A coalition of members of the Church of England in the Diocese of Chelmsford drawn from across the Anglo-Catholic, Charismatic and Evangelical traditions. This is a news blog, covering matters of general interest to Mainstream Anglicans, as well as the current crisis in the Anglican Communion. Maintained by Revd John Richardson
Saturday, 24 March 2007
Telegraph Opinion: It's all over for the Archbishop
If there is a Lambeth Conference next year – and it is hard to see how there can be, if its American bankrollers are kicked out – then I shall be very surprised if he presides over it. Read more
Friday, 23 March 2007
RC agencies could beat SORs
Agencies could continue to refuse to place children with gay couples if they stop taking money from the Government and become a private body, it has emerged. Read more
Back to Church Sunday
Back to Church Sunday website
From the Bishop of Chelmsford’s recent ad clerum:
“A number of dioceses have been supporting Back to Church Sunday with the advice of the Mission and Parish Development Advisory Group. We have decided to encourage support for this across the diocese. It has been a big success elsewhere and, I am told, is easy to do! This year 30 September has been designated as ‘Back to Church Sunday’. Lots of good resources will be available and Canon Penny Horseman and Barry Hobson have good experience of this initiative from which they will help us all.”
In the Berkshire Archdeaconry 600 people responded on 'Back to Church Sunday' in 2006. See this report from a local church. See also this article on the CofE website from 2006. The Wakefield Diocese has this information and also an ideas package. Derby Diocese has this page.
Other links include:
- Exeter Diocese
- A download from Peterborough Diocese.
- The All Saints Wokingham blog.
- A download from Southwark Diocese.
Ephraim Radner: No place left for Conservatives in TEC
Greg Venables: separation of TEC should come as soon as possible
Retired bishop to be tried by TEC court
In June 2005, Bishop Cox, 86, ordained two priests and a deacon at Christ Church in Overland Park, Kan., after he was asked by the Primate of Uganda. The following month, Bishop Cox returned to Christ Church and led a service of confirmation. Read more
Bishops Slammed as Just 3 Attend Crucial Lords Vote on Gay Regulations
In total 26 bishops automatically sit in on the House of Lords – a privilege which has come under media scrutiny over the past months – yet just 3 attended the vote; Christians across Britain have been left outraged by the meagre turn-out.
Anthony Archer, a Synod member of the Crown Nominations Committee had written to all 26 bishops encouraging them to vote against the Regulations (SORs), according to the Church of England newspaper. He reported that the 23 bishops had not helped justify their purpose for sitting in the House of Lords. Read more
Article (John Richardson): Llittle by little, freedom disappears
I am reminded how, in Nazi Germany, the persecution of the Jews originally seemed ‘acceptable’ even to some Jews. A little restriction here and a little inconvenience there was only an extension of what they were used to. Surely a compromise would eventually be reached?
Similarly, a recent survey has shown that Christians in the UK feel themselves to be discriminated against, at work, in the media and even in local government. But according to one episcopal spokesman this is only because they are more aware of things through the media, not because there is a real problem.
One day, perhaps soon, we will know who was right. Read more
Blair proud of gay rights record
Addressing campaign group Stonewall, Mr Blair said civil partnerships had had a "civilising effect" which reached beyond the gay community.
He said the first civil partnerships had given him a lot of pride and joy. Read more
Mugabe faces revolt from police and RC church
Under-18s who leave school to be fined
Teenagers starting secondary school next year will be the first to face fines or possible criminal prosecution if they fail to stay on in education or training until they are 18.
A Green Paper published by the Education Secretary Alan Johnson yesterday makes it clear £50 fixed penalty notices will be issued to drop-outs - with the threat of court proceedings if they fail to pay. Read more
Telegraph: Communion 'no more'
The American bishops have rejected Dr Rowan Williams's scheme - endorsed by Anglican primates in Tanzania last month - to create a traditionalist enclave for conservatives opposed to liberal bishops. They are also unlikely to promise not to enthrone any more homosexual bishops or bless same-sex unions.
And they have set out their opinions in stinging language: not only is the Archbishop accused of promoting a "spiritually unsound" project, but it is also implied that he is behaving like a British colonialist. Read more
David Virtue: Who will blink first?
Church Times: US bishops wish ‘passionately’ to stay in Communion
Meeting in Texas this week, they declared their “passionate desire” to remain in full constituent membership of the Anglican Communion and the Episcopal Church in the United States, as part of a family of Churches “all of whom share a common mother in the Church of England”. Read more
Gay People's Chronicle: Episcopal bishops reject Anglican leaders' ultimatum
That statement, part of a resolution released by a private meeting of the House of Bishops of the Episcopal Church on March 20, may be the “shot heard ’round the world” about the church’s pro-gay stances.
It could result in a lessening of the U.S. church’s role in the Anglican Communion, the worldwide body of national churches that grew out of King Henry VIII’s Church of England, or in a complete separation. Read more
Bishops comment on invitation to Archbishop of Canterbury, other actions
"I think that the bishops of the Episcopal Church very much want Rowan Williams and the members of the Primates' Standing Committee to hear directly from us about our concern for all members of this church, those we agree with theologically and those with whom we disagree, gay and lesbian members of our church and those who find it difficult to countenance blessing unions or ordaining gay and lesbian people. Read more
Cameron: 'I don't have a direct line to God'
The Conservative leader, who plans to send his daughter to a local Church of England faith school near his west London home, said his faith was a "very private thing". "I am a participating member of the Church of England. I'll put it that way.
"I have a faith, it's important, but not something I wear on my sleeve. I've always said I believe in God, but I don't think I have a direct line," he told the Jewish Chronicle. Mr Cameron underlined his support for faith schools, saying they played an important role in the community. Read more
Charities pay price of cut in tax base rate
Charities' groups said they would be talking to the Treasury to try to find a way out of the problem.
Charities reclaim about £625 million a year at the 22 per cent basic rate of income tax through the gift aid system. The cut to 20 per cent could see this fall to £554 million.
Oxfam will lose £1.8 million a year while the bill is likely to leave the Church of England up to £7 million out of pocket. Read more
Thursday, 22 March 2007
How about this for an anti-knife campaign slogan?
(Ed: I hope no-one is offended by this! I take the view that changing the knife-carrying culture may need to dispel the admiration of knife-carriers as tough.)
LGCM: 'Canterbury appeasement has collapsed'
In three resolutions passed by the House of Bishops dated 20th March 2007 the bishops urge the Executive Council of the Episcopal Church (the body with overall power between their triennial Conventions) to reject the requests of the Primates of the Anglican Communion for a new Pastoral Scheme in their Church to cater for a dissident minority within TEC. Read more
Sydney Anglicans' warning on Greens' support for gays
The diocese has taken issue with the Greens' support for laws permitting civil unions for same-sex and transgender couples and the party's pledge to prevent private schools and religious organisations discriminating against workers. Read more
3 out of 26 bishops voted on SORs
Forty-two lay members of the Church of England's General Synod wrote to the bishops last week urging them to turn up and vote against the SORs.
In the end, even if all the bishops had voted, it would not have changed the result. Read more
TEC House of Bishops opposes divorce, supports permanence in marriage
Read the full statement here.
Ed: Yes, I know I've made this point before, but I just thought I'd have some fun highlighting the nonsense TEC's HoB is prepared to spout in their own defence. Gene Robinson's once-divorced once-re-partnered record pales into insignificance compared with the Bishop of North Carolina's twice-divorced thrice-married track record.
14-year olds given condoms at school
Times: Anglicans closer to schism as US bishops reject gay ultimatum
Guardian: US rejects Anglican ultimatum
SORs represent 'imposition of a new morality'
It is a clear sign that despite saying they were going to consult and listen the Government has failed to respect the consciences of citizens whose values are formed and shaped by their deeply held religious beliefs, be they Christian, Muslim or Jewish. This could have been easily resolved by a simple conscience clause. Read more
Sentamu speaks in Lords against SORs
I, like William Wilberforce, fear that “The time is fast approaching when Christianity will be openly disavowed, in language as in fact it is already supposed to have disappeared from the conduct of men: when to believe will be deemed the indication of a feeble mind and contracted understanding.” Read more
Roy Hattersley calls for disestablishment
Open Evangelical says Church of England should be 'more than evangelical but not less'
Wednesday, 21 March 2007
Episcopalians brace for possible church split
The bishops were to hold a 1:30 p.m. PDT news conference today to explain Tuesday's decision to refuse a demand by Anglican leaders that they provide a special vicar for orthodox congregations and dioceses that oppose the Episcopal Church's positions on issues of homosexuality and biblical teaching. The Episcopal Church is the American branch of the worldwide Anglican Communion, the world's third-largest Christian denomination with 77 million members.
The bishops, who have been meeting privately in a retreat near Houston this week, also requested an urgent meeting with Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams, the spiritual head of the Anglican Communion. Read more
Integrity USA applauds TEC bishops' "strong stand" against the Anglican Primates'
Gene Robinson on the rejection of the Primatial Vicar
Schools set to vaccinate pupils against sexually-transmitted diseases
Three would tackle sexually-transmitted infections, which critics claimed could encourage even more risky sexual behaviour. Read more
Human Rights court censures Poland for denying 'abortion rights'
The Strasbourg-based court awarded damages to Alicia Tysiac, 35, a single mother of three from Warsaw who is nearly blind. She sued the Polish government after being denied an abortion in 2000 despite medical testimony that her pregnancy would seriously impair her failing eyesight. Read more
Letter to the Times on SORs
TEC bishops request meeting with Archbishop of Canterbury, Primates' Standing Committee
The request came as the second of three "mind of the house" resolutions adopted by the bishops on March 20. The resolutions [full texts here] were debated during the business session scheduled during the House of Bishops' annual spring retreat meeting. Read more
Gay adoption vote due for Lords
Church leaders say Parliament has not had enough time to debate the changes, part of the new Equality Act. Read more
Bishops Reject Primates' 'Ultimatum'
"The real cultural phenomenon that threatens the spiritual life of our people, including marriage and family life, is the ease with which we choose to break our relationships and the vows that established them rather than seek the transformative power of the Gospel in them."
This from a House which contains a number of divorced people, not least Gene Robinson himself. Await a suitable act of contrition - not.
The House of Bishops has declined to participate in a pastoral initiative designed by the primates to care for congregations and dioceses which for reasons of conscience cannot accept the episcopal ministry of their bishop or primate.
“We understand that the present situation requires intentional care for those within our Church who find themselves in conscientious disagreement with the actions of our General Convention,” the bishops said. “We pledge ourselves to continue to work with them toward a workable arrangement. In truth, the number of those who seek to divide our Church is small, and our Church is marked by encouraging signs of life and hope.” Read more
Tuesday, 20 March 2007
March 25 is Freedom Day in Chelmsford Cathedral
The Cathedral choir will sing spirituals together with music written by talented musicians who were freed slaves. Read more
Gay adoption rules 'rail-roaded' through parliament
Some Tory MPs criticised the "unseemly haste" with which ministers sought to pass regulations through Parliament. Read more
Ancient creatures are 'evolutionary scandal'
Sex is not just important for reproduction - it helps scramble genes much more quickly than random DNA mutations and helps new species to evolve and emerge as the environment changes.
But there here is one ugly fact in the way of this beautiful theory: the bdelloid rotifers, a strange group of translucent organisms that abandoned sex long ago, a state of affairs once denounced as an “evolutionary scandal’ by the late and great biologist Prof John Maynard Smith. Read more
Florida Bishop rejects Panel of Reference peace move
The report, which was released to the public on March 16, called for Church of the Redeemer to return to the oversight of Bishop Howard and to active participation in the fiscal and corporate life of the diocese. In return, Bishop Howard was asked to lift canonical sanctions against the clergy, end litigation, and permit alternate episcopal oversight for the parish from a neighboring Episcopal bishop acceptable to both the parish and the diocese. Read more
Chaplain's priority is listening to workers
Industrial chaplains visit or are based in places where people work, and they can be found not only on the shopfloor, but at airports, court buildings and even Premiership football clubs.
Their job is simple - to provide workers with the chance to talk confidentially about job-related or personal problems. Some even sit in on meetings with employees and their bosses. Read more
American money preventing Anglican split
The truth is, the Episcopal Church bankrolls much of the Communion’s operations. And a cutoff of that money, while unlikely at this time, could deal the Communion a devastating blow. Read more
Sunday, 18 March 2007
Changing Attitude report suggested 'sex is for friends'
This inclusive approach to current manifestations of new patterns of intimacy and visible sexual lifestyles in the West implies a belief in the continuing revelation of sexual truths by the Holy Spirit. This is our eschatological connection, via our recognition of the provisional nature and developing forms of human sexuality until all is gathered up at the Parousia.
We consider that the evident difficulty of the religious ‘right’ (both catholic and protestant) in accepting that LGBT sexualities are God-given must be more to do with historical attitudes in our cultural traditions and with individual and social prejudice than with discerning the movement of the Holy Spirit in our times. Fundamentalist adherence to selective and literalist interpretations of scriptural texts about sexual behaviour seem to stem from fear of what might follow if the validity of sexual relationships outside marriage was accepted by the churches; a major consequence might be the final collapse of any rationale for insisting that the letter of scripture can be used like a rule book.
[...]
There is often an implicit assumption in using the words ‘faithfulness’ and ‘commitment’ in this discussion that we are always talking about sexual relationships persisting over a long period of time. And of course time provides the vital conditions for development, change and growth. To be committed is to take things seriously. It is to say ‘Tomorrow I will be here as well as today, which means that we have time. Time for facing up to the reality of each other. I am not going to run away (from you or myself).’ However, the biblical theme is primarily about the overwhelming demand to remain faithful to our covenantal relationship with God through the Spirit (which, as the gospels warn, may challenge conventional family obligations)Thus while it is clear to us as LGBTs when we survey the gay scene, and indeed much of contemporary social life, that casual sex can often be addictive and destructive, we think it is important to remain open to the possibility that brief and loving sexual engagement between mature adults in special circumstances can be occasions of grace. Risky, but then as Paul Tillich said ‘A Christian is safest taking risks!’
The exploration of our sexual selves can be something which benefits from involvement with more than one person. Sexual involvement does not necessarily involve any greater psychic risk to a person than does emotional involvement (though the two are deeply intertwined). We recognise that people fall in love, become involved, get hurt, experience love not reciprocated or mutuality achieved. All this is an inevitable and appropriate part of the process of finding a life partner; becoming sexually involved can be part of the process and may well cause less damage and pain than the emotional dimension.
[...]
A ‘friendship’ matrix might look like this:-
• Friendship with self as the fundamental building block of all relating. Religious and mystical traditions tend to locate our basic connection with the divine here. Self-pleasuring, sexual and otherwise, is an integral element.
• Friendships with individuals. All friendships rely on a certain amount of trust, creativity and mutual benefit to persist. In this sense they can be seen as covenantal. As marriage includes a legal contract, other forms of partnership, including same-sex arrangements,might involve public and/or legal commitments. There is a strong case for this around child rearing, and the civil rights movement has established a further range of compelling grounds for legislative changes now in prospect. All friendships probably use erotic energy. Whether or not they include sexual expression is a matter for the discretion of those concerned, based on the complex of considerations we outline below – particularly balancing the destructiveness of sexual jealousy against the enriching potential of variety.
• Friendship as group membership. Groups may be informal, perhaps sharing an interest; for the young, gangs often express this urge to belong. Groups can exert a very powerful emotional hold and rely on the same covenantal virtues to continue as positive influences. Often groups have a more or less recognised erotic charge, e.g. sports teams. Structured groups are often part of life at schools, colleges, churches, work places, pubs, clubs etc. Sexual relationships that develop via group involvements would also be measured against the ‘Rights and Wrongs’ below
• Friendship expressed through commitment to causes, professions and passionate interests. At first sight this level might seem a bit abstract to be subsumed under friendship. However this is the mode through which a celibate priesthood has been expected to sublimate and to invest sexual energy. Same-sex communities harness the same erotic dimension. Membership of professional bodies typically involves assent to codes of conduct that echo ‘covenantal’ principles.
• Friendship with God. The various christian traditions would emphasise the importance of different points in the above matrix for our encounter with the offer of God’s friendship. Our view is that it is helpful to think of relating to God’s friendly otherness through the mediation of all these modes of friendship together – holistically, in fact.
[...]
Ethical sexual relations should involve:-
• Respect for the integrity of self and others, i.e. free consent to sex; no serious physical hurt or harm; understanding and use of safe sex.
• Consideration for the cultural background of others and where they are coming from. This includes the balance of relative power and control between men and women, and between different age groups, as well as ethnic, national considerations, etc..
• Sensitivity to the role of power in sex. Thus it is always the adult’s responsibility to hold and respect the boundary which outlaws sex with children; the customary prohibited degrees of incest are also a protection against the sexual abuse of power in the family.
• Realistic assessment of any consequences of starting a new sexual relationship on existing commitments of both parties. Respect for existing partnerships and friendships. A realistic assessment of the likely effects of the jealousy factor on all involved.
• As much honesty and clarity as possible about intention and freedom to act of both parties, especially where dependents are involved.
• Recognition of the significance of practicalities like time, money, location, health, etc.
• Respect for the secular law, and for prevailing social norms.
Download the full document.
UK Christians feel discriminated against
Poll results here.
'Disestablish Church' says Carey
Where is our Orwell, where is our Dickens?
The madness of the mortgage market
The sexual health map of our cities
The map, produced using a borough-by-borough breakdown of sexually transmitted diseases around England, charts the rise of diseases such as chlamydia and genital warts and shows big rises across the country.
The figures show that the London borough of Camden is also the chlamydia capital of England, while Liverpool leads the country in genital warts. The breakdown reveals near epidemic levels in some areas. Read more
My Homosexual Agenda is Jesus, Bishop Declares
During a panel discussion hosted Wednesday by the Washington Region for Justice and Inclusion in Washington, D.C., Robinson said "you see a mainline denomination risking its life for some people on the margins."
"It is my great privilege to be a small part of that," he added. Read more
Gay bishop says coming out is God at work
At a public meeting in Washington DC Bishop Robinson claimed that of the nearly 8000 parishes in the American Episcopal Church, only 47 have sought guidance from outside bishops after his ordination.
"If you want to know my homosexual agenda, it's Jesus," Bishop Robinson said, according to crosswalk.com Read more
Church to study rural role
Church of England's First Sport Ambassador Appointed
25-year-old rugby player Tim Friend, with a passion for sharing his faith, is currently working in Gloucestershire in a youth sports ministry role for an ecumenical church project, which will take up the new post on 1 January 2008.
Friend will be the first Sport Ambassador for the Church of England, backed by a special Mission Fund set up by the diocese. Read more
Church of Sweden Open to Gay 'Marriage' Ceremonies
Since 1994, Sweden has recognized civil unions between homosexual couples, but marriage in the traditional sense has remained illegal. On Wednesday next week, however, a government-appointed committee will present a report on whether the law allowing civil unions between homosexuals should be changed to also include marriage. Read more
'Three Little Pigs' Returns to Church of England School
Due to the multi-cultural nature of the youngsters involved and their parents in the audience, organisers of the Kirklees Primary Music Festival event have previously altered the popular characters and lyrics.
The original plan was to change the pig tale to ‘Three Little Puppies’.
Now Kirklees Council has stepped in to allow the pigs a reprieve, the BBC reports. Read more
Swedish bishops say yes to gay church weddings
"We are prepared to carry out partnerships for homosexuals that have the force of law," said Bishop Claes-Bertil Ytterberg of the church's Västerås diocese. Read more