Responses to Resolution
B033, that calls for restraint in consecrating bishops "whose manner of
life presents a challenge to the wider church," varied from
disappointment to relief June 21 as both houses of the 75th General
Convention, after much debate, concurred on final language.
Bishop Dorsey Henderson of Upper South Carolina, co-chair of the
Special Committee on the Episcopal Church and the Anglican Communion,
described the resolution as "an appropriate and blessed way forward,
strengthening the Episcopal Church, strengthening the Anglican
Communion, without closing any doors unnecessarily."
Bishop Geralyn Wolf of Rhode Island, a member of the committee, said
it is "the best that we can do," conveying hope that the Anglican
Communion realizes the process has been the result of a compromise.
"It's a relief to me because my hope is that we can stay in communion
and continue the conversation and affirm the Windsor process," she said.
"Having this vote in both houses says to the Anglican Communion that we
are very serious about our relationship."
The resolution responds to the invitation of the Windsor Report to
the Episcopal Church "to effect a moratorium on the election and consent
to 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."
Bishop Gene Robinson of New Hampshire expressed some disappointment
with the resolution because it does not affirm the role of gay and
lesbian people in the church, but seemed encouraged by the seriousness
with which the Episcopal Church has grappled with the issues in public.
"The church has a picture of the wide diversity in this church and
people have been remarkably honest and loving in all of this," he said
in an interview after the vote. "I have been approached by all kinds of
people who have felt called to vote for this resolution in order for us
to continue the conversation with the Anglican Communion."
Robinson encouraged support for Presiding Bishop-elect Katharine
Jefferts Schori "in every way possible...to give her everything that she
can have in her pocket to go to the primates meeting, to go to the rest
of the Communion," he said. "In some sense, having given the Anglican
Communion what it asked for regarding gay and lesbian members of this
church, we'll be looking to them to see if they were serious about
wanting to be in conversation about this, or whether they wanted this to
end the conversation."
Describing the process as a journey, Robinson acknowledged that there
will be bumps in the road.
"This is not what we hoped for, but it's what we have, so I'm much
more interested in talking about tomorrow than I am about today or
yesterday," he said.
The Rev. Canon David Anderson, president of the American Anglican
Council, was doubtful that the resolution represents the "sincerity"
that is required by the Windsor Report.
"I don't think there's the willingness to actually enforce it and
carry it out," he said. "The best prediction of what a person will do is
what they have done before, and a number of the very revisionist bishops
have very honestly said, ‘We've been doing same-sex blessings, we've
been ordaining homosexual persons and we're going to keep right on doing
that,' and I applaud them for their honesty, although I disagree with
them."
The Rev. Susan Russell, president of Integrity, which advocates for
the full inclusion of gay and lesbian people in the Episcopal Church,
was disappointed, especially in light of Jefferts Schori's June 21
sermon that encouraged the Church not to live in fear.
"I am disappointed that whether or not we go to Lambeth matters more
than the lives of gay and lesbian people, and their vocations in this
church," she said. "At the same time I understand this to be a part of a
process. We are on a journey. It is part of an ongoing conversation."
Russell was particularly disappointed that General Convention has
"done nothing about genocide, about evangelism, about the environment,
about economics, about all those other hundreds of resolutions that are
now going to fall into the abyss because this house has not been able to
pull itself up and take some action."
Katherine Tyler Scott, a deputy and member of the standing committee
in the Diocese of Indianapolis, said she had been blessed to work with
very diverse people "listening to one another, respecting each other,
really hearing and coming to what we thought was a common mind on these
issues."
Scott recognized that it was probably an unreasonable expectation
that the House of Deputies, with its 800-plus membership, would "be able
to have the same level of trust, relationship and communication that we
were able to establish [on the committee].
"For us this is the best we can do at this time in our journey."
Bishop Mano Rumalshah of Peshawar in Pakistan, one of more than 60
international visitors at General Convention, said the resolution
represents the best response given the circumstances.
"It could have been much more but at least it keeps the door open and
allows the dialogue to continue and let's rejoice in that," he said.
"Let's not give up. Let's not draw the lines too hard. Let's continue to
have hope in humanity and each other and in God's spirit that, yes,
things can go on."