Saturday, June 20, 2009

Anglican divisions are ‘a struggle for power'


From Religious Intelligence

A struggle for power lies behind the Anglican Communion’s divisions over homosexuality, the former Archbishop of Armagh Lord Eames said last week at the annual Lecture to the College of St George at Windsor Castle.

Speaking to the topic: “The Mechanics of Reconciliation Today,” Lord Eames --- the chairman of the commission that prepared the Windsor Report --- explored reconciliation’s social, political and theological principles, seeking to define its terms.

The modern world was “experiencing a constant evaluation of the concept we call 'reconciliation',” he said. The “fracture of society, the break-down of human relationship, the tensions between nations and how human kind’s failure to understand the deep significance of our contribution to the fracturing of the natural world” had led to a reevaluation of the concept of reconciliation.

“My thesis,” Lord Eames said, was that “short of understanding the mechanics of reconciliation we have yet to define that process itself. So often the process we call 'reconciliation' has become a form of retreat when other efforts of human progress fail --- a sort of comfort zone when other means of solving problems fall short.”

The “endeavour to overcome division or misunderstanding” had also become an “an end in itself,” defeating its purpose. Reconciliation, he argued, was not a short-term goal but an on-going process, for “when agreement is reached it is usually only a beginning to any lasting appreciation of what has been achieved and each stage in the process can produce a fresh evaluation of what we set out to accomplish.”

The Windsor Report was an example. The 2005 report “contained sign-posts, laying out the possible routes to greater understanding of each other’s arguments,” he explained.

More here-

http://www.religiousintelligence.co.uk/news/?NewsID=4592

1 comment:

Celinda Scott said...

I think Eames is right about reconciliation being an ongoing process, which may run into problems when the issue is a struggle for power. Powerful leaders and their allies may decide that power-sharing with groups which seem to err can't be done--perhaps that is what is happening with ACNA, and I'm afraid is happening with some of the leadership of TEC. This cuts off the reconciliation process.