CANADA: Primate responds to dissenting bishops
By ANDRÉ FORGET
http://www.anglicanjournal.com/articles/primate-responds-to-dissenting-bishops
October 3, 2016
In a written response to a statement issued by seven Canadian bishops expressing their dissent from General Synod's decision to move toward solemnizing same-sex marriages, Archbishop Fred Hiltz, primate of the Anglican Church of Canada, pushed back against several of the points they had raised.
While he affirmed the bishops' commitment to offer "pastoral care and loving service to all irrespective of sexual orientation," he noted that for many LGBTQ (Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Queer/Questioning) Anglicans, "pastoral care" would include the solemnization of their marriages--which the bishops have expressly said they will not do. "For me, my brothers, the question you ask is really a question for all members of the church. To what extent can we and will we make room for one another? To what extent will we pastorally accommodate one another?" Hiltz said in his letter.
Hiltz's response is dated August 5, but it became public following its distribution to the House of Bishops in advance of its September 22-27 meeting in Winnipeg. The Anglican Journal obtained a copy of the letter after a request was made to the primate's office.
Hiltz also challenged their claim that the resolution, which contains a conscience clause, "does not provide adequate protection for the consciences of dioceses, clergy and congregations." He asked the bishops to explain what such protection would look like, and how it would apply for those in their dioceses who are in favour of same-sex marriage.
He defended the process leading up to the same-sex marriage vote July 11, which narrowly passed the first of two readings (the second will take place in 2019) and took issue with the bishops' claim that the "entire process" leading up to the vote was "flawed," and had "inflicted terrible hurt and damage on all involved."
He argued that Council of General Synod (CoGS), which had been given responsibility for crafting the resolution allowing for the marriage of same-sex couples in the church after a resolution passed at General Synod 2013, had taken "considerable care" and done its work "thoroughly."
Hiltz added that, in his opinion, the discussion of the resolution at General Synod 2016 had been well-organized, with provisions made for those who wished to abstain from the vote altogether.
Hiltz also noted that though the vote itself, which was originally declared to have failed before being reversed the next day due to the discovery of an error, was "difficult," it had allowed many synod members to "experience the pain of another whose view on this matter is very different" in a "very powerful way."
The primate assured the bishops that the question of what the church should do pastorally, prophetically and structurally following the vote is one he is taking very seriously. He said he intends to publish the notes from small-group discussions on this subject that took place following the vote, and these would serve as the basis for further discussions at CoGS and House of Bishops.
But there were also points on which Hiltz concurred with the bishops.
He affirmed their condemnation of "homophobic prejudice and violence," and sympathized with their frustration over the use of a legislative process to make decisions about theological and pastoral issues. But while he stated his desire for "less confrontational, and less hurtful" ways of decision-making, he placed the onus on the bishops to delineate what that might look like.
He shared their concern over the decision made by some bishops to proceed with same-sex marriages ahead of 2019, but said he has "no canonical authority to prohibit bishops from taking such action." Hiltz said he would nonetheless "encourage a conversation in the House of Bishops about patience with the due process of General Synod..."
Hiltz also told the bishops he has spoken with the Archbishop of Canterbury, Justin Welby, about General Synod's decision and the concerns they have raised, and assured Welby that he would address the issue "as comprehensively as I can.
The dissenting bishops' statement was released July 15, just days after General Synod came to an end. It was signed by Bishop Stephen Andrews, of the diocese of Algoma; Bishop David Parsons, of the diocese of the Arctic, Suffragan Bishop Darren McCartney, also of the diocese of the Arctic; Bishop William Anderson, of the diocese of Caledonia; Bishop Larry Robertson, of the diocese of Yukon; Bishop Fraser Lawton, of the diocese of Athabasca; and Bishop Michael Hawkins of the diocese of Saskatchewan.
Bishop David Edwards, of the diocese of Fredericton, was not an original signatory, but he added his name to the statement later.
Efforts were made to contact several of the bishops who had signed, but at press time, none were willing to comment. Hawkins did, however, note that the signatories would issue a formal response in the coming year. In an interview, Hiltz said he was willing to meet with the bishops about their concerns.
*****
Seven bishops 'publicly dissent' from same-sex marriage vote
By TALI FOLKINS
http://www.anglicanjournal.com/
July, 15 2016
General Synod "erred grievously" in its approval, earlier this week, of a resolution allowing same-sex marriages, a group of seven bishops say.
In a statement released Friday, July 15, the bishops said they "publicly dissent" from the decision, which, they add, "imperils our full communion within the Anglican Church of Canada and with Anglicans throughout the world."
The statement, a copy of which was sent to the Anglican Journal, also called on the primate, Archbishop Fred Hiltz, and Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby "to seek ways to guarantee our place within the Anglican Church of Canada and the Anglican Communion."
Hiltz was not available for comment when contacted by the Journal.
The statement was signed by Bishop Stephen Andrews, of the diocese of Algoma; Bishop David Parsons, of the diocese of the Arctic, and Suffragan Bishop Darren McCartney, also of the diocese of the Arctic; Bishop Fraser Lawton, of the diocese of Athabasca; Bishop William Anderson, of the diocese of Caledonia; Bishop Michael Hawkins, of the diocese of Saskatchewan; and Bishop Larry Robertson, of the diocese of Yukon.
Twenty-six bishops, or 68.4%, voted in favour of the motion to change the church's marriage canon to allow for same-sex marriages, and 12 voted against.
In an interview with the Anglican Journal, Lawton said the bishops were concerned that "there may be a relearning of how we relate to one another, and that some things that were always givens may not be so now."
Asked to specify what he meant by this, Lawton replied, "I don't think at this point we can say much more than that. I think there will be a time of thinking deeply what the relationships are between perhaps Anglicans within Canada--bishops, dioceses, individuals--and it's an unknown at this point what that will look like."
In their statement, the bishops reaffirm their commitment to the Anglican Church of Canada, as well as to the Church Catholic and the Anglican Communion. They also reaffirm their commitment to "the scriptural, traditional and catholic definition of marriage as the lifelong union of one man and one woman as set out in both the Book of Common Prayer and the Book of Alternative Services."
The bishops declare that they "absolutely condemn homophobic prejudice and violence wherever it occurs, offer pastoral care and loving service to all irrespective of sexual orientation, and reject criminal sanctions against same-sex attracted people."
The statement begins with a declaration that "the entire process, beginning with the hasty vote in 2013 and concluding with the vote and miscount this week, has been flawed and inflicted terrible hurt and damage on all involved."
The bishops also say that the declared intentions on the part of some bishops to immediately proceed with same-sex marriages, before the required second vote on the resolution in 2019, is "contrary to the explicit doctrine and discipline set out in our constitution, canons and liturgies."
"That raises the question...why did we bother voting at all, if the decision was already made?" said Lawton. "There are a whole pile of pieces that cause some concern. We truly hope there's a way to address some of these as we look forward to 2019."
In passing the resolution, the dissenting bishops said, General Synod "has taken a further step in ordaining something contrary to God's Word written," in addition to endangering its relationship with the worldwide Anglican Communion.
In the aftermath of General Synod's vote, Lawton said, "It's clear there are some very different understandings around doctrine, around Scripture, around what it means to consult, around what it means to be a catholic church, what it means to engage with the process, what is the place of apostolic tradition...It puts on the table in quite a visible way that what we have always understood those relationships to be might now in fact be changing, and we don't know what that looks like. And that's true within Canada, but it also has that same impact on other members of the Communion, [and] with other members of the whole church."
The bishops say they do not believe the resolution in its current form provides enough protection for "the consciences of dioceses, clergy and congregations."
In particular, Lawton said, the bishops are concerned about congregations and clergy who don't agree with the decision, but may find themselves in dioceses that strongly support it.
"Do they have a place? What will be there for them?" Lawton asked.
Lawton said that they are asking the primate and the Archbishop of Canterbury for "concrete and real ways" that a good relationship could be forged between Anglicans who felt "marginalized and sidelined" and the rest of the church.
"Is there a sense that those who disagreed with the decision that was made are even welcome in the church anymore?" he asked. "It's one thing to make some statements, but the question is the action. So it's often been said, 'We want everyone at the table,' but for some time the responding question is 'Why?'
"If there's not going to be a true engagement and a true welcome, then it makes it pointless to pretend to participate in process."
Lawton also said, the entire House of Bishops noted in February that the legislative approach--a vote on an actual change to the marriage canon--by its nature "set us up essentially for an antagonistic environment."
Many people opposed to changing the canon, he said, felt sidelined by the lead-up to the vote. And the vote itself left questions unanswered for many people, he said.
"I don't think it went well, and I think it reflects badly on us," Lawton said. "There are just a whole pile of things that, in retrospect, don't make a whole lot of sense, and sadly, it leaves us in the place where I think a lot of people left thinking, 'What the heck happened?' "
END