Bishops set their sights on a more united future on Sunday as their global conference drew to a close with appeals from the Archbishop of Canterbury for all Anglicans to walk the road forward together.
In his final presidential address at the once -a-decade Lambeth Conference on Sunday, Dr. Rowan Williams, the spiritual leader for the Anglican Communion, said there was “wide support” for the suspension of ordinations of gay people, blessings for same-sex couples and cross-border interventions.
"If the North American churches don't accept the need for moratoria, then to say the least, we are no further forward," Williams said after the conference concluded. "That means as a communion we continue to be in grave peril.”
The 77-million member Anglican Communion has been wracked with division, particularly since the 2003 consecration of openly gay bishop Gene Robinson of New Hampshire. More than 200 conservative bishops boycotted the conference in protest of the presence of pro-gay bishops, including some of those involved in the consecration of Robinson. They held their own meeting, the Global Anglican Future Conference (GAFCON), in Jerusalem in June.
In his strongest public acknowledgement of GAFCON to date, Williams said he would look for ways to “build bridges” with bishops in the movement, who include Nigerian Archbishop Peter Akinola, Ugandan Archbishop Henry Orombi, Sydney Archbishop Peter Jensen, and a number of UK bishops, including the Bishop of Rochester, the Rt. Rev Michael Nazir-Ali.
Williams said he would send out a pastoral letter to each of the GAFCON bishops as a first step, but added that the bridge-building process would need some “teasing out” in the coming months.
On Sunday, the Archbishop of Canterbury also expressed support for the formation of a Pastoral Forum that would oversee conservative parishes and dioceses that break from their regional denomination, saying it would help to “avoid further ecclesial confusion.”
He went on to reaffirm his support for the Anglican Covenant, saying that it had the potential to make Anglicans “more of a church; more of a ‘catholic’ church in the proper sense, a church, that is, which understands its ministry and service and sacraments as united and interdependent throughout the world.”
Responding to critics who said this year’s Lambeth avoids tackling the controversial issues wracking the global Communion, Williams insisted that bishops at Lambeth had “not evaded” the difficult questions, although he conceded that some in the Communion had not received the answers they were hoping for.
Unlike previous Lambeth conferences, there was no legislation at this year’s meeting. Anglican leaders said they wanted to hold talks to better understand one another and build relationships, rather than create “winners and losers” through a parliamentary procedure, U.S. Episcopal Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori had said.
Despite the divisions and protests leading into the conference, Williams said he “could not have prayed for more” success as he reflected on the achievements of this year’s meeting.
The Archbishop said he would convene a Primates’ meeting in early 2009 to take the outcomes of the Lambeth Conference further.
“We may not have put an end to all our problems – but the pieces are on the board,” he said.




It is self-righteous to recognize that GOD gets to set the rules? I would think that humble. But then I do not try to re-write history or redefine terms. So maybe its not being humble to recognize I do not set the rules.
wbmoore, sadly you just don't get it. It's not about the value of truth, its about the self-righteousness with which you hold your view of it.
St Johns,
In fact, truth is so important, that we can not know God without it.
John 14:6
Jesus answered, "I am the way and the truth and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me."
St Johns,
What's sad is that you can't see how important truth is. Jesus said to call people on sin. Paul, Jude, Peter, John all spoke to the need for truth and/or defending the truth.
Luke 17:3 So watch yourselves. "If your brother sins, rebuke him, and if he repents, forgive him.
Ephesians 5:11
Have nothing to do with the fruitless deeds of darkness, but rather expose them.
2 Tim 4:2-4
2 Preach the Word; be prepared in season and out of season; correct, rebuke and encourageâ
This is hopeful. It sounds as if those who believe in the authority of scripture have finally convinced those who don't that they will not be swayed and if the Anglicans are to continue as they are presently constituted, there will have to be repentance over gay ordination and same sex blessings by man. The Africans have led the English and the Americans in following the Bible teachings. While we know there will be those in America and England who will not accept this, it is gratifying to know that the Africans, by far the majority of Anglicans, will not stand for apostasy.
Sad that neither of you can see how self-righteous your responses were.
Unity cannot come at the cost of truth.
http://wbmoore.wordpress.com/2008/07/20/unity-at-what-cost/
St. John: I believe the term is 'biblical' not 'self righteous'
However, unity will never occur. We all know the weeds will grow alongside the wheat until the harvest. He who has ears to hear, let him hear.
CP2008, how self-righteous can you be?