Posted on 07/08/2004 7:55:20 PM PDT by ahadams2
Tensions hit Eames Commission
Number: 5725 Date: July 8,
In the wake of claims that the Eames Commission has excluded the voices of gays and lesbians from its deliberations [CEN June 27] comes new word that internal tensions centering round its Steering Committee and staff may divide the Commission.
Some members object to a perceived pursuit by the Commissions Steering Committee of enlightened expediency at the expense of truth. Non-Western members of the Commission are troubled that the steering committee has privileged a European worldview that allows canon law to trump doctrine.
Some Commission members are also concerned that the ACC staff will manipulate the proceedings. On Oct 2, The Church of England Newspaper reported that a memorandum to the Archbishop of Canterbury prepared by an ACC staffer, argued that it was imperative that the will of the majority of Primates be frustrated in their plans to discipline the Episcopal Church and diocese of New Westminster, Canada.
ACC staffers inadvertently gave Dr Paul Zahl, a member of the Inter Anglican Theological and Doctrinal Commission and Dean of the Cathedral of the Advent in Birmingham, Alabama, a copy of the memo. Dr Zahl told us the memo argued, the conservatives and the Americans will try to get their way by making a lot of fuss, but we must resist at all costs listening to that". Some Commission members are wary that a similar attempt will be made to frustrate their work.
The members of the steering committee are Archbishop Eames, his two legal advisors, the Rev. John Rees and Dr. Norman Doe, and the commission secretary, Canon Gregory Cameron, who is one of three finalists to replace the Rev Canon John L Peterson as Secretary General of the Anglican Consultative Council.
Canon Camerons May 29 address to the 37th General Synod of the Anglican Church of Canada on behalf of the commission surprised many of its members, as they had not been briefed about the speech before its presentation. Canon Cameron offered a stark choice to Synod: If you say no to the motions before you, [authorising same-sex blessings] then you will be in danger of letting down the thousands of gay people in your midst, who are part of your Canadian family.
But if you say yes, the work of the Lambeth Commission becomes horribly complicated, because we will be told that the Anglican Church of Canada refuses to hear the voice, or to heed the concerns of your fellow Anglicans in the growing Provinces of the Global South, who are your international family.
Canon Camerons speech drew mixed responses as some were disconcerted by the curt tone of the speech while others were annoyed by the usurpation of the Commissions prerogatives by its staff.
Archbishop Eames press officer, the Rev Brian Parker, said reports of tensions between the staff and members have been overstated. Bishop Tom Wright of Durham, while declining to discuss the internal workings of the Commission, confirmed to us that the second plenary session had been very frank, very friendly, very cordial and hard-working.
Canon Cameron was authorized to speak to the Canadian General Synod by the chair and steering committee, Mr Parker told us. The words were his own but the broad outline was discussed at the steering committee.
Ping.
The ACC would like to be the "Roman Curia" of the Anglican Communion. They try to operate in the same way: attempting to usurp the excercise of an authority that Christ gave to His Apostles and their successors *not* to a gang of bureaucrats.
The Primates are not stupid, and they learned a valuable lesson last time they met at Lambeth. They will not allow the ACC to hijack their place in the Church. If Peterson and his henchmen think they can pull that off, they will be rudely awakened. Playing politics will not make the problem go away.
Just wanted to thank you for keeping me on the Episcopal ping list. There doesn't seem to be much to say now, but I like to keep up with what's going on.
peterson & co very much do believe they can pull that sort of thing off, and the way to stop them will be through repeated open confrontation.
Yes, and Archbp Akinola is ably up to the task.
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