Pastor leads church in secession struggle
Deepa Bharath
When Praveen Bunyan speaks, the words ring loud and clear.
They still bear a trace of an East Indian accent, as the
42-year-old pastor of St. James Church on Via Lido was born and
raised in India and lived there most of his life.
But it’s easy to understand what he says, because he seems to
stand by and believe in every word that comes out of his mouth.
Bunyan spearheaded his church’s recent struggle against the
Episcopal Diocese of Los Angeles. St. James, All Saints’ Church in
Long Beach and most recently St. David’s in North Hollywood, seceded
from the diocese last week announcing that they are now under the
Diocese of Luwero in Uganda, Africa.
In a way, Bunyan believes he was destined to come to Newport
Beach.
“I didn’t want to be in the middle of all this,” he said. “But it
just happened that way.”
The issue was one of “self-identity” and was crucial to him and
his church members, Bunyan said.
“We don’t want to be part of a church that questions the divinity
of Jesus Christ and is not so sure about the validity of the
scriptures,” he said. “If we deny the basic tenets of Christianity,
why do we even call ourselves a church?”
Bunyan has maintained that his church did not break away from the
Episcopal Church because of the issue of homosexuality, but he said
he is personally opposed to the ordination of Gene Robinson, an
openly gay man, as the bishop of New Hampshire.
“I’m not saying leaders should be perfect,” he said. “I’m no saint
myself. But a bishop or a minister should be someone who is above all
reprove.”
Bunyan’s church, however, welcomes everyone, he said --
heterosexual or homosexual.
“But we don’t marry gay couples in our church because it’s against
the scripture,” he said. “A Christian marriage is between a man and a
woman.”
All other individuals must live a life of celibacy or “holy
singleness” according to the Bible, but Bunyan says he is aware of
how practical or impractical that may be in society today.
“There are people who veer off the path,” he said. “In our church,
we have gay people who go off that path and succumb to temptation,
just as we have heterosexual people who do that. But do we throw them
out of church for that? No. We pray together.”
The church also has special ministries for gay and lesbian people
and for those infected with HIV, Bunyan said.
“The gay issue is not why we disassociated ourselves from the
Episcopal Church,” he said. “It may appear that way because of our
beliefs, but it’s not the real reason.”
St. James is still part of the Anglican Communion comprising 77
million people. The 2.5-million strong Episcopal Church of the United
States is also part of the Anglican Communion. St. James has seceded
from a small part of the Anglican Communion, Bunyan said.
“The Episcopal Church has been receiving stern warnings from the
Anglican Communion about the path they have been taking,” he said.
The Episcopal Church, in an attempt to adapt to a changing
culture, has lost its identity, Bunyan said.
“This obsession with fitting in has led them down a different
path,” he said. “All we can do is pray for that church and its
leaders.”
Bunyan’s journey into the life he now leads was tumultuous. Born
into a family of Christian ministers, he told himself as a young man
that he would never take that path. Bunyan’s resolutions were usually
set in stone.
“But this one, God overruled,” he said.
Bunyan’s great-grandfather was the first convert in the family who
later in life became a minister in the South Indian state of Andhra
Pradesh. His grandfather was ordained the first bishop of the
Anglican Church of South India. His parents taught theology at the
Hindustan Bible Institute in Chennai, a city in the southeastern
coast of India.
That’s where Bunyan went to school and college. Although he grew
up with his parents teaching at a seminary, Bunyan had very little
regard for the church, he said.
“I was more into being popular in school and college,” Bunyan
said.
He played sports, but he also developed a drinking habit and
became addicted to drugs.
“I was going astray and wanted to be popular,” he said. “I was
throwing muck on the face of the church and ridiculing God.”
But Bunyan had his turning point when he was about 20. He was
looking for something in his dresser drawer when a needle he used for
shooting drugs pricked his finger.
“A drop of blood fell from my finger to a Bible that I kept in my
drawer,” he said. “I dusted the old, brown Bible and opened it.”
His hands took him straight to the Book of Phillipians, Chapter 2.
“I asked myself, why?” Bunyan said. “Why did Jesus die on the
cross?”
And just then, he said, he felt the presence of Jesus Christ in
his room.
“I heard Him tell me: “Praveen, I died for you,’” Bunyan said.
“And that’s when I said, ‘If you died for me, I want to live for
you.’”
To this day, the pastor believes that moment turned his life
around. He threw his drugs and needles out the window and into the
Cooum river that traversed his neighborhood. He pursued a master’s
degree in public administration and political science.
But even then, he was fighting his destiny. The turning point came
when his parents went to do missionary work in a village in interior
Andhra Pradesh.
“They successfully converted one family,” Bunyan said. “But I
wondered who would continue the work and teach them more. My parents
said they didn’t know, but God would send someone.”
Bunyan took it upon himself to be that someone. For 15 months, he
lived under a tree in that village breathing its dry air, with only a
backpack and no tent or shelter over his head.
“I’d eat berries or fruits,” he said. “Sometimes, people would
bring me food.”
As he learned to plow the soil with the farmers, he talked to them
about Jesus. While he was there, Bunyan had helped set up 12 churches
in that village and neighboring villages.
His parents encouraged him to attend a seminary in Pune, India,
where he met and married Grace Veena Samson. Together, they worked in
India as ministers and then moved to the United States in 1993 to
pursue higher studies in theology. Bunyan spent most of his years in
this country as a minister for a church in Colorado.
“As a pastor, he was very engaging,” said Bob Williams, a
parishioner and a Denver real estate agent who helped the pastor find
a home in the area and who later became one of his best friends.
“People were instantly attracted by his warmth, spontaneity and
clarity.”
Bunyan was not one to try to please everyone, Williams said.
“I suspect the decision he made with his church was agonizing for
him,” Williams said. “But it’s important for people to do what they
believe they have to do. The core of Praveen’s being is in his faith,
his family and his church.”
St. James Church offered Bunyan the job in January 2003.
The decision to appoint Bunyan was unanimous, said Jim Dale,
president of the church’s board of directors.
“We found him to have a heart for scripture,” he said. “He’s a
great leader, with strong pastoral skills, and above all, we felt we
were in the presence of an incredibly godly man.”
Bunyan is also a people person, Dale said.
“He loves to be around people,” he said. “His family serves as a
role model to show people what a family is about.”
The church definitely did not call Bunyan in to lead them out of
the Episcopal Church, Dale said.
“But he has handled the situation wonderfully,” he said. “He has a
pastor’s heart and understands that there may be people hurting. He
communicates openly with all our members.”
Bunyan understands that this could end up being a legal battle,
with the Bishop of Los Angeles refusing to release the churches to
the African diocese. An African archbishop responded to the bishop
saying that the clergy and churches now came under the Diocese of
Luwero.
“We were happy to receive that support from the archbishop,”
Bunyan said. “This church belongs to us. It’s our home, and this is
where we intend to be.”
* DEEPA BHARATH is the enterprise and general assignment reporter.
She may be reached at (949) 574-4226 or by e-mail at
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