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Olde Tyme Religion
Episcopals Rebuff Demands on Stance on Gays
2007-03-22
Responding to an ultimatum from the leaders of the worldwide Anglican Communion, bishops of the Episcopal Church have rejected a key demand to create a parallel leadership structure to serve the conservative minority of Episcopalians who oppose their churchÂ’s liberal stand on homosexuality.

The bishops, meeting at a retreat center outside of Houston, said they were aware that their decision could lead to the exclusion of the Episcopal Church from the Anglican Communion, an international confederation of churches tied to the Church of England. The bishops have a “deep longing” to remain part of the Communion, they said, but they are unwilling to compromise the Episcopal Church’s autonomy and its commitment to full equality for all people, including gay men and lesbians.

In a strongly worded statement issued Tuesday night, the bishops said the Communion’s attempt to impose a parallel authority structure “violates our founding principles as the Episcopal Church following our own liberation from colonialism.” The bishops inserted a gentle reminder that the Episcopal Church long ago declared itself independent from the Church of England. “We cannot accept what would be injurious to this church and could well lead to its permanent division,” the bishops said in their statement, a set of three resolutions addressed to the church’s executive council.

They called for an urgent “face to face” meeting in the United States with the Archbishop of Canterbury, Rowan Williams, the leader of the Church of England, and a representative committee of the church’s primates, who head the international provinces. The primates, at their meeting last month in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, are the ones who issued the formal set of demands to the Episcopal Church.

The demands also asked that the Episcopal Church refrain from ordaining openly gay bishops and stop allowing blessings of same-sex couples. The bishops, while not addressing those demands directly in their new statement, did reiterate their commitment to including “all God’s people” including gay men and lesbians in church life.

A spokesman for the Anglican Communion said the Archbishop of Canterbury was still digesting the statement from the American bishops and might issue a response later today. The United States bishops plan to hold a news conference late this afternoon. Many liberal and moderate Episcopalians immediately applauded the bishops for standing by their principles. Response from conservative Episcopalians ran the gamut from confusion to angry resolve that this, surely, is the last straw.

Reached by telephone as he was leaving the bishops meeting, Bishop Robert Duncan of Pittsburgh, who leads a network of conservatives who have been asking for alternative oversight, would only say: “I’m really thinking through what all this means.”
Posted by:Fred

#5  The Episcopal Church is dying in this country, and the Anglican Church is in decline in the UK. The Anglicans in Africa on the other hand have large and growing communities. Africa is the future of the Anglican Church, with the Archbishop of Nigeria to soon outshine the Archbishop of Canterbury.
One of the main threats the Episcopal bishops in the US have used is physical expulsion from church property of any and all who challenge their right to rewrite the Gospel and Christian tradition. Episcopal congregations that built churches over 50 or 60 years are being told that they do NOT own any of the buildings, and that they will be locked out if they leave the Episcopal diocese they are in.
Posted by: Shieldwolf   2007-03-22 16:02  

#4  I have made Midwest Conservative Journal a daily stop - not a piskie, but it's been very enlightening. Presbys can't be far behind.....
Posted by: anonymous2u   2007-03-22 13:06  

#3  Â‘The bishops have a “deep longing”… They called for an urgent “face to face” meetingÂ’

I'm not sayin'...I'm just sayin'.
Posted by: DepotGuy   2007-03-22 12:03  

#2  You have to love it. The old church died and the new one grew up from the ashes of its ministry. The sickly ol' Episcopalian geezer has been trying to keep the kids kowtowing by threatening to cut them out of the will. It looks like the kids finally got the gumption to break free and live their own life. God does indeed work in mysterious ways.
Posted by: Harcourt Clerong1339   2007-03-22 06:39  

#1  This will be the final thing that splinters the episcopals. The liberal churches will remain, and wither and die as they have been. They have become so open minded that the wind blows through - when you stand for nothign you will fall for anything.

The Orthodox ones will join with the African churches, and continue to thrive. this process has already begun with many of the larger and more historical Episcopal churches in the US, including the one where Patrick Henry worshiped.
Posted by: OldSpook   2007-03-22 01:50  

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