Robert
Key says:
'This is a very significant pronouncement from the
Archbishop of Canterbury. Personally I find it very helpful in
these uncertain times. I hope you will, too.'
The Challenge and
Hope of Being an Anglican Today: A Reflection for the Bishops,
Clergy and Faithful of the Anglican Communion
The Anglican Communion:
a Church in Crisis?
What is the current tension in the Anglican
Communion actually about? Plenty of people are confident that
they know the answer. It's about gay bishops, or possibly women
bishops. The American Church is in favour and others are against
- and the Church of England is not sure (as usual).It's true
that the election of a practising gay person as a bishop in the
US in 2003 was the trigger for much of the present conflict.
It is doubtless also true that a lot of extra heat is generated
in the conflict by ingrained and ignorant prejudice in some quarters;
and that for many others, in and out of the Church, the issue
seems to be a clear one about human rights and dignity. But the
debate in the Anglican Communion is not essentially a debate
about the human rights of homosexual people. It is possible -
indeed, it is imperative - to give the strongest support to the
defence of homosexual people against violence, bigotry and legal
disadvantage, to appreciate the role played in the life of the
church by people of homosexual orientation, and still to believe
that this doesn't settle the question of whether the Christian
Church has the freedom, on the basis of the Bible, and its historic
teachings, to bless homosexual partnerships as a clear expression
of God's will. That is disputed among Christians, and, as a bare
matter of fact, only a small minority would answer yes to the
question. Unless you think that social and legal considerations
should be allowed to resolve religious disputes - which is a
highly risky assumption if you also believe in real freedom of
opinion in a diverse society - there has to be a recognition
that religious bodies have to deal with the question in their
own terms. Arguments have to be drawn up on the common basis
of Bible and historic teaching. And, to make clear something
that can get very much obscured in the rhetoric about `inclusion',
this is not and should never be a question about the contribution
of gay and lesbian people as such to the Church of God and its
ministry, about the dignity and value of gay and lesbian people.
Instead it is a question, agonisingly difficult for many, as
to what kinds of behaviour a Church that seeks to be loyal to
the Bible can bless, and what kinds of behaviour it must warn
against - and so it is a question about how we make decisions
corporately with other Christians, looking together for the mind
of Christ as we share the study of the Scriptures.
Anglican Decision-Making
And this is where the real issue for Anglicans arises. How do
we as Anglicans deal with this issue `in our own terms'? And
what most Anglicans worldwide have said is that it doesn't help
to behave as if the matter had been resolved when in fact it
hasn't. It is true that, in spite of resolutions and declarations
of intent, the process of `listening to the experience' of homosexual
people hasn't advanced very far in most of our churches, and
that discussion remains at a very basic level for many. But the
decision of the Episcopal Church to elect a practising gay man
as a bishop was taken without even the American church itself
(which has had quite a bit of discussion of the matter) having
formally decided as a local Church what it thinks about blessing
same-sex partnerships. There are other fault lines of division,
of course, including the legitimacy of ordaining women as priests
and bishops. But (as has often been forgotten) the Lambeth Conference
did resolve that for the time being those churches that did ordain
women as priests and bishops and those that did not had an equal
place within the Anglican spectrum. Women bishops attended the
last Lambeth Conference. There is a fairly general (though not
universal) recognition that differences about this can still
be understood within the spectrum of manageable diversity about
what the Bible and the tradition make possible. On the issue
of practising gay bishops, there has been no such agreement,
and it is not unreasonable to seek for a very much wider and
deeper consensus before any change is in view, let alone foreclosing
the debate by ordaining someone, whatever his personal merits,
who was in a practising gay partnership. The recent resolutions
of the General Convention have not produced a complete response
to the challenges of the Windsor Report, but on this specific
question there is at the very least an acknowledgement of the
gravity of the situation in the extremely hard work that went
into shaping the wording of the final formula. Very many in the
Anglican Communion would want the debate on the substantive ethical
question to go on as part of a general process of theological
discernment; but they believe that the pre-emptive action taken
in 2003 in the US has made such a debate harder not easier, that
it has reinforced the lines of division and led to enormous amounts
of energy going into `political' struggle with and between churches
in different parts of the world. However, institutionally speaking,
the Communion is an association of local churches, not a single
organisation with a controlling bureaucracy and a universal system
of law. So everything depends on what have generally been unspoken
conventions of mutual respect. Where these are felt to have been
ignored, it is not surprising that deep division results, with
the politicisation of a theological dispute taking the place
of reasoned reflection. Thus if other churches have said, in
the wake of the events of 2003 that they cannot remain fully
in communion with the American Church, this should not be automatically
seen as some kind of blind bigotry against gay people. Where
such bigotry does show itself it needs to be made clear that
it is unacceptable; and if this is not clear, it is not at all
surprising if the whole question is reduced in the eyes of many
to a struggle between justice and violent prejudice. It is saying
that, whatever the presenting issue, no member Church can make
significant decisions unilaterally and still expect this to make
no difference to how it is regarded in the fellowship; this would
be uncomfortably like saying that every member could redefine
the terms of belonging as and when it suited them. Some actions
- and sacramental actions in particular - just do have the effect
of putting a Church outside or even across the central stream
of the life they have shared with other Churches. It isn't a
question of throwing people into outer darkness, but of recognising
that actions have consequences - and that actions believed in
good faith to be `prophetic' in their radicalism are likely to
have costly consequences.
Truth and Unity
It is true that witness
to what is passionately believed to be the truth sometimes appears
a higher value than unity, and there are moving and inspiring
examples in the twentieth century. If someone genuinely thinks
that a move like the ordination of a practising gay bishop is
that sort of thing, it is understandable that they are prepared
to risk the breakage of a unity they can only see as false or
corrupt. But the risk is a real one; and it is never easy to
recognise when the moment of inevitable separation has arrived
- to recognise that this is the issue on which you stand or fall
and that this is the great issue of faithfulness to the gospel.
The nature of prophetic action is that you do not have a cast-iron
guarantee that you're right. But let's suppose that there isn't
that level of clarity about the significance of some divisive
issue. If we do still believe that unity is generally a way of
coming closer to revealed truth (`only the whole Church knows
the whole Truth' as someone put it), we now face some choices
about what kind of Church we as Anglicans are or want to be.
Some speak as if it would be perfectly simple - and indeed desirable
- to dissolve the international relationships, so that every
local Church could do what it thought right. This may be tempting,
but it ignores two things at least. First, it fails to see that
the same problems and the same principles apply within local
Churches as between Churches. The divisions don't run just between
national bodies at a distance, they are at work in each locality,
and pose the same question: are we prepared to work at a common
life which doesn't just reflect the interests and beliefs of
one group but tries to find something that could be in everyone's
interest - recognising that this involves different sorts of
costs for everyone involved? It may be tempting to say, `let
each local church go its own way'; but once you've lost the idea
that you need to try to remain together in order to find the
fullest possible truth, what do you appeal to in the local situation
when serious division threatens? Second, it ignores the degree
to which we are already bound in with each other's life through
a vast network of informal contacts and exchanges. These are
not the same as the formal relations of ecclesiastical communion,
but they are real and deep, and they would be a lot weaker and
a lot more casual without those more formal structures. They
mean that no local Church and no group within a local Church
can just settle down complacently with what it or its surrounding
society finds comfortable. The Church worldwide is not simply
the sum total of local communities. It has a cross-cultural dimension
that is vital to its health and it is naVve to think that this
can survive without some structures to make it possible. An isolated
local Church is less than a complete Church. Both of these points
are really grounded in the belief that our unity is something
given to us prior to our choices - let alone our votes. `You
have not chosen me but I have chosen you', says Jesus to his
disciples; and when we gather to celebrate the Eucharist, we
are saying that we are all there as invited guests, not because
of what we have done. The basic challenge that practically all
the churches worldwide, of whatever denomination, so often have
to struggle with is, `Are we joining together in one act of Holy
Communion, one Eucharist, throughout the world, or are we just
celebrating our local identities and our personal preferences?'
The Anglican Identity
The reason Anglicanism is worth bothering
with is because it has tried to find a way of being a Church
that is neither tightly centralised nor just a loose federation
of essentially independent bodies - a Church that is seeking
to be a coherent family of communities meeting to hear the Bible
read, to break bread and share wine as guests of Jesus Christ,
and to celebrate a unity in worldwide mission and ministry. That
is what the word `Communion' means for Anglicans, and it is a
vision that has taken clearer shape in many of our ecumenical
dialogues. Of course it is possible to produce a self-deceiving,
self-important account of our worldwide identity, to pretend
that we were a completely international and universal institution
like the Roman Catholic Church. We're not. But we have tried
to be a family of Churches willing to learn from each other across
cultural divides, not assuming that European (or American or
African) wisdom is what settles everything, opening up the lives
of Christians here to the realities of Christian experience elsewhere.
And we have seen these links not primarily in a bureaucratic
way but in relation to the common patterns of ministry and worship
- the community gathered around Scripture and sacraments; a ministry
of bishops, priests and deacons, a biblically-centred form of
common prayer, a focus on the Holy Communion. These are the signs
that we are not just a human organisation but a community trying
to respond to the action and the invitation of God that is made
real for us in ministry and Bible and sacraments. We believe
we have useful and necessary questions to explore with Roman
Catholicism because of its centralised understanding of jurisdiction
and some of its historic attitudes to the Bible. We believe we
have some equally necessary questions to propose to classical
European Protestantism, to fundamentalism, and to liberal Protestant
pluralism. There is an identity here, however fragile and however
provisional. But what our Communion lacks is a set of adequately
developed structures which is able to cope with the diversity
of views that will inevitably arise in a world of rapid global
communication and huge cultural variety. The tacit conventions
between us need spelling out - not for the sake of some central
mechanism of control but so that we have ways of being sure we're
still talking the same language, aware of belonging to the one,
holy, catholic and apostolic Church of Christ. It is becoming
urgent to work at what adequate structures for decision-making
might look like. We need ways of translating this underlying
sacramental communion into a more effective institutional reality,
so that we don't compromise or embarrass each other in ways that
get in the way of our local and our universal mission, but learn
how to share responsibility.
Future Directions
The idea of a
`covenant' between local Churches (developing alongside the existing
work being done on harmonising the church law of different local
Churches) is one method that has been suggested, and it seems
to me the best way forward. It is necessarily an `opt-in' matter.
Those Churches that were prepared to take this on as an expression
of their responsibility to each other would limit their local
freedoms for the sake of a wider witness; and some might not
be willing to do this. We could arrive at a situation where there
were `constituent' Churches in covenant in the Anglican Communion
and other `churches in association', which were still bound by
historic and perhaps personal links, fed from many of the same
sources, but not bound in a single and unrestricted sacramental
communion, and not sharing the same constitutional structures.
The relation would not be unlike that between the Church of England
and the Methodist Church, for example. The `associated' Churches
would have no direct part in the decision making of the `constituent'
Churches, though they might well be observers whose views were
sought or whose expertise was shared from time to time, and with
whom significant areas of co-operation might be possible. This
leaves many unanswered questions, I know, given that lines of
division run within local Churches as well as between them -
and not only on one issue (we might note the continuing debates
on the legitimacy of lay presidency at the Eucharist). It could
mean the need for local Churches to work at ordered and mutually
respectful separation between `constituent' and `associated'
elements; but it could also mean a positive challenge for Churches
to work out what they believed to be involved in belonging in
a global sacramental fellowship, a chance to rediscover a positive
common obedience to the mystery of God's gift that was not a
matter of coercion from above but of that `waiting for each other'
that St Paul commends to the Corinthians.
There is no way in
which the Anglican Communion can remain unchanged by what is
happening at the moment. Neither the liberal nor the conservative
can simply appeal to a historic identity that doesn't correspond
with where we now are. We do have a distinctive historic tradition
- a reformed commitment to the absolute priority of the Bible
for deciding doctrine, a catholic loyalty to the sacraments and
the threefold ministry of bishops, priests and deacons, and a
habit of cultural sensitivity and intellectual flexibility that
does not seek to close down unexpected questions too quickly.
But for this to survive with all its aspects intact, we need
closer and more visible formal commitments to each other. And
it is not going to look exactly like anything we have known so
far. Some may find this unfamiliar future conscientiously unacceptable,
and that view deserves respect. But if we are to continue to
be any sort of `Catholic' church, if we believe that we are answerable
to something more than our immediate environment and its priorities
and are held in unity by something more than just the consensus
of the moment, we have some very hard work to do to embody this
more clearly. The next Lambeth Conference ought to address this
matter directly and fully as part of its agenda. The different
components in our heritage can, up to a point, flourish in isolation
from each other. But any one of them pursued on its own would
lead in a direction ultimately outside historic Anglicanism The
reformed concern may lead towards a looser form of ministerial
order and a stronger emphasis on the sole, unmediated authority
of the Bible. The catholic concern may lead to a high doctrine
of visible and structural unification of the ordained ministry
around a focal point. The cultural and intellectual concern may
lead to a style of Christian life aimed at giving spiritual depth
to the general shape of the culture around and de-emphasising
revelation and history. Pursued far enough in isolation, each
of these would lead to a different place - to strict evangelical
Protestantism, to Roman Catholicism, to religious liberalism.
To accept that each of these has a place in the church's life
and that they need each other means that the enthusiasts for
each aspect have to be prepared to live with certain tensions
or even sacrifices - with a tradition of being positive about
a responsible critical approach to Scripture, with the anomalies
of a historic ministry not universally recognised in the Catholic
world, with limits on the degree of adjustment to the culture
and its habits that is thought possible or acceptable.
Conclusion
The only reason for being an Anglican is that this
balance seems to you to be healthy for the Church Catholic overall,
and that it helps people grow in discernment and holiness. Being
an Anglican in the way I have sketched involves certain concessions
and unclarities but provides at least for ways of sharing responsibility
and making decisions that will hold and that will be mutually
intelligible. No-one can impose the canonical and structural
changes that will be necessary. All that I have said above should
make it clear that the idea of an Archbishop of Canterbury resolving
any of this by decree is misplaced, however tempting for many.
The Archbishop of Canterbury presides and convenes in the Communion,
and may do what this document attempts to do, which is to outline
the theological framework in which a problem should be addressed;
but he must always act collegially, with the bishops of his own
local Church and with the primates and the other instruments
of communion. That is why the process currently going forward
of assessing our situation in the wake of the General Convention
is a shared one. But it is nonetheless possible for the Churches
of the Communion to decide that this is indeed the identity,
the living tradition - and by God's grace, the gift - we want
to share with the rest of the Christian world in the coming generation;
more importantly still, that this is a valid and vital way of
presenting the Good News of Jesus Christ to the world. My hope
is that the period ahead - of detailed response to the work of
General Convention, exploration of new structures, and further
refinement of the covenant model - will renew our positive appreciation
of the possibilities of our heritage so that we can pursue our
mission with deeper confidence and harmony.
© Rowan Williams
2006 |