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  • House Of Bishops Meeting Set To Open

    HOUSE OF BISHOPS MEETING SET TO OPEN
    By Mary Frances Schjonberg

    Episcopal News Service, NY
    September 19, 2007

    Listening can build relationships, lower anxiety, Presiding Bishop's
    canon says

    [Episcopal News Service, New Orleans] Presiding Bishop Katharine
    Jefferts Schori has assured Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams
    that he will be received September 20 and 21 by the House of Bishops
    "with great respect and hospitality."

    The Rev. Dr. Charles Robertson, canon to the Presiding Bishop and
    Primate, said September 19 that Jefferts Schori had spoken with
    Williams to discuss meeting arrangements and the bishops' anticipation
    of their conversations.

    Robertson termed "extraordinary" the unanimity with which the House
    of Bishops voted at its March meeting to invite Williams to meet
    with them.

    "Both he and we recognize the importance of this time, and that
    it is natural to experience some anxiety" in the current context,
    Robertson said.

    "Our call is to respond to one another, not out of anxiety, but out
    of an even deeper respect for ourselves and one another, honoring
    our relationships," he said.

    Robertson noted that the Presiding Bishop, in question-and-answer
    sessions held during her recent travels around the church, has said
    that "when communion is based on agreement rather than relationship,
    it is easier for tensions to arise."

    Given that potential, Robertson said, "to truly be able to listen to
    one another is important for finding ways to lower the anxiety."

    Jefferts Schori has also reiterated to Williams that the Episcopal
    Church's Executive Council in June "promised our engagement with the
    churches of the Anglican Communion and our deep and sincere listening
    will continue."

    Robertson noted that the General Convention both in 1991 and 1994
    "encouraged conversation with our sisters and brothers in the Anglican
    Communion, and our ecumenical partners," and that this desire remains.

    In 1991, the General Convention proposed a "Pan-Anglican and Ecumenical
    Dialogue on Human Sexuality." Resolution B20 said, in part, that the
    Presiding Bishop's office should "propose to all provinces of the
    Anglican Communion and all churches with whom we are in ecumenical
    dialogue that a broad process of consultation be initiated on an
    official pan-Anglican and ecumenical level as a bold step forward in
    the consideration of these potentially divisive issues which should
    not be resolved by the Episcopal Church on its own."

    In 1994, Resolution B12 called, in part, for the church to "commit
    itself to dialogue in faith, with no expectation of uniformity,
    but every expectation of unity" and "encourage conversation on the
    issues of human sexuality with both Anglican and ecumenical partners
    open to such communication at national, diocesan and local levels."

    Robertson said that all such listening takes place within a context
    in which "we also respectfully acknowledge that we have inherited
    a system of governance that is not necessarily the same as in other
    parts of the communion."

    He added "it is very important to us that we continue to honor not
    only the concerns of the communion but also our own polity -- our
    own governance."

    Meeting agenda detailed The House of Bishops unofficially started
    its regularly scheduled fall meeting with a September 19 dinner,
    also attended by spouses who are meeting concurrently under the theme
    "Marching with the Saints."

    Williams will meet with the bishops and other invited guests for the
    entire day on September 20 and for the morning of September 21. They
    will discuss a variety of subjects, including the recently proposed
    Anglican covenant and the Primates communique. The communique made
    certain requests of the bishops and set a September 30 for their
    response.

    The Joint Standing Committee of the Anglican Consultative Council and
    the Primates will attend those conversations, at Jefferts Schori's
    invitation.

    House of Deputies President Bonnie Anderson, also invited by the
    Presiding Bishop, will be present as well.

    The sessions with Williams are closed to the public, media and other
    visitors.

    The Joint Standing Committee will then meet as a group on September
    24 in the same hotel as the House of Bishops. Williams departs New
    Orleans the afternoon of September 21 to begin an official visit to
    Armenia, Syria and Lebanon.

    Williams will participate in a September 20 evening interfaith
    gathering at the Morial Convention Center in New Orleans, which will
    celebrate the "Resiliency of Spirit in New Orleans," according to a
    Diocese of Louisiana news release.

    Aspects of poverty and hunger relief targeted by the first of eight
    U.N. Millennium Development Goals will be the focus of the house's
    September 21 afternoon session as the bishops join a dialogue with
    medical anthropologist and physician Paul Farmer, founder of Partners
    in Health medical programs in Haiti and around the world.

    A work day for bishops and their spouses is set for September 22. The
    house's planning committee and local officials are monitoring weather
    conditions. The work day may have to be re-scheduled depending on
    the intensity of developing storms.

    Many bishops will participate in worship September 23 with Episcopal
    congregations across Louisiana and Mississippi. The Joint Standing
    Committee has been invited to witness and take part in re-building
    initiatives sponsored by the Diocese of Louisiana over the weekend
    and will likely attend worship in local churches, according to a
    media advisory from the Anglican Communion News Service.

    The bishops will meet in the evening that day to reflect on their
    weekend experiences with specific attention to the role racism plays
    in hurricane-recovery efforts. Gus Newport, Eugene "Gus" Newport, a
    program consultant to the Vanguard Public Foundation and the Louisiana
    Disaster Recovery Foundation, will lead the session.

    The bishops will hold their first business sessions on September
    24. That day will end with a Eucharist.

    On September 25, a morning business session is planned. Time is
    also set aside in the afternoon if the morning session needs to be
    continued. The meeting will close with Jefferts Schori's reflections,
    followed by a Eucharist in memory of deceased members of the house
    and then a dinner.

    Each day includes time for the bishops to study the Bible and to
    worship together.

    -- The Rev. Mary Frances Schjonberg is national correspondent for
    the Episcopal News Service.
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