I don't know where you are getting your information from. I have personally had this whole thing explained to me by the Abp himself as well as two other bishops since. The proposal is quite clear- full communion, not absorption, with Rome.
There's no need to be upset, my friend. We both are just guessing, and neither of us will be affected personally no matter which way this goes. And we both can be wrong.
We both have our sources, and time will show which of us is more perceptive. So far, I am, like it or not. When the same TAC abp said, several years ago, that Rome's approval of the specific TAC proposal then on the table would be "imminent," I doubted the accuracy of that prediction and said so. Of course, it was not "imminent." It never came at all. Now even TAC has admitted that that isn't going to happen.
Then, it was confidently predicted that the revised proposal for TAC to be given some less notable status by Rome would be announced earlier in this year. I said again that this would likely not happen. It didn't.
Then it was said, also with great confidence, that the Vatican was planning to make its positive announcement right after Lambeth...after all, there was too much going on until that was over and done with. But then it would come right away. I said this was very unlikely. Again, I was right.
So, once again, the faithful are being told by the same people who said several times before that approval was going to be announced any day now that the outlook is still good. If I am wrong, so be it; but I certainly don't think that Abp Hepworth
knows what the Vatican intends to do. He didn't know each of the earlier times, and he doesn't know now. But if we pay attention to what the
Vatican itself is saying, rather than banking on TAC sources which have been wrong more than once before and obviously would prefer not to admit defeat a moment sooner than necessary, we get a better picture.
Anyway, we'll see if I am right once again. Let's make a mental note to return to this thread in, say, three months and see what has transpired vis-a-vis TAC's plans and predictions.
There are a lot of people in the TAC that would be happy to be absorbed into Rome, but I'm not one of them. The idea is an extension of the Malines Conversations- spoken of later by Pope Paul VI as being that Anglicans would be "united but not absorbed".
I have noticed before that you seem to think that whatever Rome has said with respect to the Anglican Communion she will also apply to any small offshoot of the Anglican Communion, if only that offshoot is doctrinally in step with Rome. I think that this is a fundamentally mistaken idea, CM. She doesn't...and she has made this clear.
From the very beginning of the Continuing Anglican movement, there were Catholic-leaning groups which were just certain that Rome was on the verge of making then Uniates or something like that, and in each case Rome was polite and supportive. In each case, however, nothing came of it. TAC's initiatives are just the latest installment in that saga.
Even the much discussed Anglican Use and Pastoral Provision decisions of recent years were inaugurated with clergy and parishes of the
Anglican Communion in mind, not with our churches.