Church of England gives green light for women bishops
LONDON (RNS) The Church of England will proceed with legislation to allow the ordination of women bishops, despite fierce opposition from Anglican traditionalists.
After a marathon, 12-hour debate in York, the church’s General Synod on Monday (July 12) rejected calls for further delays in developing a draft law to allow female bishops. The earliest women bishops could be ordained is 2014.
But the decision did little to tamp down furious infighting that some fear could prompt conservatives to defect to the Roman Catholic Church.
Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams told London’s Daily Mail newspaper Tuesday (July 13) that avoiding a schism over the contentious issue would be “desperately difficult.”
Williams’ attempt at a compromise — allowing conservative congregations to be overseen by male bishops — had been rejected Saturday, but he insisted the Synod’s decision to go ahead was “not the end of the road.”
Williams added that merely dumping the problem into the “too-difficult basket” was not “really … an option.”
Meanwhile, Rachel Weir of the group Women and the Church, described the Synod’s ruling as “momentous.”
Williams and his No. 2 official, Archbishop of York John Sentamu, will now draft legislation allowing women bishops and send it to all 43 dioceses for approval.
If a majority of the synods approve the draft, it will be presented to the 2012 General Synod. If all three houses — bishops, clergy and laity — approve the measure by the necessary two-thirds majority, women bishops could start being ordained in 2014.
— Al Webb
Copyright 2010 Religion News Service. All rights reserved. No part of this transmission may be distributed or reproduced without written permission.

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