since people are hopelessly fractured on a nearly endless number of issues, one must simply identify a few main crucial points of unity and the rest is up for grabs? Is that close?
Pretty much, although there is also a complication regarding the consensus upon how many points are crucial, and which ones they are. That particular discussion has been running through the Church as a whole for two thousand years now, and is far from over.
- So if a local chapter of the “North American Man-Boy Love Association” wanted to identify with the Episcopal Church, that would be OK too? Perhaps maybe just with the modifier that none of the boys complained about it? …] Will TEC be unable to resist this movement if it gains any sort of mainstream backing in society or is TEC now just a social club unable to assert a claim of moral authority over its members?
As far as I am aware, most social clubs do have codes of ethics, although not necessarily written ones. Certainly, if someone suddenly made paedophilia legal, I expect quite a few would start adding that prohibition to their own rules.
I should also point out here that, as my user affiliation says, I am Anglican, not Episcopalian, and I have been talking about the Communion, all 80ish million of us, not just the TEC.
There is, however, a very significantly
hierarchical idea here in the church being able to “assert a claim of moral authority over its members” which is very foreign to Anglicanism. As it happens, that sort of centralisation was recently attempted via something called
The Anglican Communion Covenant, and it got shot down in flames: the idea that Lambeth should control Anglicanism was not well received worldwide. For us, the church
is its members;
consensus fidelium, as in the Catholic Church, but writ even bolder.
So, on the wider level, the Communion is a confederation of 44 provinces, each of whom is autonomous. If one, for example TEC, does something which others, for example various provinces in Africa do not like, then those ten provinces in Africa can break communion with TEC (and then reinstate communion to the ACNA who splinter from TEC), while the other two provinces in Africa do not break with the TEC. That sort of refusal to talk to another, however, works about as well as the Rome breaking communion with SSPX: the latter go on their merry way, unconvinced by all the fuss.
On a narrower level, each individual province has its own specifics of structural organisation and control, but the basic instrument of legislation is the synod, which is regularly composed of clergy
and laity. Thus, if the majority of a particular province did decide to that Young Earth Creationism were the truth, something hugely improbable and yet still
far more likely than any such population wholly deciding that paedophilia were not inherently abusive, it is through the synod that the movement would be able to make it part of the rules which govern the province.
Jesus said quite clearly that the weeds would grow up alongside the wheat and this was inevitable. But I’m not sure I recall him treating this as a diversity to be celebrated or encouraged. Rather to the contrary, as I recall, the weeds are going to end up in a burn piles!
Where did he define the weeds as anyone who held a different opinion to The Authorities? The discussions in Anglicanism are not about whether or not people can freely perpetrate wickedness, but about how we identify what is wicked and what is not. All are (at least publicly) in complete agreement about promoting good and ending evil.
Science is not within the mission of the Church.
As you mentioned, “since people are hopelessly fractured on a nearly endless number of issues, one must simply identify a few main crucial points of unity and the rest is up for grabs”. Science is a form of understanding of reality, as is religion. When religion cedes authority to science, religion is admitting that those particular areas are not crucial points of unity, and are thus up for grabs. That process of admission, and it has been a gradual process over the Church’s history, has been about how we identify what is wicked and what is not.
It seems like in Anglicanism, there is ever less unity even among the bishops on matters of faith and revelation and nobody who can bring it about. Functionally, this means people can simply pick the bishop they like best according to what they want to believe.
This is where we get back to the synod issue: bishops govern, but it is really the synods who legislate. Still, potentially, one could emigrate from a province which ordains gay people to a province which does not, although I have never met anyone who has gone that far. Usually, Anglicans do what Catholics do: they shift to a more-conservative or more-liberal parish in the same city. In part, this is because even the greatest
points of difference still tend to be embedded in huge swathes of agreement: we might disagree entirely with that bunch about the ordination of gay people, but we are in complete accord about the liturgy, about the structure of the church, about the church’s role in society, etc.
Sorry if it seems I’m opinionated. I confess, I am. But I do like to listen and understand where others come from.
It’s fine: it took me quite a while to get any kind of handle on Catholicism; I am hardly going to expect you to understand our very-different ways automatically. The most crucial point is the hierarchy, and this fact that Catholicism traditionally has a “top-down” form of legislation and governance, whereas Anglicanism is much more democratic.