- REUTERS
England's Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams (right) and Nigerian Anglican Archbishop Peter Akinola chats during a group picture session after a closed-door meeting in Palmera Beach Resort in Ain El Sukhna, 120km (75 miles) east of Egypt's capital Cairo, yesterday. Williams arrived on Thursday night to join the third Global south-to-south Anglican international conference which is in it's fourth day. Traditionalist Anglican clerics from the developing world said on Tuesday that liberal U.S. and Canadian churches had not done enough to heal a rift over gay rights that is threatening to tear apart the Anglican church.
CAIRO, (Reuters):
TRADITIONALIST ANGLICAN clerics from the developing world said on Tuesday that liberal United States and Canadian churches had not done enough to heal a rift over gay rights that is threatening to tear apart the Anglican church.
The 77 million-strong Anglican Church has been divided since 2003 when the U.S. Episcopal Church ordained a gay bishop and Canadian Anglicans began blessing same-sex marriages.
BID TO END DIVISIONS
The move outraged traditionalists who dominate the Anglican Church in Africa, Asia and Latin American, a grouping known as the Global South. They say the Bible condemns homosexuality and add that their position represents the majority of Anglicans.
"I still believe there is room for us to walk together," said Drexel Gomez, Archbishop of the West Indies, speaking on the sidelines of a six-day meeting of the Global South group which began in Egypt on Tuesday.
"But if they (the United States and Canada) refuse to buy into what we call the Anglican consensus, then I believe that those people who cannot accept the consensus are the ones who must leave," he told Reuters.
In a bid to end divisions in the 450-year-old church, a report by Anglican leaders called for steps by the U.S. and Canadian churches, including expressing regret for their actions. A dispute now rages about whether those conditions have been met.
Archbishop Robin Eames, who headed the task force that drew up the so-called Windsor Report, has said the demands were broadly met. Traditionalists in the Global South disagree.
"He expressed an opinion, which came as a surprise to many people ... We have heard expressions of sadness at the hurt, but we haven't heard yet the statement which the Windsor Report was looking for," said one Anglican primate at the meeting, who asked not to be named.
ENTRENCH OPOSITION
Traditionalists complain that, for example, at least one diocese in Canada is still conducting same-sex blessings, which they say contradicts the report's demands.
"They have not met what we asked for," said Gomez, adding that a final response from the U.S. and Canadian churches would have to wait for their conventions in 2006 and 2007. Bishops from the Global South say their meeting in Egypt, which runs from the October 25-30, is not seeking to focus on the Anglican divisions and that their discussion will cover pressing concerns such as AIDS and interfaith dialogue.
"This meeting is not to react to any single issue," said Datuk Yong Ping Chung, Archbishop of southeast Asia. But analysts say the meeting in Egypt could further entrench opposition to the liberal trends in Western churches because the debate will be dominated by conservative voices.
Several delegates from the United States and Canada, who oppose the liberal moves in their countries, have been invited.
"The Global South will encourage us, who are remaining faithful, to know that we are not standing alone," said Donald Harvey, a retired Canadian bishop who is part of a network of Canadian Anglicans opposed to the liberal moves.
Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams, the Anglican spiritual leader who personally backs accepting gay bishops, has been seeking to heal the rifts.