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US Episcopal Bishops Request Meeting with Archbishop of Canterbury

Responding to the recent Anglican Primates' Communiqué, the Episcopal Church's House of Bishops, has expressed "an urgent need for us to meet face to face with the Archbishop of Canterbury and the members of the Primates' Standing Committee".

by Daniel Blake
Posted: Wednesday, March 21, 2007, 15:26 (GMT)
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Responding to the recent Anglican Primates' Communiqué, the Episcopal Church's House of Bishops, has expressed "an urgent need for us to meet face to face with the Archbishop of Canterbury and the members of the Primates' Standing Committee".

The request came as the second of three "mind of the house" resolutions was adopted by the bishops on March 20. The resolutions were debated during the business session scheduled during the House of Bishops' annual spring retreat meeting in Navasota, Texas.

In the afternoon's first resolution, addressed to the Episcopal Church's Executive Council, the House of Bishops said it "affirms its desire that The Episcopal Church remain a part of the councils of the Anglican Communion" and "pledges itself to continue to work to find ways of meeting the pastoral concerns of the Primates that are compatible with our own polity and canons".

Stating that "the meaning of the Preamble to the Constitution of The Episcopal Church is determined solely by the General Convention", the resolution also declares that "the House of Bishops believes the pastoral scheme of the Dar es Salaam Communiqué of February 19, 2007 would be injurious to the polity of the Episcopal Church and urges that the executive council decline to participate in it."

The Primates' "pastoral scheme" seeks to establish a pastoral council and a primatial vicar whom the Episcopal Church's Presiding Bishop would name to provide alternative oversight to dioceses - seven of the Episcopal Church's 111 - that have requested such a provision.

A third resolution - a longer text - enumerates four reasons why the bishops, hoping "we will continue to be welcome in the councils" of the Anglican Communion "nevertheless decline to participate in the Primates' pastoral scheme for many reasons".

The reasons cite violation of church law and founding principles of the Episcopal Church, fundamental change to the character of the Windsor process and proposed Anglican Covenant design process, and departure from English Reformation heritage and "the generous orthodoxy of our prayer book tradition".

The resolution further calls the scheme "spiritually unsound" for its encouragement of "one of the worst tendencies of our Western culture, which is to break relationships when we find them difficult instead of doing the hard work necessary to repair them and be instruments of reconciliation".

Further details of the resolutions and the House of Bishops' full six-day meeting will be provided in a written letter to be released by the House on March 21.

The House of Bishops' media briefing officer for the March 20 sessions was the Rt Rev Catherine Roskam, bishop suffragan of the Diocese of New York.



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