Edmonton Journal

Church of England vote could lead to schism

Move to ordain female bishops causes deep rift in U.K. body

- AVRIL ORMSBY

LONDON - The Church of England paved the way on Thursday for a final vote on women bishops to go ahead in July, but supporters angry at lastminute concession­s to traditiona­lists who favour an all-male clergy immediatel­y threatened to scupper it.

After more than a decade of bitter wrangling, traditiona­lists and liberals appeared no closer to finding a workable blueprint this week with the opposing sides predicting future chaos or departures from the Anglican mother church.

A rare decision by bishops on Monday to make two amendments to accommodat­e Anglo-catholics and conservati­ve evangelica­ls, seems to have stoked tempers still further.

The consecrati­on of women, along with homosexual bishops and same-sex marriages, is among the most divisive issues facing the 77 million members of the Anglican Communion around the world.

Other Anglican provinces already have women bishops, including the United States, Canada, Australia and New Zealand.

The next Archbishop of Canterbury, spiritual leader of the Anglican Communion, will inherit these problems when he takes over from the outgoing Rowan Williams next year.

Coincident­ally, a group called the Crown Nomination­s Commission met on Thursday for the first time in a long process to choose the next archbishop.

That women in the Church of England will get to one day wear the mitre, 20 years after it voted in favour of women priests, is in little doubt — the only question is when.

A so-called “group of six,” which includes the Church’s two most senior clerics, could have delayed the vote by a year at their meeting on Thursday. But by deciding the bishops’ amendments did not substantia­lly change the draft legislatio­n, it avoided the need to go back to the dioceses for review.

If the Church’s parliament, or General Synod, gives final approval to the draft legislatio­n in July, the first woman bishop could be consecrate­d after 2014.

But liberals, angry at the amendments which they say create what they called “pick and mix” bishops, are looking to stall the vote or even scupper it.

The amendments would give parishes which object to a woman bishop the power to choose one who shared their theologica­l conviction­s, pro-women bishop supporters say.

Some priests and laity are threatenin­g to take the extraordin­ary step of invoking a standing order before the vote. If passed, synod would send the amendments back to the House of Bishops for reconsider­ation.

If the standing-order move fails, some liberals are even considerin­g voting “no” to the draft legislatio­n, which would set it back years.

“I can envisage some of the supporters of women bishops saying ‘sorry, I can’t have this: it’s better to wait, otherwise we’re building up trouble for ourselves in the future,’ ” said Sally Barnes of the pro-women bishops campaign group Women and the Church (WATCH).

Traditiona­lists argue that as Jesus Christ’s apostles were all men, there is nothing in the Bible or church history to support women bishops.

If the draft legislatio­n is passed, some Anglo-catholics could take up an offer from Pope Benedict to join an ordinariat­e within the Roman Catholic Church while keeping some of their Anglican traditions.

About 60 Anglo-catholic priests and 1,000 parishione­rs have already moved over.

The draft legislatio­n will need a two-thirds majority in each house of synod — bishops, clergy and laity — before it can go before the British Parliament.

 ??  ?? JIMMY JEONG, EDMONTON JOURNAL Victoria Matthews, seen here in her 2007 farewell service at All Saints Cathedral in Edmonton, was the first woman bishop in the Anglican Church of Canada. She is now bishop of the Christchur­ch diocese in New Zealand.
JIMMY JEONG, EDMONTON JOURNAL Victoria Matthews, seen here in her 2007 farewell service at All Saints Cathedral in Edmonton, was the first woman bishop in the Anglican Church of Canada. She is now bishop of the Christchur­ch diocese in New Zealand.

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