Thursday, July 02, 2009

The Elephant in ACNA's Living Room

New Anglicans split on women By Julia Duin
Thursday, July 2, 2009


Last week's birth of a new Anglican province in the dusty plains of north-central Texas left the question of women's ordination dangling in the air.

Of the 800 people attending the founding of the Anglican Church in North America, 368 were priests and deacons. Of that number, about 10 percent, or 36, of the clergy were female.

The new province is a mishmash of former Episcopalians, ranging from almost-crossing-the-Tiber Anglo-Catholics to low-church charismatics, and it's a mystery as to how they're all going to get along. Many are against ordaining women. Others are just as adamant that females be given access to the diaconate, priesthood and the episcopate. The Episcopal Church approved female priests in 1976 and elected its first female bishop in 1988.

The ACNA's new canon laws state women can be deacons and priests, but not bishops.

I queried retired Eau Claire, Wis., Bishop William Wantland, an old friend and an ardent opponent of ordaining women. He reminded me that 22 of the ACNA's 28 dioceses do not allow female priests. It's a system known as "dual integrity," dioceses that differ on a question where Scripture can be read both ways agree to respect and live with each other's views.

I asked him if he wanted the ACNA to eventually outlaw ordaining women entirely.

"Of course. That's our mission," he said. "Christ is the bridegroom and the church is the bride. The priest at the altar is an icon of Christ. What image is that if the person at the altar is a woman? It's a lesbian relationship."

Not much room for negotiation there.

Archbishop Robert Duncan, the new head of the ACNA, pointedly had a woman, the Rev. Travis Boline, at his right hand during legislative sessions. She reminded me that even the conservative African provinces are split on the question. Although Nigeria forbids female priests, Kenya and Uganda allow them.

"The global south has shown us a model of keeping to the main thing, while not being of one mind," she said. "Bishops serve the whole church, and if the church is not of one mind, then it's not appropriate for women to be bishops."

The other women I talked with were trying to put a good face on it all.

"It's more important to be part of an organization preaching the Gospel as the Word of God," one cleric said.

"We're trying to be servants," Katherine Martin, a cleric from Auburn, Ala., told me. "I'm not being welcomed to consecrate [Communion] in Quincy [Illinois] or Fort Worth [Texas]," which are two dioceses that don't ordain women, "but both the bishops of those dioceses couldn't be more kind."

I wondered if the men would take a similar position, agreeing to be "servants" while limitations were placed on them.

"I'd be lying if I'd say I wasn't disappointed," said Canon Mary Hayes of the Pittsburgh Diocese. "I've been a priest 25 years. I'm delighted to be in a body of people who have different views. It's not about getting my way."

Other women told me they hope men will see the light.

"They'll wake up," predicted the Rev. Joy Vernon, a Canadian priest ordained in 1989. "Jesus Christ ministered to women way beyond the culture of His day."

"We're not going to go away," a female priest told me. "Women have been patient since the beginning of time."

5 comments:

Joe said...

The real question is not whether women should be priest or not but whether a church or a body calling itself the church really want to follow the Word of God and Holy tradition or are they just wanting to be with the in crowd and do what makes people happy. As a Anglican it is more than what the Bible says it is what does Church tradition say. What seperates us Anglicans from the none Catholic Christianity is that we believe that the Church is greater the "I" and there for submit to the authority to the Church and the traditions of the Church. It is not a matter of men coming around to the idea it is a matter of the sin nature in man/woman vs the Holy Catholic Church that Christ has brought to this world.

Jay Scott Newman said...

Many Lutherans say that the believe in the “real presence” of Christ in the Eucharist, but at the end of every celebration of the Lord’s Supper, they return the “consecrated” but unconsumed hosts to the sacristy for use again at the next celebration. In this way, their practice puts the lie to the what they say they believe.

In the same way, Christians who say that they believe in a sacramental priesthood of the ordained which is different in kind and not only in degree from the priesthood of the baptized but who then attempt to incorporate women into that ordained priestly ministry (of either the presbyteral or the episcopal rank) thereby reveal that they do not truly believe what they say they believe.

Moreover, any Christian community which “ordains” women to the priesthood deprives itself of any and every theological objection to “marrying” persons of the same sex, whether or not they will acknowledge this inevitable consequence of making themselves masters of the sacramental economy.

Finally, the self-described Anglo-Catholics who have signed up for this Frankenstein’s Monster of a Christian community (i.e. ACNA) have now placed themselves in communion of word and sacrament with Calvinists and Protestants who reject as heretical what Catholics of every description must believe about the nature and number of the sacraments. This is lunacy on stilts, and the Principal of Non-Contradiction cannot be mocked without the gravest consequences to right reason.

In sum, this entire exercise is futile and bizarre in the extreme. Why would men like Iker and Ackerman lend their names to this foolishness?

charles said...

The good news is this is a minority opinion in the ACNA. It's easy to be pessimistic about low views regarding the sacrament of ordination and priesthood/episcopacy. But look how APA help draw REC in a more high church direction? Indeed, a fight is brewing, but that's a good thing. Our side may win for once.

Joe said...

It may be the minority opinion but when the "leader" believes and preaches the "orders" of women, than whether the other groups ordain women themselves they are supporting the larger group that does.

What do you do when the only Anglican Church around has fallen under the ANCA, when you know and believe that the ANCA is not truly working to the fulfillment of Gods Church, but breading the same trap that ECUSA/TEC has already fallen into?

Where do you go, you believe that you are Anglican and Catholic, you believe in the true rank of the Episcopate, Deacon Priest Bishop, so you can not go to Rome, so where do you go when Anglicanism fails. And when is it declared that Anglicanism has fallen?

charles said...

Dear Joe,

You can't run. You have to work harder than the liberals (i.e, get on committees, promote your people, build like-mindedness through lay organizations, newsletters, message boards, etc..). You have to fight like the judges of Israel. May God raise bold men for us to wage war.

Some good advice here: http://covenant-communion.net/index.php/forums/viewthread/630/#2651

Also, on this thread the asymmetric disparity in force is tragic, but the liberals were better organized, plain and simple. Read about the literal campaign they organized for upcoming Anaheim. B033 resolution:
http://covenant-communion.net/index.php/forums/viewthread/741/

So, pray, partake in communion, catechize, know your bible and Fathers, sanctify and make yourself holy so we can win this battle. The Lord of Hosts is our Captain! No quarter for the enemy-- out smart and out flank.

Reflection: The 2024 APA Clergy Retreat on G3 Unity

Reflection: The 2024 APA Clergy Retreat on G3 Unity