Thursday, April 22, 2010

"A CANTERBURY TALE"

Jane Kramer's long essay in the New Yorker, titled "A Canterbury Tale", on the Church of England and its internal battle over women bishops is now available online in its entirety. I read the piece earlier because, although I didn't yet have my copy of the magazine, as a subscriber, I have access to the full contents of the online version of the magazine. I still don't have my copy. The New Yorker takes forever to get to my house ever since Katrina, and I don't know if it's the magazine or the Postal Service that is responsible for the delay. Back to the article. It's worth a read.

Here's my comment at The Lead to its first post on the article when only the abstract was available:
Since I don't yet have my copy of the New Yorker, I read the entire article online, and I thought it was excellent. Kramer did her homework before writing. I now understand the Church of England much better than I ever did, and I see how the situation in England drives a good many of the statements of the ABC.

I also understand Rowan Williams a little better after reading Kramer's piece, which does not lead me to further agreement with him. You don't throw certain people under the bus for the sake of saving the Anglo-Catholic wing of the Church of England.

Still, with all Kramer's good work, she doesn't get the difference between the adjective "Episcopal" and the noun "Episcopalian". Why is it so difficult to get that right? Sorry. The mistake grates.
The first words of Kramer's article drew me in like the invitation of a gracious host:
Remember the Church of England, that mythically placid community of Sunday Christians and beaming vicars whom you met in Austen and possibly came to loathe in Trollope?
Moving on, I'll highlight several quotes entice you to read the essay.
It took seventeen years of wrenching Synod debate for women to be ordained, and when they were, some five hundred male priests fled in protest—two-thirds of them, as the saying goes, “to Rome.” The prospect of women’s elevation to the House of Bishops has been even more divisive. This isn’t a question of High Church and Low Church differences. England’s church has always been (the common word) “inclusive.” It grew as an uneasy accommodation between the traditionalists of the Apostolic Creed and Catholic ritual and devotions now known as Anglo-Catholics and the brimstone-and-Bible Protestants born in the chapels of the Reformation, making common cause against the Church of Rome. Today, it covers a sliding scale of beliefs and practices, with the majority of England’s Anglican parishes somewhere in the middle. But the argument about women bishops cuts across all the old divisions. Thousands of conservative Anglicans—priests and laymen—on both sides of the High Church–Low Church divide still refuse to take Communion from a female priest, and would certainly refuse to take it from any priest ordained by a female bishop.
The wenches cause such distress to the advocates of patriarchy in the Church of England, forcing them to make wrenching decisions. How cruel of the wenches!
“How do you eat an elephant?” he [Rowan Williams] said, with something between a chuckle and a sigh, when I asked how he hoped to hold his church together, given that the demands of Anglican women were so completely at odds with the demands of Anglican men whose own inclusion specifically involved excluding those women from episcopal service. “I suppose it’s by using as best I can the existing consultative mechanisms to create a climate—and I think that’s often the best, to create a climate,” he told me. “There’s a phrase which has struck me very much: that you can actually ruin a good cause by pushing it at the wrong moment and not allowing the process of discernment and consent to go on, and that’s part of my view.” He thought that with time, patience, and enough discussion within the Church you could temper the opposition to female bishops—despite the fact that three synods since 1994 have tried to address the issue, and the opposition remains intractable. His friends call this “Rowan’s Obama syndrome”: the persistence of a commendable but not very realistic belief in the power of reason to turn your enemies into allies.
Perhaps if someone walked the ABC through a realistic appraisal of the climate he has created, he'd come to see that his climate plan is not working well, and following "the process of discernment and consent" as he envisages it, women could wait decades for their opportunity to become bishops.

With respect to "Rowan's Obama syndrome", Obama seems to have learned the lesson that his original plan to work with the opposition wasn't working, and he changed his plan. May we hope that the ABC will see that all is not sunny in the climate that he's created and consider a change of plan? I guess not.

The words of a member of the opposition to women bishops in the Church of England:
Geoffrey Kirk, an unabashedly misogynist London vicar who is the national secretary of Forward in Faith, told me that, for him, the tipping point was the Episcopalian bishops’ election of Jefferts Schori as their presiding bishop. He called it “a fundamental scandal” and added, “I think Mrs. Jefferts Schori is a layperson. It’s not my doing. They decided.” He said that a shoplifter was “more qualified, per se,” to be a bishop than a woman was, so long as the shoplifter didn’t say that shoplifting was good, or that he was a Marxist spreading the wealth around.
Does the ABC see any hope of creating an amicable climate between the members of the Church of England who favor the ordination of women as bishops, especially the women in the church, and the likes of Vicar Geoffrey Kirk with his insulting comments? I don't.
Conservative evangelicals—which is to say fundamentalist and, as often as not, charismatic—are one of the only expanding groups in England’s otherwise dwindling church. Vaughan Roberts, the rector of an evangelical church in Oxford called St. Ebbes, told me that his own congregation had spilled over into three other locations, outside the parish structure, in five years and now amounted to nine Sunday congregations, with a total of eleven hundred people.
....

He has been “encouraged” in his mission, he says, by the example of London’s Holy Trinity Brompton, the closest thing to a megachurch in the Church of England. Holy Trinity Brompton was once a tranquil and quite traditional church. Today, as often as not, it is in full charismatic swing. It serves four thousand people, many of them twenty-somethings, at staggered Sunday services, and is said to be the wealthiest parish church in England—even without taking into account the worldwide distribution of its “Alpha Program,” which, like Vaughan’s program, leads you up a smooth path to Jesus, truth, and a cheerful Christian life.
Therein lies a mega-problem for the Archbishop of Canterbury. If enough of the Anglo-Catholics accept Rome's offer to jump the Tiber, then the numbers in the Church of England will weigh heavily on the side of the conservative evangelical, fundamentalist, sometimes charismatic church communities.

There's much more that I'd like to quote, but I've probably gone beyond fair use already. Perhaps the powers at the New Yorker will not take note of my humble blog. I urge you to take the time to read the essay. I've admired Jane Kramer's previous writing, and my admiration increases with this example of her diligent research and her graceful prose style.

H/T to The Lead for the link to the entire piece.

15 comments:

  1. Those who hold back on doing what is right out of fear or concern it might offend people who think it is wrong (and who are unlikely to change their minds this side of a Damascus Road experience), are privileging the wrong over the right. And that is wrong.

    It forestalls people taking responsibility for their own choices, and hobbles the church in the meantime. I'm glad the Apostles didn't have Rowan's way of working / thinking or the church would never have gotten off the ground.

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  2. Progressives in the Church of England get hardly a nod from the ABC. The folks in the middle don't make a lot of noise, don't threaten to leave, and probably a good many are not paying attention to the internal wars, nor the Anglican Communion battles, but a good many are voting with their feet in staying away from services. With all those troubles at home, I find it difficult to understand why Rowan obsesses over our one and soon-to-be two partnered gay and lesbian bishops.

    Even with the loud voices in the Anglican Communion shouting against Bp. Gene and Bishop-elect Mary, as you say in your latest post, Tobias, if you don't like having gay bishops, then don't ordain them. And you needn't be embarrassed in front of Muslims or anyone else that here in the US we do ordain them, because you're not responsible for our gay bishops.

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  3. I hadn't gone over to ECafe before I wrote my essay on it. I am just amazed, once again, by Rowan's "paralytic reticence" and how that compromises the authority of women.

    He is, hands down, the best educated dumbass in the history of Western Christendom.

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  4. Elizabeth, well-said, m'dear. I'll go read your essay now. I'm glad I didn't see it before I wrote mine. I might have plagiarized, and I know how strongly you feel about THAT.

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  5. So glad you posted this. I'll be back to read and get linked to the entire article.

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  6. You pretty much have pulled the quotes I would have (and was about to put in a posting but why repeat what everyone else is saying?). These men are so, so small. And it drives me nuts when they called a legitimately ordained woman, 'Mrs' or 'Ms.' They are so petty, so little.

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  7. Jan, enjoy.

    You take the better part, Caminante, because writing this stuff takes time. The mens are petty, indeed, but they need their little thrills.

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  8. I look forward to reading the article. And I LOL at Elizabeth Kaeton's description of ++Rowan as a well-educated dumbass.

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  9. Ooooh, that Elizabeth is wicked, ain't she?

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  10. I actually don't think he is a dumbass. I do think he seems to be unsuited by temperament to what the role of ABC requires at this particular time in history. Re the "gays and women" issue, I have always had the impression that he has progressive instincts. He has allowed those to be stifled because of pressure from conservatives. Just my two cents' worth.

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  11. "Thousands of conservative Anglicans—priests and laymen—on both sides of the High Church–Low Church divide still refuse to take Communion from a female priest, and would certainly refuse to take it from any priest ordained by a female bishop"

    Not only that, many of them would refuse to take Communion from a male priest who was ordained by a male bishop who had participated in the ordination of female priests.

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  12. Re the "gays and women" issue, I have always had the impression that he has progressive instincts.

    Cathy, you have that impression because Rowan made statements to that effect. He's on the record as being sympathetic to faithful, same-sex relationships. He did a turnaround when he became ABC.

    Erika, you've opened a window on the conservative Anglicans' view of how the women cooties spread. They'd need to do research similar to genealogy to discern from whom they'd take Communion. It's absurd.

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  13. He did a turnaround when he became ABC.

    Yes, that's more or less what I'm saying - he caved in to pressure from the conservative wing of the church after he got the top job.

    I'm not saying this is a good thing, obviously (!), or that what he has done over this issue has been good for the church. But that is partly why people are so disappointed in him, isn't it - he led all of us to expect a more liberal approach.

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  14. When the ABC asked his good friend, Jeffrey John, to step away from his appointment as bishop of Reading, Rowan set out on a path that lead him to where he is today. And despite all the sacrifices of his principles, he gained nothing, for he pleases no one.

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  15. Here's the quote that gets me:

    John Broadhurst, the Suffragan Bishop of Fulham and the chairman of Forward in Faith...told me, “I didn’t sign up with the Church of England for forty years of argument; I signed up for forty years of hard work proclaiming Christ. And now the Pope has said, You may have a home that’s secure for you, in communion with Rome and leading your Anglican life.” Broadhurst, whose blustery style has made him a fixture on the country’s television talk-show circuit—on “Hard Talk,” he pronounced it against “women’s nature” to be priests—also doubles as London’s flying bishop. Like Kirk, he considered conversion in the early nineties and decided against it “because of the constraints.” Today, he told me, “not even the flying bishops will have a place to live in the ‘new’ Church of England. The only choice is to knuckle under. And in the end I’d rather knuckle under to the Vatican.”

    Does he think that Thurgood Marshall wanted to spend his entire career fighting for civil rights, rights that should be "unalienable?" Perhaps he would have liked to have spent his time arguing interesting esoteric points of law. Maybe when the Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. "signed up for forty years of hard work proclaiming Christ," being assasinated, again fighting for those "unalienable rights" wasn't what he was looking for, but what he was called by Christ to do. I would suggest to Bishop Broadhurst that all of us are called to ensure equal rights to all. But of course he is free to indulge his white male priviledge with the Roman Catholic Church.

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