Dear Diocesan Family,
At
the end of this month the House of Bishops will hold its annual
fall meeting in New Orleans. The Archbishop of Canterbury,
Rowan Williams, and several members of the Primates’ Joint
Standing Committee will be with us at the unanimous request of
our Bishops. It is still theoretically possible there will be
some surprises, but nearly every observer of the events of the
past several years is convinced that a watershed moment is at
hand.
In their meeting
in Dar es Salaam in February the Primates asked the American
House of Bishops to clarify the decisions of last year’s General
Convention, which, in turn were The Episcopal Church’s response
to the recommendations of the 2004 Windsor Report and subsequent
requests from the Primates themselves. More specifically, they
asked our Bishops to give “unequivocal assurances” that we will
not consent to the election of another noncelibate homosexual
Bishop, and we will not authorize or permit any (more) “same-sex
blessings.” And they set a deadline of September 30 for our
response.
Nearly thirty of
our Bishops – myself among them – have given the assurances
requested, but a larger number than that have said they will
never agree to these requests, and more than a third of the
Bishops have yet to declare themselves. (Note: The Episcopal
Church has never officially authorized the blessings, but some
Bishops have done so in their own Dioceses.)
Everyone hopes
that clarity and understanding will be improved on all sides
when the Archbishop meets with us, but I know of no one who
expects that at the end of the meeting the unequivocal
assurances will have been given by the House as a whole.
Archbishop
Williams will need to consult with the other Primates to
consider and evaluate whatever responses we will have given
them. The Archbishop has recently said he is “hopeful, but not
optimistic” that the Anglican Communion will be able to stay
together after that point.
What this will
mean for parishes, Dioceses, and The Episcopal Church as a whole
is not yet clear. There is, however, increasing talk among
several of our Central Florida clergy about the possibility of
their declaring their “separation from The Episcopal Church” and
their seeking “realignment” with some other Province of the
Anglican Communion. They would hope to take as many of their
parishioners with them as possible, and they would try to retain
the property belonging to those congregations.
If they decide to
do this it will be extremely messy, difficult, and costly in
every way imaginable.
Both the canons
of The Episcopal Church and the state law of Florida stipulate
that congregational properties are held “in trust” for the
Diocese and the national Episcopal Church. This means that even
if every single person in a given congregation wanted to leave
they could not simply “take the property with them.”
(You may remember
my discussion at our Convention last January of the Church of
the New Covenant in Winter Springs, in which we had precisely
that scenario, and CNC ended up purchasing the property from the
Diocese at “fair market value,” without interest, over a period
of 30 years. But that agreement only came after we determined
the Diocese had no alternative use for the property.)
I believe that in
virtually every one of our congregations, even those in which
the desire to separate is widespread, there are many who do not
wish to leave The Episcopal Church or the Diocese of Central
Florida. If those who desire to remain can become a viable
congregation, that congregation becomes the continuing body of
that parish, with a claim upon the property.
So: I foresee an
extremely difficult period ahead of us, in which congregations
may be pulled apart, and arguments over property become horribly
distracting and costly.
I am committed to
being as gracious and generous as possible to those who, for
conscience sake, believe they must separate. But I am pledged
to stand alongside those who, for conscience sake, choose to
remain, and I am committed to the rebuilding of congregations
and this Diocese in the wake of any such departures.
Pray for the
Church.
Love to every
one of you,
John W. Howe