Back in the days of black and  white television, one of the staples of light entertainment was the plate-spinning juggler. The act was simple, but compelling: a juggler  would balance a series of plates on top of polls by spinning them. The real entertainment came when  the plates started to wobble. Would the juggler spot them in time? Would he be able to prevent one of them falling off before the row  was completed?
Today, though it is by no means as  entertaining the same is beginning to happen to our bishops over homosexuality. Since 1991, the episcopal ‘line’ in the Church of  England has been held by a small document produced by the then House of Bishops, titled Issues  in Human Sexuality. Whenever a bishop was questioned  on the subject, the stock response was, “I abide by the position set out in Issues in Human Sexuality,” whether the bishop agreed  with the conclusions of that document or not. Thus unity was maintained and, equally in keeping with  ‘company policy’, controversy was avoided.
Interestingly, when a much more  substantial follow-up report, Some Issues in Human Sexuality: a Guide to the Debate, was again produced by the House of Bishops in  2003, it actually took a theologically very conservative line, reinforcing rather than  questioning the traditional position largely (though not entirely) reflect in the 1991 report.
This makes it all the more  important to understand what is happening now. When a system — or a person — is under stress, collapse may be a long time coming, but when  it comes, it tends to be abrupt rather than gradual. What we are now seeing in the House of  Bishops on the matter of homosexuality is an increasing number of ‘wobbling plates’. When they  fall, though, I predict they will do so both dramatically and abruptly.
In this respect, Archbishop Rowan  Williams definitely belongs in the ‘old school’. His personal views were made quite clear in his essay The Body’s Grace, and  have never been repudiated. He has, however, been faithful in his own way to his commitment to uphold  the church’s present teaching. Fundamental to his international approach has been the  conviction that if the mind of the Communion is divided, then his responsibility as an instrument of unity  is to recognize that, not to try to pre-empt the outcome in favour of his own views.
The same, however, is not true for  our diocesan and suffragan bishops, and it is here that we see the wobble developing.
One of the early indications of  this was the declared change of heart by the Bishop of Liverpool. This was then greeted with approving noises from the Bishop of  Gloucester and the Bishop-elect of Chelmsford. Just recently the Bishop of Manchester has welcomed a LGBT  ‘celebration’ at his cathedral.
Meanwhile, as an indication of the changing climate, the views of Geoffrey  Annas, the new the suffragan Bishop of Stafford, have passed almost unremarked:
My feelings  about openly gay clergy —  I personally have no issues with that at all,  but I think again like the ordination of women to the episcopate it’s  something where there needs to be enormous sensitivity. I’m not somebody who will overthrow rules  and regulations for the sake of it, because I think if you do that you get chaos and  anarchy, but I am somebody who will work to build a consensus to change rules and regulations and I  would hope that in the future at some point people could be allowed to be true to  themselves. (Interview, Church of England Newspaper, 11 June 2010, p7)
This is, of course, a long way  from ‘collapse’ — on the contrary, it is nuanced and careful to recognize the existing ‘rules and regulations’. But precisely for that  reason, it is in fact more deadly than the pronouncements of the Bishop of Liverpool. What we see here,  once again, is what Richard John Neuhaus wrote about when he warned of ‘The Unhappy Fate of  Optional Orthodoxy’.
As Neuhaus observed, the crucial  damage is done not when orthodoxy is overthrown, but when it is included as an option. And that is precisely what Annas advocates  — all in the nicest possible way and the best possible taste. As he says earlier,
We sometimes  make the mistake [of thinking] that everyone wants something new but there’s a lot  that’s good about the traditional ways we’ve always done things and it’s just  about bringing the two together really, which is what I meant by the consensual thing.
Thus traditionalists must be held  together with revisionists until, as he says, such time as he can “build  a consensus to change rules and regulations”.
Of course, the traditionalists  will never be rubbed out or ruled out — not until there are too few of them for anyone to care any longer — but the very act of establishing  the consensus between orthodoxy and change establishes that only those who accept the  consensus will henceforth be allowed centre place in the institution. Indeed, the headline to the  article says it all: ‘New bishop holds firm to incremental reform in Church’.
The tragedy in all this, however,  is not the views of Mr Annas, but those of the existing Diocesan Bishop, the Rt Revd John Gledhill, whom I have hitherto admired as an  evangelical. In the present circumstances, it would have been a dereliction of his duties not to ask  his suffragan’s views on sexuality, and a dereliction of honesty for his suffragan not to have  volunteered them. One can only conclude, therefore, that Bishop Gledhill was aware of, but unfazed by,  the compromises being urged by his new episcopal colleague.
Our list of ‘wobblers’ thus runs  to Liverpool, Gloucester, Chelmsford, Manchester, Lichfield and Stafford, but doubtless more could be included.
What will happen when the ‘tipping  point’ is reached? And what should happen if one’s own bishop moves from ‘wobble’ down to floor level?
It cannot be long before the  situation becomes intolerable on both sides. Indeed, the interviewer of Geoffrey Annas poses an interesting, though sadly rhetorical, question:
Traditionalists  are asking why, if he feels women are entitled to be bishops and people  who are gay entitled to physical relationships without being excluded, he  doesn’t take a stand and openly challenge the Church, instead of sneakily undermining it.
The answer, I would have thought,  is obvious. He is biding his time — as are many on the episcopal bench, some known, others unknown. But the time will certainly  come.
When it does, and it cannot be far  off, there is only one possible way that traditionalists can respond effectively — the way that has always most affected and changed the  Church of England — and that will be radical principled action. In short, as the bishops topple,  the traditionalists will have to find their own bishops.
A friend of mine who works in  finance once said of the global recession that he could understand everything except why people were surprised it happened. To him,  predicting it was like predicting that if it is spring, summer cannot be far off. The collapse of the  bishops on human sexuality is in the same category. The only question is whether traditionalists will be  ready when it comes and will act when they should.
John P Richardson
26 June 2010
Anonymous users wishing to paste in the comments box need first to select 'preview', then close the preview box. When posting your comments please give a full name and location. Comments without this information may be deleted.
26 June 2010
 
 
And that's why groups like 'Fulcrum' actually did a lot of harm to evangelical unity: because while the leadership officially endorsed church policy but lukewarmly and rather apologetically, their supporters (those who contributed to the website blog) openly dissented.
ReplyDeleteThe way the Englsih sustem is weighted, only liberal-leaning evangelicals end up becoming bishops - and then they have to be bag-carriers for liberals, as Tom Wright was for Williams agaisnt Gafcon, or Tom Butler's suffragan Nick Baines in Southwark against Reform.
James M.
It's all very reminiscent of the Tories in the mid-nineties, seemingly unable to stop fighting over Europe despite facing increasing public ridicule.
ReplyDeleteIs the fight in the church now mostly about who gets to keep the family home when the schism comes?
"In short, as the bishops topple, the traditionalists will have to find their own bishops."
ReplyDeleteWhat a sad reflection of the inability of some Christians who refuse to pray and witness together you give us John. Your solution reminds me of playground games; we don't like your gang so we are going to start our own with our own leaders.......and what a betraal of the Elizabethan settlement...
Best of luck! But remember, this is the C of E and the door is always open both ways....
This is all to assume that "liberals" will continue and continue and continue to have the power at the top, and continue to grow in numbers throughout the leadership of the C of E - but will they? Do things always go on as they have, the trends always continuing in the same direction ...? Not necessarily! I have many times heard it said that at ordinand- college level, "liberals" are very thin, and that parishes which promote "liberalism" wither ("error rots, truth flourishes" - it has been said). Read David Virtue on the sickness within TEC, and its imminent collapse. So things might not go on and on as they have in recent decades. Room for hope, I think.
ReplyDeleteI think its sad that the lovely chaplain I had at polytechnic has turned into a right-wing bigot. Maybe it was fortuitous I didn't 'come-out' while I was there!
ReplyDeleteAnonymous - may I suggest that either you didn't know me that well back then, or that you may not have the measure of me now? If you would like to contact me personally, via the e-mail link at the bottom of the blog, I would be happy to try to arrange to meet you if possible and to persuade you I'm not that different, either way.
ReplyDeleteIt's got to be better than merely posting anonymous criticism!