Submit your comments on this article |
Britain |
Church of England to debate whether Christians should try to convert Muslims |
2008-12-17 |
A discussion on the sensitive topic has been tabled for the next meeting of the Church of England's governing body amid fears that some clergy are ignoring their traditional missionary role. Some members of the General Synod believe Christ ordered all Christians to recruit nonbelievers and followers of other faiths, and they want to see how many bishops and vicars agree with this view. Among the speakers is likely to be the Bishop of Rochester, the Rt Rev Michael Nazir-Ali, who earlier this year warned that Church leaders had "gone too far" in their sensitivity towards Muslims and were not doing enough to spread the word of God. At the end of the debate at next February's Synod meeting in London, bishops, clergy and lay members will vote on whether bishops should report to the Synod on "their understanding of the uniqueness of Christ in multi-faith Britain", and give examples of how the gospel should be shared. Paul Eddy, a lay member of the Synod, started the Private Members' Motion and accused the Church of censorship earlier this year when it was taken off the agenda of the July meeting at the last minute. He believed it was shelved because it would have shown up deep divisions in the Church over its attitude to converting believers in other faiths. Mr Eddy said today that he was delighted the discussion will now be heard. He told The Daily Telegraph: "I'm looking forward to what I think will be a very positive debate. I'm hoping that the Church will affirm the historic tenets of our faith. "We have a huge responsibility to share our faith with everyone in the UK including those of other faiths." The Synod meeting will also debate whether clergy should be banned from being members of the far-right British National Party, following another Private Members' Motion. There will be a presentation on "the implications of the financial crisis and recession", triggered by fears that the economic downturn could damage the Church's billion-pound stock market investments as well as takings in the collection plate. |
Posted by:tipper |
#8 Convert them to what? |
Posted by: Snogum Guelph7607 2008-12-17 23:55 |
#7 Broadhead, which book do you mean? I don't think the CofE bothers to read the Bible any more. Maybe the Quran, though. |
Posted by: Rambler in Virginia 2008-12-17 22:09 |
#6 wow, I'm not the most religious dude but I seem to recall as per the Book, this isn't really up for discussion. Fisher's of men and all... |
Posted by: Broadhead6 2008-12-17 21:30 |
#5 I am surprised bishops whether CofE bishops can remain Cof E bishops if they don't convert to Islam. |
Posted by: JFM 2008-12-17 18:28 |
#4 I'm surprised they aren't debating whether CofE bishops can convert to Islam and still remain CofE bishops. |
Posted by: Anonymoose 2008-12-17 17:56 |
#3 I'll bet Doc Druid just choked on his lobster thermidor. |
Posted by: tu3031 2008-12-17 17:14 |
#2 ![]() |
Posted by: gorb 2008-12-17 14:11 |
#1 What's the other option - shooting them? Seriously, at this point, I think the C of E would have a hard time recruiting Christians. |
Posted by: SteveS 2008-12-17 14:02 |