Posted on 07/03/2005 8:17:44 AM PDT by sionnsar
Along with the Episcopal Church, the Anglican Church of Canada met with censure after presentations to the Anglican Consultative Council regarding the two provinces recent innovations with respect to homosexuality. Canadas Primate, Archbishop Andrew Hutchison, was ill and unable to deliver an informal series of speeches and discussions exploring the current crisis within the Anglican Communion which was scheduled the week after the ACC presentation.
Instead, the Ven. Paul Feheley, principal secretary to Archbishop Hutchison, delivered the speeches by proxy. He reported that the majority of the Communion wants us to admit that weve made a horrible mistake, say weve been bad children, go to the corner, and promise never to do it again.
In contrast to narrow consensus at ACC-13, in his speeches to divinity alumni from the University of Trinity College, Toronto, Archbishop Hutchison suggested the possibility that at least some of the ACC delegates had been motivated by a global perception of North American arrogance, concluding that the issue could be more about power than scripture and doctrine.
Listening to the debate, one would have thought that there were no homosexuals in Africa or Asia, that only the United States and Canada had been struggling with this, Archdeacon Feheley said. But we know that isnt true.
The lack of openness about sexuality, both in North America and the world, became one of the central themes of the conference, which was titled The Ties That Bind. The three-day event was attended by 80 graduates, mostly from Canada but also including individuals from the United States and Great Britain.
While much of the international discussion has focused on the actions of the American and Canadian churches as breaches of communion, the conference expressed a different opinion as it explored the issue from June 27-29. Referring to the refusal of some primates, meeting in Northern Ireland last February, to attend the closing Eucharist, one attendee asked, Whos out of communion with whom? They wouldnt even sit in the same chapel with us.
Archbishop Michael Peers, a retired primate, said he would rather be part of a church that debates whether this is doctrine or not doctrine, whether this is church dividing or not church dividing than be part of a church that says, We fear this may be church dividing, and therefore you shall not talk about it.
After two and a half days of speeches, worship, open discussions and small-group work, the conference recorded its conversation in a statement of consensus. The thrust of that statement, titled A Responsible Place at the Table, was a call to remain in communion while respecting differing points of view and accepting that conflict is part of reality.
- Aaron Orear
To read the complete statement produced at the conference, click here.
Click here to read the Globe and Mail account of the conference.
What part of the word "abomination" do they not understand?
Maybe their bible is missing a few pages?
1Corithians 6:9-10: "Know ye not that the unrighteous shall not inherit the kingdom of God? Be not deceived: neither fornicators, nor idolaters, nor adulterers, nor effeminate, nor abusers of themselves with mankind, Nor thieves, nor covetous, nor drunkards, nor revilers, nor extortioners, shall inherit the kingdom of God."
" The Ties That Bind. "
Great... they're into bondage. *eyeroll*
Seriously, when the conference is about sexual perversions, can't they come up with a title that isn't a reference to sexual perversions?
Ironically that's the point... once you start down that road there's nothing that can't get sucked down with it.
Boy, I'm all out of entendres for today!
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