Anglicanism Recap
A few weeks ago the primates (archbishops who head the 38 provinces of the Anglican Communion) met at Tanzania to decide, among other things, what to do about the American (Episcopal, ECUSA) Church that has failed to comply with 2004's "Windsor Report" which required that the American Church should consecrate no more practicing homosexual bishops, should disallow the blessing of same-sex unions, and should apologize for the church-wide crisis that has been caused. The Primates proposed the creation a "primatal vicar," an administrative and spiritual leader (but probably not a bishop) who could provide oversight to orthodox Episcopalians as an alternative to the current hierarchy of the church, and they also gave the Episcopal Church until September 30th to decide whether the American Church would comply with the Windsor Report.
American leaders initially balked at these ideas, arguing that a September deadline did not provide enough time for the ECUSA's democratic processes to work. Last week the House of Bishops of the Episcopal Church, USA, met in Texas and rejected the idea of a primatal vicar -arguing (correctly, perhaps) that it would create two de facto Episcopal Churches - and some bishops began talking of schism from the Anglican Communion. The gauntlets appear to have been thrown.
So what will happen? Only time (probably more of it than one would expect) will tell. I believe the Episcopal Church will ultimately split at some point in the future and the Anglican Communion will restructure itself to create some sort limitations on the autonomy of the provinces in favor of a more centralized authority that could deal with such crises in the future.
The Church will split because there is simply no moderating position to be had. One side - the smaller liberal side - believes that God created homosexuality and affirms it just as he does sex between a husband and wife. To them denial of "gay rights" is contrary to the will of God (whether we are talking about marriage or ordination or whatever issue, I find the language of "rights" in the church extremely unhelpful, since it is secular/legalistic language with little or no theological reference point - we have no "rights" before God, only gifts from him). The other side - the conservative majority - believes that God has revealed his plan for human sexuality in the Bible which condemns homosexual practice and that anything beyond that Biblical vision is sinful and contrary to the will of God. This side sees homosexual desire not as God-given but as a product of our corrupted and fallen nature, like so many other desires we all experience. As one commentator put it "they [the ECUSA leadership] want to make a sin into a sacrament." When we stop talking about "rights" and reframe the question in theological terms, we see how vast is the divide between the two sides.
Labels: Anglicanism, Ecumenical stuff, God and Sexuality, Methodism