Harold Meyerson: Anglican angst

But a common complaint of American and European conservatives against Muslims is that Islam itself is a monolithic faith unsuitable for the pluralistic West. We don’t have to accept this characterization of Islam to recognize that it is close to what Anglican traditionalists are advocating for their own church.

Besides, if ever a church were rooted less in timeless truths than in historic particularities, it is Anglicanism, and the Episcopal wing of Anglicanism most of all. Anglicanism began, after all, because the pope would not sanctify Henry VIII’s divorce, and Henry used the opportunity to seize the church and all its properties. Episcopalianism began when the leaders of the American Revolution (two-thirds of the signers of the Declaration of Independence were active or, like George Washington, nominal Anglicans) realized they could hardly stay religiously affiliated with a church headed by the very king against whom they were rebelling secularly.

Given the schismatic and distinctly secular nature of Anglicanism’s and Episcopalianism’s origins, the pending ordination of L.A.’s lesbian bishop seems well within the church tradition. A faith rooted in the denial of papal authority and kingly authority, a faith that in the United States has increasingly championed egalitarian principles, should hardly be cowed by contingent bigotries masquerading as universal truths.

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Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, Archbishop of Canterbury, Episcopal Church (TEC), TEC Bishops, TEC Conflicts, TEC Conflicts: Los Angeles

10 comments on “Harold Meyerson: Anglican angst

  1. John Wilkins says:

    Well, although I find this an interesting piece in that it represents what some in the outside world think of Episcopalians, I find the conflation of political and religious identification troubling. Evangelicals and Catholics have often been “progressive.” Evangelicals stood against the state; Catholics have marched for the poor against corporations.

    I see what he’s saying. My congregation, however, has a number of politically conservative people who would take issue with some of the vocabulary, although they would agree that the African view of homosexuality is bigotry, and that scripture is more plastic than others claim. One can celebrate the humanistic traditions in Christianity without being a pawn of the Democratic party. I hope.

  2. francis says:

    This is Anglicanism? Ciao.

  3. A Senior Priest says:

    Astonishingly ignorant historical analysis.

  4. dwstroudmd+ says:

    This is clearly revisioned history. Relation to reality is dubious where tenuous.

  5. teddy mak says:

    Re: #3. Astonishingly ignorant historical etc etc.

    You got that right Senior.

    Who is Harold Myerson? Did he ever hear of the War of The Roses? The primary duty of Henry VIII was to assure that this horrific dynastic conflict did not erupt again. He must have an heir, and saw to it, confounding the scheming occupant of Peter’s Chair. If later Henry committed excesses-well that’s another story and has nothing to do with his putting to an end for all time the Roman attempt to retake its lost cash flow and real estate. It is just tiresome to see this nonsense come back over and over again.

  6. William P. Sulik says:

    Well said, John (#1) – thank you.

  7. The young fogey says:

    Good point about ‘theologically conservative but politically progressive’: true of Anglo-Catholics for much of their history.

    The article has its biases (implied: if you want consistent doctrine you’re like the 9/11 terrorists) but in its broad outlines of Anglicanism is correct (pedantry: Henry wanted and got an annulment not a divorce but so what?). Given Anglicans’ principle of authority they don’t have a leg to stand on when criticising Canon Glasspool’s election. (That is, all Protestants are only a vote away from that.)

    But there won’t be a split. That won’t come unless one of the Anglican national churches turns unitarian.

    All I care about in all this is defending the Episcopalians’ right to govern themselves, their property rights and, when this is all over, defending their religious liberty as well as the Episcopalians’, that my conservative friends who are still Episcopalians still have someplace to go to church.

  8. John Wilkins says:

    I wouldn’t call his interpretation wrong, but it is selective. There are multiple traditions that have competed and engaged each other. And it is amusing to presume that the Episcopal church was ever really “liberal”.

    The polity of the Episcopal church, has made it ill-suited to have a single voice that visibly contrasts against the countervailing claims of the culture at large. To some it will has simply demonstrated that it’s responses are reactive, thoughtless, faddish and ephemeral; to others it remains antiquated.

    Although I’m more of a left contrarian on most political issues, the church loses its voice when it indulges too easily in the political conventions of the day, which is what this author has unintentionally revealed.

  9. evan miller says:

    People really shouldn’t write about things about which they are so ignorant.

  10. northcoast says:

    Times Editor: Bishops are consecrated, and conservative former Episcopalians aligned themselves with foreign provinces. Here we go again about Henry VIII. Washington’s association with Virginia parishes seems to have been more than just passive. Just love that Anglican jihad stuff.