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N.T. Wright: The Americans know this will end in schism
Posted: 14 July 2009 05:40 PM   [ Ignore ]  
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Channel: Times (UK)
Author: The Rt. Rev’d N.T. Wright

In the slow-moving train crash of international Anglicanism, a decision taken in California has finally brought a large coach off the rails altogether. The House of Bishops of the Episcopal Church (TEC) in the United States has voted decisively to allow in principle the appointment, to all orders of ministry, of persons in active same-sex relationships. This marks a clear break with the rest of the Anglican Communion.

Both the bishops and deputies (lay and clergy) of TEC knew exactly what they were doing. They were telling the Archbishop of Canterbury and the other “instruments of communion” that they were ignoring their plea for a moratorium on consecrating practising homosexuals as bishops. They were rejecting the two things the Archbishop of Canterbury has named as the pathway to the future — the Windsor Report (2004) and the proposed Covenant (whose aim is to provide a modus operandi for the Anglican Communion). They were formalising the schism they initiated six years ago when they consecrated as bishop a divorced man in an active same-sex relationship, against the Primates’ unanimous statement that this would “tear the fabric of the Communion at its deepest level”. In Windsor’s language, they have chosen to “walk apart”.

Granted, the TEC resolution indicates a strong willingness to remain within the Anglican Communion. But saying “we want to stay in, but we insist on rewriting the rules” is cynical double-think. We should not be fooled.

Of course, matters didn’t begin with the consecration of Gene Robinson. The floodgates opened several years before, particularly in 1996 when a church court acquitted a bishop who had ordained active homosexuals. Many in TEC have long embraced a theology in which chastity, as universally understood by the wider Christian tradition, has been optional.

That wider tradition always was counter-cultural as well as counter-intuitive. Our supposedly selfish genes crave a variety of sexual possibilities. But Jewish, Christian and Muslim teachers have always insisted that lifelong man-plus-woman marriage is the proper context for sexual intercourse. This is not (as is frequently suggested) an arbitrary rule, dualistic in overtone and killjoy in intention. It is a deep structural reflection of the belief in a creator God who has entered into covenant both with his creation and with his people (who carry forward his purposes for that creation).

Paganism ancient and modern has always found this ethic, and this belief, ridiculous and incredible. But the biblical witness is scarcely confined, as the shrill leader in yesterday’s Times suggests, to a few verses in St Paul. Jesus’s own stern denunciation of sexual immorality would certainly have carried, to his hearers, a clear implied rejection of all sexual behaviour outside heterosexual monogamy. This isn’t a matter of “private response to Scripture” but of the uniform teaching of the whole Bible, of Jesus himself, and of the entire Christian tradition.

The appeal to justice as a way of cutting the ethical knot in favour of including active homosexuals in Christian ministry simply begs the question. Nobody has a right to be ordained: it is always a gift of sheer and unmerited grace. The appeal also seriously misrepresents the notion of justice itself, not just in the Christian tradition of Augustine, Aquinas and others, but in the wider philosophical discussion from Aristotle to John Rawls. Justice never means “treating everybody the same way”, but “treating people appropriately”, which involves making distinctions between different people and situations. Justice has never meant “the right to give active expression to any and every sexual desire”.

Such a novel usage would also raise the further question of identity. It is a very recent innovation to consider sexual preferences as a marker of “identity” parallel to, say, being male or female, English or African, rich or poor. Within the “gay community” much postmodern reflection has turned away from “identity” as a modernist fiction. We simply “construct” ourselves from day to day.

We must insist, too, on the distinction between inclination and desire on the one hand and activity on the other — a distinction regularly obscured by references to “homosexual clergy” and so on. We all have all kinds of deep-rooted inclinations and desires. The question is, what shall we do with them? One of the great Prayer Book collects asks God that we may “love the thing which thou commandest, and desire that which thou dost promise”. That is always tough, for all of us. Much easier to ask God to command what we already love, and promise what we already desire. But much less like the challenge of the Gospel.

The question then presses: who, in the US, is now in communion with the great majority of the Anglican world? It would be too hasty to answer, the newly formed “province” of the “Anglican Church in North America”. One can sympathise with some of the motivations of these breakaway Episcopalians. But we should not forget the Episcopalian bishops, who, doggedly loyal to their own Church, and to the expressed mind of the wider Communion, voted against the current resolution. Nor should we forget the many parishes and worshippers who take the same stance. There are many American Episcopalians, inside and outside the present TEC, who are eager to sign the proposed Covenant. That aspiration must be honoured.

Contrary to some who have recently adopted the phrase, there is already a “fellowship of confessing Anglicans”. It is called the Anglican Communion. The Episcopal Church is now distancing itself from that fellowship. Ways must be found for all in America who want to be loyal to it, and to scripture, tradition and Jesus, to have that loyalty recognised and affirmed at the highest level.
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Posted: 14 July 2009 06:26 PM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 1 ]  
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Well said Bp Wright.

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Posted: 14 July 2009 08:21 PM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 2 ]  
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After reading this, I am afraid Bishop Wright has made it clear there is no room for people like me in his vision of the Anglican Communion.

I suppose it may be a good time to me to reconsider my support for a covenant because (if people like Bishop Wright have their way) TEC won’t even be a part of the Anglican Communion.

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Posted: 14 July 2009 08:38 PM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 3 ]  
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David,

If TEC is someday no longer part of the Anglican Communion it will not be because of any decision or position taken by Bishop Wright.  Rather it will be—as has been said from the beginning of this process—because TEC has decided to no longer walk together with the Communion, in spite of the lip service we may pay to it.

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Posted: 14 July 2009 09:24 PM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 4 ]  
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Although I may disagree with the Lord Bishop of Durham with his assessment of homosexual behavior, I do agree with his assessment that we have walked away from the two things set down by the Instruments of Unity including the Windsor Report and the proposed Anglican Covenant. But, with all due respect to the Lord Bishop of Durham, this is symptomatic of a much larger problem in the Communion. If the Episcopal Church is serious about being in relationship with other Anglicans, and vice versa, we need to engage in real dialogue, not political posturing or theological grandstanding. All provinces of the Communion (not just TEC), need to comply with the full provisions of the Windsor Report. I think also that if the TEC is no longer part of the Anglican Communion, the rest of the Anglican Communion would also be partly to blame for its failure to dialogue and converse with the Episcopal Church and to listen to the experience of gay and lesbian Christians. To my knowledge, this listening has not occurred anywhere (not even in TEC). 

On an aside, I continue to be in amazement that memorialists, transubstantiationists, evangelicals, Anglo-Catholics with grandly divergent Christologies, Soteriologies, Ecclesiologies, etc. can commune at the same rail, yet those who differ on the matter of accepting GLBT people cannot. I think that the issue of whether Christ is really and truly present in the Eucharist or whether the elements are merely symbolic, the role of the Episcopate, and other issues we disagree with mightily on are of much greater importance than the moral dillema of how to respond to a same-sex couple in a loving, committed, monogamous relationship.

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Posted: 14 July 2009 10:37 PM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 5 ]  
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Bp Wright to date has been very quiet about TEC. This is the first time he has really spoken out forcefully. If I was nervous before, I am really nervous now.

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Posted: 14 July 2009 11:36 PM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 6 ]  
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OK, I was wrong about D025.  Tom is Wright.

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Posted: 14 July 2009 11:48 PM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 7 ]  
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I thank God for giving us N.T. Wright.  I am sure everyone has noticed the last sentence.  Particularly “...scripture, tradition and Jesus…”  Wow.  Very well done and effective way to put TEC’s love affair with “reason” (which bears little resemblance to Hooker) in its place.  Amen. Amen.

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Posted: 15 July 2009 12:20 AM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 8 ]  
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I was in such a hurry when posting it that I missed that, Ben.  Thanks for pointing it out.

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Posted: 15 July 2009 12:57 AM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 9 ]  
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Bennett Jones - 14 July 2009 11:48 PM

I thank God for giving us N.T. Wright.  I am sure everyone has noticed the last sentence.  Particularly “...scripture, tradition and Jesus…”  Wow.  Very well done and effective way to put TEC’s love affair with “reason” (which bears little resemblance to Hooker) in its place.  Amen. Amen.

I noticed that too, but took it for an echo of the 6th paragraph (the one that starts with “Paganism ancient and modern…”).  GC, by its passage of D025, has aligned TEC with pagan attitudes and practices, but provision must be made to recognize those of us in North America who are loyal to scripture, tradition and Jesus and make it possible for us to maintain our connection to the rest of the Communion.

Karen

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Posted: 15 July 2009 07:58 AM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 10 ]  
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Ian Chamberlin - 14 July 2009 09:24 PM

On an aside, I continue to be in amazement that memorialists, transubstantiationists, evangelicals, Anglo-Catholics with grandly divergent Christologies, Soteriologies, Ecclesiologies, etc. can commune at the same rail, yet those who differ on the matter of accepting GLBT people cannot .


Ian, I would not suggest you hold your breath for a sincere and truthful answer on that question from people like N.T. Wright. Throughout the ongoing debate of this subject, I have yet to hear a suitable answer to this question.

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Posted: 15 July 2009 08:20 AM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 11 ]  
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David,

At this time, I am not waiting, but this is really the heart of the matter I think. There is only so much that both sides of this argument can do before it reaches the level where we either back into our respective corners or we meet in the middle and find a way to walk together despite our differences. It’s almost like we need another Elizabethan Compromise.


What’s most annoying to me I guess is that this issue is being treated almost to the level of a debate on an issue of dogma when it clearly is not. I’m preaching to the choir here to some people, but the Anglican Communion has not yet managed a civilized, honest conversation about human sexuality. Before this happens, I think we’re doomed to at best hostile relations between TEC, ACoC and the rest of the Communion, and at worst schism.

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Posted: 15 July 2009 08:40 AM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 12 ]  
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Ian Chamberlin - 15 July 2009 08:20 AM

David,

At this time, I am not waiting, but this is really the heart of the matter I think. There is only so much that both sides of this argument can do before it reaches the level where we either back into our respective corners or we meet in the middle and find a way to walk together despite our differences. It’s almost like we need another Elizabethan Compromise.


What’s most annoying to me I guess is that this issue is being treated almost to the level of a debate on an issue of dogma when it clearly is not. I’m preaching to the choir here to some people, but the Anglican Communion has not yet managed a civilized, honest conversation about human sexuality. Before this happens, I think we’re doomed to at best hostile relations between TEC, ACoC and the rest of the Communion, and at worst schism.

I agree, Ian. I see (for the most part) in TEC a desire to “walk together despite our differences”, despite all the angry and hurtful things being said in some quarters.

As time passes, I am beginning to ask myself if it is still worth it to attempt to “walk together”. It is hard for me to “walk with” people who reduce me (as a person and as a Christian) down to being a mere “inclination and desire” comparable to “ancient paganism”.

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Posted: 15 July 2009 10:59 AM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 13 ]  
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Bishop Wright is entitled to his opinion even if we disagree.  That is the upshot of D025.  Anglicanism is of many positions and they do not all agree. He then refers to the “rules” set by the Communion, rules that no one has been authorized to make for the Communion, and that is fine too.  We can argue and work back and forth for what that might mean.

But it simply makes the English Synod members who propose endorsing ACNA a laughingstock and hypocrites; for the ACNA only exists as a violation of the rules their own proposed rule makers made.  It is ludicrous to threaten TEC with ACNA because ACNA is a symbol of the ineffectiveness of the fictive Instruments of Unity, Communion, or whatever.

Those parts of the Communion which endorse the ACNA’s existence, the violation of the third moratorium, and their expropriation of property and assets have walked apart as well.  TEC lived within the moratoria these past three years as a sign of intent to be part of the Communion even when we are not of one mind, but ACNA and their interloping bishops brazenly threw the third moratorium in the face of the Communion with hardly a hiccup of official process.

So lets keep the situation balanced.  Just as it is inescapably the case, for me at least, that D025 is a repudiation of B033; so is it the case that the rest of the Communion has abetted or winked at the violation of the third moratorium.  Hypocrites have little ground to chastise others.

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Posted: 15 July 2009 01:30 PM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 14 ]  
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You know that I don’t like the formation of ACNA, Michael, but it seems to me that, the convention now having turned to considering same-sex unions/marriages, they would have to take a very aggressively negative stance in order to forestall a Philly-‘74/Righter test case. Or perhaps more likely, a bishop would give tacit approval to such unions by failing to discipline those who publicly executed them. It does not seem to me that the C of E can be expected to be infinitely patient with ECUSA; somewhere along the way they may well be put in the position of applying casuistry and taking ACNA as the lesser “evil”. The upshot of B025 is that it doesn’t seem to commit anyone to either going ahead or refraining from doing so; it invites the timid to let the bold carry through the acts that they wish to have done, all the while saying, “but we called for restraint.”

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Posted: 15 July 2009 01:54 PM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 15 ]  
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Charles Wingate - 15 July 2009 01:30 PM

You know that I don’t like the formation of ACNA, Michael, but it seems to me that, the convention now having turned to considering same-sex unions/marriages, they would have to take a very aggressively negative stance in order to forestall a Philly-‘74/Righter test case. Or perhaps more likely, a bishop would give tacit approval to such unions by failing to discipline those who publicly executed them. It does not seem to me that the C of E can be expected to be infinitely patient with ECUSA; somewhere along the way they may well be put in the position of applying casuistry and taking ACNA as the lesser “evil”. The upshot of B025 is that it doesn’t seem to commit anyone to either going ahead or refraining from doing so; it invites the timid to let the bold carry through the acts that they wish to have done, all the while saying, “but we called for restraint.”

The Church of Canada has moved further along the path to SSBs than TEC, where is the condemnation of them?  There is no equal treatment in this process.  But in the end I am happy for TEC to be clear and direct and take whatever lumps come along. It can be costly to lead and to enact one’s conscience, but faithful people do it none the less.

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