Tag Archives: Ireland

LGBT Church of Ireland people have both good will and faith @downandromore @churchofireland #8aNoWay

It is energizing to think of the blessing which is possible in our communities if people of good will and faith work together creatively.

- Bishop Harold Miller, Bishop of Down & Dromore

I trust that the Lord Bishop of Down & Dromore will remember his own words when introducing the rather unfortunate motions before the General Synod of the Church of Ireland later today.

It would be great to believe that Bishop Miller will look forward to working creatively with the LGBT community not just in his diocese but across Ireland. From Down & Dromore there were six members of the Church of Ireland who signed the Open Letter to members of the General Synod regarding the motions before Synod later this afternoon. The LGBT people across Ireland who signed the letter as well as their supporters who signed the petition (currently at 117 signatures) have plenty of good will and plenty of faith.

Will Bishop Harold be willing to work with us?

It is hard to see how the Church of Ireland in general, and Bishop Miller in the more local instance will be able to work with the LGBT community if Resolution 8A is passed.

As one of the signatories who worships in Connor Diocese but is resident in Down & Dromore (the River Lagan is the divide for most if not all of the boundary) I am very proud to have been involved in trying to bring to His Lordship’s attention the great hurt that he and the Lord Archbishop of Dublin, Dr Michael Jackson will cause not only to the LGBT Communities across the island of Ireland, but to much of the wider public as well. I sincerely hope and pray that the members of the General Synod will see sense and refuse to hear or pass these motions.

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Questions for the Archbishop of Armagh and members of General Synod @churchofireland

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I trust that those who are General Synod members attending this week’s meeting of the General Synod of the Church of Ireland in Christ Church Cathedral, Dublin will actually read the proposed motions (8A, 8B, 8C) before them, and not just rely on the explanations that the Bishops are putting out. Dr Houston McKelvey and the volunteers of Church News Ireland are misleading on this issue.

Resolution 8A does not restate the C of I’s current position: it goes much further.

Resolution 8A demeans the relationships of re-married divorcees; can be used to exclude gay people from Holy Communion; and legitimises witch-hunts against gay clergy. The General Synod members need to think long and hard about even entertaining these motions at General Synod this week. According to the Standing Orders,

(d) A notice of motion received during a session of the Synod shall be read to the Synod by one of the Honorary Secretaries on such day as the President shall direct, but such motion shall not be taken into consideration until the next following session unless:

(i) it arises out of business already transacted at the session at which it is received, or

(ii) The President and a two–thirds majority of the members present and voting consent to its being taken into consideration at the session at which it is received.

If a motion is taken into consideration under (i) or (ii) it shall be taken into consideration on such day as the President shall direct.

Archbishop Alan Harper & Bishop Patrick Rooke (dublin.anglican.org)

The Most Reverend Alan, His Grace the Lord Primate of All Ireland together with The Right Reverend Patrick, Lord Bishop of Tuam, Elphin & Ardagh – how will they both vote on the issue of Resolution 8A?

It is clear that the President of General Synod, usually His Grace the Lord Primate of All Ireland, presently The Most Revd Alan Harper, has to agree to hearing the motions at this week’s Synod as well as two-thirds of the members of Synod. Therefore I ask the simple questions…

  • Archbishop Harper, will you support hearing the motions?
  • Members of General Synod, will you allow the Bishops to fundamentally alter the relationship between the laity and the Church by allowing Resolution 8A to be heard and then passed?
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LGBT Churchpeople still not being listened to: #8aNoWay @churchofireland

The Church of Ireland is governed by General Synod, made up of three Houses: the Laity, the Clergy, and the Bishops. This week, the three houses will meet in Dublin at Christ Church in Dublin to transact the business that ensures the Church continues to work.

General Synod is rather like a mini-parliament: to effect change you need to bring a Bill and form legislation. This week, however, one change is being sought by the back door. And it is being brought by those who should know better: two Bishops.

The bishops tabling the motion are His Grace the Archbishop of Dublin, Dr Michael Jackson, and His Lordship the Bishop of Down & Dromore, Harold Miller. The motions have not been brought to General Synod by the usual methods. No, they have been brought by the back door; they have been sprung on the members of the General Synod without wider debate in the Church. The motions were not submitted in time for the Standing Committee of General Synod to include them in the normal business of the General Synod. It seems that the Bishops have no regard for the due process of the Church of Ireland: this is completely unacceptable.These motions arrived late, and thus have to have two-thirds support from the members of the Synod present and voting as well as the support of the President (usually His Grace the Lord Archbishop of Armagh) to be allowed to be debated1.

The resolutions are, of course, on the issue that apparently is the line in the sand for some: sexuality. Whilst the resolutions can be read in all manner of ways by all manner of people, there is growing concern about the content of Resolution 8A in particular.

The text of Resolution 8A is given below:

Having regard to the present discussions in the Church of Ireland on Human Sexuality in the Context of Christian Belief, the General Synod affirms that: 

• The Church of Ireland, mindful of the Preamble and Declaration, believes and accepts the Holy Scriptures as revealing all things necessary for eternal salvation through faith in Jesus Christ;

• The Church of Ireland continues to uphold its teaching that marriage is part of God’s creation and a holy mystery in which one man and one woman become one flesh, as provided for in Canon 31:

‘The Church of Ireland affirms, according to our Lord’s teaching that marriage is in its purpose a union permanent and life-long, for better or worse, till death do them part, of one man with one woman, to the exclusion of all others on either side, for the procreation and nurture of children, for the hallowing and right direction of the natural instincts and affections, and for the mutual society, help and comfort which the one ought to have of the other, both in prosperity and adversity’.

The Church of Ireland recognises for itself and of itself, no other understanding of marriage than that provided for in the totality of Canon 31;

• The Church of Ireland teaches therefore that faithfulness within marriage is the only normative context for sexual intercourse. Members of the Church of Ireland are required by the Catechism to keep their bodies in ‘temperance, soberness and chastity’. Clergy are called in the Ordinal to be ‘wholesome examples and patterns to the flock of Jesus Christ’.

The final paragraph is the most nasty of all. For it is the one that will legitimise witch-hunts against gay clergy; it is the one that will allow gay people to be excluded from Holy Communion; and it demeans the relationships of remarried divorcees.

It is clear that the Church of Ireland needs to listen to its LGBT members. The Conference on Human Sexuality Homosexuality in March in the Slieve Russell Hotel in County Cavan had no input from LGBT members of the Church of Ireland. I am not a member of General Synod, but I do ask those who are to reject Resolution 8A and allow a real listening process to begin. After all, we were promised this by the House of Bishops back in 2003… surely nine years later it is about time to get started. The Pastoral Letter on Human Sexuality of 2003 also states

the conversation surrounding sexuality is not suited, at this stage, to large legislative assemblies.

I would contend that since there has been no real process by which the views of the LGBT members of the Church can be heard, there has been no fundamental change in the mind of the Church and so that statement still stands.

Notes:
1. Standing Order 31(d)(ii) Standing Orders of the General Synod
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A blend of modern and ancient in St George’s for Lent

Pilgrims at the Foot of the Cross photo: Gerry Lynch

St George’s Parish Church in Belfast proclaims itself as

An open door in the heart of the city- a place of prayer and peace.

I know that it has an open door, it has been open to me at times in my past when it life has been very difficult.

This year, during Lent, this historic church which is right in the heart of the city has a modern take on the ancient office of Compline. The office will be at 9 p.m., which although late for a church service in the city of Belfast, it is hoped that this will allow many people of differing traditions to come together for it.

Compline will be said using the Book of Common Prayer 2004 of the Church of Ireland.

Compline unites the traditional and the modern. We will be using some recorded music, and the service of Compline we will be using comes, like all services in St. George’s, from the Church of Ireland’s Book of Common Prayer 2004. But Compline dates back to the 4th Century, and has not changed substantially since that incredibly ancient time when the English language did not even exist. It unites us with the Christians who have prayed the service of Compline throughout more than sixteen centuries, and with Christians around the world praying through Compline today – not only in the Anglican Churches, but in the Roman Catholic, Orthodox and Lutheran Churches as well.

There will be readings from St John of the Cross, St Teresa of Avila, John Keble, Mother Julian of Norwich, among others. Music will be by Allegri, Byrd, Arvo Pärt, John Adams, Philip Glass, and others.

For more details ring 0779 780739, or email stgeorgesoffice@btconnect.com

 

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Aside

second week – a trip to Dublin #openuniversity

1230 Belfast to Dublin Enterprise train passes...

Image via Wikipedia

As one royal visit ends, another begins

So said one friend after I had texted him on Monday evening as I left the Republic of Ireland having been up in Dublin to meet an American cousin, her husband and son who had been at a conference on the Isle of Man last week.

I think the friend was being taking things a little far. I’m not really a queen. Well I don’t think I am.

And so most of my reading this week was done not in Belfast, but on the Enterprise between Belfast and Dublin and Dublin and Belfast.

I’m looking forward to our first tutorial on Saturday at Stranmilis College – it’ll be good to meet who else is in our tutorial group. Maybe we’ll be able to start a small informal study group as well.

cross-posted from personal blog on StudentHome at Open University