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For the past two
weeks, I have been in regular phone and email conversation
with several members of the
House of Bishops. We began talking and writing because
of our concern that the Archbishop of Canterbury has
announced that our colleague and friend, the Rt. Rev.
Gene Robinson, will not be receiving an invitation
to the Lambeth 2008 Conference, which gathers together
all the bishops of the Anglican Communion every ten
years. We drafted a letter expressing our disappointment
and concern. In that letter we also articulated our
hope – that this season of confusion and distress,
which has “threatened the bonds of affection” in
the Anglican Communion, might be resolved through thoughtful
conversation and mutual respect.
In a conference call
this afternoon, we decided not to send out our letter.
As Gene Robinson has told us,
there is a lot of diplomacy going on between the Archbishop’s
office and the American Church, which may – or
may not, create a different ecclesiastical climate
and result in invitations to all bishops in good standing
in the Church (which certainly includes Bishop Robinson,
who was duly elected, consented and consecrated as
a bishop in the Episcopal church). We also acknowledged
to one another that there is great confusion in the
wider church about our polity. Unlike most of the rest
of the Anglican Communion, which appoints their bishops – we
elect ours.
So we decided not to
send out our letter – yet.
Ours was a decision of strategy. We want to wait a
bit to see if the diplomacy will lead to a different,
and more satisfying resolution. But as we debated issues
of strategy, I could feel my commitment to radical
hospitality deepen, and I could hear it in my colleagues.
Jesus had a passion for radical welcome – and
a disdain for those who were unwilling, or unable,
to embrace it. Jesus’ invitation extends down
through the centuries to include the rest of us. All
of us. Welcome should beget welcome. We shouldn’t
settle for anything less.
+Mark M. Beckwith
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