Our group this morning felt we needed to begin with reality. We can all fixate on “if only’s” — if only the US bishops hadn’t proceeded, if only Lambeth 1998 hadn’t been so mismanaged and poorly led, if only the Nigerians had come. All this is fantasy. The Chief Rabbi’s holy pragmatism was a better starting point. Rowan is inviting us to be more humble, to listen, to repent, to enlarge our hearts. This means dying to our fantasy rallying points and hostile preconceptions, so that we attain a state of reality, responding to the call to life of the Lord who called Lazarus to life. If, on the other hand, we just cant let go of that stuff, then we stay in the tomb. The life of Anglicanism does not depend on the institutional wellbeing of Anglican structures, which will plainly have to morph, bend and perhaps even break. It’s a simple spiritual choice, really.
Jim,
ReplyDeleteI like the Bishop's wisdom very much, and they are words to take to heart.
I was drawn to this posting on Pellidium, the best of the individual Episcopal blogs I follow. His analysis, more detailed than my earlier reaction, is pretty close to what I think:
http://anglicanfuture.blogspot.com
/2008/07/canterburys-question-and-
response.html
Bill