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  • Episcopal bishops, archbishop seek a middle ground

    Boston Globe, United States

    Episcopal bishops, archbishop seek a middle ground

    Queries, comment offered on issue of gay clerics

    The Archbishop of Canterbury during a visit to All Souls Church in New
    Orleans yesterday.

    By Michael Paulson, Globe Staff | September 21, 2007

    NEW ORLEANS - Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams, in a last-ditch
    effort to avoid a schism in the global Anglican Communion, spent seven
    hours yesterday holed up in a posh New Orleans hotel with most of the
    nation's Episcopal bishops, many of whom tried to persuade him that it
    is a mistake to define the American church solely by its decision four
    years ago to approve an openly gay priest as bishop of New Hampshire.


    The unusual conversation took place just days before a Sept. 30
    deadline, set by leaders of Anglican provinces around the world, for
    the American church to back away from its support for gay rights or
    face some unspecified form of punishment. US bishops spent yesterday
    morning telling the archbishop how they see the church in the United
    States, and the archbishop spent the afternoon asking them questions.

    The meetings, which resume today, were closed to reporters, but
    participants described them as cordial but pointed. Williams was
    scheduled to meet with the bishops again this morning and then to
    depart for Armenia; next week, the bishops were expected to decide
    whether they are willing to explicitly promise not to approve any more
    gay bishops or a blessing rite for same-sex couples, the actions
    requested by the foreign Anglican leaders.

    Despite deep disagreements among the bishops over theology and
    increasing dissatisfaction among some Episcopalians with the Anglican
    Communion, none of the 159 bishops in attendance spoke in favor of
    walking away from the communion, which is a 77-million member global
    coalition of regional churches that trace their roots to the
    Reformation and the Church of England.

    "The conversation today . . . reflected a passionate commitment to the
    vitality of the life of, and ministry of, both the Episcopal Church
    and to the Anglican Communion," Bishop Robert O'Neill of Colorado, who
    began his career as a priest in Winchester, Mass., said at a press
    briefing.

    Bishop M. Thomas Shaw of Massachusetts said that he told Williams that
    gay rights issues should not depend on approval from the majority of
    the Anglican Communion, but urged Williams to recognize that gay
    rights supporters, such as Shaw, believe they are acting in a
    prophetic way.

    "There are certain times in history when you simply have to act - the
    majority isn't going to do it," Shaw said in an interview. "Speaking
    truth isn't just liberal thinking, but it's something that has a deep
    place in biblical literature, in the life of Jesus and the prophets."

    Shaw said he also told Williams that it is difficult to seek consensus
    in the American church "when these American bishops are going to
    Africa and making promises and playing on the fears of the African
    church."


    Shaw was referring to the fact that Anglican leaders in Kenya,
    Nigeria, Rwanda, and Uganda have consecrated American priests,
    including the Rev. William Murdoch of Massachusetts, as bishops to
    minister to the alienated conservative minority in the United States
    who no longer feel comfortable in the Episcopal Church.

    The Anglican Communion has been facing the possibility of schism since
    2003, when the Episcopal Church approved as the bishop of New
    Hampshire the Rev. V. Gene Robinson, who is openly gay and lives with
    his longtime partner. The approval, which conservatives said violated
    the Bible's teachings on homosexuality, exacerbated long-developing
    tensions over the liberal direction of the Episcopal Church.

    The bishops in attendance are so divided that they are not all staying
    in the same hotel. The official meeting hotel is the InterContinental,
    but Bishop Robert Duncan of Pittsburgh, the leader of the wing of the
    church most upset by the Robinson consecration, is staying down the
    block at the Parc St. Charles with a handful of other conservatives.

    Even though the House of Bishops meeting is scheduled to run through
    Tuesday, some conservative bishops are planning to walk out today, as
    soon as the archbishop of Canterbury is gone. The conservatives,
    including people who have left the Episcopal Church as well as those
    who have remained, are planning their own meeting in Pittsburgh next
    week to figure out how they might organize themselves outside of the
    Episcopal Church.

    Hoping to head off one proposal - a two-tiered Anglican Communion in
    which the Episcopal Church would have some kind of lesser status if it
    could not agree to the majority view on homosexuality - a group of six
    bishops has circulated a 98-page document arguing against the idea of
    an agreed-upon covenant to which all Anglican provinces would have to
    agree or be ostracized; they argue such an agreement would violate the
    Anglican Communion's constitution.

    "The covenant is a bad idea," said Joe Morris Doss, the former bishop
    of New Jersey. "We should all understand: We became Anglicans for a
    reason, and we should now discuss long-range solutions."

    In remarks at the opening worship service, Presiding Bishop Katharine
    Jefferts Schori decried the increasingly hostile tone of the debate.

    "We have lived in this church and in this communion for a number of
    years with abundant disdain, violent words, and destructive action
    toward those who hold positions at variance with our own," she
    said. "None of us is wholly free of blame in this game, for we have
    all sought to judge those who oppose us."

    Schori began the meeting by offering an olive branch of sorts to
    conservatives, naming eight US bishops who could visit dioceses that
    do not approve of Schori herself, either because she is a woman or
    because she supported the election of Robinson. Of the 110 Episcopal
    dioceses in the United States, six have asked for someone other than
    Schori to oversee them. The bishops of all of six dioceses opposed
    Robinson's consecration, and in three the bishops do not ordain women.

    Conservatives rejected the Schori overture, which a spokesman for the
    Pittsburgh diocese, Peter Frank, called "less than what was offered
    before and less than what the Communion asked for.

    "It's not going to go anywhere, and the presiding bishop knows that,"
    he said.

    The only woman named by Schori as a possible alternative visitor,
    Bishop Geralyn Wolf of Rhode Island, said in an interview that she
    does not expect anyone to ask her to visit because of her gender.
    Wolf, who supported Robinson's consecration, said that in the interest
    of keeping the communion together, she believes that the bishops
    should issue a clear statement agreeing to the primates' request that
    they approve no more noncelibate gay bishops and that they not
    authorize a national rite for blessing same-sex couples.

    After meeting with the bishops, Williams yesterday visited an
    Episcopal mission, All Souls Church, in the Katrina-devastated Lower
    Ninth Ward of New Orleans. Last night, Williams preached to several
    thousand people at an ecumenical service in New Orleans's Morial
    Convention Center, where Hurricane Katrina evacuees huddled two years
    ago.

    Michael Paulson can be reached at [email protected].

    © Copyright 2007 Globe Newspaper Company.
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