Anglican leaders on Thursday
temporarily restricted the role of the U.S. Episcopal Church in their
global fellowship as a sanction over
the American church's acceptance of gay marriage.
Anglicans, whose roots are in the missionary
work of the Church of England, are the third-largest grouping of
Christians in the world, behind Roman Catholics and the Orthodox.
The fellowship has been fracturing for decades over gay relationships, women's ordination and other issues. Those rifts blew wide open in 2003 when the New York-based Episcopal Church consecrated the first openly gay bishop, Gene Robinson, in New Hampshire. Last year, the top U.S. Episcopal legislative body, or General Convention, voted to authorize gay marriages in their churches.
the American church's acceptance of gay marriage.
Episcopalians
have been barred for three years from any policy-setting positions in
the Anglican Communion while a task force is formed that will try to
reconcile conflicting views over sexuality in the 85-million-member
family of churches. The Episcopal Church is the Anglican body in the
United States.
The
announcement came near the end of a weeklong meeting in Canterbury,
England, called by Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby, to heal rifts
over same-sex relationships and keep the Anglican Communion from
splitting apart. Welby, the Anglican spiritual leader, does not have the
authority to force a compromise. He set a news conference Friday in
Canterbury to explain the leaders' decision.
Episcopal
Presiding Bishop Michael Curry, who attended the meeting, told the
other leaders their vote "will bring real pain" to gays and lesbians and
to Episcopalians "committed to following Jesus in the way of love and
being a church that lives that love." Still, he said he was committed to
the Anglican family.
The
Global Anglican Future Conference, which represents theologically
conservative Anglican leaders worldwide, had sought sanctions against
the U.S. church, and some members said they would walk out of this
week's meeting unless some penalty was applied. One leader, Ugandan
Archbishop Stanley Ntagali, did so. In a statement Thursday, the
conference known as GAFCON said their leaders were pleased by the
outcome of the meeting, but "this action must not be seen as an end, but
as a beginning."
The fellowship has been fracturing for decades over gay relationships, women's ordination and other issues. Those rifts blew wide open in 2003 when the New York-based Episcopal Church consecrated the first openly gay bishop, Gene Robinson, in New Hampshire. Last year, the top U.S. Episcopal legislative body, or General Convention, voted to authorize gay marriages in their churches.
The
most vocal protests to the Episcopal embrace of gay rights came from
Africa, home to some of the fastest-growing churches in the Anglican
communion and the deepest opposition to gay relationships as a violation
of Scripture. Many African countries have criminalized gay
relationships.
Theological
conservatives from around the world joined together to form the Global
Anglican Future Conference as a fellowship within the communion,
distancing themselves from the U.S. Episcopal Church and refusing to
participate in some Anglican gatherings.
In
2009, Anglican national leaders in Nigeria, Kenya, Uganda and other
church provinces helped create the Anglican Church in North America, as a
theologically conservative alternative to the U.S. Episcopal Church.
Welby had invited the leader of the conservative North American body to
participate in the Canterbury assembly.
The
press office for the Anglican leaders in Canterbury said the statement
released Thursday affirmed the leaders' "unanimous commitment to walk
together." The statement acknowledged "deep differences" over
understanding of marriage and said the majority in the meeting
"reaffirm" the teaching that marriage is only the union of a man and a
woman. The leaders called the Episcopal Church approval of gay marriage
"a fundamental departure from the faith and teaching" of the majority of
Anglicans.
As a result,
Episcopalians "no longer represent us on ecumenical and interfaith
bodies," and have the equivalent of observer status in Anglican
commissions, the leaders said.
Robinson,
in response, posted on his Twitter account, "God's judgment against
those who include too many will be less harsh than the judgment against
those who include too few."
While
the U.S. Episcopal Church is alone among Anglican provinces in
approving gay marriage, other Anglican national churches, in Brazil,
South Africa, New Zealand and Scotland, have taken steps toward
accepting same-sex relationships. The top body of the Anglican Church of
Canada is scheduled to vote in July on a proposal that would authorize
gay marriage. A spokeswoman for the Canadian church said its leader,
Archbishop Fred Hiltz, would comment after the news conference Friday.
Source: AP
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