Bishop Gene Robinson of New Hampshire posted a final summing up of GC09 from his vantage point at his blog
Canterbury Tales from the Fringe.
This Convention had an unexpected -- and wonderful -- effect on me. The marginalization I have felt from my own House of Bishops since Lambeth seems to have disappeared. Finally, after months of feeling "cut out of the herd" by Lambeth, I once again feel restored to the community of bishops. Perhaps it was my own doing, I don't know. But whatever distance I felt, now seems mostly healed. And for that I am very grateful.
One brother bishop noted in private that my blog was still called "Canterbury Tales from the Fringe," and wondered if that was not out of date now. While I had simply decided to continue the same blog, rather than establish a new one, I now wonder if at some level I had still felt "on the fringe." Because that is no longer the case, if I decide to blog again (I'm sure I will), it will be under a different name. I, along with my gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender brothers and sisters, are moving into full participation in the Body of Christ. There is no sweeter result of General Convention than this one.Please read Bishop Gene's entire post. I regret that he was not able to participate in the African Indaba process at Lambeth, as he did at the convention in Anaheim, because I believe that he would have made an enormous positive contribution. Although he was barred from the meetings at Lambeth, the Anglican Communion came no closer to unity because of it.
Of the meeting of 25 bishops who stayed up late in the night, Bishop Gene says:
NEVER in my six years as a bishop have I experienced the holy speaking and holy listening I experienced that night.Thanks be to God.
Thanks to David@Montreal for sending me the link.