ahab said:
Hi PaladinValer,
It is obviously possible in this autocephalous Communion, as a province has rejected Lambeth 1.10 (even after the primate agreed to it) However that rejection has caused the communion to be impared in so much as the majority quite rightly can not tolerate such a departure from the gospel given, hence the Eames commission and the Windsor report.
Can you please expalin to me what value you believe the Windsor report is then, and are you supportive of its recommendations?
Good and valid question,
Ahab.
It's my understanding that most Anglicans share my personal feeling that the unity of the Anglican Communion is something precious that should not be quickly discarded, by the throwing of anathemas back and forth like a bunch of particularly irritable 4th Century Greek bishops.
To be in union with Canterbury means that you can go virtually anywhere in the world and be able to enter and receive communion in an Anglican church with a sense that you are "home" there as much as you are in your own parish church.
As noted by
PV, the present mechanism has only
advisory roles for "Anglican Communion officials" -- the Archbishop of Canterbury himself is the sole person who has any authority whatsoever beyond his own province, and that authority consists entirely in deciding with whom he will be in communion. Granted he will seek advice on this, and listen seriously to that advice, the final decision rests in him (and of course with those with whom he is willing to be in communion, to accept that relationship -- that choice
is a two-way street).
The Eames Commission and the Windsor Report it produced were intended to recommend ways in which "impaired or broken communion" could be avoided -- by recommendations as to actions which could be taken by
both sides in disputes such as the past women's ordination issue and the present gay bishop/blessing of gay unions issues.
It does not itself carry any authority whatsoever over any church in the Anglican Communion. But it was requested and is being given serious consideration by Abp. +Williams.
I think it may be important for all of us to look at the issue from both sides, and I am going to violate the verbage of Rule #4, though not its intent, enough to state the issues as I understand the two sides to see them. I want to stress that this is
not done to start the morality-of-homosexuality debate in this forum contrary to CF rules, and I would hope that nobody is interested in trying to take up that debate. My intent is to make clear what exactly the two sides in this issue, which
is causing serious rifting in our Communion, are saying, simply so that we can get beyond that to the issues of how Anglicans deal with the question of unity-in-disagreement.
Most of the African Bishops and Evangelical minorities in the "older" churches hold that the elevation of practicing gay persons (or persons who are not in what they believe to be a state of repentance for past gay activities), and the blessing of gay unions, represent a condonation of a state of serious sin in which they feel they cannot acquiesce.
The leadership and majority of the American and Canadian Churches, and I believe the CoE and a few other "older" Anglican churches, take the view that the commitment to love one's neighbor as oneself, and one's fellow Christian as Christ loved us, mean that any action that relegates gay members of our church to a second-class status, in which their love and desire for holy union with the beloved, and their ability to minister in Christ's name, is not given equal status with the equally sinful and equally forgiven straight majority. As such, they feel that the actions called for by conservative Christians and their fellow Anglicans identified in the previous paragraph are a violation of their commitment to "seek and serve Christ in all men and women, loving one's neighbor as oneself."
That to me is the bottom-line stance of the two sides. As noted, they are not put up for discussion (forbidden by the CF rules) but simply as an assertion of my understanding of the stances taken on the underlying issue that led to the Eames Commission and the Windsor Report. How to live together as one Communion holding those separate views is what the Eames Commission was tasked to figure out. I personally feel they failed in their task, that they did not provide adequately for the moral stances of either side -- what they proposed was a compromise that injures
both sides' moral judgment, and further damages the time-honored principle of autocephaly, which we inherited from the Orthodox and which is important to all our churches.