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Liberal Bishop Reflects On HOB Kanuga Meeting
VirtueOnline-News ^ | 3/28/2006 | The Rt. Rev. Kirk Steven Smith

Posted on 03/29/2006 6:31:24 PM PST by sionnsar

A LIBERAL BISHOP RELFECTS ON HOB MEETING IN KANUGA
Are the liberals blinking?

by Kirk Steven Smith

Sitting in the airport, waiting to catch a plane back to Phoenix from the North Carolina House of Bishops meeting gives me a chance to add my own unofficial "Word to the Church" as an introduction to the official published document, which I have included below in case you have not already seen it.

There were several large and important issues we dealt with at this meeting. We were very much aware that many in our own country, not to mention the wider Anglican Communion, were waiting to see how we would react to the Windsor Report on the eve of our June General Convention. You will note the mention, in the "Word to the Church" document, of the Special Commission on the Anglican Communion. Although this Commission did not give us a written report (that will be published in a few weeks), it did outline several recommendations, which will take the form of resolutions at General Convention.

From my perspective, these resolutions represent an endorsement of the Windsor Report and express a clear desire not to do anything that would further jeopardize our standing with the rest of the Communion.

The resolutions, which I also expect will pass in June, I would sum up as follows-and these are my own words as nothing is official at this point:

1. A restatement of our commitment to the Communion and the leadership of the Archbishop of Canterbury; an endorsement of the Windsor process as the way forward for all of us.

2. An invitation that representatives from the wider Communion join us on our national standing committees.

3. An expression of "repentance" (and that is the word used rather than "regret") for actions of our church, which have caused pain to the wider Communion.

4. An encouragement of "very considerable caution" in electing future bishops whose "acceptability poses a challenge" to the Communion, until a wider consensus emerges.

5. A call for a wide breadth of responses and pastoral care to the needs of homosexual people. However, the authorization of same sex unions is to be put on hold "until a broader consensus emerges in Communion." Bishops who have authorized such are to apologize for their actions.

6. A commitment to the care of all people, especially those who dissent with the decisions of the national church and thus feel marginalized. The provisions of DEPO (Delegated Episcopal Oversight) are to be revised.

7. A call to strictly enforce the ancient rule of bishops respecting the boundaries of other dioceses.

8. Urge the adoption of the Millennium Development Goal of .7% of income given by all parishes and dioceses to the needs of the developing world.

9. A recommitment to a grass roots listening process in which there would be face-to- face interchange of leaders of the Communion. The work of the Anglican Consultation of Women is given as a model for this.

10. Strong support of international human rights for gay men and women.

I think one might say this represents a "go slow" approach for our church. Without backing away from decisions we have made, it is nonetheless a clear message that we will work to conform to the requests of the majority of the Anglican Communion as expressed in the Windsor Report.

I know that some of you will have questions about my point. There are at present three openly gay candidates (out of six) for the next Bishop of California to be elected in May. If one of them should be elected, consent would have to be given at the June General Convention.

In that scenario, and given the mood of this meeting, my sense is that those consents would not be forth-coming from a majority of the bishops.

Although the response to the Windsor Report was the main focus of attention, the HOB did a lot of other good work. We got to hear from the seven candidates for the next Presiding Bishop. My personal observation is that there is no clear choice at this point. We also issued a pastoral letter on racism, and, of special note to Arizonans, we rejected any legislation that would make humanitarian aid to immigrants a crime. As our communications officer pointed out, we are more likely to get press coverage for that action than anything else we did!

Amidst all of this work-and it was a lot of work-we had time for a day-long silent retreat led by Frank Griswold, who will be stepping down as Presiding Bishop after 9 years. We honored him at a roast on the last night of the meeting.

We also had two reports on the effects of Katrina by the bishops of Louisiana and Mississippi. They were heartwarming in their accounts of the tremendous generosity of the church, but also heartrending in telling of the work that is yet to be done.

But their reports gave us all a great example of the church at its best. This was pointed out by the visiting English Bishop of Exeter in his remarks to us: "If there was just one thing I could carry away from all the words that have been uttered in this room this week, it would be the testimony of the Bishop of Mississippi, 'We have discovered something of brokenness, when all your walls are broken down, grace abounds.'

In the context of the Anglican Communion and hope for its future, I want to say Amen to that."

In 2004 a lay chaplain for the Episcopal Canterbury Fellowship at Northern Arizona University (NAU) resigned her position rather than compromise her theological convictions. Linda Radosevich described herself as a "faithful dissident" who was left with no choice but to resign after the Bishop Coadjutor of Arizona, Kirk Smith, insisted she "modify her position" regarding the crisis in the Episcopal Church following the consecration of V. Gene Robinson.

---The Rt. Rev. Kirk Steven Smith is Bishop of Arizona


TOPICS: Mainline Protestant
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1 posted on 03/29/2006 6:31:25 PM PST by sionnsar
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To: ahadams2; axegrinder; AnalogReigns; Uriah_lost; Condor 63; Fractal Trader; Zero Sum; ...
Traditional Anglican ping, continued in memory of its founder Arlin Adams.

FReepmail sionnsar if you want on or off this moderately high-volume ping list (typically 3-9 pings/day).
This list is pinged by sionnsar, Huber and newheart.

Resource for Traditional Anglicans: http://trad-anglican.faithweb.com
More articles here.

Humor: The Anglican Blue (by Huber)

Speak the truth in love. Eph 4:15

2 posted on 03/29/2006 6:31:52 PM PST by sionnsar (†trad-anglican.faithweb.com† | Libs: Celebrate MY diversity! | Iran Azadi 2006)
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To: sionnsar
4. An encouragement of "very considerable caution" in electing future bishops whose "acceptability poses a challenge" to the Communion, until a wider consensus emerges.

Thank heavens that with the Magisterium, Tradition and The Bible, we Roman Catholics will not have to worry about "a wider consensus emerging". I would think that Luther and King Henry VIII would roll over in their graves if they could hear what is happening to major Christian Churches. It seems outrageous to me that an immoral society will have the final answer in what is right or wrong in the churches. Where is the Bible? Are we not taught to love the sinner BUT HATE THE SIN?
3 posted on 03/29/2006 10:06:15 PM PST by mckenzie7 (Parenthood is a gift)
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