Pope Francis with the Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby at the Vatican Photo: AGF
Anglican Welby braced for 'difficulty' with Rome as Church of England prepares to approve women bishops
Archbishop of Canterbury insists expected decision in favour of women bishops will not spell end of hopes of unity between Anglicans and Roman Catholics despite theological differences
A long-awaited vote, expected next
month, to allow women to become bishops in the Church of England is likely to
set back relations with the Roman Catholic Church, the Archbishop of Canterbury
has acknowledged.
The Most Rev Justin Welby, a strong
supporter of women in episcopate, said he was conscious he would have to “deal
with” the ramifications but insisted it was a “difficulty” rather than a
serious blow to hopes of eventual unity.
Speaking as he met Archbishop Welby
in Rome earlier this week, Pope Francis described the more than 400 years of
division between the two churches as a “scandal”.
Although the two churches began
discussing the possibility of full visible unity more than 50 years ago, moves
such as the ordination women priests in the Church of England and the
establishment under Pope Benedict of a special branch of the Catholic Church
for former Anglican have accentuated differences.
But the day-to-day relationship
between the two churches is currently considered to be better than at any time
since the split from Rome became permanent under Elizabeth I.
Speaking to odogwuemekaodogwu.com
the Catholic magazine, at the end of his three-day visit to Rome, Archbishop
Welby acknowledged how the vote on women bishops is likely to be seen in Rome.
“I am very conscious that this is
something we have to deal with,” he said.
“This is a difficulty, but a
difficulty that we can handle in the context of a good relationship rather than
a pit into which we fall.”
After decades of wrangling, a vote
giving final approval to women bishops is expected to be passed by the Church
of England's General Synod in York on July 14.
The church was thrown into crisis
November 2012 when women bishops legislation, prepared during a tortuous
12-year legal process and overwhelmingly backed by parishes, failed to pass.
Although three quarters of Synod
members voted in favour, it failed under the church’s complicated voting
procedures, falling six votes short among the laity.
Amid fury in parishes and calls for
Parliament to intervene, Archbishop Welby oversaw a fast-track plan to bring
the issue back before Synod, sidestepping procedural rules which would have
prevented a fresh attempt for several years.
Significantly, among those who
accompanied Archbishop Welby to meet the Pope was the Rev Nicky Gumbel, the
vicar of Holy Trinity Brompton, the lively evangelical parish which pioneered
the Alpha course, the short introduction to Christianity taken by more than 15
million around the world.
Adapted from the Tablet written By John Bingham,
Religious Affairs Editor
Pope Francis At War With Archbishop Of Canterbury Over Women Ordination
Reviewed by Unknown
on
Saturday, June 21, 2014
Rating:
No comments: