Posted on 05/05/2006 11:00:57 PM PDT by MadIvan
Schism fears revived as San Francisco church's election for a new bishop includes three candidates who live with gay partners
IT IS not an election that would normally attract world attention, but when a few hundred Christians gather to choose a new Episcopal Bishop of California today, millions around the globe will be watching.
The reason is simple. Three of the seven candidates are gay or lesbian, and live openly with their same-sex partners. If one of them wins, the victory could well fracture the Episcopal Church in America and trigger a schism in the worldwide Anglican Communion to which it belongs.
It would be like a terrorist bomb which is timed to destroy a peace process, says the Rev Paul Zahl, dean of the conservative Trinity Episcopal School for Ministry in Pennsylvania.
The peace process he refers to was made necessary by the Episcopal Churchs consecration, three years ago, of Gene Robinson as its first gay bishop.
That choice created ferment among the worlds 77 million Anglicans. It outraged conservatives, particularly in Africa, where the Church is growing fast but where homosexuality is taboo.
Today about 300 local clergy and 400 lay electors from 86 churches with 27,000 parishioners will gather in Grace Cathedral, on Nob Hill in San Francisco, to choose the next bishop for one of Americas most left-wing dioceses.
The candidates include the Very Rev Robert Taylor, the Rev Canon Michael Barlowe and the Rev Bonnie Perry all of whom are gay.
The election of a second gay bishop would create a crisis both inside the American Church which would have to decide whether to consent to the appointment and with fellow Anglicans around the world.
It would be seen as a rebuff for the Archbishop of Canterburys Windsor Report, which recommended a moratorium on such appointments, and to a special commission of the American church that has tried to defuse the issue by counselling very considerable caution.
The atmosphere is electric, Canon Kendall Harmon, of South Carolina, a leading church conservative who writes a widely read blog, said. If they were to choose a same-sex partnered candidate its so clearly a repudiation.
Ian Douglas, co-chairman of the 14-member special commission, predicted that electing a gay bishop would make Anglicans reconsider seriously the place of the American Episcopal Church in the 77 million-strong worldwide Communion.
It could not be let go by. It would provoke a response on the inter-Anglican level, Mr Douglas said. I can imagine some would be calling for out-and-out disenfranchisement of the Episcopal Church. The Rev John Kirkley, rector at predominantly gay St John the Evangelist Church in San Francisco and a leader of the Episcopal gay-rights group Oasis, sees a clash as inevitable. If it does not happen here, it s just going to happen somewhere else down the road, he said.
Episcopalians in the gay-friendly Bay area of the city find it hard to understand what the all the fuss is about.
The right of homosexuals to become bishops enjoys near universal support in the diocese where 8 per cent of parishioners identify themselves as gay, lesbian, bisexual or transgender. None of the four heterosexual candidates opposes gay bishops.
Arthur Holder, professor of Christian Spirituality at the Graduate Theological Union in Berkeley and one of the electors, noted that all the homosexual candidates were recognised leaders of the church. The focus on this one decision is absolutely understandable, he said. But this is how we live all the time.
Two of the non-gay candidates the Rt Rev Mark Andrus and the Rev Eugene Sutton were finding favour in the final hours before the vote, but there was still resentment at the Anglican hierarchys effort to prevent the diocese naming Americas second openly gay bishop.
Underneath, we all see this as the bad parent who says Im going to spank you if you do it. I really mean it this time!, says Rosa Lee Harden, rector of Holy Innocents church in San Franciscos gay-friendly Castro district, whose 15-strong congregation is evenly divided between gays and straights.
Whoever is elected today must receive the consent of the Episcopal Churchs general convention next month in Columbus, Ohio, before taking office.
The three-yearly convention is to take up a proposal calling for very considerable caution in selecting bishops with same-sex partners.
But it is far from clear that the convention would block Californias choice if the winner were a gay or lesbian person.
The frontrunner to become the new presiding bishop, who will be chosen at the meeting, is Bishop Neil Alexander, of Atlanta, an outspoken supporter of gays serving as bishops.
THE CANDIDATES
Bonnie Perry Rector of All Saints in Chicago. Certified kayak instructor and recreational tree climber who has introduced pet blessing ceremonies and offering champagne in the communion cup. Her partner of 18 years is Susan Harlow, a minister of the United Church of Christ and theology professor
Michael Barlowe: Diocesal officer in California added to shortlist by parishioners petition. Shares lifelong commitment to unconditional love with Paul Burrows, rector of an Episcopal church in San Francisco
Robert Taylor South African-born protege of Archbishop Desmond Tutu and first openly gay dean of an American cathedral, in Seattle. Enjoys the outdoors, exercise, music, reading and movies with his friend Jerry Smith
Mark Andrus Social justice activist and yoga-practising Bishop Suffragan in the Diocese of Alabama. Married with two children
Eugene Sutton Charismatic canon of the National Cathedral in Washington DC and the only black candidate. Wife is a professional musician. Four children
Jane Gould Rector of St Stephens Church in Massachusetts. Previously chaplain of Massachusetts Institute of Technology with history of anti-war protest dating back to Vietnam. Husband is a writer and teacher. Two children
Donald Schell Rector of St Gregory of Nyssa Church in San Francisco, added to shortlist by parishioners petition. Wife is an Aids activist. Four children
RIVAL VIEWS
It is my hope that the church in America and the rest of the Anglican Communion will have the opportunity to consider this development before significant and irrevocable decisions are made
Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr Rowan Williams
We are going against the created order. Same-sex relationships are not right, they are unbiblical and therefore sinful. We may be heading for a split
Bishop of Central Zambia, Derek Kamukwamba
I believe that the acceptance of gay and lesbian people into the life of the church is something that is going to happen. It will happen in Gods own time. The issue has to be faced
Gene Robinson, Americas first openly gay Bishop
Ooops. I forgot to say thanks for the great news.
"Screw the church. I want what I want."
My grandfather used to say, "Self denial is good for the soul."
He'd be appalled that church officials seem to be saying, "If it feels good, do it."
Regards, Ivan
I can't believe this person's disregard for the good of the church. That, alone, should get the person kicked out instead of ordained.
We live in an instant gratification society. Self-discipline is just not something that is cherished any longer. But it's loathsome that in a profession that demands a higher calling, that self-discipline cannot be exercised even then.
Regards, Ivan
Integrity's hailing the election.
Thanks for the headsup. The link below is very interesting.
http://www.integrityusa.org/press/2006-05-06.pdf
That's the one that got posted on TitusOneNine.
Good God, Almighty: -
Those who would totally destroy the tattered remnants of America's Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church seem Hell-bent in their spiralling attempts to catch up with the already reversed and rapidly repairing Romans down amorality's drain of degradation and degeneration.
Thank You, Dear Lord.
Amen.
BUMPping
I'm disappointed by the outcome. It just gives the cowardly conservative bishops more time to avoid showing some leadership.
,,, everthing's up for deconstruction.
Too bad a modern "education" skips history, theology, the ability to recognize, let alone to deal with, reality and/or Truth.
All of this notwithstanding it takes the time to teach the ignoramuses it clones to communicate in words of more than one sylable, the while instilling in every one of them delusions of his being "educated" and: -- this despite there are no absolutes, that everything is relative, his inclinations, base urges and behaviors are one and the same, religion and socialism, ditto, that his every somewhat successfully verbalized feeling is an "idea" -- and that she deserves to "run" things.
Into the ground.
And Judeo-Christian/Western/Human Civilization back into the Dark Ages.
God save us all.
I was kind of hoping they would elect a homosexual, that way we could finally have our schism. I strongly disapprove of a bishop living in an unmarried sexual relationship, and I believe only a man and a woman should be married, but is Vicky Gene really any worse than John Shelby Spong, who denies just about every tenet of the Christian faith from the pulpit? The guy is basically a Buddhist, and he's certainly not the only one. But all the attention goes to Vicky and his sisters.
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