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Emergency Episcopal-Anglican Talks Bring No Consensus on Homosexuality

Episcopal and Anglican leaders have failed to reach consensus at a closed meeting this week in New York on how the worldwide Anglican Communion can move forward from the controversy over homosexuality in the church.

by Maria Mackay
Posted: Wednesday, September 13, 2006, 20:05 (BST)
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The meeting was also convened to discuss a resolution within the U.S. Anglican arm over a divide that conservative leaders had called "inevitable."

"We had honest and frank conversations that confronted the depth of the conflicts that we face," said the statement today. "We recognised the need to provide sufficient space, but were unable to come to common agreement on the way forward."

Participants in the meeting included Griswold, Presiding Bishop-elect Katharine Jefferts Schori, Bishops Peter James Lee of Virginia, John Lipscomb of Southwest Florida, Jack Iker of Fort Worth, Robert Duncan of Pittsburgh, James Stanton of Dallas, Edward Salmon of South Carolina, Mark Sisk of New York, Dorsey Henderson of Upper South Carolina, and Robert O'Neill of Colorado. Canon Kenneth Kearon, the Secretary General of the Anglican Communion, was also present at the gathering.

Tensions within the Episcopal Church had mounted after the 2003 consecration of New Hampshire Bishop V. Gene Robinson, an active homosexual, and the adoption of a last-minute resolution earlier this summer that called church leaders to "exercise restraint" when considering gay candidates for bishops. More opposition arose as Jefferts Schori, an advocate of gay relationships, was elected to be the first female presiding bishop for the U.S. denomination. Shortly after her election, Jefferts Schori said that she believes homosexuality is not a sin and that homosexuals were created by God "with affections ordered toward other people of the same gender."

This led conservative dioceses, which hold the Church subordinate to the sovereign authority of Scripture, to appeal for an "alternative primatial oversight".

Conservative leaders drafted a petition letter late last month on the current state of the Anglican Communion for distribution to all bishops in the worldwide communion. The 44-page document was written by several Anglican leaders including the Rt. Rev John H. Rogers, a bishop with the conservative Anglican Mission in America, and the Rt. Rev. John K. Rucyahana, bishop of the Diocese of Shyira in Rwanda. It made clear that the issue on homosexuality and whether the Church should propound its approval is "a defining [matter] for the continued unity of the churches and bishops in the Anglican Communion."

This week's meeting did not conclude in any resolution or agreement. But the statement assured talks will continue until a consensus is reached.

"The level of openness and charity in this conference allow us to pledge to hold one another in prayer and to work together until we have reached the solution God holds out for us," it stated.


Lillian Kwon, US Christian Today Correspondent, with contributions from Maria Mackay



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The comments below are readers' personal opinions and are in no way intended to reflect the editorial opinion of Christian Today.

Added: Saturday, September 30, 2006, 13:43 (BST)

In my experience, attempting to "problem-solve" this issue will not further the mission of the church. There are human beings involved who both belive they are right - I doubt there will be resolution. Perhaps it is not needed and further focusing on this issue will cause the church to lose it's focus on the bigger mission. What if....the church could find a way to fulfill it's mission and not resolve this particular issue? I suggest they elevate to the highest possible work they can do as a church and take each question as it comes. What if... resolving the issue one way or another doesn't really put us any closer to God?

Karen Robertson, MIchigan

Added: Wednesday, September 13, 2006, 22:53 (BST)

The entire Anglican Communion is moving more and more into a farce. With meeting upon meeting and nothing decided at all; the only result has been greater divisions and greater tension. If the liberal wing of the Church are unwilling to back down then surely a time must come when we call an end to their ties with the Communion, because for sure their new doctrine entirely goes against all traditional Biblical teachings, and this is something that can never be compromised with.

Terence Downing, London

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