Epis News Service 2nd Release Feb 19

Primates Endorse
Pastoral Council, Primatial Vicar
in Closing Communiqué
Presiding Bishop Comments on Actions; Further Rreflection to Follow
Episcopal News Service
February 19, 2007 By Matthew Davies

[ENS] The Primates of the Anglican Communion have called for the formation of a “Pastoral
Council” that would work in cooperation with the Episcopal Church to negotiate the necessary
structures to facilitate and encourage healing and reconciliation for those who feel unable
to accept the direct ministry of their bishop or of the presiding bishop.

The request came in a communiqué issued at the close of their February 15-19 meeting near Dar
es Salaam, Tanzania, during which the Primates devoted extended discussions of the response
of the Episcopal Church’s 75th General Convention to the Windsor Report, a document that
recommends ways in which the Anglican Communion can maintain unity amid differing viewpoints.

The full text of the communiqué is available at http://www.anglicancommunion.org.

“It is clear that despite the subcommittee report, a number of the Primates were unhappy with
General Convention’s response, and clarification of that response is among the Primates’
requests of the Episcopal Church,” Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori, one of the
Anglican Communion’s 38 Primates, said after their meeting’s final business session adjourned
at 11 p.m. local time.

“There is awareness that these issues are of concern in many Provinces of the Communion, and
that the Episcopal Church’s charism is to continue to encourage the discussion,” said
Jefferts Schori, who will offer additional comment after further reflection and her nearly
20-hour journey back to New York.

Jefferts Schori said the Primates “have also acknowledged and supported” her November 2006
proposal to name a primatial vicar who would assume some pastoral duties at the Presiding
Bishop’s direction.

“The hope is that the proposed primatial vicar will provide enough relief on both sides that
the property disputes can be resolved in a way that does not alienate property and allows
congregations access,” Jefferts Schori said.

She said the Pastoral Council has been requested “to provide accountability for the primatial
vicar proposal, as well as for other Provinces that have intervened.”

Overall, Jefferts Schori said the Primates’ Meeting demonstrated “a positive sense of
collegiality, especially in the Bible studies and among Provinces where these issues have
been robustly discussed. In addition, a number of Provinces are engaged in the Listening
Process, and that is positive.”

The 11-page communiqué noted that, although the Episcopal Church has “taken seriously” its
Windsor response, “at the heart of our tensions is the belief that the Episcopal Church has
departed from the standard of teaching on human sexuality accepted by the Communion in the
1998 Lambeth Resolution 1.10 by consenting to the episcopal election of a candidate living in
a committed relationship, and by permitting Rites of blessing same-sex unions.”

During a news conference at the close of the Primates’ Meeting, Archbishop of Canterbury
Rowan Williams said that the response represented “a willingness to engage with the Communion
… Our first question is how do we best engage with that willingness, a stream of a desire
to remain with the Communion?”

Meanwhile, the Primates have requested that the Episcopal Church’s House of Bishops “make an
unequivocal common covenant” that they will not authorize same-gender blessings within their
dioceses and confirm that Resolution B033, passed at the 75th General Convention, means that
a candidate for bishop who is living in a same-gender relationship “shall not receive the
necessary consent unless some new consensus on these matters emerges across the Communion.”

An answer from the House of Bishops is to be conveyed to the Primates by September 30, 2007.

“If the reassurances … cannot in good conscience be given, the relationship between the
Episcopal Church and the Anglican Communion as a whole remains damaged at the best, and this
has consequences for the full participation of the Church in the life of the Communion,” the
communiqué says.

Williams recognized that a substantial group of bishops in the Episcopal Church — almost one
quarter — have committed fully to the Windsor Report and to providing a carefully worked out
procedure for pastoral oversight.

“So we needed to see if there is an interim situation while the covenant is being worked
out,” he said. “That will provide a way of moving forward with integrity, a system of
pastoral care … a way of beginning to negotiate through the very difficult situation of
interventions of provinces in the life of the Episcopal Church. We had some very moving
testimonies of those, but it can only remain a very temporary solution.”

The Primates said that there remains a “lack of clarity” about the Episcopal Church’s stance,
particularly on the issue of same-gender blessings, and called for some clarification.

They also acknowledged that interventions by bishops and archbishops of some Provinces “have
exacerbated … estrangement between some of the faithful and the Episcopal Church that this
has led to recrimination, hostility and even to disputes in civil courts.”

According to the communiqué, Jefferts Schori reminded the Primates that some in the Episcopal
Church “have lost trust in the Primates and bishops of certain … Provinces because they
fear that they are all too ready to undermine or subvert the polity of the Episcopal Church.”

The Primates are urging “the representatives of the Episcopal Church and of those
congregations in property disputes with it to suspend all actions in law arising in this
situation,” and have requested the assurance that “no steps will be taken to alienate
property from the Episcopal Church without its consent or to deny the use of that property to
those congregations.”

“None of us agreed that litigation or counter litigation can be a proper way forward for a
Christian body,” Williams said.

The communiqué said that once the “scheme of pastoral care is recognized to be fully
operational, the Primates undertake to end all interventions” and that congregations or
parishes in current arrangements will negotiate their place within the structures of pastoral
oversight.”

“I’d like to put all this within the context of a Covenant process,” Williams said. “It’s a
scheme … of nurturing those in the Episcopal Church and clarifying its position.”

Upholding the bonds of affection that unite the Communion, the Primates supported the
establishment of an Anglican Covenant, noting that it “may lead to the trust required to
re-establish our interdependent life.” They recognized that an “interim response” is required
“until the Covenant is secured.”

The text of a proposed Anglican Covenant (http://www.aco.org/commission/covenant/index.cfm),
intended to affirm the cooperative principles that bind the Anglican Communion, was also
released at the end of the Primates’ five-day meeting.

In other business, Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori was elected to represent the
Americas on the Primates’ Standing Committee. Other members elected to serve on the Committee
are Archbishops Phillip Aspinall of Australia; Mouneer Anis of Jerusalem and the Middle East;
Barry Morgan of Wales; Justice Akrofi of West Africa.

The Primates Meeting — of which Jefferts Schori is among 13 new members — is one of global
Anglicans’ four “Instruments of Communion” together with the Archbishop of Canterbury, the
Anglican Consultative Council, and the Lambeth Conference.

Other international concerns addressed in the communiqué included the Millennium Development
Goals (http://www.episcopalchurch.org/3577_77743_ENG_HTM.htm); reports on the Panel of
Reference (http://www.aco.org/commission/reference/index.cfm), which considers situations
where congregations are in serious dispute with their bishop, and the Listening Process
(http://www.aco.org/listening/index.cfm), which strives to honor the process of mutual
listening, particular to the experience of homosexual persons; a proposal for an in-depth
worldwide study of the way Anglicans interpret the Bible; and theological education.

On Sunday, February 18, the Primates traveled by boat to Zanzibar for a Solemn Eucharist in
the Anglican Cathedral — where the altar is built over an old slave trading post — as the
people of Zanzibar commemorated the 100th anniversary of the last slave sold on the island
and the 200th anniversary of the end of slavery in the British Empire.

Jefferts Schori called the Zanzibar visit one of the meeting’s “most significant” aspects.

Throughout the week, alternate meetings have been taking place between some of the “Global
South” Primates and conservative Americans, including Bishop Martin Minns of the conservative
Convocation of Anglicans in North America (CANA), who have been strategizing together.

Nigeria’s Archbishop Peter Akinola, one of the Communion’s leading critics of the Episcopal
Church and its inclusive theology, absented himself from the visit to Zanzibar and met
frequently with the CANA group.

Earlier in the week, seven “Global South” archbishops, including Akinola, refused to receive
Holy Communion with their fellow Primates February 16, alleging that they were “unable to
come to the Holy Table with the Presiding Bishop of The Episcopal Church because to do so
would be a violation of Scriptural teaching and the traditional Anglican understanding.”

“Looking at the levels of human grief, terror and suffering around the world, it is difficult
for people to have transforming views about the Anglican Communion when we have our own
internal divisions,” Williams said. “I do hope that people will bear the MDGs as the primary
vision.”

The Archbishop of Canterbury was joined at meeting’s February 19 closing news conference by
Archbishop Phillip Aspinall of Australia; Archbishop Drexel Gomez of the West Indies;
Archbishop Bernard Nharoturi; and Archbishop Donald Mtetemela of Tanzania.

“The Primates have needed to be patient with one another,” Aspinall said. “They have listened
to each other very carefully and expressed themselves with care. They have tried to
accommodate one others’ views as fully as possible. That slow, respectful process of
communication does take time.”

“The Communion we share is a Communion that covers the whole world,” Nharoturi said. “It has
the wealth richness and diversity … That diversity is a gift from God — although we do not
have the same views and background, we have the same vision.”

Mtetemela, Primate of the 2.5-million-member Anglican Church of Tanzania, said it honor to be
hosting the Primates. “It was an opportunity for our people to have this international
leadership ministering to them,” he said. “and an opportunity for me to expose the leadership
of the Anglican Communion to my country.”

— Matthew Davies is international correspondent for the Episcopal News Service.

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