The Church of England has taken its first steps towards allowing gay members of the clergy to marry.
Gene predicted this.
The Church of
England has taken its first steps towards allowing gay members of the clergy to marry.
The General Synod,
the Church’s legislative body, voted to pass proposals that pave the way
towards a report on the question of same-sex civil marriage ceremonies between
members of the clergy or one member of the clergy and a lay person.
Church leaders will
now reconvene in February 2025 to discuss the prospect, as well as steps to
permit blessings for same-sex couples in so-called “standalone” services, which
closely resemble marriage ceremonies.
These would build
on proposals agreed in November 2023, when the Synod voted in favour of
permitting blessings for same-sex couples during regular church services on a
trial basis.
The proposals passed comfortably by 22 votes to 12 in the House of Bishops and by 99 votes to 88 among the clergy respectively.
Among the laity,
the vote was much closer, passing by just four votes, with 95 in favour and 91
against.
The proposals were
met with widespread dismay among conservative-leaning groups within
the Church.
Rev Canon John Dunnett, the national director of the Church of England Evangelical Council (CEEC), said: “I was born in the Church of England. But if the prayers of love and faith bus continues in the same direction, I sometimes wonder whether I will die as a member of the Church of England or not.”
The Rev Will
Pearson-Gee, a Buckinghamshire rector, said: “I think it could be a watershed
moment.
“They’ve woken up a
sleeping giant. Up until now we’ve just been disinterested, but people have
been radicalised.”
The Rev Ian Paul, a
member of the General Synod and the Archbishops’ Council of the Church of
England, said: “It has now become clear and open that there are bishops who do
not believe the doctrine of the Church and are determined that it should
change.
“They will drive
this through no matter what the consequences. They seem to be out of touch
with what many in the Church believe, and that this change is not something on
which many of us can simply ‘agree to disagree’.”
It comes after more
than 25 church leaders last month wrote to the archbishops of York and
Canterbury warning that such a change could amount to “unlawfulness” and
threatened to create a “parallel province”, a separate autonomous grouping
within the Church.
A conservative-leaning group called The Alliance, which describes itself as an informal partnership of leaders from networks in the Church, claims to be supported by 2,000 clergy members.
Threatens existence
One of the
signatories to the letter, Tom Middleton, director of Forward in Faith, which
represents around 1,000 Anglican clergy, described the split as “potentially
the biggest since the Church of England was founded in the aftermath of the
Reformation”.
“It threatens
the Church of England’s very existence,” he said.
Ahead of Monday’s
vote, the Most Rev Justin Welby pleaded for unity between pro-same sex blessing
and anti-same sex blessing factions.
“The reality of the
church as we live it is always messy,” he told Church leaders gathered in York.
“That the Church
flourishes as one is indispensable to the Gospel in this land.
“That the Church
flourishes as one is essential to the Anglican community, which like all global
churches, is deeply divided and seeking the support of each other.”
"One of the signatories to the letter, Tom Middleton, director of Forward in Faith, which represents around 1,000 Anglican clergy, described the split as “potentially the biggest since the Church of England was founded in the aftermath of the Reformation”."
ReplyDeleteWell said Tom. Methinks so too.
Sugarboy Nando
“It threatens the Church of England’s very existence,” he said.
ReplyDeleteI should say so!
Mary Winterbourne