The Times of London
  March 22, 2007
   
  Anglicans closer to schism as US bishops reject gay ultimatum
  Ruth Gledhill, Religion Correspondent 
  
The Anglican Church took another step towards its apparently inevitable schism 
when US Episcopal bishops rejected the ultimatum from primates of the Anglican 
Communion to fall into line over homosexuals. 
   
  The bishops of the Episcopal Church accused Anglican primates of trying to 
drag their Church back into “a time of colonialism”. They said late on Tuesday 
night that they would resist the primates’ demand that they set up a new 
pastoral scheme with a “primatial vicar” to make a traditionalist enclave for 
antigay conservatives who reject the oversight of liberal bishops. They said 
that the scheme “violated” their canons, or Church law. 
   
  Christian gays in Britain yesterday welcomed the US decision and accused the 
Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr Rowan Williams, who chaired last month’s primates’ 
meeting in Tanzania, of trying to “sell them down the river” and of pandering 
to “forces of the extreme Right”. 
   
  If the wealthy US Church, headed by the Communion’s first woman primate, 
Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori, is expelled from the Communion, as now 
appears increasingly likely, the Anglican Communion worldwide will be plunged 
into financial crisis because so much of the central administration and 
overseas aid is bank-rolled by the Americans. 
   
  Although the 2.3 million American Episcopalians are few among the 77 million 
Anglicans worldwide, they are understood to finance up to one third of the 
Communion’s total international budget. 
   
  Speaking at the end of their annual spring retreat at Camp Allen near 
Houston, the Episcopal Church House of Bishops said in a statement that they 
had “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”. 
   
  The bishops said: “We believe that there is an urgent need for us to meet 
face to face with the Archbishop of Canterbury and members of the primates’ 
standing committee, and we hereby request and urge that such a meeting be 
negotiated . . . at the earliest possible opportunity. 
   
  “We invite the archbishop and members of the primates’ standing committee to 
join us at our expense for three days of prayer and conversation regarding 
these important matters.” 
   
  At their meeting in Dar es Salaam, the primates set a deadline of September 
30 for the pastoral scheme to be set up. They also demanded a commitment not to 
authorise same-sex blessings or consecrate any more gay bishops. 
   
  “It harks back to a period of colonialism from which The Episcopal Church was 
liberated. It replaces local rule by laity with a curial model,” the US bishops 
said. 
   
  Responding for the UK’s Lesbian and Gay Christian Movement, the Rev Richard 
Kirker said: “At last some sanity is breaking into the debate. There is an 
obvious realisation that the consequences of this pandering to the puritans 
means an increasing hostility towards lesbian and gay people so clearly 
demonstrated by the Archbishop of Nigeria, who is fiercely promoting antigay 
legislation in his country contrary to Scripture and all the decisions of 
Anglicanism over the last 30 years. 
   
  “The Archbishop of Canterbury has much to answer for. His decision to sell us 
down the river in the short term to buy time has back-fired. If the Americans 
are expelled, this will encourage those bent on our destruction to persecute 
lesbian and gay people even more.” 
   
  Origins of split
   
  * The depth of the divisions in the Anglican Communion became clear at the 
1998 Lambeth Conference when Resolution 1.10 set a conservative Biblical 
standard but insisted that lesbians and gays in the Church must be heard 
   
  * The seeds of the present schism were sown when in 1993 The Episcopal Church 
consecrated the openly gay bishop, Gene Robinson 
   
  * At about the same time, the New Westminster diocese in Canada authorised a 
rite of same-sex blessing. The first authorised gay blessing took place 
followed, leading the Church Times to declare the existence of one happy couple 
and 75 million unhappy Anglicans 
   
  * Conservatives in the US were swift to act, with some looking as far afield 
as African provinces such as Nigeria for orthodox bishops to lead them


 
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