Mr. Dungan, admitted 1949, 230 hours; Mr.
Quirk, admitted 1964, 194 hours. No other evidence is needed
to enable the Court to fix a reasonable fee. We suggest
$25,000.
p
21 --
MALCOLM
T. DUNGAN
JAMES H. QUIRK
BROBECK, PHLEGER & HARRISON
111 Sutter Street, 11th Floor
San Francisco, California 94104
Telephone: 434-0900
BOARDMAN
NOLAND
P. O. Box 4354
Takoma Park, Maryland 20012
Telephone: (202) 723-0800
DONALD
McNEIL
RUFFO, FERRARI & McNEIL
101 Park Center Plaza, Suite 1300
San Jose, California 95113
Telephone: (418) 287-2233
Attorneys
for Defendants
UNITED
STATES DISTRICT COURT
NORTHERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA
EQUAL
EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY
COMMISSION,
Plaintiff,
vs,
PACIFIC PRESS PUBLISHING
ASSOCIATION, et al.,
Defendants. |
CIV. NO. 74-2025 CBR
AFFIDAVIT OF
NEAL C. WILSON
|
District
of Columbia, ss
NEAL
C. WILSON, being first duly sworn, deposes and says:
l. In the Name of God. Amen. I am Neal C. Wilson, an ordained
minister of the gospel of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ,
in the Seventh-day Adventist Church.
2.
I am Vice President for North America of the General Conference
of Seventh-day Adventists. As such, I am the spirityal leader
of approximately 1-half million
22 -- Seventh-day Adventists in North America,
and administrative oveseer of all of the departments and
institutions of the Church in North America, including its
publishing houses and specifically Pacific Press Publishing
Association.
3.
I have reviewed a quantity of court papers in the case of
Equal Employment Opportunity Commission versus the Seventh-day
Adventist Church, including a petition, several affidavits,
and what I understand to be a proposed order. As a result
of this review, I make this affidavit for the purpose of
covering nine points which bear directly on the charges
and allegations in this case:
(a) Background
(b) Meaning, nature and authority of the Seventh-day Adventist
Church
(c) Relationship of Publishing Houses to the Church
(d) Why it is necessary to control all materials officially
published and distributed by the Church
(e) Reasons for not complying with Merikay Silver's request
to rescind Bruce M. Wickwire's letter to Publishing Houses
(f) Denominational position with respect to ministers and
missionaries living with their spouses and serving as a
family unit
(g) My efforts to render temporary relief to Lorna Tobler
(h) Brief statement of the Church philosophy regarding remuneration
and the denominational wage scale.
p
23 --
(i) The Church's view of its relation to civil authority
4. It
is alleged that there has been repeated retaliation, harassment
discrimination, et cetera, against Merikay Silver and Loran
Tobler because they took advantage of provisions of Title
VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 in an attempt to resolve
injustices, inequity, and differences with the management
of the Pacific Press Publishing Association. These allegations
must be denied. There is no resentment or bitterness on
the part of management towards these individuals. The primary
reason for the conflict is that these workers in the Church
have been unwilling to recognize and accept the authority
of the Church in determining internal policies governing
the ecclesiastical nature and mission of their employing
organization.
5. No
attempt is made to invade individual rights to prevent anyone
from living as private citizens, nor has there been any
attempt to make life difficult for workers of the Church
nor to in any way hurt their reputation or professional
skills. Those employed by the Church have a dual obligation,
first as a member of the spiritual body of Jesus Christ
and second, as a servant and worker of the Church.
6. I
categorically state that there is no attempt on the part
of the Church to exonerate or condone poor administrative
decisions or unfair employment practices. The point at issue
is, Who shall arbitrate and decide differences that arise
between members or between employees in a church organization
and management within the structure of the Church? It is
the position of the Church that there is a proper approach,
there is recourse to justice, there are avenues of appeal
to
p
24 -- adjudicate
grievances arising with the Church.
7. The
Working Policy of the General Conference of Seventh-day
Adventists which is recognized as the authoritative voice
of the Church in all matters pertaining to the work of the
SDA denomination in all parts of the world, elaborates on
this point under the title "Personal Relations and
Organizational Authority." It states:
"It is recognized as fundamental that workers counsel
together as to plans and policies of work in all our organizations,
the consensus, or majority conviction, being accepted as
the general working plan. Unity in effort is more essential
and fruitful in soul winning than exact perfection in plans.
"Persons
accepting employment in any branch of the work of the denomination
must do so upon the definite agreement that they will submit
to the properly constituted authority of the church in the
matter of the adjustment of all personal differences arising
between themselves and employing boards or committees, and
that they shall never appeal to any court of law for redress
from such adjustments as may be made by the denomination
concerning any personal claim they may make." WORKING
POLICY, North American Division, p. 36.
8. The
Church is more than buildings, priests, pastors, doctrines,
beliefs, dogma, and spiritual mysteries. It is a spiritual
institution made up of spiritually minded men and women
and youth with a spiritual mission for the
p
25 --
whole world and for all mankind. In the American concept
the term "church" has a number of significant
meanings. It may refer to a building dedicated for religious
worship, it may refer to a single body or group of individuals
who have similiar religious beliefs, or it may refer to
the entire body of Christian believers.
9.
In the Seventh-day Adventist denomination the term "church"
has a very comprehensive and broad meaning. It is used to
apply to the general organization and headquarters for Seventh-day
Adventists under the name of General Conference of Seventh-day
Adventists. It also applies to all the subordinate units
engaged in fulfilling the missionn of the Church. In order
to fulfill the ministry of Jesus Christ in today's society,
the Church has found it necessary to use a variety of ministries
and a number of different agencies and facilities. These
are all an integral, organic part of the Church and actually
constitute the Church as it seeks to fulfill its mission.
Specifically appliad to the question under review, it is
the position of the SDA church that publishing houses are
in essence the Church in its preaching and literature distribution
ministry.
9. The
United States Government through its various agencies (executive,
legislative and judicial) has recognized and upheld the
position thus stated. Even though the operation of the Church
and its institutions involves employer-employee relationships,
and certain activities common also in non-religious organizations,
and even though interstate transactions (non-commercial)
are involved, the Church is none-the-less an ecclesiastical
body and a spiritual communion. By way of illustration,
the publishing houses of the Church perform certain functions,
carry on training programs, have
p
26 -- computer centers and other facilities;
yet they are religious institutions and are engaged in the
redemptive mission of the Church.
10.
Those who accept the invitation of, or who apply to work
for, the Church should feel that it is a privilege and the
fulfillment of a spiritual outreach. When a person by voluntary
choice accepts to work for the Church, he or she thereby
also accepts certain personal restrictions and limiting
factors. Personal or selfish ambitions, individual philosophy,
natural and carnal feelings must be subordinated to the
unity of faith and the well-being of the Church. If one
is not happy in the restrictive atmosphere of church employment,
he or she should seek employment elsewhere.
11.
In order to achieve the purposes and mission of the Church
and to deal with personnel and all the activities involved,
it is absolutely essential for the Church to have organization
and laws. It is also necessary for the Church to establish
its authority in the community of believers. The Church
must have the right to screen and hire or to discharge ministers,
editors and other workers without challege from the State.
There is no possible way for State or a court to properly
assess the circumstances, the needs, the implications, and
the solutions that become a part of the operation of a church.
The State must not find itself in a position of imposing
control and thus endangering the freedom of the Church to
achieve its divine mandate.
12.
Courts have warned against impermissable entanglement with
the Church. Seventh-day Adventists are grateful that the
United States Government respects the time-honored relationships
established between the State and the Church. These
p
27 -- Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ; and by the
Spirit of Prophecy manifested in the life and ministry of
Ellen G. White (Revelation 12:17 & 19:10; Yearbook
6, p. 19), to follow and implement the instruction and commandment
of our Lord, delivered from the Mount of Olives, when He
said, "and this gospel of the kingdom shall be preached
in all the world for a witness unto all nations; and then
shall the end come." Matthew 24:15.
36.
Finally, being conscious of the full weight and burden of
my responsibilities, as the spiritual leader of approximately
one-half million souls, it is my duty to God and to my Church
to reaffirm that, with all respect and veneration for the
secular laws of the United States of America duly and justly
realized and rendered, we the Church owe and must render
our first obedience and service to the Divine Law of Jesus
Christ, that the will of God may be done "on earth
as it is in Heaven"; and this we solemnly and reverently
do, even should the carrying out of our sacred obligations
result, in the words of St. Paul to the Corinthians (2 Corinthians
6:4-5 [RSV] ), "in afflictions, hardships, calamities
beatings, imprisonments."
(signed)
Neil C. Wilson
Subscribed
and sworn to before me this 27th day of November, 1974.
(signed)
Opal Caldwell
Notary Public
District of Columbia
My Commission Expires 6/14/75
p
28 --
MALCOLM
T. DUNGAN
JAMES H. QUIRK
BROBECK, PHLEGER & HARRISON
111 Sutter Street, 11th Floor
San Francisco, California 94104
Telephone: 434-0900
BOARDMAN
NOLAND
P. O. Box 4354
Takoma Park, Maryland 20012
Telephone: (202) 723-0800
DONALD
McNEIL
RUFFO, FERRARI & McNEIL
101 Park Center Plaza, Suite 1300
San Jose, California 95113
Telephone: (418) 287-2233
Attorneys
for Defendants
UNITED
STATES DISTRICT COURT
NORTHERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA
EQUAL
EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY
COMMISSION,
Plaintiff,
vs,
PACIFIC PRESS PUBLISHING
ASSOCIATION, et al.,
Defendants. |
CIV. NO. 74-2025 CBR
AFFIDAVIT OF
ROBERT
H. PIERSON
|
District
of Columbia, ss
ROBERT
H. PIERSON, being first duly sworn, deposes and says:
l. I am Robert H. Pierson, an ordained minister of the gospel,
and president of the General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists,
which is the Seventh-day Adventist Church, and which was
established for the purpose of followint the instruction
of Jesus Christ when He said, "And this gospel of the
Kingdom shall be preached in all the world for a witness
into all natiions; and then shall the end come." Matthew
24:14.
p
29 -- 2. The document which has been filed in
this case entitled "Seventh-day Adventist Yearbook
19'73-74" is an official publication of the Church.
The Fundamental Beliefs of Seventh-day Adventists printed
at pp. 5-6 of the Yearbook are the fundamental beliefs of
the Church. The Constitution and By-laws printed at pp.
7-11 of the Yearbook are the Constitution and by-laws of
the General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists. The remainder
of the Yearbook sets out the organizational structure of
the Church, including its World Divisions, Union and Local
Conferences and Missions, Educational Institutions, Food
Companies, Hospitals and Sanitariums, Publishing Houses,
Periodicals, and Denominational Workers.
3. As
stated in Article II of the Constitution and By-Laws, "The
object of this Conference is to teach all nations the everlasting
gospel of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ and the commandments
of God." All of the Divisions, Conferences, and Missions
of the Church and all of its Institutions, including Publishing
Houses, were formed and their activities are carried on
for the purpose of fulfilling this object of the Church,
and for no other purpose; and all of the Divisions, Conferences,
Missions, and Institutions, including Publishing Houses,
are integral parts of the Church. We believe that their
work is God's work.
4.
One of the distinguishing marks of the Remnant Church, Revelation
12:17, of which the Seventh-day Adventist Church is a part,
is the gift of the spirit of prophecy. Revelation 19:10.
In this respect, Ellen G. White occupies a special place
in the history and development of the Church. She was the
wife of Elder James White, one of the founders of the Seventh-day
Adventist Church and the founder of its
p
30 --
publishing work. Sister White was shown visions for the
guidance and instruction of the infant denomination, and
wrote extensively of what she was shown. Her works include
Acts of the Apostles, Counsels to Writers and Editors, Desire
of Ages, Life Sketches, Testimonies for the Church (9 volumes),
and many others.
5. It
is one of the fundamental beliefs of Seventh-day Adventists
that "The gift of the Spirit of Prophecy is one of
the identifying marks of the remnant church .... The remnant
church recognizes that this gift was manifested in the life
and ministry of Ellen G.White." Yearbook 6,
p.19.
6. Pacific
Press Publishing Association is owned and operated by the
Seventh-day Adventist Church, is one of its Publishing Houses,
and is an integral part of the ministry of the Church. It
is involved entirely in the production of books, magazines,
and other literature for the use of the Church in the accomplishment
of its world mission to preach the gospel "in all the
world, for a witness unto all nations." Matthew 24:14.
7. The
Spirit of Prophecy, as set forth by Ellen G. White, gives
counsel which the Church accepts as an important part of
its theology. Concerning the Publishing Houses it states:
"The
publishing houses, the presses, instrumentalities in God's
hand to send out to every tongue and nation the precious
light of truth." 4 Testimonies 595.
"Our publications have a most sacred work to do in
making clear, simple and plain the spiritual basis of our
faith." 7 Testimonies 150.
p
31 -- voluntary gifts to accelerate the proclamation
of gospel, and thus exhibit a further demonstration of faith
and commitment. Because of this philosophy, all denominational
employees in the Seventh-day Adventist Church are regarded
as church workers placed in one of two harmonious categories
and designated either as ministers or missionaries. Both
categories call for commitment and sacrifice but allow for
different functions." Wage Scale Booklet, July
l, 1974, p. 3.
"A
wage scale for the North American Division based on such
considerations as education, experience, and responsibility,
provides a scale for all employees in each job classification
without discrimination on the basis of race, religion, sex,
national origin or color, with minimums and maximums expressed
in percentages of the wage factor (100% salary level) .
It incorporates basic salary rates for various categories
of services with recognition of the responsibility inherent
in each position or category." Wage Scale Booklet,
July 1, 1974, p. 3.
10.
The church believes that committed women in the remnant
church should be given every consideration and opportunity
to develop their God-given talents. We believe also that
they should be fairly remunerated for their labors. If women
are doing work traditionally done by men, they should not
be penalized financially. The Seventh-day Adventist Church
has been moving in this direction, and although some problem
areas still need attention, we are rapidly nearing the goal.
The Church has made and will continue to make needed changes.
It is and has been, however, the desire and purpose of the
leadership of the Church, including myself as its first
minister for the time being, to identify problem areas and
make needed
p
32 -- changes in the spirit of the Master, and
not in the spirit of the world around us. In this as well
as all other areas of our ministry, we propose to be guided
by God's will, rather than by the will of mankind. We believe
that by so doing, and by recognizing that here as elsewhere
we must bow to the teachings of our Lord, and not to the
ordinances of mankind, the Church will be consistent with
its message, and will be better enabled to preach the gospel
to the world, and to have the gospel message heard and understood
by the world.
11.
While we believe, therefore, that every effort should be
put forth by the Church and its leadership to assure that
our women are fairly dealt with, as Christians and as Adventists
we are disturbed and ashamed to see employed the kinds of
approaches of activism seen in the world outside the Church,
approaches that would seek to force or coerce those with
whom women mutually serve in God's work to achieve such
ends. This, we believe, is not the Christian, the Christ-like,
approach. This, we believe, negates the very spirit and
goals of Christian ethics and, if they were to accept or
agree to be bound by it, the leadership of the Church would
be involving themselves in un-christian approaches to problems
which, in our belief, demand Christian solutions, not worldly
ones.
12/
It is the belief of the Seventh-day Adventist Church that
misunderstandings and disputes among Church members, or
between the Church and its members, are to be decided within
the Church according to the doctrine and discipline of the
Church. The following quotations from the writings of Ellen
G. White indicate the position of the Church regarding the
settlement of misunderstanding and disputes:
p
33 -- "ignoring the authority of the church
they show contempt for God, who gave to the church its authority."
5 Testimonies, 242,243.
13.
The orders of ministry in the Seventh-day Adventist Church
include Ordained Ministers, Credentialed Missionaries, Licensed
Ministers, Licensed Missionaries, and Credentialed Literature
Evangelists. All of these are ministers of the Church, and
charged by God with carrying on His work. The policy of
the Church with respect to Credentials and Licenses, and
the method of issuing the same, together with certain other
aspects of Church policy, are set forth at pp. 76-87 of
the General Conference's Working Policies, true copies
of which are attached hereto and marked "Exhibit A."
14.
An ordained minister is authorized and expected to preach
the gospel of Our Lord Jesus Christ, and to administer the
sacraments, whether or not he is in a pastoral assignment,
or whether he is also a physician, a teacher, an editor,
or an administrator. Ordained ministers have theological
education, which today is given at a Seventh-day Adventist
Seminary, in addition to whatever other education and training
they have. Licensed ministers are usually seminarians, or
others, who look forward to ordination upon completion of
their education and training. Credentialed missionaries
are ministers of the Church, in remunerative employment
with the Church or its institutions, and who have positions
;which require experience and responsibility. Licensed missionaries,
also minister of the Church, are persons in like employment
who have not yet attained the stature of credentials. Literature
evangelists are those engaged in the colporteur ministry.
As before stated,
p
34 -- authority except God's. If we were to be
ordered by civil authority to hire or not to hire a certain
person, to publish or not to publish a certain article,
to permit a person at variance with the Church access to
the columns of the Church's periodicals, or to give notices
to its employees in language prescribed by a civil authority,
it would be necessary in obedience to God's law to refuse
compliance, even if such refusal resulted in subjecting
the servants of God to "afflictions hardships, calamities,
beatings, imprisonments." 2 Corinthians 6:3-5 (RSV).
Subscribed
and sworn to
before me this 30th day of November, 1974
[signed]
Beulah A Peterson
Notary Public
District of Columbia
STATE OF FLORIDA
[LS]
p
35 -- CHRIS ROGGERSON
F CANCINO
WM. KEITH MacLEOD
JOHN M. REA
EQUAL EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY COMMISSION
1390 Market Street, Suite 1010
San Francisco, California 94102
Telephone: (415) 556-4261
Attorneys for Plaintiff Commission
JOHN
KURT BRADFORD, ESQ.
1320 Bayport Avenue
San Carlos, California 94070
Telephone: (415) 591-8207
Attorney for Intervenors
UNITED
STATES DISTRICT COURT
NORTHERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA
EQUAL
EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY COMMISSION
Plaintiff
and
MERIKAY SILVER and LORNA TOBLER,
Intervenors,
v.
PACIFIC PRESS PUBLISHING ASSOCIATION,
et al.,
Defendants.
|
CIVIL
ACTI0N
NO. C-74-2025CBR
AFFIDAVIT OF LORNA TOBLER |
LORNA
TOBLER, being first duly sworn, deposes and says:
1. I am a woman employee of PACIFIC PRESS PUBLISHING ASSCCIATION
(hereinafter "PPPA"), Mountain View, California.
I presently work in the job category of editorial secretary,
and I have been employed at PPPA since July 1, 1960.
2.
This affidavit is submitted in support of the Petition and
Motion for Preliminary Relief by the Equal Employment Opportunity
Commission (hereinafter "The Commission"), and
Intervenors MERIKAY SILVER and LORNA TOBLER, and opposition
to defendants' Motion for Summary Judgment and Dismissal.
3.
I have been employed at PPPA for nearly 15 years, having
commenced my work there on July 1, 1960. From July, 1960
p
36 -- 111. During the 15 years I have worked
at PPPA, I have attended many events in the PACIFIC PRESS
auditorium (characterized by defendants as a "chapel"
[AE Blacker 5:'2-9]) other than religious meetings, such
as travel film showings and parties. The last such film
showing was on February 16, 1975, as shown by the admission
ticket attached hereto as Ex. "PP." An entertainment
program scheduled to take place there on March 1, 1975 is
shown by the advertisement I received from the sponsors
of "Phun-nite" and is attached hereto as Ex. "QQ."
I have attended many nonreligious Monday morning meetings
for employees (referred to as "chapel exercises"
by defendants (AE Blacker 5:2-9). A recent such Monday morning
meeting was the eighteenth annual business meeting of the
Miramonte Federal Credit Union held January 27, 1975, as
announced in PPPA house organ The Informer of January
20, 1975, attached hereto as Ex. "RR."
112
. As a practicing Seventh-day Adventist, I leave my work
at PPPA at 1:30 p.m. each Friday in order to prepare for
religious worship and Sabbath observance beginning at sunset
Friday and continuing until sunset Saturday. In harmony
with the teaching of my church, I would consider it a violation
of Sabbath observance to continue my regular work at PPPA
during the hours of the Sabbath.
113.
During the course of 25 years which I have spent working
and studying in Adventist-related institutions, I have never
been called a pastor or elder, I have never been ordained,
I have never performed a baptismal or marriage ceremony
or presided at the Lord's Supper, I have never served as
a ministerial intern or gained a Bachelor of Divinity.
114.
As a lifelong Seventh-day Adventist who has attended Adventist
secondary school and college, worked in Adventist-related
institutions for 25 years, read widely Adventist books and
periodicals, worked as editorial secretary
p
37 -- for an Adventist magazine, and is married
to an Adventist minister, I have never seen or heard the
term "first minister" (OBE xii, 15, 17, 38, 45)
applied to a president of the General Conference or used
in any way whatsoever. I have frequently heard the term
"hierarchy" used among Adventist when reference
is made to the Roman Catholic system, of which I have always
been taught that Adventists strongly disapprove. I have
never heard the term "hierarchy" used to describe
Adventist ministers as it is done in defendant's brief (OBE
pp. 14, 44, 97), and I find it strange and contradictory
to all I have ever learned in Adventist schools and churches.
I have never heard of Adventist religious "orders"
or "orders of ministry" (OBE 18, 47) and have
never had any such "order" conferred upon me or
upon any Adventist I have ever known. Among Adventists,
I have always heard this term used to apply to Roman Catholicism,
which I have been taught to reject. I have never heard any
employee of Adventist- related institutions, or any Seventh-day
Adventist at all, compared to "a cloistered nun"
(OBE 90) and believe such concept to be alien to Adventist
thought and practice. I have never heard of any belief that
everything Adventist ministers or administrators do is "sacramental"
(OBE 88). I have never heard that the Seventh-day Adventist
Church or any of its ministers are exempt from civil law
which agrees with Adventist teachings. I have never heard
it said among Adventists that "the church claims exemption
from all civil laws" (OBE 104). I have frequently read
in Adventist publications and heard in Adventist churches
strong support for law enforcement.
115.
As a practicing Seventh-day Adventist from my youth, I attend
church services on Saturday in my own congregation, the
Mountain View SDA Church, which meets in a church sanctuary
dedicated to the purpose of holding divine worship only.
According to my personal belief and the teaching of my
p
38 -- Adventist teaching and that his conduct
toward me, toward his work, and toward his church has been
courageous and devoted.
I swear
under penalty of perjury that the foregoing is true and
correct.
Dated:
February 18, 1975, at San Carlos, California.
(signed)
LORNA TOBLER,
Intervenor
Subscribed and sworn to before me on February 18, 1975
(signed)
James C. Moraes
Notary Public in and for said County and State
p
39 --
UNITED
STATES DISTRICT COURT
NORTHERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA
EQUAL
EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY COMMISSION, et al.,
Plaintiffs,
vs.
PACIFIC PRESS PUBLISHING ASSOCIATION, et al.,
Defendants. |
Civ.
No. 74-2025 CBR
REPLY BRIEF FOR DEFENDANTS
IN SUPPORT OF THEIR MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT
|
Introductory
Despite the welter of paper which burdens the file,
only a few questions emerge which require decision. Hence
we ignore the multitude of irrelevancies in plaintiffs'
affidavits and briefs -- extending to 735 pages -- and answer
in stride those assertions that seem to deserve a reply,
however brief.
The
questions which we see presented for decision by the Court
are only these:
1. Is there a "case or controversy" within
the accepted meaning of the Judiciary Article of the Constitution,
where any decision the Court might make is liable to be
nullified at any time by ecclesiastical proceedings over
which the Court admittedly has not the slightest jurisdiction
or control?
Note: Concerning terminology and notation we adopt, mutatis
mutandis, the Note at pp. xi-xii of our Opening Brief
("OB" dated December 4, 1974. Plaintiffs' briefs
are cited "EEOC Br." and "I.P. Br."
p
40 --
6. What is the standard for determination of questions
3, 4 and 5 above? That is to say, is the Court to examine,
dissect, and evaluate defendants' assertions as to their
religious beliefs (particularly where they are demonstrated
beyond any possibility of quarrel not to have been concocted
post litem motam, but are based upon Holy Scripture
and the teachings of the church's Prophet, who died in 1915),
or must the assertion of those beliefs be accepted at face
value by civil courts in determining a controversy within
a church?
For
reasons of coherence, we take up the remaining few factual
and legal questions in roughly the same order as we presented
them in our Opening Brief. 1
Statement
I.
Organizational Structure of the Seventh-day
Adventist Church; Authority of General Conference
with Respect to the Institutions
From
an ecclesiastical-historical standpoint, there are numerous
forms of church organization, which are described variously
as presbyterian (which connotes governance by the priesthood),
or episcopal (which connotes governance by the bishops of
the church), or papal (which connotes governance by a sole
chief bishop), or congregational (which connotes governance
by individual local church groups).
1. We stand on our Opening Brief as well
as this Reply, while noting that a number of the points
made there are completely omitted here. That is only to
spare the Court repetitious argument on matters as to which
we think the answering briefs contain an obviously insufficient
answer, or no answer at all.
p
41 -- These distinctions are without legal significance.
From a legal standpoint, as we show post, part IIB
of the Argument, there are but two sorts of church organization
which carry with them significant legal consequences: the
"congregational", and all others, which in law
are called "representative", or "hierarchical".
2
The
plain and undeniable fact is that the Seventh-day Adventist
Church is most assuredly not a "congregational"
one (although it contains elements of congregationalism)
but is clearly of the "representative" or "hierarchical"
variety. As stated in the Seventh-day Adventist Church Manual,
p. 43: "The General Conference
is the highest organization in the administration of our
worldwide work, and is authorized by its constitution to
create subordinate organizations to promote specific interests
in various sections of the world; it is therefore understood
that all subordinate organizations and institutions throughout
the world will recognize the General Conference in session,
and the Executive Committee between sessions, as the highest
authority, under God, among us. When differences arise in
or between organizations and institutions, appeal to the
next higher organization is proper till it reaches the General
Conference in session, or the Executive Committee Autumn
Council. During the interim between these sessions the Executive
Committee shall constitute the body of final authority on
all questions where a difference of viewpoint may develop,
whose decision may be reviewed at a session of the General
Conference or an
2. Although it is true that there was
a period in the life of the Seventh-day Adventist Church
when the denomination took a distinctly anti-Roman Catholic
viewpoint, and the term "hierarchy" was used in
a pejorative sense to refer to the papal form of church
governance, that attitude on the Church's part was nothing
more than a manifestation of widespread anti-popery among
conservative Protestant denominations in the early part
of this century and the latter part of the last, and which
has now been consigned to the historical trash heap so far
as the Seventh-day Adventist Church is concerned.
p
42 -- "Each unit has a large amount of autonomy.
Local congregations elect lay elders, deacons and other
officers; the local conference office supervises all local
pastoral and evangelistic work and relations and pays all
pastors and other workers in its territory from a central
fund. Theirs is a highly representative form of government."
(Mead, Handbook of Denominations in the United States
21-22 (4th Ed. 1965).)
The
official position of the Seventh-day Adventist Church is
that its government is a blend of congregational and presbyterian,
with elements of methodism, but can best be described as
"representative". 10 SDA Encyclopedia, s.vv .
Church Government, pp. 263-64; Organization, Development
of, In SDA Church, id. p. 929; Church Manual 46-47;
"The representative form of church government is that
which prevails in the Seventh-day Adventist Church."
Pursuant
to the General Conference Reorganization of 1901 (SDA Encyc.
937-39) the General Conference Committee was greatly expanded,
and the leading independent organizations within the denomination
-- including publishing -- became branches or "departments"
of the General Conference. (Id. at 938.) Each departmental
secretary is a member of the General Conference Committee,
and his department acts as liaison between the institutions
(schools, publishing houses, medical institutions) and the
administration of General Conference. (Id. at 438.)
Because
of its size and importance, Pacific Press was assigned,
not to a local or union conference, but directly to General
Conference, and is known as a "General Conference institution."
(L.TobIer AE, Ex.SS.) The administrative overseer of the
Press is Elder Wilson, Vice-President for North America
of General Conference. (Wilson AE 12.)
p
43 -- As shown by the affidavit of EIder Blacker
(Blacker AE paragraphs 13, 14, 18), members of the General
Conference Committee are ex officio members of Pacific
Press, and on dissolution of Pacific Press its assets devolve
upon General Conference. Since the Committee has 350 members,
it holds the majority of the voting power, and accordingly
has power to revise the by-laws, to dismiss the board of
directors, to change management and editors, and in general
to control the affairs of Pacific Press. (par. 14) Again,
the administrative official who exercises this power directly
on behalf of the General Conference Committee is Elder Wilson.
Elder Blacker concludes (Blacker AE par.18),
"Thus, the General Conference has control over all
aspects of Pacific Press both:
"(a) pursuant to secular norms of corporate control,
through possession of a majority vote of it's members; and
"(b) through the hierarchy of the Seventh-day Adventist
Church ...."
It follows
that the General Conference Committee has firm control over
Pacific Press; and it follows, too, that it is untrue to
say that Pacific Press is free to follow or not, as its
own board sees fit, the Wage Guidelines of General Conference.
The facts are, simply, that when Pacific Press was laggard
in complying, and General Conference learned of it, it very
quickly called the Press to heeI, and soon replaced its
General Manager. (Wilson DE 11, 14; Blacker AE)
Intervenor
plaintiffs blow hot and cold with respect to the nature
of General Conference and its relationship to the small
institutions of the Church. They recognize but one aspect
of General Conference (I.P. Br. 10) that is to say, its
p
44 -- existence as a secular corporation for
the purpose of holding property and the like. They recognize
it as the "parent of subsidiaries" such as a food
company, radio and television stations, an insurance company,
and a wood and furniture sales company, 5 but
they decline to recognize it as the owner and overseer of
Pacific Press, which it assuredly is. And at p. 11, they
distinguish between "General Conference" and "General
Conference In Session" and in this they err in two
directions. First, the phrase "General Conference In
Session" is not an entity or an organism but is one
facet of the Church (the most important and powerful, of
course, but still only one facet of the phrase "General
Conference"), and they fail to recognize that between
the quadrennial (now quinquennial) sessions of the delegates
in General Conference, the Execucive Committee wields all
of the powers of the Church, excepting only two: the
power to alter the structure of the Church and the power
to alter its doctrine. Everything else, without exception,
which can be accomplished in General Conference when it
is in its infrequent sessions can similarly be accomplished
by the General Conference Committee between those infrequent
sessions. (General Conference Working Policy, p. 36; cf.
Wilson AE para 7: the Working Policy "is recognized
as the authoritative voice of the Church in all matters
pertaining to the work of the SDA denomination in all parts
of the world.")
5.
The Harris Pine Mills was donated, as a going
concern, to the Church by the Harrises in 1951. It is described
as a "taxable wood-products manufacturing corporation"
which "is owned and operated by the General Conference
for the benefit of SDA work." SDA Encyc. p. 498. All
the other entities mentioned were organized for denominational
purposes.
p
45 -- insisting that the General Conference Committee
is without ecclesiastical authority and represents solely
a "small group of men who constitute administrative
personnel" and nothing more. To the contrary, the Church
Manual clearly states at p. 48, "that all subordinate
organizations and institutions throughout the world will
recognize the General Conference in Session, and the Executive
Committee between sessions, as the highest authority
under God, among us. When differences arise in or between
institutions and organizations, appeal to the next higher
organization is proper until it reaches the General Conference
in Session or the Executive Committee Autumn Council. During
the interim between these sessions the
Executive Committee shall constitute the body of general
authority where all questions may be reviewed at a session
of the General Conference or an Autumn Session or the Executive
Committee." This clearly shows that the Church governs
by a method of organization which in Seventh-day Adventist
terminology is "representative", and which embraces
exactly, from a legal standpoint, the same kind of organization
(in opposition to "congregationalism") as is embraced
by the term "hierarchical".
In their zeal to deny the organization and structure of
the Seventh-day Adventist Church, in order to be enabled
to deny the authority of the General Conference Committee,
the intervener-plaintiffs fall into the error of teaching
false doctrine, which is contrary to the doctrine and practice
of the Church. Thus Mrs.Tobler swears (Tobler AE para.114,
p. 39, lines 4-11): "I
have frequently heard the term 'hierareny' used among Adventist[s]
when reference is made to the Roman Catholic
p
46 -- system, of which I have always been taught
that Adventists strongly disapprove. I have never heard
the term 'hierarchy' used to describe Adventist ministers
as it is done in defendants' brief ..., and I find it strange
and contradictory to all I have ever learned in Adventist
schools and churches."
In several
ways this illustrates the dangers incurred by an individual
church member who presumes to deny the authority of the
duly constituted officials and governing bodies of the
Church. In the first place, it is true that for a period
in its history, the Seventh-day Adventist Church had an
aversion to Roman Catholicism and especially to the papal
form of church government -- an aversion shared by virtually
all Protestant denominations. (See Pittenger, What Is an
Episcopaiian?, in Rosten (ed.), Religions in America 68,
69 (1963) ) While, however, Adventist doctrine continues
to teach that church government by one man is contrary to
the Word of God, it is not good Seventh-day Adventism to
express, as Mrs. Tobler has done, an aversion to Roman Catholicism
as such. (SDA Encyc. Ecumenism, pp. 361-63.)
The
term "hierarchy" or "hierarchical" has
no such adverse connotation in Seventh-day Adventist theology
as Mrs. Tobler suggests. (See SDA Encyc. 263-64.) It is,
indeed,
synonymous from an etymological standpoint with "presbyterianism",
that is to say with government by the priesthood; and the
official expression of the Seventh-day Adventist Church
is that its form of government closely corresponds to the
presbyterian system. Of course, neither the Seventh-day
Adventist Church nor the Presbyterian Church in the United
States is governed
p
46b -- February 24, 1975, because it has a straitly-fixed
duration, and because final decision is at hand. We prefer
an orderly and seemly progress to decision over a helter-skelter
approach.
An indefinite
or permanent interference, however, by secular authority
with decisions as to whom to hire, whom to retain, what
editorial assignments shall be made, in a Church publishing-house,
is something that the General Conference of Seventh-day
Adventists could not accept or accommodate to. In the event
of such an order, it would be compelled to follow St. Paul's
admonition as outlined in 2 Corinthians 6:3-7, and
the witness of Ellen G. White in 6 Testimonies 394-95.
Defendants
should have judgment, with costs and a reasonable attorneys'
fee.
Respectfully submitted
MALCOLM
T. DUNGAN
JAMES H. QUIRK
BOARDMAN NOLAND
By (signed)
Malcolm T. Dungan
Of Counsel for Defendants
March 3, 1975
p
47 -- Reprinted by Permission of the ADVENTIST
REVIEW
When the Church Is Taken to Court
The General Conference president reports to the church
on current litigation involving the denomination.
Report to the church
By ROBERT H. PIERSON
AT PRESENT the Seventh-day Adventist Church is the defendant
in several lawsuits. The results of these court cases could
have rather far-reaching effects on the church. Upon the
advice of our attorneys we have refrained from reporting
these court cases in the public press while the cases are
pending. We have made statements in public gatherings on
occasions, but for legal reasons have nor released information
to the public press on the issues involved.
There
appears to be a difference between the interpretation of
the United States Government and the Seventhday Adventist
Church with regard to provisions of the First Amendment,
which reads, "Congress shall make no law respecting
an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise
thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press;
or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to
petition the Government for a redress of grievances."
Three
areas of our church program are involved in the current
cases. All three of these issues are vital to the life and
operation of our church. We believe that we are protected
by the First Amendment in each of the three areas. We do
not believe that the church is above the law or that the
Seventh-day Adventist Church is not subject to the laws
of this country, as has been suggested in the public press.
On the contrary, it is because we feel that basic issues
of religious liberty, assured under the First Amendment,
are involved that we are seeking legal redress. We feel
that not all laws apply to the church, since the First Amendment
offers certain protections to the church.
The
three sensitive areas concerned in the present suits are:
l. Does the church have the right to determine
who shall and who shall not author the books and articles
printed by our publishing houses? Although freedom of
the press per se has not been questioned by the court in
any of the current suits, our right to refuse to publish
manuscripts submitted by persons under some circumstances
has been challenged. Some believe that such a position is
not consonant with the provisions of the First Amendment.
We believe the church has the right to publish or not to
publish materials submitted for publication not only on
the basis of the acceptability of the manuscript but also
on the basis of the relationship of the author to the church,
providing such material is not in violation of law.
2. Does
the church have the right to structure its own system of
remunerating its
workers, or does the State control this important factor
in church administration? Since its inception, the Seventh-day
Adventist Church has structured its wage scale on what we
have termed a modest "living" income. Our wage
scale brochure puts it this way: "The
philosophy of this wage scale is predicated upon the fact
that a spirit of sacrifice and dedication should mark God's
workers irrespective of the position they hold or the department
they represent. The work of the church, including every
denominational organization, is a mission to which lives
are dedicated rather than a business or commercial venture.
The church wage scale does not always compensate its dedicated
workers in monetary units commensurate with their talents,
accomplishments, and contributions, but does provide workers
with a modest living income, which gives recognition of
responsibilities borne, preparation undertaken, professional
attainment, previous experience, and years of service."
. -- Wage Scale, effective July I, 1976, pp. 2, 3.
Areas
of the traditional plan for remuneration of workers followed
by the church for many decades have been challenged by Government
agencies, and some of the current court cases involve questions
of remuneration, with the church as the defendant.
This
"living" wage often provides an income less than
the person would receive for comparable employment in the
community. We believe that service in the cause of God is
a privilege and that part of the remuneration we receive
is the knowledge that we are working for God and that by
accepting a lower salary we help the church's funds to go
further so that more workers can be employed, and the work
of the church will go more rapidly.
Until
more recent years this scale provided that the "head
of household" (the wage earner in a family, in contra-distinction
to a worker with only himself/herself to support) should
receive a higher remuneration than a singe worker with no
family responsibilities. It is also true that in the past
in some cases women received a lower wage than a man in
the same position - a practice widespread outside the church,
as well. The church is now in compliance with the law on
both of these points. There is no head-of-household differential,
and a woman holding the same position and doing the same
work as a man receives the same salary and benefits pertaining
to the post.
The
third question involved in present litigation is:
3. Does the church have the right to employ
whomsoever it will to carrv on its work in institutions
and other areas of its ministry? It is the contention
of church leadership - and we believe our general church
membership supports us in this position - that to operate
truly Seventh-day Adventist schools, health-care institutions,
and publishing houses, staffing by committed Seventh-day
Adventist Church members is essential.
It is
also the contention of the Seventh-day Adventist Church
- as indicated by a General Conference session action in
Vienna - that the institutions of our church are the church
carrying out her various ministries. Our publishing houses
are the publishing arm of the church carrying out her literature
ministry. Our schools are the educational arm of the church
ministering to the educational needs of our church and young
people. Our health-care institutions are the medical arm
of the church ministering to the needs not only of Seventh-day
Adventists but of all who need health and healing, regardless
of their national, cultural, racial, or religious backgrounds.
Our institutions in their operations are indeed the Seventh-day
Adventist Church in action on all fronts of its spiritual,
philanthropic endeavor.
The
Seventh-day Adventist Church has not initiated any of the
current court cases. We are defendants in every case.
We do not like to be involved in court cases. We believe
there are better ways of settling differences in the church,
but sometimes a situation develops or deteriorates to the
extent that we have no other course than to defend the church
when it is sued in court.
Robert H. Pierson is president of the General Conference.
6 (302) R&H, MARCH 24, 1977
p
48 -- As stated above, the Seventh-day Adventist
Church per se does not feel that it is above the law or
that it is not subject to city, State, or Federal laws.
Seventh-day Adventists are traditionally lawabiding citizens,
and the church counsels our members to keep the laws of
the (and. "Let every soul he subject unto the higher
powers. For there is no power but of God: the powers that
be are ordained of God" (Rom. 13:1). "It is our
duty in every case to obey the laws of our land, unless
they conflict with the higher law which God spoke with an
audible voice from Sinai, and afterward engraved on stone
with His own finger."--Testimonies, vol. 1,
p. 361.
The vast majority of civil laws in the United States have
nothing to do with religion or with the church. As Seventhday
Adventists we support the legal system that is set up to
govern the nation. It is unnseal indeed when we take issue
with the ordinances or the directive; of the Government.
The General Conference has developed guidelines that govern
our church-State relationships. Here is a review of these
guidelines in principle:
1. In case, where the church feels that Government
demands are a violation of a plain "Thus with the Lord"
we would he prepared to pursue all possible civil remedies
to the fullest extent. We would go to the highest court,
as well as to the legislative and executive branches of
the Government, if necessary, to seek redress. If relief
were denied in a matter pertaining to conscience, the church
might be forced to take a position that could be interpreted
as being civilly disobedient.
Determining what is a "Thus with the Lord" would
be by properly constituted church bodies, such as the General
Conference Committee, Annual Council, the General Conference
in session.
2. Where the church feels Government violates
the establishment, free-exercise, due-process, equal-protection,
or any other clause in the U.S. Constitution, it would state
clearly to both Government and church members why it differs
with Government. If the church subsequently fails to convince
Government and/or the Supreme Court, it would thereafter
obey the law, adjusting the challenged church program or
terminating it.
3. When the church feels Government is operating
beyond its rightful sphere, or where the church differs
with Government its interpreting a statute, where it dislikes
a law or stands to suffer a disadvantage or loss on the
grounds of public policy or cost, the church would state
clearly to both Government and church members why it differs
with Government. If the church subsequently fails to convince
Government, it would again have to decide whether to adjust
the challenged church program or to terminate it.
4. When the church has problems outside the
United States, the above system perhaps could he adapted
to almost every country. Where there are constitutions and/or
laws protecting the religious rights of citizens and institutions,
the approach would be substantially as outlined above. In
a country where legal options are more limited, the approach
would be reduced to circumstances as outlined in No. 1:
the church would obey the Government except where demands
violate a "Thus with the Lord."
We believe that Adventist church members generally will
agree that these guideline, represent a reasonable approach
to church-State relationships and that they underscore our
desire to be lawabiding citizens supportive of Government
in every respect. Only when matters of conscience conflict
with legal requirements would we be unable to comply fully
with the laws of the land. We believe that the U.S. Government
stands for freedom of worship, and we pray it will never
ask us to do things that would be in open conflict with
our conscience.
There is one other area in recent court procedures that
has concerned a few who have read the affidavits filed by
church leaders. Apparently there was fear on the part of
some that the use of first minister and spiritual
leader as applied to two General Conference officers
in two affidavits meant that a new form of church polity
was aborning. These terms were initiated by attorneys who
are not Seventh-day Adventists. They were using language
they no doubt felt would be well understood in the courtroom.
If we erred in accepting counsel in this area, we will try
to do better next time. In the Adventist ministry we do
not have various "orders," with some "outranking"
others. It is true that some have larger parishes than others,
but basically we are all in this greatt cause together,
and we would not have it any other way.
The use of the term hierarchical system by attorneys
also disturbed a few people. Hierarchy was selected
by the lawyers, because of its legal significance in defining
a church organizational structure with different levels
of administarative authority such as our local churches,
Iocal conferences, union conferences, divisions, and the
General Conference, in contrast to a purely "congregational"
form of church government that has no central
conference administrative system and functions simply as
a single independent church unit. The Seventh-day Adventist
Church has adopted and continues to maintain a "representative"
form of church government, which in an organizational context
is probably closer to the hierarchical organization than
to the congregationalist.
The system of Seventh-day Adventist polity has not been
changed nor could it be changed other than by a vote of
the delegates attending a General Conference quinquennial
session. I know of no steps being taken-nor have any ever
been mentioned-that would revise or change the wonderful,
God-given organization that has served this church effectively
and efficiently for so many decades.
Today the church is passing through one of the most critical
periods in its history. This is a time when "the dragon"
is "wroth with the woman" and has declared war
on "the remnant of her seed" (Rev. 12:17). There
are troubles and problems in almost every country where
our work is carried on. In some lands there is overt war
or political turmoil. In others we have workers in prison,
our schools have been taken over by the Government, our
funds have been frozen, our members are restricted in worship.
We should not he surprised when these conditions obtain.
They are signs of the early triumph of the Advent Movement.
Before things get better they will get much worse. Bible
prophecy declares it. Current events already confirm it.
In such days your leaders on even "level" of administration--from
the local church through the General Conference--need your
understanding and your prayers. Like you, we are only human.
We may make mistakes, but we do much earnest praying and
give careful, thoughtful consideration to the decisions
made. We sincerely endeavor to stay close to the counsel
given us irn the Bible and the Spirit of Prophecy. As far
as is humanly possible we want to carry on God's work in
God's way. We want to see His work finished and the Saviour
return so that very soon we can all be with Him in that
land He has gone to prepare.
p
49 -- RESPONSE TO PIERSON
By SOURCE within the CHURCH
Editor's
Note:- It was back in 1977 before Elder G. H.
Pierson stepped aside as President of the General Conference
that he wrote the article on the two preceding pages to
explain the why of the litigation in which the Church was
involved with the Federal government at that time. Some
people who were in a position to know the facts recognized
the explanation given by Elder Pierson was an end run around
the truth, and believed it should be answered. It was decided
to send a response by personal mail to every SDA worker
in North America. The cost became a prohibitive factor.
"The Response to R. H. Pierson's Report to the Church"
remained - though written - uncirculated. We include this
analysis here so that the laity might understand that "explanations"
coming through the official organ of the Church - THE ADVENTIST
REVIEW - are no more reliable now than past explanations
have been. The author of this "Response" has asked
that he be identified only as "a source within the
denomination."
In his
report to thee church titled, "When the Church Is Taken
to Court," (REVIEW, 3-24-77, pp. 6-8) General Conference
President Robert H. Pierson seeks to calm the troubled waters
of the faithful members of the church by crying, "Peace!
Be Still!" But there are times when such an instruction
is inappropriate.
Now
is such a time. Now is rather a time to "let judgment
run down as waters, and righteousness as a mighty stream."
Amos 5:24. We are faced here with a General Conference President
who is telling the Adventist people one thing through the
REVIEW, while through affidavits and General Conference
attorneys, he is telling the courts of the land, and thus
the public press, something dissimilar.
In the
REVIEW he says, "We do not believe that the
church is above the law or that the Seventh-day Adventist
Church is not subject to the laws of this country, as has
been suggested in the public press." Through
his attorneys he says, "The Church claims
exemption from all civil laws in all of its religious institutions."
(The
above quotes appears on p. 104 of a brief prepared for the
General Conference officers by Malcolm T. Dungan, James
H. Quirk, Donald McNeil, and Boardman Noland, a General
Conference staff attorney and a Seventh-day Adventist. It
was submitted as part of the Opening Brief for Defendants
in Civil Case No. 74-2025, EEOC vs PPPA and General Conference,
to Judge Charles B. Renfrew in the U. S. District Court
in San Francisco. This same assertion is repeated word for
word in Civil Case No. 75-1792 before the U. S. Court of
Appeals for the Ninth Circuit Court in a Brief for Appellants
on p. 77, submitted July 6, 1975)
In the
same appeals brief appear the following claims:
"We
insist that in doing its holy work, the church is free to
ignore, even to to flout, measures [laws] which bind all
others." (p. 78)
p
50 -- "As an organized religious
denomination the Seventh--day Adventist Church insists that
it is 'wholly exempt' from the cognizance of Civil Authority,
and that entanglements, practical exceptions, and 'reasonable
adjustments' [in order to comply with the law] are not to
be tolerated." (p. 80)"
Contrary
to what Elder Pierson tell us in the REVIEW, we see that
the public press did not misreport the evidence available
to it in publishing church claims of exemption from the
laws of this country. The fact is that they found this evidence
in the public record, placed there by attorneys carrying
out the directives of the General Conference officers.
The
Legal Issue
Elder Pierson makes this statement: "Until
more recent years this scale [the traditional plan for
remuneration of church workers] provided that the 'head
of household' (the wage earner in a family, in contradistinction
to a worker with only himself/herself to support) should
receive a higher remuneration than a single worker with
no family responsibilities."
This
statement is unfortunately misleading in two important,
basic ways. 1) By applying the term "herself"
equally with "himself" to "head of household,"
Elder Pierson implies that a female sole-family-support
had as good a chance as a male sole-family-support to receive
"head of household" benefits. Such was not the
case. A great many God-fearing, self-sacrificing women church
workers are sole-family-support. (being widowed or divorced
with dependent children, or married to invalid husbands).
Yet exceedingly few of these women ever received "head
of household" benefits down through the years. 2)
Just as misleading is his description of the "head
of household" as "the wage earner in a family,
in contradistinction to a worker with only himself/herself
to support." This implies that the considerable "head
of household" remuneration was based on need. Again
such was not the case.
As a
general practice church institutions simply defined "head
of house" as a "married male" and let it
go at that. Thus, the institution paid "head of household"
remuneration to all married male employees whether or not
they had dependent children, whether or not their wives
also earned their own incomes (even larger than their husbands),
whether or not these men also received (in some cases huge)
extra forms of income (such as subscription book royalties,
investment income, etc.) Yet to extremely few woman employees
did these institutions pay "head of household"
remuneration, whether or not they were widowed or divorced
with dependent children, whether or not they had to support
invalid dependent relatives (including husbands), whether
or not they were putting husbands through school (as was
the case with Merikay Silver of the Pacific Press).
Church
remuneration policy has never been based on need. In her
day Ellen G. White spoke out against sex discrimination
in remuneration: "If a woman is appointed
by the Lord to do a certain work, her work is to be estimated
according to its value." Not paying
women is "making a difference, and selfishly withholding
from such workers their due." And,
"When self-denial is required... do not let a few
hard-working women do all the sacrificing. Let all share
in making the sacrifice. God declares, I hate robbery for
a burnt offering." Evangelism, pp. 491-92
Now
Elder Pierson asserts that "there
is no head-of-household differential, and a woman holding
the same position and doing the same work as a man receives
the same salary and benefits." If this
is an assertion that there is no sex discrimination in remuneration,
it is doubtful. It is not reasonable to conclude that Federal
government would wage protracted legal battles against church
institutions
p
51 -- if these institutions were compying
with laws against sex discrimination.
Excuses
for Going to Court
Elder Pierson nukes a point cut of the fact that, "The
Seventh-day Adventist Church has not initiated any of the
current court cases. We are the defendants in every case."
This he seems to offer as a claim to virtue and honor. Since,
he implies, we do not believe in taking someone to court,
being sued is somehow more virtuous and honorable than suing.
But this is not always the case. In the instances here discussed
the Federal govenment has determined that the officers of
the Pacific Press, the Pacific Union, and the General Conference
have been violating the Civil Rights Act and the Fair Labor
Standards Act.
To claim
that we are the defendants, we are the accused,
is no defense. It is no denial of wrong doing. It is no
example of virtue and honor. To claim that we are defendants,
we are the accused, is no more virtuous or honoriable
that the thief's protest that he is the defendant,
he is the accused. Certainly there is no honor, no
virtue, and nothing praiseworthy in such a claim. To offend
is less honorable than to seek remedy for an offense.
"Sometimes
a situation developes or deteriorates," Elder Pierson
writes, "to the extent that we have no other course
than to defend the church when it is sued in court."
He here refers to "the current court cases" in
which the Federal government is suing the Church and some
of its institutions for violating Title VII of the Civil
Rights Act of 1964, a law of more than a dozen years standing,
and the Federal Fair Labor Standards Act, amended in 1972
to include teachers. This has given us plenty of time to
clean up our remuneration practices. Where, then, is the
deterioration that makes costly court proceedings inevitable?
If we
were violating child labor laws, fire ordiances, health
codes, and safety regulations in our institutions and were
sued by the Federal agencies involved, would "we
have no other course than to defend the church when it is
sued in court?" And now that we have been found
by the government to have been violating anti-sex discrimination
laws, do "we have no other course than to defend
the Church when it is sued in court?" The answer
is that we do have another course. We can obey these laws
as the Word of God requires:
"Submit
yourselves to every ordinance of man for the Lord's sake:
whether it be to the king as supreme; or unto governors,
as unto them that are sent by him for the punishment of
evildoers, and for the praise of them that do well. For
so is the will of God, that with well doing ye may put to
silence the ignorance of foolish men." I Peter
2:13-15
"Let
every soul be subject unto the higher powers. For there
is no power but of God: the powers that be are ordained
of God. Whosoever therefore resisteth the power, resisteth
the ordinance of God: for they that resist shall receive
to themselves damnation. For rulers are not a terror to
good works, but to the evil. Wilt thou then not be afraid
of the power? do that which is good, and thou shalt have
praise of the same: For he is the minister of God, a revenger
to execute wrath upon him that doeth evil. Wherefore ye
must needs be subject, not only for wrath, but also for
conscience sake." Romans 13:1-5
Elder
Pierson lists four General Conference guidelines that determines
whether the church will go to court. Do any of the rules
apply to the cases under consideration?
1) When
government demands constitute a violation of a plain "Thus
saith the Lord," the church would go to court. But
the government is seeking to enforce laws with
p
52 -- which the church agrees. There is
no violation here. This rule does not apply.
2)
When the government violates the U. S. Constitution, the
church would go to court. But here Elder Pierson provides
no explanations of how laws at hand violate the Constitution.
The only laws at issue are anti-sex discrimination laws.
The church agrees that sex discrimination in remuneration
is bad. How do these laws violate the Constitution? Are
laws prohibiting excessive child labor constitutional, while
those prohibiting sex discrimination unconstitutional? If
so, then how, or why? Elder Pierson offers no reasons. Without
them this rule cannot apply.
3) When
the government operates beyond its rightful sphere, the
church may go to court. But again no reasons or explanations
are forthcoming as to how the anti-sex discrimination laws
intrude unconstitutionally into legitimate church activities.
Does enforcement of anti-sex discrimination laws involve
an unconstitutional scutiny, whereas enforcement of health
and safety codes do not? Without answers, neither can this
rule apply.
4) When
the church has problems outside the United States, the church
(under modifications of the above rules) could go to court.
But obviously this rule does not apply, since all the lawsuits
have been brought within the United States.
Since
no reasons have been given showing how any one of the four
rules would apply to the court cases Elder Pierson discusses,
it was pointless to include them in the article. None shows
why the church should have gone to court in these cases.
After reading such statements as, "It is unusual
indeed when we take issue with the ordinances or directives
of the Government," one would think that very powerful,
very compelling reasons would have to exist to convince
the Adventist laity that these court cases were necessary.
But we cannot find such reasons. We cannot even find poor
reasons. We find no reasons at all.
"Only
when matters of conscience," Elder Pierson writes,
"conflict with legal requirements would we be unable
to comply fully with the laws of the land." Yet
he fails to tell the church what specific "matters
of conscience" in these cases "conflict with legal
requirements." Is it a "matter of conscience"
that we resist the legal requirments of equal pay for equal
work? This is all that the govenment is asking. Only lay
employees are subject to the Fair Labor Standards Act. The
clergy are not involved. There is no collision between these
laws and legitimate religious activities than there is between
health and safety codes and our ligitimate religious activities.
Is it a "matter of conscience" that we resist
routine investigation and investigations of specific complaints
when and if any of our institutions should violate these
laws? There is no more intrusion of the government into
church affairs involved in the enforcement of these laws
than is involved in the enforcement of health and safety
laws.
In the
absence of any specific conflicting "matter of conscience"
that Elder Pierson could bring forward, and in the absence
of anyy conflicting "matter of conscience" involved
in obeying these laws, we must conclude that this massive
and costly resistance to the Federal government was baseless
and futile.
On December 4, 1974, before the huge Federal Case against
the Pacific Union Conference was launched in Los Angeles,
General Conference attorneys submitted to U. S. District
Court Judge Charles B. Renfrew the following statement:
"The
elders of the Church are few, and they have much to do;
they have already had to spend too much of their time, and
far too much of the Church's treasury, which comes from
the tithes and offerings of faithful people, in connection
with this case." (Opening Brief for Defendants,
EEOC vs PPPA and GC, p. 105)
p
53 -- One might ask rhetorically, then,
Why are they spending the church's treasury, which comes
from the tithes and offerings of faithful people, in this
way? Why not rather use it for which it was intended --
to pay fair and lawful wages to workers in our institutions?
"First
Minister" Explanation
Elder Pierson admits that "the use of first minister"
was "applied" to a General Conference officer
in an affidavit. He fails to mention that it was he himself
who used the term in his own signed affidavit and that he
applied it to himself in his capacity as General Conference
President. "It is... the desire and purpose of the
leadership of the Church, including myself as its first
minister for the time being," his statement reads,
"to identify problem areas and make needed changes..."
The context of this statement reveals that he, acting
as "first minister" of the Church, was qualified
"to make needed changes." Such a statement carries
obvious overtones of "primacy," since "first"
literally means "prime," with attendant power
and authority to act on that primacy. And when used together
with a description of the Seventh-day Adventist church as
a "hierarchy," it echoes the term, "primacy
of the pope" especially in the ears of judges not familiar
with true Seventh-day Adventist church government and authority.
The
standard New Catholic Encyclopedia defines "primacy
of the pope" as "that full, supreme, and universal
authority over all bishops and faithful of the Church which
belongs by divine right to the bishop of Rome as the successor
to St. Peter, who received such a primacy among the Apostles
directly from Christ." (Vol. 11, p. 779) But Ellen
G. White wrote:
"God
has never given a hint in His word that He has appointed
any man to be head of His church. The doctrine of papal
supremacy is directly opposed to the teachings of the Scriptures.
The pope can have no power over Christ's church except by
usurpation." (Great Controversy, p. 51)
Orders
of Clergy
In his report to the Church, Elder Pierson also made this
statement: "In the Adventist ministry we do not
have various 'orders,' with some 'outranking' others."
Here is the president of the General Conference telling
the laity of the Church that we have no orders of ministry,
yet telling the courts that we do. In his own affidavit,
signed by him on November 30, 1974, Elder Pierson told Judge
Charles B. Renfrew (EEOC v. PPPA and GC) that "the
orders of ministry in the Seventh-day Adventist Church include
Ordained Ministers, Credentialed Missionaries, Licensed
Ministers, Licensed Missionaries, and Credentialed Literature
Evangelists" (p. 8) and that "the total
number of Seventh-day Adventists in all Orders of Ministry
is approximately 75,000" (page 9).
Elder
Pierson describes some of the duties of one of these "Order
of Ministry" in this way: "An ordained minister
is authorized and expected to preach the gospel of our Lord
Jesus Christ, and to administer the sacraments..."
(Same document, p. 8)
The
Term - "Hierarchy"
"The use of the term hierarchical system
by attorneys," Elder Pierson says,"also
disturbed a few people." He ignores the fact that
people have been more disturbed over the use of the term
hierarchy to describe the Seventh-day Adventist church,
not by attorneys, but by high church officers. In an affidavit
which he signed on February 6, 1976, [then] Vice President
of the General Conference Neal C. Wilson said this: "The
Seventh-day Adventist Church... maintains... a hierarchical
structure of church authority." (Presented to Judge
Manuel L. Real in Case
p
54 --
CV 75-3032-R, US Secretary of Labor vs Pacific Union Conference
and General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists. On April
1, 1977, Judge Real ruled against the church's arguments
that the First Amendment to the Constitution protects Adventist
institutions from obeying the Fair Labor Standards Act requiring
equal pay for equal work.) And in an affidavit signed on
December 3, 1974, by [then] General Manager of the Pacific
Press W. J. Blacker, Elder Blacker asserted this: "The
General Conference has control over all aspects of Pacific
Press. . . through the hierarchy of the Seventh-day Adventist
Church." (Presented to Judge Charles B. Renfrew
in Case No. 74-2025 CBR, EEOC v PPPA and General Conference,
in U.S. District Court, San Francisco.) Elder Pierson's
report to the laity goes on to insist that our "hierarchical
system" is really a "'representative' form of
government." But a "representative hierarchy"
is a contradiction of terms.
On the
one hand, a representative (delegate) by definition is not
one who holds authority in his own right. To the contrary,
he is an instrument of those who hold the true God-given
authority, the constituents, the local church members, who
have elected and delegated him. On the other hand, a hierarch
is literally a "sacred ruler" or "high priest,"
one who receives his spiritual authority directly from God
and governs the church by divine right. In representative
church government, God-given authority rest ultimately with
the body of individual believers, and expresses itself through
representatives or delegates of the believers.
The
SDA Church Manual recongizes the Adventist system
to be representative rather than its opposite, hierarchical:
"Authority in the church rests
in the church membership." (p. 46 [1967 edition])
But the General Conference attorneys, acting under the directions
of President Pierson and Vice President Wilson portrayed
the Seventh-day Adventist church as a hierarchy: "A
'hierarchical' church is one in which the decisions are
made at the top of the organizational ladder." (Reply
Brief for Defendants in EEOC vs PPPA and GC, p. 28) They
were applying this term, not to the Roman Catholic Church,
but to the Seventh-day Adventist Church. "The General
Conference Committee," [then] Vice President Neal
C. Wilson testified under oath in the U.S. District Court
for Northern California (EEOC vs PPPA & GC on March
20, 1975, "is the highest authority in the Seventh-day
Adventist Church."
Judge
B. Renfew, unfamiliar with the original structure of the
Seventh-day Adventist Church, received a picture of "hierarchical"
Adventism from the General Conference officers that showed
the Genera! Conference Committee wielding "hierarchical"
spiritual power sufficient to secure the excommunication
of two SDA church members in good and regular standing by
"hierarchical" determination alone. Testified
Elder Wilson on this same day, "The General Conference
Committee felt that this discipline [disfellowshipping
Lorna Tobler and Merikay Silver, two women who sought equal
pay for equal work under the law] was necessary in this
case. . . The Church (that is, General Conference Committee)
felt that inasmuch as these ladies were at variance with
the Church [as determined by the General Conference
Committee], the local church of which they, where they
hold membership, should be be informed of that."
This
drift toward hierarchical rule in modern Adventism has gone
so far that the highest General Conference officers have
been able, through their own Adventist attorneys and non-Adventist
attorneys, to deny the historic Seventh-day Adventist stand
against the kind of spiritual authority claimed by the Roman
Catholic Church and to label as "false doctrine"
our historic position. Thus did the General Conference attorneys
sweep away our historic position, a position adopted by
the pioneers, including Ellen G. White:
"Although
it is true that there was a period in the life of the Seventh-day
Adventist Church when the denomination took a distinctly
anti-Roman Catholic viewpoint,
p
55 -- and the term 'hierarchy' was used
in a perjorative sense to refer to the papal form of church
governance, that attitude on the Church's part ... has now
been consigned to the historical trash heap so far as the
Seventh-day Adventist Church is concerned." (Reply
Brief, EEOC vs PPPA & GC, p. 4)
Further
the leadership of the Church labelled as "false doctrine"
Lorna Tobler's statement of this position:
"In
their zeal to deny the organization and structure [hierarchical]
of the Seventh-day Adventist Church [Elder Pierson's
court version of] in order to be enabled to deny the
authority [hierarchical] of the General Conference
Committee, the intervenor-plaintiffs [Lorna Tobler and
Merikay Silver] fall into the error of teaching false
doctrine, which is contrary to the doctrine and practice
of the [current] Church. Thus Mrs Tobler swears:
'I have frequently heard the term 'hierarchy' used among
Adventists when reference is made to the Roman Catholic
system, of which I have always been taught that Adventist
strongly disapprove. I have never heard the term 'hierarchy'
used to describe Adventist ministers as is done in the defendants'
brief... and I find it strange and contradictory to all
I have ever learned in Adventist schools and churches.'
In several ways this illustrates the dangers incurred by
an individual church member who presumes to deny the authority
of the duly constituted officials and governing bodies of
the Church... It is not good Seventh-day Adventism to express,
as Mrs Tobler has done, an aversion to Roman Catholicism
... The term 'hierarchy' or 'hierarchical' has no such adverse
connotation in Seventh-day Adventist theology as Mrs Tobler
suggests." (Same Brief as above, pp. 29-30)
The
Blame for bringing the term "hierarchy" into Adventism
cannot be placed upon tho legal counsel, although Elder
Pierson suggests that the terms in question were selected
by non-Adventist lawyers. The attorneys - both Adventist
and non-Adventist - represented him and other General Conference
officers and it was their job to do the General Conference
Committee's bidding. The General Conference president
is responsible, no matter what he claims. The Adventist
delegates in Vienna did not intend to put an irresponsible
man into the presidency of the Church.
It should,
furthermore, he clearly noted that nowhere in his report
to the Church did Elder Pierson renounce or abandon the
terms, "first minister" or "hierarchy"
as applied to himself and our church respectively. And nowhere
did he admit that he made any mistakes. He said, "If
we have erred... we will try to do better next time."
(pp. 7-8, emphasis writer) He said, "We are only human,
We may make mistakes." (p. 8, emphasis
writer) He did not say he erred. He did not say he made
a mistake. Nor has he. For all these arguements and assertions
continue unabated and in full force in the legal documents
to this very moment.
The
good Seventh-day Adventist people will either or to have
to accept them or to shoulder their own responsibilities
as members of a non-hierarchical fellowship of believers,
a democratically-based representative church, to rid these
things from our midst.
END
Webmaster
Note: Copied from a book written: "Betrayal,
Merikay McLeod, The shattering sex discrimination case of
Silver vs Pacific Press Publishing Association".
©2001-2025TOP
master