Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr Williams writes his opinion on current issues
that the Anglican Churches are confused to line up. Please leave your
comment.

*Arif Bhuiyan*


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Why the Anglican Communion matters
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By Dr Rowan Williams
Friday, 23 February 2007

In some people's eyes, keeping the Anglican Communion together as a
worldwide institution looks like prolonging the life of a dysfunctional or
abusive marriage; isn't it more honest and humane to head for the divorce
courts?

Why should we be mortgaged to other people's prejudices - if we're liberal -
or other people's irresponsibility - if we're traditionalist? Isn't what
matters the life and vigour, and indeed the integrity, of the Church on our
doorstep?

There were moments in the meeting of Anglican leaders in Tanzania when I
guess most of those present felt a bit like this. The fact that they weren't
prepared simply to leave things there suggests, though, that more needs to
be said. There remains a strong belief that this kind of worldwide Christian
institution means we all agree to take responsibility for each other in some
way, and to recognise that none of us has ultimate interests and concerns
that are exclusively local or personal.

So what is the problem at the moment? When Anglicans in America decided, in
2003, to appoint as a bishop someone in an openly gay partnership, the
widespread reaction was that there hadn't yet been the kind of discussion in
the worldwide setting that might convince others of the rightness, in
principle, of blessing same-sex relationships - and that this discussion
needed to happen before anyone decided whether an active gay person might be
a candidate for being a bishop. Not too surprisingly, most in the Communion
felt that the conclusion had come before the argument.

This created two sorts of difficulty. One was the question of limits. For
most Anglicans, questions about sexual ethics belonged in that category of
teaching that was not up for negotiation as a result of cultural variation
or social development. As with the central doctrines of the Creed and the
biblical world view, people could only say: "This isn't mine to give away."

They needed more than an assurance that it had been thought about in America
and that a lot of people there had concluded it was all right. The other
question followed on: if an issue just might be in the "not mine to give
away" category, how did the Church as a whole decide whether it really was
in that category or not? How did it decide as a Church, not as a
conglomerate of local independent bodies? And if it couldn't decide as a
Church, how could it carry on talking with other worldwide Christian bodies
on the same foundations?

Not a wholly new question: the often bitter controversies over women's
ordination had already raised some of these matters. But at least on that, a
conviction had emerged that it was possible to treat it as something people
could disagree about and still leave intact the basics of common faith. For
a variety of reasons, this current question has not felt like that for many.
And - worst of all in some ways - the possibility of detailed and patient
scrutiny of the underlying question about sexual ethics was rather derailed
by the feeling that the outcome had been decided in advance by one group in
the Communion. Trust suffered badly.

To digress for just a moment: one of the hardest things in all this has been
to keep insisting on the absolute moral imperative of combating bigotry and
violence against gay people, and the need to secure appropriate civic and
legal protection for couples who have chosen to share their lives. These are
different matters from whether the Church has the freedom to bless same-sex
unions. A negative or agnostic answer to this latter question is frequently
heard as a negative attitude to the imperatives of care and respect - and
sometimes that perception is sadly accurate, judging from the postbag that
arrives here. Yet they are different, and quite a lot of Christians know it
and try to act accordingly.

What happened in Tanzania in the last week or so represents an effort to
define what could restore trust - all round, since the point is made that
interventions from overseas in the American Church also have destructive
effects in some ways. What has come to be called the "Listening Process" was
discussed and strongly affirmed the continuing work on finding means for
homosexual men and women in the Communion to speak about their experience in
a safe environment.

This work has not been restricted to the West, and shows surprising signs of
vigour. The outline of a "covenant" document for local Anglican Churches
suggests ways in which we could commit ourselves to a future process where
consultation was fully built in. The requests to the American Church for
further clarification and a moratorium on certain actions while the covenant
process is going forward are essentially requests to show that their desire
to stay with the Communion is strong enough to cope with a halt for the sake
of continuing to move and work together. The suggestion of a structure in
America to care for the minority tries to remove any need for external
intervention.

Whether it can all come together remains to be seen. But the leaders of the
Communion thought it worth trying - not because enforced unanimity matters
more than anything, but because the relations and common work of the
Communion, especially in the developing world, matter massively. And also
because the idea that there might be a worldwide Christian Church that could
balance unity and consent seems worth holding on to, for the sake of the
whole Christian family and even for the sake of human society itself.

I think that those who gathered in Tanzania believed that their vocation was
to look for a way of embodying this balance. Losing that possibility is not
a small matter. Working for it (when I think back to the painful intensity
of some of our discussions) is not looking for an easy option.

End.

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