The Daily Telegraph

Church takes step towards gay marriage

Vote against bishops’ report that supported ban is hailed as a victory by liberal clergy

- By Olivia Rudgard

CHURCH of England clergy appeared to signal support for gay marriage last night after they rejected a bishops’ report which said that only a man and woman could marry in church.

The report recommende­d that the bar on same-sex church marriages continue but that a more welcoming attitude towards homosexual­s should be shown by congregati­ons.

However, the motion was rejected by clergy at the General Synod who voted 100 to 93 against. Last night, sources said they believed the recommenda­tion had been rejected by the more liberal members of the clergy who thought the Church should ultimately drop its opposition to gay marriage. Campaigner­s for gay marriage welcomed the decision as a “victory for love and equality”.

After the vote, Graham James, the Bishop of Norwich, who led the group that produced the report, said: “We have listened to those who have spoken, and those others who have made contributi­ons to us directly.

“Our ongoing discussion­s will be informed by what members of Synod and the wider Church have said as a result of this report.”

The decision exposes deep divisions within the Anglican Church over homosexual­ity and is embarrassi­ng for the House of Bishops as authors of the report. In the vote, which was split between the Church’s three houses – bishops, clergy, and laity – the clergy were the only house not to “take note” of, or accept, the report, which meant it was rejected. There were two abstention­s within the clergy and one bishop voted not to take note. Laity voted to take note by 106 to 83, with four abstention­s.

The report was strongly criticised during a two-hour debate yesterday afternoon. Members said it was “grudging and condescend­ing”, “divorced from reality” and made the Church look “unkind” and homophobic.

The report had recommende­d the Church of England continue to consider marriage as “a union, permanent and lifelong, of one man with one woman”.

Before the vote, the Most Rev Justin Welby, the Archbishop of Canterbury, urged members to “take note” of the motion but promised that bishops would in future “do better”, adding: “We could hardly fail to do so, in the light of what has been said this afternoon.”

The vote was welcomed as a symbolic victory by campaigner­s. Jayne Ozanne, a campaigner for LGBT rights within the Church, said she was “thrilled” with the result.

Peter Tatchell who has campaigned against Church homophobia for 50 years said: “This vote to, in effect, reject the bishops’ report is a victory for love and equality. It is the biggest defeat for the Anglican leadership in many decades. Synod refused to endorse the anti-LGBT exclusion and discrimina­tion enshrined in the bishops’ recommenda­tions.”

But conservati­ve members also said they voted against the report, which would have allowed the Church “maximum freedom” to support gay couples

and clergy. Andrea Minichiell­o Williams, director of lobby group Christian Concern, said: “I think what was clear from the debate was that the report tries to straddle positions that cannot be reconciled. I voted against the report as well. This shouldn’t be read as a victory for the LGBT activists within the Church.”

The report, released last month after a three-year consultati­on process, was strongly opposed by liberal members of the Church of England’s governing body, who said it discrimina­ted against gay people and excused homophobia.

Earlier, two bishops who helped write the report apologised for its content and tone but urged members not to reject it. Bishop Graham insisted that lesbian and gay people already had an “honoured place” in the Church.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom