J
jwinch2
Guest
huffingtonpost.com/2013/05/25/church-of-england-unveils-plan-for-women-bishops-in-2015_n_3337907.html?utm_hp_ref=religion
catholicculture.org/news/headlines/index.cfm?storyid=17985
Having been thwarted last year when a major push for this was made, it looks like they are going forward again with this initiative. Unfortunately, the more that these kinds of decisions are made, the further that Anglicans get away from the Apostolic Faith, and the less able we are to establish common ground. Mainline Protestantism is not what it was 50 years ago when Unitatis Redintegratio was written. We are, in reality, probably further away from each other in many ways then we were at that time. In the 1960’s we agreed far more on moral issues and doctrinal issues then we do today. That the Church of England would have been supportive of things such as woman’s ordination, gay marriage, abortion, etc. would have come to a shock to most Anglicans 50 years ago.
Orthodoxy is having the same problems in their attempt to establish common ground with Anglicans. blogs.telegraph.co.uk/news/damianthompson/100209298/russian-orthodox-tell-archbishop-of-canterbury-ordain-women-bishops-and-you-can-forget-about-unity/
I am hopeful that the faithful among the Church of England rise up again and stop this effort from going forward, but to me, it seems only a matter of time until this is reality. Woman “bishops” already exist in some areas of Anglicanism, and I don’t expect the remainder to hold out forever.
catholicculture.org/news/headlines/index.cfm?storyid=17985
Having been thwarted last year when a major push for this was made, it looks like they are going forward again with this initiative. Unfortunately, the more that these kinds of decisions are made, the further that Anglicans get away from the Apostolic Faith, and the less able we are to establish common ground. Mainline Protestantism is not what it was 50 years ago when Unitatis Redintegratio was written. We are, in reality, probably further away from each other in many ways then we were at that time. In the 1960’s we agreed far more on moral issues and doctrinal issues then we do today. That the Church of England would have been supportive of things such as woman’s ordination, gay marriage, abortion, etc. would have come to a shock to most Anglicans 50 years ago.
Orthodoxy is having the same problems in their attempt to establish common ground with Anglicans. blogs.telegraph.co.uk/news/damianthompson/100209298/russian-orthodox-tell-archbishop-of-canterbury-ordain-women-bishops-and-you-can-forget-about-unity/
I am hopeful that the faithful among the Church of England rise up again and stop this effort from going forward, but to me, it seems only a matter of time until this is reality. Woman “bishops” already exist in some areas of Anglicanism, and I don’t expect the remainder to hold out forever.