To Set Our Hope On Christ

News from the greater Anglican church:

Presiding Bishop Frank Griswold joined six presenters at the Anglican Consultative Council (ACC) meeting in Nottingham June 21, explaining that while the Episcopal Church includes diverse views on sexuality, common mission continues.

“Although certain actions by the Episcopal Church have deeply distressed a number of you, we have not come to argue,” Griswold said. “I want to be clear that the Episcopal Church has not reached a common mind. However, it is our desire to be faithful to scripture. It is my hope that in the tradition of classical Anglicanism we will be united in Christ’s love and called to serve the world in Christ’s name.”

The presentation came at the invitation of the ACC and in response specifically to the Windsor Report’s request (paragraph 135) to outline “how a person living in a same gender union may be considered eligible to lead the flock of Christ.”

A booklet titled “To Set Our Hope on Christ” was distributed as part of the presentation. [Link to the text: http://www.anglicanlistening.org ]. “We believe that God has been opening our eyes to acts of God that we had not known how to see before,” the text states.

The booklet can be read online but it’s a very long PDF file. However, the language in the opening introduction and the first few pages is inspiring, open-hearted, and even beautiful.

The Anglican Listening website states:

Part of the distinctive tradition of Anglican listening and learning is identified by the 16th century English theologian Richard Hooker, who described Anglicanism as rooted in scripture, reason and tradition.

This triad of interrelationships is central to current conversations across the Episcopal Church as it seeks to respond faithfully to the request of Anglican leaders, via the 2004 Windsor Report, to learn more about sister and brother Anglicans internationally by participating in a careful process of intent listening.

These processes of listening and learning are recorded here, beginning with the 2005 observance of the Feast of Pentecost, which celebrates the gift of God’s Spirit to the world, imparted through a multiplicity of voices.

It looks like there’s a great deal of food for thought there – and much listening yet to be done.


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