Times of Eswatini

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CAPE TOWN - Anglican bishops in Southern Africa have failed to reach consensus on blessing same-sex unions during church services, ruling out church marriages for same-sex couples.

Archbishop Thabo Makgoba of Cape Town on Monday said, “The divisions within the Synod of bishops reflect the divisions in the church as a whole, and we are not at peace with one another on this issue.”

However, the bishops have resolved to craft special prayers suitable for providing pastoral care to couples in same-sex civil unions.

Releasing statements by the church’s Synod of Bishops, Archbishop Makgoba said they agreed at a meeting last week to prepare formal prayers suitable for providing pastoral care

Harry and Meghan are refusing to confirm whether or not they will attend the historic event in May, but Royal Commentato­r Richard Fitzwillia­ms said they would ‘‘dare not stay away.’’ to couples in same-sex civil unions.

The Synod had its first in-person meeting in three years, and published the results of its deliberati­ons to church members on Sunday.

The bishops considered a proposal by the Archbishop’s Commission on Human Sexuality to allow local churches to conduct formal blessings of same-sex unions, but could not reach an agreement.

The proposal would have permitted individual dioceses of the church which chose to do so, to allow samesex blessings to be performed in parishes in those dioceses where both the priest and the congregati­on agreed.

Makgoba told the gathering the church was already baptising the children of same-sex couples and conducting confirmati­on services for LGBTQI Anglicans. Seeking a compromise, he challenged the bishops to ‘develop prayers of affirmatio­n and acknowledg­ment for all faithful Anglicans with which all of us can agree’. The Synod agreed to the proposal. Archbishop Makgoba’s office said in a statement that ‘the bishops will consider drafts for the formal prayers at their next meeting in September before presenting them to church ruling bodies which also represent other clergy and lay members of the church’.

Anglican bishops from across Southern Africa resolved in 2016 that gay and lesbian partners who enter samesex civil unions under South African law should be welcomed into congregati­ons as full members of the church. However, bishops were at that time divided over whether to marry samesex couples in church.

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