House of Bishops moves on women bishop legislation
Bishop Tim has welcomed the progress being made following the two-day meeting of the House of Bishops at Lambeth Palace to consider the implications of the General Synod’s recent rejection of legislation to enable women to become bishops.
“It was good that the House of Bishops reaffirmed its commitment to see women ordained as bishops and I am glad that a group will now begin the work to look for new proposals,” said Bishop Tim.
“Please do keep all involved in your prayers. We do need to go on finding ways to listen carefully to those who disagree with us and to try and discern the right way forward in this matter.”
The House of Bishops expressed its ongoing gratitude and appreciation for the ministry of ordained women in the Church of England, and its sadness that recent events should have left so many feeling undermined and undervalued. Effective response to this situation is a priority on which all are strongly agreed.
The House acknowledged the profound and widespread sense of anger, grief, and disappointment felt by so many in the Church of England and beyond, and agreed that the present situation was unsustainable for all, whatever their convictions. It expressed its continuing commitment to enabling women to be consecrated as bishops, and intends to have fresh proposals to put before the General Synod at its next meeting in July.
The House will be organising an event early in 2013 at which it will share with a larger number of lay and ordained women – in the context of prayer and reflection – questions about the culture of the House’s processes and discussions, and how women might more regularly contribute.
Action Agreed
In order to avoid delay in preparing new legislative proposals, the House has set up a working group drawn from all three houses of Synod – the membership to be determined by the Archbishops and announced before Christmas.
This group will arrange facilitated discussions with a wide range of people of a variety of views in the week of 4 February 2013, when General Synod was to have met.
The House will have an additional meeting in February immediately after these discussions, and expects to settle – at its May meeting – the elements of a new legislative package to be presented to Synod in July.
For any such proposals to command assent, the House believes that they will need:
- greater simplicity;
- a clear embodiment of the principle articulated by the 1998 Lambeth Conference “that those who dissent from as well as those who assent to, the ordination of women to the priesthood and episcopate are both loyal Anglicans”; and
- a broadly-based measure of agreement about the shape of the legislation in advance of the beginning of the actual legislative process.
These concerns will be the focus of the working group in the months ahead.
The House endorsed the view of the Archbishops’ Council that the “Church of England now has to resolve this issue through its own processes as a matter of great urgency”.
Related link
Bishop Tim’s Pastoral Letter on Women Bishops