Women Bishops – where are we now? A personal view on GS 1886
The reasons why people voted against in November were
varied.
·
There were those who voted against in principle
because they opposed women bishops.
·
There were those voted against because, although
opposed, they recognised that the Church of England was going to have women
bishops, and they believed that provision for opponents could be improved.
·
There were those (particularly evangelicals) who
were in favour of women bishops but voted against the legislation in order to
secure better provision for those opposed.
There are, of course, overlaps and nuances in the
positions outlined above. What I think opponents failed to recognise was that
the Synod’s inability to progress the legislation in November 2012 was a
game-changer. The legislative provision that was on the table in November was
the most generous that opponents were likely to get, and the high-risk strategy
of voting it down means that whatever is enacted in the future will have far
fewer provisions built into it. The sheer incredulity that most Bishops met in
the parishes, in Parliament, in the media and in civic life that we had failed
to deliver the legislation was pretty universal. I found myself constantly
having to apologise for the CofE. But the effect of voting down the legislation
that was on the table has now given us far less room for manoeuvre. In particular:
1. I
cannot see Synod or Parliament now allowing us to pass legislation where there
is overt discrimination against women priests and bishops on the face of a
Measure (or even an Act of Synod).
2. There
is a groundswell of opinion that Resolutions A & B and the existing Act of
Synod are no longer tenable or credible. (Conversations with parish reps to
explain that they need to discuss whether or not to debate the resolutions
during a vacancy leave them open-mouthed that the CofE still contemplates
excluding women candidates!)
3. Unless
those of us who want to secure provision for those opposed can move swiftly to
ensure that the non-statutory provision is as generous as possible, there is a
danger that there will be almost nothing left for those parishes and clergy. I
have recently been redrafting the London Plan (which is predicated on the existing
legislation) with a view to working out how it will operate in a
post-legislative climate. I’ve included at the end of this paper a flavour of
what the working out of the London Plan looks like in the way in which we work
between the Bishops in London. (Appendix A). It’s this sort of thing that we
will need to be part of the arrangements.
I would hope that members of Synod can:
1. Embrace
the totality of the vision set out in para 12 of the Report:
- Once legislation has been passed to enable women to become bishops the Church of England will be fully and unequivocally committed to all orders of ministry being open equally to all, without reference to gender, and will hold that those whom it has duly ordained and appointed to office are the true and lawful holders of the office which they occupy and thus deserve due respect and canonical obedience;
- Anyone who ministers within the Church of England must then be prepared to acknowledge that the Church of England has reached a clear decision on the matter;
- Since it will continue to share the historic episcopate with other Churches, including the Roman Catholic Church, the Orthodox Church and those provinces of the Anglican Communion which continue to ordain only men as priests or bishops, the Church of England will acknowledge that its own clear decision on ministry and gender is set within a broader process of discernment within the Anglican Communion and the whole Church of God;
- Since those within the Church of England who, on grounds of theological conviction, are unable to receive the ministry of women bishops or priests will continue to be within the spectrum of teaching and tradition of the Anglican Communion, the Church of England will remain committed to enabling them to flourish within its life and structures; and
- Pastoral and sacramental provision for the minority within the Church of England will be made without specifying a limit of time and in a way that maintains the highest possible degree of communion and contributes to mutual flourishing across the whole Church of England.
2. Recognise
that Option 4 is a non-starter (para 20 and paras 110 – 120)
3. Recognise
that the 1993 framework is no longer fit for purpose, and that Option 3 will
not therefore commend itself to the wider Church or nation (paras 96 – 109). A
new mechanism will be needed for parishes to request extended oversight.
4. Recognise
that an Act of Synod in this context has become a toxic, totemic and divisive
mechanism, which makes Option 2 pretty tenuous. (Paras 89 – 95) It’s also
provision by force of law, which on my reckoning won’t play with the Church or
Parliament.
5. Get
behind Option 1 (paras 79 – 88). If we can embrace this together now, we have some real chance of getting
something that is coherent and workable.
The more opponents attempt to block the legislation, the more likelihood
that provision will be whittled down to nothing.
Of the four
options in the HoB paper, only Option 1 has any chance of success. I would urge
opponents to adopt realpolitik on
this matter. It really is no good any more to argue for provision enshrined in
law. The game is up.
PB/15.6.13
Appendix A
Working Arrangements with the Bishop of Fulham
The order of issues in this list relates to the order
(though not the numbering) in which they appear in the appendix to the London
Plan
1.
Petitioning process for parishes seeking extended
episcopal oversight.
Where a parish seeks
extended oversight, a consultation process will take place
Stage 1
PCC indicates to
Bishop of London that it wishes to consult on petitioning for extended
oversight (copying the Area Bishop and Archdeacon)
Stage
2 Archdeacon
and representative of Bishop of Fulham attend a PCC meeting to explain the
process, hear from the PCC their reasons, and respond to questions and points
of concern (this meeting would occur within 4 weeks of the Stage 1 notification
to the Bishop of London)
Stage
3 PCC meet
(on a separate occasion to the Stage 2 meeting) in order to vote on petitioning
Stage
4 If passed,
then the Bishop of London would be formally petitioned. The Archdeacon would
also submit to the Bishop a report based on the Stage 2 meeting.
Stage
5 After
consultation with the Area Bishop, the Bishop of London would decide whether to
accept the petition or require further consultation
2.
Sponsorship of ordinands by Bishop of Fulham
Discernment process will
take place using Area Directors of Ordinands and existing Area systems, but the
Bishop of Fulham will appoint his own examining chaplain to be in involved in
processing candidates from parishes for which he is responsible.
3.
Placing ordinands in title posts
Subject to suitable
training incumbents being available, ordinands sponsored by the Bishop of
Fulham can be placed in “Fulham” parishes, subject to funding being available.
They will be counted within the relevant Area Bishop’s allocation.
4.
Licensed Lay Ministers and Commissioned Ministers
Candidates will be agreed
by the Bishop of Fulham for training, licensing and commissioning, working with
the relevant Area Wardens of LLMs and CMs. Commissioning paperwork and entry on
database to be done through the Areas.
5.
Permissions to Officiate
The Bishop of Fulham will not process PTOs. PTOs will be processed by the Area Bishop of the
Area in which the priest is working (or by the Bishop of London where the PTO
applicant is in a national post). The Bishop of Fulham may be asked to sign
PTOs where this would be pastorally appropriate.
6.
Collations, Institutions and Licensings in parishes
under the oversight of the Bishop of Fulham
These will be carried out
by Bishop of Fulham with the relevant Archdeacon
7.
Authorisation of lay permissions in parishes under the
oversight of the Bishop of Fulham
To be processed by the
Bishop of Fulham, with a list of those issued to be sent to the Area Bishop for
safeguarding and database purposes (Safeguarding
checks as normal)
8.
Authorisation of admission of children to HC before
confirmation, by the Bishop of Fulham
in relation to those parishes under his oversight, subject to Diocesan
Regulations
9.
Confirmation returns to be kept by Bishop of Fulham for confirmations he carries out.
10. Blue files of
clergy serving in parishes under the oversight of the Bishop of Fulham – to be kept at Old Deanery and available for
consultation by Bishop of Fulham and relevant Area Bishop (the Chichester review made it clear that we should not have two
separate clergy files)
11. MDR – to be run in Areas. Episcopal Review to be carried
out by Bishop of Fulham
12. Appointment
to parishes under the oversight of the Bishop of Fulham – Bishop of Fulham (and Patron) to run whole process
with Archdeacon and Area Dean. Area Bishops to meet candidates before they are
appointed.
13.
CDM process for clergy under the oversight of the
Bishop of Fulham - to be referred to the Bishop of London for his determination
on process
I appreciate your thinking, Pete, but I still hope you and others who can shape a future for traditionalists like myself won't be cowed by the aggressive secularist agenda that's increasingly at us all. Let's not be conservative in the sense of conserving favour with a post-Christian culture that does what's right in its own rather dim sighted eyes. John
ReplyDeleteFr John,
DeleteI am sorry that we inclusionists are not, apparently, vocal enough about this, but it is *offensive* to suggest that we are "cowed by the aggressive secularist agenda." Most of us are quite, quite clear that supporting full inclusion is very much a matter of Gospel imperative – we are all called to witness the glorious, ridiculous, gracious love of God in Christ.
Dan Barnes-Davies
Interesting take. It seems such a shame, however, that we can't find a way to accommodate traditionalists' interpretation of the Bible on this. To bend towards the majority without accommodating the minority at the same time is to give in to political tinkering and to appease the public will, over and above unity with our Christian brothers and sisters. I'm praying for a result which God and the church would be pleased with, and one which would help us to refocus our efforts on what matters most, so that the public would see a church excited about a transformational gospel. Thanks Peter!
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteSo, Pete,you are agreed that "the game is up" .. I seem to recall someone saying that a while back at a Forward in Faith Assembly; and since then, thanks to Benedict XVI, there is an entirely new game available,called Anglicanorum Coetibus. No point pursuing the dead game; you should be encouraging those still opposed on principle to women in the episcopate to join in the new game. It's great.
ReplyDeletePlenty of choices. Personally, I'd been you folk, I'd have swum the Tiber properly, and not just stopped in the lagoon halfway across. But for those who want to stay Anglican, we need to make the best possible provision within the political realities we now inhabit. A quick settlement, and we can ensure real bishops for those opposed.
ReplyDeleteWomen bishops aren't "real" bishops? Possibly "male" better choice of language. However, congratulations on such a constructive and well-received intervention in General Synod.
ReplyDelete"Real" not in contradistinction to "women". What I mean by "real" in this context is male bishops who do more in a parish than merely confirm. The danger is that we give parishes who are opposed a bishop who has no real pastoral functions or duties - which is why I've put the London Plan out there
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