An Anglican Covenant, proposed five years ago in
the Windsor Report and touted by the Archbishop of Canterbury as
“the way forward” for the Communion, has passed through
three drafts and is ready for consideration by the 38 Anglican
provinces. During the last six months of its evolution, the provinces
were asked to comment on the most controversial part of the
penultimate Ridley-Cambridge Draft: Section 4, which deals largely
with endorsement of the Covenant and enforcement of its
provisions. Twenty provinces responded. Eighteen did not, Nigeria,
Kenya, Uganda, and Rwanda among them.
Two December 18 articles in Episcopal Life
Online outline the history of the Covenant and provide links to
the final version and provincial responses to Section 4. Reading those
responses is instructive and much less of a chore than one might fear,
given their episcopal authors. For the 13 provinces that support the
Covenant contributed terse statements, most of which show no evidence
of wide discussion and include few or no reservations or suggestions
for improvement.
Responses from seven provinces that either oppose
the Covenant or are ambivalent about it are, by contrast, long,
detailed, and reflective, the products of wide discussion within their
provinces — the kind of discussion that the Communion hoped to
provoke by circulating drafts. Statements by Aotearoa New Zealand and
Polynesia, Brazil, Canada, England, Scotland, Wales, and our Episcopal
Church differ in detail and are worth reading in full, but two
provinces have expressed a worry that is shared by all seven:
From Wales:
At a most general level, the Doctrinal
Commission [of Wales] expressed concern that Section 4 of the Ridley
Draft places in the hands of the Communion the formal means for
dividing the Communion rather than a theological method for nurturing
the unity of the Church.
From Scotland:
There is a general feeling that
Section 4 as it currently stands is, in places, unclear and ambiguous
and, indeed, could even lead to and enshrine schism.
Despite minor changes made since these cautionary
words were written, Section 4 of the Anglican Covenant retains its
potential to widen rather than heal fissures in the
Communion. Inasmuch as one of those fissures runs straight through the
Church of England (ambivalent now, rather than opposed), one might
wish to ask Abp. Williams, in a quiet moment, “Is this really
what you had in mind?”
Given the destructive potential of a poorly
conceived Covenant, it is disturbing that Albany's Bishop and Standing
Committee approved the Ridley-Cambridge draft before it took final
form. It is more disturbing that in spite of repeated requests by the
Covenant Design Group, there has been no effort by our leaders to
engage Albany's clergy and laity in careful discussion of the
Covenant's pros and cons.
Editor's Note: The October action of
the Diocese on the Ridley-Cambridge draft was reported in Bishop Love's
Update
of October 20, 2009. For more on the status of the Anglican Covenant,
including the December 2009 revisions of section 4, see the materials
about the Anglican Covenant currently found on the front page of the
Anglican Communion website
http://www.anglicancommunion.org/.
A (Limited) Show of Hands on the Covenant
Robert Dodd
An Anglican Covenant, proposed five years ago in the Windsor Report and touted by the Archbishop of Canterbury as “the way forward” for the Communion, has passed through three drafts and is ready for consideration by the 38 Anglican provinces. During the last six months of its evolution, the provinces were asked to comment on the most controversial part of the penultimate Ridley-Cambridge Draft: Section 4, which deals largely with endorsement of the Covenant and enforcement of its provisions. Twenty provinces responded. Eighteen did not, Nigeria, Kenya, Uganda, and Rwanda among them.
Two December 18 articles in Episcopal Life Online outline the history of the Covenant and provide links to the final version and provincial responses to Section 4. Reading those responses is instructive and much less of a chore than one might fear, given their episcopal authors. For the 13 provinces that support the Covenant contributed terse statements, most of which show no evidence of wide discussion and include few or no reservations or suggestions for improvement.
Responses from seven provinces that either oppose the Covenant or are ambivalent about it are, by contrast, long, detailed, and reflective, the products of wide discussion within their provinces — the kind of discussion that the Communion hoped to provoke by circulating drafts. Statements by Aotearoa New Zealand and Polynesia, Brazil, Canada, England, Scotland, Wales, and our Episcopal Church differ in detail and are worth reading in full, but two provinces have expressed a worry that is shared by all seven:
From Wales:
From Scotland:
Despite minor changes made since these cautionary words were written, Section 4 of the Anglican Covenant retains its potential to widen rather than heal fissures in the Communion. Inasmuch as one of those fissures runs straight through the Church of England (ambivalent now, rather than opposed), one might wish to ask Abp. Williams, in a quiet moment, “Is this really what you had in mind?”
Given the destructive potential of a poorly conceived Covenant, it is disturbing that Albany's Bishop and Standing Committee approved the Ridley-Cambridge draft before it took final form. It is more disturbing that in spite of repeated requests by the Covenant Design Group, there has been no effort by our leaders to engage Albany's clergy and laity in careful discussion of the Covenant's pros and cons.
Editor's Note: The October action of the Diocese on the Ridley-Cambridge draft was reported in Bishop Love's Update of October 20, 2009. For more on the status of the Anglican Covenant, including the December 2009 revisions of section 4, see the materials about the Anglican Covenant currently found on the front page of the Anglican Communion website http://www.anglicancommunion.org/.