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  • Thursday, June 15, 2006

    Episcopal Church Airs Divisive Gay Issues

    V. Gene Robinson, Episcopal Bishop of New Hampshire and first openly gay bishop.

    By Michael Conlon

    The U.S. Episcopal Church, trying to quell the storm it created by consecrating the first openly gay bishop in Anglican church history, was showered with calls on Wednesday to repudiate the action and pleas not to abandon gays and lesbians.

    "Are we courageous enough to recognize Christ in the lives of our gay and lesbian neighbors?" asked Bishop Gene Robinson of New Hampshire, whose elevation to the episcopate in 2003 set off turmoil in the 77-million-member Anglican Communion, as the worldwide church federation is called.

    "I'm convinced I'm not an abomination in the eyes of God," added Robinson. "Please, let us say our prayers and stand up for right."

    He was one of dozens of church members, ordained and laity, who took the floor in a packed hotel ballroom at the church's triennial convention to debate the fallout from his consecration at the last such gathering in 2003. He is believed to be the first openly gay bishop in more than 450 years of Anglican history.

    Bishop Robert Duncan of Pittsburgh, head of the Anglican Communion Network, a group of bishops seeking a return to what they see as orthodoxy, spoke just before Robinson and warned it may already be too late to repair any damage.

    UNITY AT STAKE

    If the convention approves, as written, a series of resolutions crafted with the blessing of the 2.3-million-member U.S. church's leadership it will send a clear signal that it has decided to "walk apart" from worldwide Anglicanism, he said, and that unity is no longer possible.

    The forum for Wednesday's discussion was the meeting of a committee which is considering the package of resolutions written by a special commission formed by U.S. church leaders. The resolutions attempt to respond to the Windsor Report, a paper issued at the behest of the archbishop of Canterbury, Rowan Williams, which demanded the Episcopal church apologize for the Robinson elevation, not do any others like it and make it plain that it is against the blessing of same-sex unions.

    The committee will consider the testimony, perhaps reword the resolutions and send a report to the two legislative houses at the convention. One consists of bishops and the other is made up of diocesan representatives. Final votes may not come until Saturday.

    The resolutions being debated include an admonishment that church congregations use "very considerable caution" in elevating gays to bishop; that clergy not authorize public blessings of same-sex unions until the broader church agrees on a policy; and that the entire convention reiterate a statement the Episcopal bishops made last year saying they regretted the pain the Robinson consecration caused.

    From the men and women testifying at Wednesday's hearing there were repeated claims that the resolutions are meaningless in terms of addressing worldwide concerns, and many who said their approval or that of even stronger statements would make it look like the U.S. church is caving in to unwarranted pressure on a stand it took with moral conviction.

    Copyright © 2006 Reuters Limited.

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