Former CoE bishops ordained Roman priests
Three former Church of England bishops unwilling to tolerate woman bishops were ordained Roman Catholic priests January 15, 2011, in a ceremony in London’s Westminster Cathedral. The ceremony that saw John Broadhurst, Keith Newton, and Andrew Burnham become priests in what is now called the Ordinariate of Our Lady of Walsingham, a kind of church within a church, was attended by the wives of the former bishops. The event is seen by some as a chill on ecumenical relations between the Roman Catholic Church and the Anglican Communion.The Guardian both reported and editorialized (“to be consumed in bickering about whether women can be priests is the stuff of satire”) on the ordinations. The BBC suggested that the new Ordinariate is problematic in a number of ways. Anglicans converting to Rome will not be able to take their churches with them and likely cannot share them. Moreover, liberal Catholics may not appreciate the influx of conservatives “more Catholic than the Catholics.” The effect on the Church of England will likely be to make it more liberal and more Protestant.
CoE General Synod to consider super-majority vote on Covenant
The Church of England General Synod meets again next month and will consider a motion respecting the Anglican Covenant for which there was insufficient debate time at the November meeting. (See Pittsburgh Update story here.) The motion, from John Ward, seeks to require a two-thirds vote of General Synod for the Church of England to adopt the Anglican Covenant. That the motion is to be considered is indicated in item 8 of this report from the Synod’s Business Committee.Dissident Canadian congregations appeal to Supreme Court
The four congregations in Vancouver’s Diocese of New Westminster that left the Anglican Church of Canada to join the Anglican Network in Canada—now a diocese of Robert Duncan’s Anglican Church in North America—have filed an application for leave to appeal to the Supreme Court of Canada. Lower courts have ruled that the congregations must return parish property to the diocese.The application is not a surprise—see Pittsburgh Update story here—but is clearly a disappointment to New Westminster’s Bishop Michael Ingham, who observed that the move would “consume even more of the time, energy and money that should be used for the mission of the Church.”
The story was reported January 17, 2011, by Anglican Journal. The diocese commented on the legal move January 14 here. The brief filed by the 4 dissident congregations is available on the ANiC website.