Monday, May 11, 2009

Chicago Consultation Responds to Anglican Consultative Council Actions

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
contact: Rebecca Wilson, 330-524-2067, rebeccaswilson@sbcglobal.net
 
GOING FORWARD, GOING TOGETHER:
Chicago Consultation Urges Deeper Communion Through Justice, Mission
 
CHICAGO, May 11, 2009--The Chicago Consultation released this statement
today from its co-convener Ruth Meyers in response to the Anglican
Consultative Council's affirmation of the recommendations made by the
Windsor Continuation Group and its decision to postpone the release of the
Anglican Covenant for consideration by provinces:
 
The Anglican Consultative Council (ACC), meeting now in Kingston, Jamaica,
has committed itself to the hard work of debating recommendations and
documents that seek to define the Anglican Communion. We are grateful for
the efforts of its representatives, and we especially commend the decision
to delay sending a draft of the proposed Anglican Covenant to the provinces
until more work has been done that might strengthen, rather than tear down,
our common life.
 
However, we believe that the ACC and the Windsor Continuation Group have
made a grievous error by concluding that God is calling us to exclude
baptized Christians who are gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender for the
sake of communion. These moratoria, which were requested in the Windsor
Report and by the primates, have not been formally agreed to by the
democratic structures of the Episcopal Church and are inconsistent with both
the Anglican tradition of seeking unity through diversity and with
scripture's mandate to do justice.
 
Moreover, much of the recent debate suggests that we are in danger of coming
to believe that the Anglican Communion is defined by meetings, documents and
resolutions rather than by our call to be the body of Christ in the world.
All baptized people share equally in that call and no resolution or
moratorium can diminish it.
 
At its best, the Anglican Communion is a manifestation of the body of Christ
in which the Holy Spirit blesses members from different cultures and
contexts in various ways and gives us grace to embrace all of these gifts.
All around us, we see evidence that this Communion—strengthened by common
prayer and sacraments, mutual mission, and ministry of our gay, lesbian
bisexual and transgender brothers and sisters—offers rich possibility for
our common life.
 
Sometimes this way is difficult, but we believe it is the path on which God
is calling us to go forward together. We urge the Anglican Consultative
Council, the working group to be appointed by the Archbishop of Canterbury,
and the Episcopal Church to follow by doing justice and seeking true
communion, without fear about where God might lead us.
 
The Chicago Consultation, a group of Episcopal and Anglican bishops, clergy
and lay people, supports the full inclusion of gay, lesbian, bisexual and
transgender (GLBT) Christians in the Episcopal Church and the worldwide
Anglican Communion. We believe that our baptismal covenant requires this.

The Chicago Consultation believes that, like the church's historic
discrimination against people of color and women, excluding GLBT people from
the sacramental life of the church is a sin. Through study, prayer and
conversation, we seek to provide clergy and laypeople across The Episcopal
Church and the Anglican Communion with biblical and theological perspectives
that will rid the church of this sin.
 
###
 
Editor's note: The Rev. Dr. Ruth Meyers is Co-Convener of The Chicago
Consultation; Professor of Liturgics at Seabury-Western Theological
Seminary; and Deputy from the Diocese of Chicago.

No comments: