A Statement from the Chairman of Forward in Faith

From here:

Like you, I was very disappointed at the outcome of last weekend’s debate at General Synod in York and appalled at the intransigence of some feminist clergy and their supporters. What kind of a church is it that is willing to ignore the leadership of its Archbishops and to renege on a solemn promise given to Parliament about an honoured and permanent place for us?

We now face a most serious situation, made all the worse by the refusal of the Synod to pass the Archbishops’ amendment. Resolutions A & B – which provide the basis in law on which the ordination of women can be opposed – are to be removed. This means that any opposition which might be tolerated will be based on the recognition of supposed prejudice rather than the respect of theological principle. Further, the abolition of the PEVs is proposed, which will leave our constituency in an intolerable position. All we would be allowed under the draft Measure as it now stands is access to a male bishop, whose own beliefs need not coincide with ours. That is sexism writ large.

Despite the dreadful result in York, we owe a debt of gratitude to the Catholic Group in General Synod, along with all those who supported them in the debate. In the coming weeks, a new Synod is to be elected and it is vital we all do all we can to ensure the return of as many orthodox candidates as possible, in order that a Catholic presence on the Synod can be there to continue to represent the interests of Catholic Anglicans throughout this divisive and unnecessary process.

That these are very difficult times for all of us goes without saying; we need, above all, to take time to pray, to consult together and to support one another, as we try to discern our respective ways forward ”“ not just in faith, but also of course in hope and in love.

–(The Rt. Rev.) John Broadhurst, Bishop of Fulham

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3 comments on “A Statement from the Chairman of Forward in Faith

  1. New Reformation Advocate says:

    Clear, calm, and dignified. A fine, measured response, a worthy lament, doubtless intended to discourage any “precipitate” actions.

    But +Broadhurst has no real hope or consolation to offer. The game is up, and now it’s only a matter of time before many anti-WO Anglo-Catholics depart for Rome and the new Ordinariate. I don’t blame them. The CoE has treated them shamefully.

    David Handy+

  2. Larry Morse says:

    No, the game isn’t up, and that is precisely the problem! The Anglican patricians have no idea how to declare the game is up. That is precisely what they WON”T do because they don’t have the…….courage. Instead there will be meetings, conferences, dialogues, confrontations, prayers for a perfectly fraudulent unity. And crossing the Tiber, what is that except ANOTHER running away from the burden of standing up and being counted. I blame them and damn their eyes as well, for they are leaving Christianity spineless and weakened when they could have done otherwise.
    Precipitate? What does it take to produce any real action? Two generations of vacillation and procrastination and the church patricians have yet to act. And if the patricians are impotent what shall hoi polloi do? Larry

  3. rugbyplayingpriest says:

    running away to cross the Tiber or making a courageous stand requiring the sacrifice of home and stipend in order to proclaim the truth? What did Jesus say about banging the dust from the boots?

    Why fight for an institution that does not even want your help? When is it so broken as to be unfixable? It is noble to defend the Mother ships from Pirates in order to save her. It is sheer folly to remain on deck as she sinks and refuse to climb aboard the lifeboat when it is sent