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Episcopal church to affirm gay clergy

Bishops at the Episcopal General Convention voted 99-45 for a statement declaring “God has called and may call” gays in committed lifelong relationships to the ministry

The Episcopal Church has moved toward affirming their acceptance of gays and lesbians for all roles in the ministry, despite pressure from fellow Anglicans worldwide for a decisive moratorium on consecrating another openly gay bishop.

Bishops at the Episcopal General Convention in Anaheim, California, voted 99-45 with two abstentions for a statement declaring “God has called and may call” to ministry gays in committed lifelong relationships.

Lay and priest delegates to the meeting had comfortably approved a nearly identical statement, and were expected to adopt the latest version before the meeting ends on Friday.

Leaders of the Anglican Communion have been pushing Episcopalians to roll back their support for gays and lesbians since 2003, when the US denomination consecrated the first openly gay bishop, V. Gene Robinson of New Hampshire. The Episcopal Church is the US Anglican body.

Robinson’s election brought the 77 million-member Anglican fellowship to the brink of schism. Last month, breakaway Episcopal conservatives and other like-minded traditionalists formed a rival national province called the Anglican Church in North America.

To calm tensions, the Episcopal General Convention three years ago passed a resolution that urged restraint by dioceses considering gay candidates for bishop. No other Episcopal bishops living openly with same-sex partners have been consecrated since then.

Drafters of the latest statement insisted that the resolution only acknowledges that the Episcopal Church ordains partnered gays and lesbians and is not a repeal of what was widely considered a moratorium on consecrating gay bishops.

“The constitution and canons of our church as currently written do not preclude gay and lesbian persons from participating,” in any part of the church, said the Reverend Gay Clark Jennings, on the committee that drafted the statement. “These people have responded to God’s call.”

However, the Episcopal gay advocacy group Integrity, said in a statement on Monday night that the declaration “effectively ends” the temporary prohibition on gays in ministry. Integrity called the vote “another step in the Episcopal Church’s ‘coming out’ process.”

Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori, who leads the Episcopal Church, was among the bishops who voted to approve the declaration. The statement also affirms the Episcopal Church’s commitment to participate in and help fund the Anglican Communion, the third-largest grouping of churches worldwide, behind the Roman Catholic Church and Orthodox Christian churches.

Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams, the Anglican spiritual leader, had attended the Episcopal national meeting in Anaheim in its opening days last week. He said, “I hope and pray that there won’t be decisions in the coming days that could push us further apart.”

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Episcopal church to affirm gay clergy

Bishops at the Episcopal General Convention voted 99-45 for a statement declaring “God has called and may call” gays in committed lifelong relationships to the ministry

The Episcopal Church has moved toward affirming their acceptance of gays and lesbians for all roles in the ministry, despite pressure from fellow Anglicans worldwide for a decisive moratorium on consecrating another openly gay bishop.

Bishops at the Episcopal General Convention in Anaheim, California, voted 99-45 with two abstentions for a statement declaring “God has called and may call” to ministry gays in committed lifelong relationships.

Lay and priest delegates to the meeting had comfortably approved a nearly identical statement, and were expected to adopt the latest version before the meeting ends on Friday.

Leaders of the Anglican Communion have been pushing Episcopalians to roll back their support for gays and lesbians since 2003, when the US denomination consecrated the first openly gay bishop, V. Gene Robinson of New Hampshire. The Episcopal Church is the US Anglican body.

Robinson’s election brought the 77 million-member Anglican fellowship to the brink of schism. Last month, breakaway Episcopal conservatives and other like-minded traditionalists formed a rival national province called the Anglican Church in North America.

To calm tensions, the Episcopal General Convention three years ago passed a resolution that urged restraint by dioceses considering gay candidates for bishop. No other Episcopal bishops living openly with same-sex partners have been consecrated since then.

Drafters of the latest statement insisted that the resolution only acknowledges that the Episcopal Church ordains partnered gays and lesbians and is not a repeal of what was widely considered a moratorium on consecrating gay bishops.

“The constitution and canons of our church as currently written do not preclude gay and lesbian persons from participating,” in any part of the church, said the Reverend Gay Clark Jennings, on the committee that drafted the statement. “These people have responded to God’s call.”

However, the Episcopal gay advocacy group Integrity, said in a statement on Monday night that the declaration “effectively ends” the temporary prohibition on gays in ministry. Integrity called the vote “another step in the Episcopal Church’s ‘coming out’ process.”

Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori, who leads the Episcopal Church, was among the bishops who voted to approve the declaration. The statement also affirms the Episcopal Church’s commitment to participate in and help fund the Anglican Communion, the third-largest grouping of churches worldwide, behind the Roman Catholic Church and Orthodox Christian churches.

Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams, the Anglican spiritual leader, had attended the Episcopal national meeting in Anaheim in its opening days last week. He said, “I hope and pray that there won’t be decisions in the coming days that could push us further apart.”

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Archbishop ‘regrets’ move to ordain gay bishops

The archbishop of Canterbury is bracing himself for fresh turmoil in the Anglican Communion ahead of a crucial vote that could overturn a ban on the ordination of gay bishops.

For five years Dr Rowan Williams has succeeded in avoiding an irrevocable schism in the world’s third-largest Christian denomination by persuading Anglican churches to refrain from appointing gay bishops, blessing same-sex unions and cross-border interventions.

A vote in the US Episcopal church could threaten the already fractious relationships in the Communion when its house of bishops decide later this week on a resolution declaring the ordination process open to “all individuals”.

At the General Synod meeting in York today, he told Church of England members: “I regret the fact there is no will to observe a significant part of the moratoria,” he added.

Williams had flown to Anaheim, California, last week for the US church’s triennial meeting. In a sermon given last Thursday, he told the congregation his visit was tinged with “hopes and anxieties”.

The crisis in the Anglican Communion was triggered mostly, but not solely, by the 2003 ordination of Gene Robinson as bishop of New Hampshire. Robinson, a genial churchman well-regarded by his parishioners, is in a committed relationship with another man.

His appointment scandalised conservatives and their dissent culminated last year with the boycott of a flagship Anglican conference by hundreds of bishops.

Last week more than a thousand representatives from the Church of England supported the launch of a UK fellowship for congregations and clergy unhappy with the church’s vague position on the blessing of same-sex unions and the ordination of women and homosexual priests.

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Archbishop ‘regrets’ move to ordain gay bishops

Dr Rowan Williams warns of church split over US decision to ignore ban on homosexual clergy

Dr Rowan Williams, the archbishop of Canterbury, has said he regrets a decision by the US Episcopal church to ignore a ban on ordaining gay bishops and lobby for their inclusion.

Williams’s comments at the general synod in York were in response to a vote held yesterday in Anaheim, California, where the Episcopal church of the United States is meeting for its triennial gathering.

Representatives from the house of deputies, one of two legislative branches in the US church, voted to adopt a resolution declaring the ordination process open to “all individuals”.

If passed by the house of bishops this week, the resolution will be a blow for Williams, who went to Anaheim last week to urge the Americans to show restraint over homosexual clergy.

In a sermon last Thursday, he told the congregation his debut at the general convention was tinged with “hopes and anxieties”.

“Along with many in the communion, I hope and pray that there won’t be decisions in the coming days that will push us further apart. If we – if I – had felt that we could do perfectly well without you, there wouldn’t be a problem.”

Williams arrived in York last Friday for the general synod, the Church of England’s governing body, and answered questions on the Anglican communion.

When told by a synod member, Chris Sugden, that the house of deputies was pressing for the ordination of all individuals to the episcopate, he replied: “It remains to be seen whether the house of deputies will be endorsed by the house of bishops. If they choose to block that then the moratorium stands.

“I regret the fact there is no will to observe a significant part of the moratoria,” he added, referring to three bans aimed at keeping the Anglican communion together.

Gay bishops have proved to be a headache for Williams, who has struggled to maintain harmony in the Anglican communion.

The dissent culminated in an open revolt last year, with the boycott of hundreds of bishops from the flagship Anglican conference and the establishment of a worldwide network for conservatives.

Disaffected Episcopalians in the US have severed their ties with their mother church, setting up a rival church and appointing an archbishop.

This week, more than a thousand representatives from the Church of England endorsed the launch of a UK fellowship for congregations and clergy unhappy with the Church of England’s fuzzy position on the blessing of same-sex unions, the ordination of women and homosexual priests.

To compound Williams’s woes, delegates at the general convention will also debate blessing same-sex unions and consider whether gender-neutral liturgies should be introduced.

Some fear what the changes will mean for the conservative voices within the Episcopal church.

The Rev Ralph Stanwise, from the diocese of Quincy, said: “If we overturn the moratorium we will in effect be urging many remaining conservatives and moderates among us and in our home dioceses, especially our most fragile ones, to search for the exit signs.”

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Car Bomb Explodes Outside Iraqi Church, Kills 4

BAGHDAD — A car bomb exploded near a church as worshippers left Sunday Mass, killing at least four civilians and injuring 18 in one of several attacks on Iraq’s beleaguered Christian minority.

The coordinated assault came as the Iraqi m…

“Kiss-In” Held To Protest Detention Of Gay Men Outside Mormon Church

A “kiss-in” drew about 60 people sporting pink paper hearts to the sidewalk just off of LDS Church property near Main Street and South Temple Sunday to protest actions taken by church security late last week.

Baghdad church bombing kills four

Security forces outside one of the bombed churches in Baghdad

A car bomb outside a church in eastern Baghdad has killed four people and injured 21, Iraqi police say.

The bomb went off on Sunday evening and could be heard around the city.

The bombing came after three other churches were targeted by smaller bombs, injuring seven people but killing none, reports said.

There are some 750,000 people in Iraq’s Christian community. Christian targets have been attacked in the past, but are spared much of Iraq’s deadly violence.

They have been targeted in some areas of the country, mainly in Baghdad and in the northern city of Mosul.

However, most of the violence in Iraq is sectarian in nature and targets either Sunni or Shia Muslims.

The last bomb of the day went off near a church on Palestine Street, the Reuters news agency said.

Sunday’s earlier bombs were hidden in cardboard boxes, the BBC’s Gabriel Gatehouse reports from Baghdad. One bomb caused some injuries but no-one was killed, and two of the bombs hurt no-one.

The attacks came on the day a senior general in Iraq’s military said insurgent attacks could be expected to continue for several more years.

Levels of violence have dipped sharply in recent years, but the remarks suggested Iraqi leaders are expecting continued sporadic attacks by militant cells after the US pulls out combat forces from Iraq by the end of 2011. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Alan M. Webber: Washington Post Salons: Right Church, Wrong Pew

It’s official as any papal encyclical: Katharine Weymouth has been led to the front of the church by the moral authorities of journalism and…

Gay Couple Detained After Kissing Near Mormon Church

SALT LAKE CITY — A gay couple say they were detained by security guards on a plaza owned by the Mormon church and later cited by police, claiming it stemmed from a kiss on the cheek.

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints said …