The 75th General
Convention responded to recommendations set forth in the Windsor Report
with six resolutions that commit to interdependence within the Anglican
Communion, express regret for straining the bonds of affection, affirm
pastoral care, and urge restraint in consecrating bishops "whose manner
of life presents a challenge to the wider church."
The Anglican Communion Listening Process and the development of an
Anglican Covenant also received support in both Houses of Convention.
In its most significant Windsor-related measure, Convention passed
resolution B033, "On the election of bishops," in the last hours of
legislative sessions on June 21.
It was presented on the morning of June 21, the final legislative
day, during a joint session of the Houses of Bishops and Deputies. It
was the final Windsor resolution to be acted on after the House of
Deputies the day before had voted down resolution A161, preventing it
from going to the House of Bishops and rejecting the resolution's call
for "very considerable caution in the nomination, election, consent to,
and consecration of bishops whose manner of life presents a challenge to
the wider church and will lead to further strains on communion." The
resolution also would have directed the church not to develop rites for
blessing same-gender unions.
Addressing a joint session, called for after the rejection of A161,
Presiding Bishop Frank Griswold relayed the text of B033 that was
proposed by Bishop Dorsey F. Henderson of Upper South Carolina, co-chair
of the Special Committee on the Episcopal Church and the Anglican
Communion.
B033 calls on bishops and standing committees to "exercise restraint
by not consenting to the consecration of any candidate to the episcopate
whose manner of life presents a challenge to the wider church and will
lead to further strains on communion." It makes no mention of
same-gender blessings.
The Windsor Report invited the Episcopal Church "to effect a
moratorium on the consecration of any candidate to the episcopate who is
living in a same-gender union until some new consensus in the Anglican
Communion emerges."
The Joint Session adjourned, and the two Houses met separately to
debate the resolution. The need to make some statement was stressed in
both Houses. "If we don't have something substantial, it will be very
difficult for the Archbishop of Canterbury to invite the Presiding
Bishop to the Lambeth Conference," Presiding Bishop Frank Griswold told
his colleagues. "I do know the complexity of what the Archbishop dealing
with, in Communion terms, and he needs for something clear to come from
the Episcopal Church."
Presiding Bishop-elect Katharine Jefferts Schori told the bishops
that she could only support the resolution "if we understand that it's
not slamming the door. It has to leave the door open for further
conversation and consideration in the very near future."
After the bishops passed B033 and sent it to the deputies, Jefferts
Schori asked for and received permission to speak to the House of
Deputies. She told them that she is "fully committed to the full
inclusion of gay and lesbian Christians in this church."
Reiterating her stance that B033 does not slam the door to further
discussion, she added, "I think if you do pass this resolution you have
to be willing to keep working with all your might at finding a common
mind in this church. I don't find this an easy thing to say to you, but
I think that is the best we are going to manage at this point in our
church's history."
B033 passed in the House of Deputies during a vote by orders. It had
75 affirmative votes in the clergy order and 73 in the lay order. There
were 24 no votes and 10 divided votes in the clergy order, and 21 no
votes in the lay order and 11 divided. That compared with the rejection
of resolution A161 on June 20 by 53 no votes and 14 divided votes in the
clergy order for a total of 67 negative votes. In the lay order there
were 53 no votes and 18 divided for a total of 71.
Some Episcopal Church bishops objected later in the day on June 21 to
the process by which resolution B033 was developed and passed. They
wrote a "statement of conscience" that was read during a closed session
of the House of Bishops that day. They said that "undue pressure" had
been brought to bear on the House of Deputies and that the Convention
had been forced into a "flawed paradigm" that framed the Convention's
choice as one between "two goods -- the full inclusion in the life of
the Church of our brother and sister Christians who happen to be gay or
lesbian and our full inclusion in the life of our beloved Communion."
The bishops also said that they were "absolutely committed to the
future of this Communion and the process of healing the strain that we
readily admit and regret exists, and has been exacerbated in our own
house by events today."
The statement says that the names of the "undersigned bishops" are
not available because when the statement was read in the executive
session, it was uncertain which bishops stood in support of it. The text
of the statement (available at
http://edow.org/news/window/special/generalconvention/2006/0621conscience.html)
notes that the group includes at least the bishops of Chicago, Newark,
Northern Michigan, Rochester, Vermont, Washington and Wyoming.
Expression of regret, Listening Process, Covenant
Mindful of "the repentance, forgiveness, and reconciliation enjoined
on us by Christ" (Windsor Report, paragraph 134), Resolution A160
expresses "regret for straining the bonds of affection" with the
election, confirmation and consecration of Bishop Gene Robinson of New
Hampshire, the first openly gay bishop in the Anglican Communion.
The resolution also offers "its sincerest apology to those within our
Anglican Communion who are offended by our failure to accord sufficient
importance to the impact of our actions on our church and other parts of
the Communion," and asks "forgiveness as we seek to live into deeper
levels of communion one with another."
Convention approved two resolutions supporting the process of
developing an Anglican Covenant (A166) and committing to interdependence
in the Anglican Communion (A159).
The language in resolution A166, which survived an attempt to change
references of a covenant to "conversation," says the measure is "a
demonstration of our commitment to mutual responsibility and
interdependence in the Anglican Communion."
The resolution directs the Executive Council's international concerns
committee and the Episcopal Church's representatives on the Anglican
Consultative Council to follow the process of the Communion for
developing an Anglican Covenant and making regular reports to Council.
Commending the "listening process," as recommended in the Windsor
Report, "so that greater common understanding might be obtained on the
underlying issue of same-gender relationships," resolution A165 commits
the church to participating fully and openly in the "listening process,"
both at the local level and with the rest of the Communion.
The process was recommended by the bishops attending the Lambeth
Conference in 1998 in Resolution 1.10 that requests establishing "a
means of monitoring the work done on the subject of human sexuality in
the Communion" and to honor the process of mutual listening, including
"listening to the experience of homosexual persons."
The Anglican Consultative Council (ACC), which met in June 2005, also
encouraged the listening process in each Province and called for
relevant research studies, statements and resolutions to be collated and
made available for study, discussion and reflection within each member
Church of the Communion.
In November 2005, the Secretary General of the Anglican Communion,
the Rev. Canon Kenneth Kearon, appointed the Rev. Canon Philip Groves as
the facilitator of the Listening Process. In a letter to the Primates of
the Anglican Communion at the time, Kearon said, "I am pleased that this
Listening Process, which has been requested on many occasions, can now
begin in earnest."
In other action, resolution A163 commits the church to the
"centrality of effective and appropriate pastoral care for all members
of this church" and urges the House of Bishops to seek the highest
degree of communion and reconciliation within their own dioceses, using
the Delegated Episcopal Pastoral Oversight (DEPO) process when
necessary.
The resolution also urges "continued maintenance of historic diocesan
boundaries, the authority of the diocesan bishop, and respect for the
historical relationships of the separate and autonomous Provinces of the
Anglican Communion."
Background to resolutions
The Windsor Report, released in October 2004, was the result of a
year's deliberations between members of the Lambeth Commission on
Communion who were mandated by the Archbishop of Canterbury to explore
ways in which to maintain the highest degree of communion possible in
light of differences concerning issues of human sexuality.
The Anglican Primates urged the Episcopal Church to address the
recommendations of the Windsor Report in its February 2005 statement
from Dromantine in Northern Ireland.
The Special Commission on the Episcopal Church and the Anglican
Communion was established to produce resolutions for consideration by
Convention as the church's response to the Windsor Report. The original
11 resolutions were debated and amended throughout convention by the
special legislative committee and the houses of convention.
Response from Canterbury, other leaders
The Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr. Rowan Williams, commended
Convention's Windsor-related actions for the "exceptional seriousness"
with which it has responded.
"There is much to appreciate in the hard and devoted work done by
General Convention, and before that, by the Special Commission on the
Episcopal Church and the Anglican Communion, in crafting the
resolutions," he said. "This and the actions taken today show how strong
is their concern to seek reconciliation and conversation with the rest
of the Communion."
Williams said that it is not yet clear how far the resolutions
represent the adoption by the Episcopal Church of all the proposals set
out in the Windsor Report. "The wider Communion will therefore need to
reflect carefully on the significance of what has been decided before we
respond more fully," he said.
The Joint Standing Committee of the Primates and ACC has already
appointed a small working group to assist in the process of reflection
and to advise Williams on these matters in the months leading up to the
next Primates' meeting in February 2007 in Tanzania.
Some of the Primates have already reacted to the work of the 75th
General Convention. The Primates of the Council of Anglican Provinces of
Africa (CAPA), meeting in Kampala on June 21-22, issued "An Open Letter
to the Episcopal Church USA" on June 23. The letter, signed by
Archbishop Peter Akinola, Primate of the Anglican Church of Nigeria,
says, in part, that the Primates are "saddened that the reports to date
of your elections and actions suggest that you are unable to embrace the
essential recommendations of the Windsor Report and the 2005 Primates
Communiqué necessary for the healing of our divisions. At the same time,
we welcome the various expressions of affection for the life and work of
the Anglican Communion."
The full text of the letter is available at
http://www.anglicancommunion.org/acns/articles/41/50/acns4159.cfm
Meanwhile, the American Anglican Council's (AAC) president, the Rev.
Canon David Anderson, welcomed the CAPA statement and claimed that the
Episcopal Church had feigned compliance with the Windsor Report. The
full text of the AAC statement is available at
http://www.americananglican.org/site/c.ikLUK3MJIpG/b.691897/apps/nl/content2.asp?content_id={B701BA95-9CA3-44DE-A47D-34714463C941}{RDhref+}notoc=1
The complete texts of all General Convention resolutions are
available at
http://gc2006.org/legislation/