GAFCON: even more news and analysis

The fact that its essential activity is poaching shows that GAFCON is too weak to sustain schism at the level of the Communion and that right wingers in the US and Canada are too weak to sustain schism without help from abroad. The best that can be done–after five years of turmoil–is a redoubling of efforts to create a vampire, a province in North America.

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Crazy things for love

“You want me to ride on the back of the scooter all the way to Moody’s?” I looked at this man on my deck with whom I’ve spent my entire adult life and with whom, God willing, I’ll still be eating dinner long after our sleepers have cleared out. And I said, “Okay, but no splaying of my body on the roadway.” The things we do for love.

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Picking up broken pieces

I can illustrate an important part of what I have learned from Simon Peter in a story about something that happened to a friend of mine. His young son had eagerly begun kindergarten and, in October of his first year of school, the teacher said to his class, “Would you like to make something with your own hands to give to your folks for Christmas?

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Support for women bishops in Church of England

More than 4,000 Anglicans have given their support to calls for the introduction of women bishops in the Church of England without special legislation to protect opponents of the move. Supporters gathered today at Westminster Abbey for a press conference in advance of the General Synod this coming weekend in York.

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Pro-life statement not included in GAFCON declaration

Some GAFCON pilgrims are disappointed that an explicit pro-life plank was not included in the final document despite their efforts to have their views included. It appears that the final document was relatively unchanged from the original that existed at the beginning of the conference.

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Archbishop Williams responds to GAFCON

We have seen instances of intervention in dioceses whose leadership is unquestionably orthodox simply because of local difficulties of a personal and administrative nature. We have also seen instances of clergy disciplined for scandalous behaviour in one jurisdiction accepted in another, apparently without due process.

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The response back home

The anti-gay crusade being led by Archbishops Peter Jensen and Henry Orombi, among others, is not receiving uniformly good reviews back home.

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God Gap gone

Stephen Waldman from BeliefNet notes that the second part of the Pew Study released earlier this week contains statistics that address “the three big religion-and-politics questions of 2008”: Do Democrats still suffer from a God Gap? Which way will Catholics break in the election? And, can Obama do well among evangelicals?

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