In Canada Church leaders brace for battle over the soul of Anglicanism

From the Toronto Star:

The blogs have started and the 24-hour prayer vigil is accepting emails as the Anglican world turns its eyes to Winnipeg.

Canada’s Anglicans gather this week in Manitoba to pick a new leader and decide whether to allow same-sex marriage blessings. But that narrow debate only touches what is truly at stake. For all those involved, on either side of the issue, what is really at issue is the definition of Anglicanism itself ”“ and the possibility of schism.

“The nature of Anglicanism is that it has been from the beginning a movement that tries to be comprehensive,” says retired U.S. Bishop Arthur Walmsley, who has studied and lectured on church history.

But the trait that for more than 400 years has been its strength ”“ an ability to reflect varied theological perspectives and practices ”“ may yet prove its fatal flaw as the gap between conservative and liberal grows too wide to bridge.

“Even if there was a way to solve the same-sex issue satisfactorily to all parties tomorrow, we would still have a major problem on our hands,” says Newfoundland Bishop Don Harvey, spiritual head of the conservative Canadian group Anglican Essentials. “It’s so much deeper than that.”

Already, the church in the U.S. faces expulsion from the Worldwide Anglican Communion if it refuses to recant by Sept. 30 its support of gay marriage and homosexual clergy ”“ a fate that could await Canada if it votes to allow an accommodation of gay marriage within the church. With so much at stake, the Anglican world will be watching what happens in Winnipeg.

Read it all.

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, Anglican Church of Canada, Anglican Provinces, Canadian General Synod 2007, Same-sex blessings, Sexuality Debate (in Anglican Communion)

One comment on “In Canada Church leaders brace for battle over the soul of Anglicanism

  1. Peter says:

    “Harvey’s group has set up a blog, http://www.anglicanessentials.ca/wordpress/, to strengthen the resolve of those opposed to allowing same-sex blessings. Debate of the issue is not tolerated on the forum, according to posted rules.”

    I don’t know if we’re trying to strengthen the resolve as such (though that works too), more about presenting an entirely different perspective on events – as live as possible

    Debate is tolerated on the blog, less so on the prayer forum as the purpose there is very different.

    Peter