Independent: Opt-out for parishioners opposed to women bishops

The Church of England last night tried to avoid a split by watering down its plans for the consecration of women bishops, granting an opt-out to parishioners who refuse to accept the spiritual authority of female clergy.

Under the church’s proposals, parishes could bypass women bishops and women priests by taking their leadership from specially consecrated male “complementary” bishops.

Parents could elect to have their children confirmed and baptised by male clergy while congregations could seek to have sacraments and other divine service removed from the responsibility of a female bishop.

Read it all.

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, Anglican Provinces, Church of England (CoE), CoE Bishops

6 comments on “Independent: Opt-out for parishioners opposed to women bishops

  1. Intercessor says:

    This plan seems fraught with complexities that will fail. As an Anglo-Catholic there can be no negotiation of one’s soul. The Women have already exposed their politics of “priesthood” via compromise thirty or so years ago by the weak and the blinded. We should not trust the untrustworthy.
    Intercessor

  2. Fr. Dale says:

    “The Bishop of Manchester’s report also places a requirement on theological opponents to female bishops to accept that their ordination in the Church of England is legally binding.”
    This is what I would call consent under duress. This is nothing more than a transitional policy that will eventually force CofE parishioners and male priests to accept female bishops.

  3. austin says:

    “There will always be an honored place among us for those that do not accept the ordination of women” ranks up there with “I will not invade Poland” as one of the great lies of the 20th Century.

    In the 21st, the so-called “period of reception” has evidently ended. Forward in Faith laid out with painstaking clarity what would be adequate for its needs. That was simply refused by Synod. Now, feeling rather shamefaced, the CoE is trying to fudge something inadequate together that will please nobody.

    Still, better than the US, Canadian, Australian, and NZ example of “Shut up. pay up, and do as you are told.

  4. Ad Orientem says:

    I am here reminded of the Orthodox axiom that you are who you are in communion with. If you are in communion with heretics…

    Under the mercy,
    [url=http://ad-orientem.blogspot.com/]John[/url]

    An [url=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gj4pUphDitA]Orthodox [/url] Christian

  5. Id rather not say says:

    Actually, I regard such waffling by the Manchester group as a hopeful sign. Perhaps the whole sorry thing will unravel and we’ll be back where we started before the Synod ran roughshod over those objecting to the new gender agenda.

  6. nwlayman says:

    Now everyone knows that this has been done before and everything just turned out *fine*. At the 1976 General Convention provisions were carefully drawn up to safeguard the convictions of those who couldn’t assent to women’s ordination. The Conscience Clause protected all the conservatives, didn’t it?