Anglicans cut Episcopalians from ecumenical bodies

Nick the Pilot

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Anglicans cut Episcopalians from ecumenical bodies - Yahoo! News

LONDON – The Anglican Communion has suspended U.S. Episcopalians from serving on ecumenical bodies because of the election of a lesbian as a bishop in California.

The U.S. church opened a rift in the global communion, and within its own ranks, seven years ago by electing a gay man, V. Gene Robinson, as bishop of New Hampshire. Conservative African Anglicans have taken a lead in opposing moves in the United States and Canada to promote gays and to bless homosexual relationships.

Rowan Williams, the archbishop of Canterbury and spiritual leader of the Anglican Communion, had called for a moratorium on appointing homosexuals to leadership positions. He asked for action against the Episcopal Church after the Rev. Canon Mary Glasspool was made an assistant bishop of Los Angeles.

The Anglican Communion is an association of 44 regional and national member churches, most founded by Church of England missionaries, with more than 80 million members in more than 160 countries.

The Rev. Canon Kenneth Kearon, secretary general of the Anglican Communion, announced Monday that Episcopalians had been downgraded from members to consultants in formal ecumenical dialogues, annual meetings between Anglicans and clergy in other churches intended to build friendship and better understand one another's traditions and issues of mutual concern such as points of theology and ways of worshipping.
Kearon said he had also written to the primate of the Anglican Church of Canada to ask whether it has formally adopted a policy backing same-sex blessings.

The Canadian church's governing General Synod is meeting this week, and is discussing whether to debate a motion on the issue.

The Episcopal News Service said the Rev. Katherine Grieb, an Episcopal priest and professor of New Testament at Virginia Theological Seminary, was downgraded from member to consultant to the Inter Anglican Standing Commission on Unity Faith and Order.

Those who were stripped of membership in ecumenical dialogues, according to ENS, were the Rev. Thomas Ferguson and Assistant Bishop William Gregg of North Carolina, both involved in the Anglican-Orthodox Theological Dialogue; Bishop C. Franklin Brookhart of Montana had been a member of the Anglican-Methodist International Commission for Unity in Mission; and the Very Rev. William H. Petersen, professor of ecclesiastical and ecumenical history of Bexley Hall in Columbus, Ohio, who was serving on the Anglican-Lutheran International Commission.

Brookhart said the individual clergy members' opinions about the moratorium were not a factor in the archbishop's decision. Brookhart said he supports the moratorium, did not participate in Glasspool's consecration and that his policy has been not to authorize the blessing of same-sex couples.

"This is ironic, isn't it?" he said.
 
If you want to play in a league, you have to play by the league's rules. If you don't want to play by the league's rules, you're free to go elsewhere.
 
If you want to play in a league, you have to play by the league's rules. If you don't want to play by the league's rules, you're free to go elsewhere.
Yes but when a bunch of teams have a dispute and others agree, if the league doesn't change its rules soon the league falls apart...and their is a new league in town with new rules.
 
Yes but when a bunch of teams have a dispute and others agree, if the league doesn't change its rules soon the league falls apart...and their is a new league in town with new rules.

If a church is really nothing but a sporting league, with no Divine Providence behind it, certainly, but at that point, there would be no point in the church worrying about such issues, anyway.
 
Hi Nick —

The Episcopal Church is the name taken by the Anglican Church in America when, after the War of Independence, it was obliged to distance itself from the mother house on the grounds that Anglican clergy swear an oath of allegiance to the British monarch (who is the head of the Anglican church).

Thomas
 
While it does not make me happy, frankly we've earned the slap. We said we would wait and abide by certain agreements (this is not saying that we agree that homosexuals can't be Bishops, but that we agreed to a certain process), and then we ignored our end of the agreement.

If we had no intention of honoring the process, we should just have said so and taken the consequences then.

I wish we had stuck to our agreement, even though I think we also should keep working toward full inclusion of homosexuals.

But, American Bishops are an unruly bunch.
 
Nope ... it's dem bloomin' Anglicans! :mad::eek:

(but then me, a Catlick, would say that ... :D )
 
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