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London, July 13 (PTI):
After much debate and controversy, the Church of
England has decided to allow women to become bishops in
the next two years, but traditionalists who opposed the
landmark decision say it will lead to many people
leaving the church. After the church’s assembly passed
the draft legislation, dioceses will now consider the
draft, which would let individual bishops allow
alternative oversight for traditionalists within each
diocese.
Church of England spokesman Lou Henderson said: “The
decision to consecrate women as bishops has been taken.
Everybody recognised the importance of offering
safeguards and assurances to those who find it very
difficult (to accept women bishops), but in the end
Synod as a whole was not prepared to go as far as the
traditionalists would have liked.” The decision marks a
milestone for the governing General Synod, which has
been debating the issue for years.
Traditionalist Anglicans opposed the move and sought to
impose restrictions on the authority of female bishops,
but they were defeated narrowly at the meeting at York
University. Traditionalists, led by the Archbishops of
Canterbury and York had proposed a structure that
guaranteed more conservative parishes would be
supervised by male bishops and led by male priests but
the ruling assembly rejected the proposal.
Bishop Broadhurst, who is the chairman of the Forward in
Faith organisation, declined to say whether he would
leave the Church of England. But reports say many
leading lights of the church were unhappy with the
decision. Broadhurst told the BBC: “My organisation has
1,000 priests and about 8,000 lay people in it. None of
those priests are happy. Now people have to decide
whether they will knuckle under - if they do, that is
not a very happy situation for them or the Church - or
whether they’ll go, or whether they’ll just defy it, and
I can see that happening with many people.”
The Reverend Fiona Weaver, an Anglican chaplain, urged
traditionalists not to leave the Church of England, and
said: “For me, it’s about us learning to live together.
And there are plenty of us. I have many friends who are
clergy who are opposed to the ordination of women. But,
on both camps, there are people at the extreme end who
are quite vicious and for me it’s very sad because they
are behaving in a very unchristian way.”
Rachel Weir of the pro-women bishops group Women and the
Church, said it was a “momentous” decision. She said
many supporters of having women bishops did not
understand why it had taken so long for the Church of
England to move ahead with ordaining them, but she said
the reason for the delay was “to keep as many people on
board as we can”.
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