Dear ebia,
Which raises the question who is 'we'?
I had in mind the Anglican Communion.
The Bible doesnt talk of people deciding what is right but people either accepting what is right. Whether the liberal minority with disproportional organisational power, or the believing majority 'win' is just a reflection on whether the Anglican Communion accepts error or not.
Nobody decides to accept that which they know to be error to be true - the people who disagree with you are just as convinced that they are right about God's will as you are. If you want to change anybody's opinion you need to persuade them, not keep telling everyone that it's self-evident that you are right and they are wrong. If we are to enforce anything then some human body - person, committee, instruments, whatever - has to decide what and when someone has strayed too far from scripture. Who or what should decide that? So far you have offered nothing more than your personal judgement of what is/should be self-evident; and scripture which does need to be the starting point but always needs interpreting and applying.
Obviously proportional represntation would be nice to ensure the right result.
That essentially puts all the power in the hands of two or three African national churches, who outnumber all the rest of us put together. Is that really what you want? I suspect not if we started looking at some other issues, but if it is then say so.
Anyone can overide anything they want ebia, if they couldnt there would have been no GAFCON so I dont se your point.
Anybody can
ignore anything they want. There is nothing to override because there are no instruments currently for telling anyone else what to do - each national church is fully independent of all the others. That's part of the problem. GAFCON's statement, as it stands, doesn't change that.
If we want a communion where a national church can be effectively called to account then we have to design some instruments to do that. GAFCON
could have stepped up to the plate with some serious, workable, suggestions for how we might do that, but it hasn't. Rather, it's made some statements we all already agreed on but were worth restating, but then given a free-for-all legitimacy for
anyone to reject authority if they believe the person wielding that authority is less than orthodox. What we need, if we are to hold authorities to account, are some instruments to decide when it's proper to do that. GAFCON hasn't done anything to forward that as far as I can see, and the absence from Lambeth of some of the GAFCON bishops, IMO, makes it less likely that Lambeth will either.
As a body the Communion needs to decide how much diversity it can sustain, how it will decide when too much is too much, and how it will call those who overstep the mark to account. And
then apply that to the case in hand. Not put in place rash statements that might address the issue in hand effectively but cause disintegration over all the other issues where diversity is sustainable.
Pretend for a minute that the conscration of +Gene has been resolved in some way you are okay with. How do we deal with all the other issues currently going on or future, issues of women priests and bishops; of border crossing; of failing to provide adequate support and oversight to parishes of different traditions to the diocese in which they fall; of polygamy; of divorce; of calling into doubt literal belief various doctines; of failing to be a church at mission; of....
How can they be unhappy with both when if it waasnt for the TEC there wouldnt have been a GAFCON?
Two wrongs don't make a right. TEC's actions may have been wrong, but that does not make any and all possible responses to TEC's actions good.