Mary Frances Schjonberg reports at
Episcopal Life Online on Canon Kenneth Kearon's statement and responses to questions submitted by members of the Episcopal Church Executive Council at their meeting in Maryland.
Kearon claimed that the communion's ecumenical dialogues "are at the point of collapse" and said that the last meeting of the Standing Committee of the Anglican Communion, of which Jefferts Schori is an elected member, "was probably the worst meeting I have experienced."
"The viability of our meetings are at stake," he added.
Is it the fault of the Episcopal Church? Will the meetings spring back to life if Bishop Katharine removes herself from the Standing Committee, which I fervantly pray she will not, if she has been requested to do so?
At the beginning of the session with Kearon, Jefferts Schori asked the council to vote on his request that the session be closed to all but council members. His request was decisively rejected by a show of hands.
Excellent. A victory for transparency.
He [Kearon] then began by saying that the "problem of increased and growing diversity in the Anglican Communion has been an issue for many years" and added that by the 1990s leaders in the communion began to name "the diversity of opinions in the communion and diversity in general as a problem and sought some mechanisms to address it."
To embrace the "growing diversity" would be unthinkable, then?
Kearon said during his statement that Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams has limited authority beyond the ability to call meetings of certain communion bodies, make some appointments and "occasionally articulate the mind of the communion."
"Everywhere I go, everyone wants him to act as a sort of an Anglican pope as long as he does what [they] want him to do," Kearon added.
I imagine that the ABC as Anglican pope is the last thing many of us in TEC want to see, although there are exceptions.
During his remarks, Kearon also said that he has asked whether it "constitutes an intervention and is therefore a breach of the third moratoria" if a communion province has among its bishops one who is exercising ministry in another province without that province's permission.
"That question has not been addressed by any of the instruments of communion so I and the archbishop don't have guidance on that particular question," he said.
Later in the discussion, Hollingsworth said that he was puzzled about how the communion could declare a moratorium on interventions and then say it cannot determine what constitutes an intervention.
"I can pretty easily define what an intervention is," said Hollingsworth, in terms of a Southern Cone bishop who has established congregations in the Diocese of Ohio and exercise his episcopal ministry without Hollingsworth's permission. (My emphasis)
If a bishop from the Southern Cone or any other province set up shop in a diocese of the Church of England without permission of the local bishop, would the Archbishop of Canterbury recognize the action as an intervention and a breach of the third moratorium?
Backing up a bit:
The secretary general's visit was initiated by member Bruce Garner of Atlanta, Georgia, who suggested to Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori that she invite Kearon, who was vacationing in North America, to the meeting.
Garner told ENS afterwards that he had "never witnessed so much obfuscation in such a short period of time" in his entire life.
"We were polite," he said, "but we asked him questions he could not or would not provide answers to."
The description brings to mind Tony Hayward, the CEO of BP, in his recent testimony during a Congressional hearing.
Nicholas Knisely at
The Lead posted the entire report from the Executive Council meeting.