Thinking Anglicans

civil partnerships: another bishop's view

For earlier bishops’ views see here.

Michael Nazir-Ali Bishop of Rochester has issued an Ad Clerum letter which is reproduced in full below the fold.

This was first reported on in the Church of England Newspaper (online yesterday, issue datelined Friday) by Jonathan Wynne-Jones in Civil partnership row erupts.

It is also reported today in The Times by Ruth Gledhill as Bishop attacks civil partnerships.

And in the Telegraph by Jonathan Petre and Jonathan Wynne-Jones as Gay weddings for priests ‘unbiblical’.

There has also been a Statement from Anglican Mainstream and the Church of England Evangelical Council and others in Support of Bishop Michael Nazir Ali’s Statement Ad Clerum. The signatories to this statement include Archbishop Peter Jensen, Sydney.

January 2006

Dear Colleagues
An Answer to some Questions about the Civil Partnership Act 2004

In recent weeks, I have been asked by more and more people, clergy and lay, about my views on the Civil Partnerships Act 2004 and the Church of England’s response to this by way of the House of Bishops’ Pastoral Statement but also in other ways.

It is widely recognised, on all sides, that people living together, for one reason or another, can face significant hardship and discrimination. For those in heterosexual relationships, one way to resolve these difficulties is to get married but this is not possible where the co-habitees are of the same-sex or closely related to one another. While some rights may belong to the married state in virtue of its nature, there are others, such as security of tenancy or rights of visitation, which need not be so restricted. The government’s proposals to remedy injustice and to remove unjust discrimination were, therefore, welcomed by many.

It was, however, the nature of the Civil Partnerships Bill, which was to become the Act, which has caused concern in several quarters. The Bill replicated for same-sex couples nearly all the provisions for marriage which are to be found in existing law. In particular, the prohibition on consanguinity reads very like the provision for marriage. Attempts in Parliament to widen the scope of the legislation so that siblings and other relatives living together might also benefit were fiercely resisted and were unacceptable to the government.

On the one hand, then, the Bill was portrayed as being about the removal of injustices and, on the other, as something as near to ‘marriage’ for same-sex couples as we could get. It has been noted that it is in its careful mimicking of marriage that the Bill can be said to undermine the distinctiveness and fundamental importance to society of the relationship of marriage. There is, then, at the very least, a studied ambiguity both in the text of the legislation and in the way it has been presented and promoted.

In such circumstances, what should have been the Church’s response? It was, I believe, open to the Church, in terms of the Human Rights Act, to derogate from the legislation on the grounds that its ambiguity was not consistent with fundamental Christian teaching on marriage. Also, it could have derogated on the grounds that the ‘marriage-like’ character of the Act would be unacceptable to a substantial number of its members.

In fact, the Church chose not to take either of these courses of action. Instead, first of all, it allowed the government to change church legislation by order so that the term ‘civil partner’ was added wherever the term the ‘spouse’ of a cleric occurred. Secondly, the House of Bishops was asked to agree to a statement prepared on its behalf by a group of bishops and others.

There is much in this statement that is good and entirely acceptable to a biblically-minded Christian. It reiterates basic Christian teaching on marriage and it sets out the Church’s position on issues of human sexuality by referring to authoritative resolutions or texts. It shows a proper pastoral concern for those facing difficult moral and spiritual dilemmas; so far so good. What then is the problem?

I have been somewhat uneasy about some of these actions and some aspects of this statement from the very beginning and have said so in the appropriate bodies and to appropriate people. I fear that the change in church law will have the effect of undermining that very teaching on marriage which the bishops are wishing to uphold and that it introduces another category of ‘partner’ covertly without any public or synodical discussion.

Secondly, inspite of the ambiguity in the legislation and the declared intention of the government, the House has been unable to say that civil partnerships entered into under this legislation would be inconsistent with Christian teaching. This is, and will continue to be, a recipe for confusion.

Thirdly, the Statement has given bishops the task of ensuring that clergy who enter into these partnerships adhere to church teaching in the area of sexuality without giving the bishops the clear means to do so. In the days to come, this step will both severely test the Church’s discipline and stretch pastoral relationships to breaking point.

Finally, by declaring that lay people who enter such partnerships should not be asked about the nature of their relationship, in the context of preparation for baptism and confirmation, as well as for the purposes of receiving Holy Communion, it has compromised pastoral discipline at the local level and pre-empted the relevant canons. In doing this, the House believes that it is adhering to the teaching in Issues in Human Sexuality. It interprets ‘not wanting to exclude from the fellowship of the Church’ as equivalent to there being no discipline in terms of access to the sacraments. Such an interpretation, however, flies in the face of clear biblical teaching and the unanimous practice of the Church down the ages. All are welcome, of course, but this does not mean there is no guidance and discipline for the sake of the fellowship.

The statement leans towards a ‘folk’ understanding of the sacraments as rites of passage rather than as an entry into states of holiness and of discipleship. Bishops have a particular responsibility for holiness and I cannot see how this aspect of the statement will promote it. It should be perfectly possible, without undue intrusion, to set out the Church’s faith clearly and to guide those for whom we have pastoral care with compassion and understanding as to the future course of their discipleship.

As before, I will continue to support clergy and other ministers who seek to bring the fullness of the faith to bear on the pastoral situations they encounter. I know they do this with the greatest sensitivity and care. It is part of their ministry and mine to ‘declare the whole counsel of God’ (Acts 20:27) to the best of our ability and in complete reliance on the grace of God which has appeared with healing for all (Tit 2:11).

In Christ’s service
+Michael Roffen:

Subscribe
Notify of
guest

36 Comments
Oldest
Newest
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Merseymike
Merseymike
18 years ago

It simply goes to show that the Bishops are divided on this issue – just like the rest of the Church. Nazir-Ali is well known for his homophobic views, so this comes as no surprise. Essentially, he appears to be wishing to implement the Reform line , extending the restrictions to the laity.

Expect him to toddle off with Akinola and Sydney should the hoped-for split eventually occur. We can only hope!

Peter O
Peter O
18 years ago

“Yawn”

I love this “homophobic” stuff you come out with all the time MM. Perhaps I should call you “bibliophobic”, “orthodoxiphobic” or even “anybodywhodisagreeswithmerseymikephobic”?

It’s an interesting ad clerum, because it’s more a commentary on the HoB’s statement then a rejection of it (unlike Worcester). His last point is the most provocative, but even that could be read as “The way the Statement was phrased is ambiguous”.

Interesting to see where this goes.

Merseymike
Merseymike
18 years ago

Read ‘anti-gay’ for homophobic, then, Peter. Thats the way the word is now used in common parlance – its only church conservatives who still try and pretend it is about psychological fear.

I am quite happy to be referred to as anti-evangelical. It describes my position fairly.

I can’t actually believe that there’s many people who really agree with the statement but then it has managed to irritate everyone about equally.

Dave
Dave
18 years ago

Dear Merseymike, It’s not the Reform line… it’s the biblical and traditional teaching of all the holy catholic and apostolic churches. You may have noticed that all of them are cutting off relations with ECUSA to some extent or other! The HoB pastoral statement claimed “no change” from 1991, but when it told clergy not to enquire with laity in CPs about the nature of their relationship wrt admission to communion and chldren’s baptisms, this WAS a change. Maybe that, and the equivocation on disciplining clergy, was done out of fear of legal action under secular legislation, but as the… Read more »

Merseymike
Merseymike
18 years ago

Only as you well know, that wouldn’t be possible unless the CofE accepted your position wholesale, which it isn’t likely to do.

Martin Reynolds
Martin Reynolds
18 years ago

How fascinating! I would very much like to see the legal advice that led this bishop to his conclusions.

Dave
Dave
18 years ago

Dear Martin, Liberals do love using the law to force people to conform in deed and word (and even thought if that were possible I guess !) If European HR law won’t allow religions to follow their beliefs on such firmly established issues as homosexual sex then there is no religious freedom any more! Maybe that is the case.. but better to find out now than just freeze into inaction for fear of finding out! In the end I think the HR courts and lawmakers would look extremely totalitarian to the rest of the world – to whom they preach… Read more »

Merseymike
Merseymike
18 years ago

Well established religions really don’t have anything much to offer, though, if they cannot temper their ageing superstitions with liberal humanist input.

Joan
Joan
18 years ago

How sad it is to see some members of the ‘low church’ (such as the Archbishops of Nigeria & Sydney) trying to force their anti-gay stand on everyone else. London does have a Nigerian Lesbian and Gay community, which is even more so the case for Sydney. It is becoming increasingly clear that neither the Archbishop of Nigeria nor Syndey are able to provide adequate pastoral care to Lesbian or Gay people in their mist. TEA should be considered for these poor souls. Furthermore, there is evidence of same-sex relationships in the early church: e.g. between a Christian Roman soldier… Read more »

Sean Doherty
18 years ago

Martin Blow the legal advice (if any). It is up to the church to be faithful, not to avoid being taken to court. If one can be faithful and avoid it, great. But if being faithful means being taken to court, that should hardly surprise us if we have more than a passing familiarity with Scripture and tradition. As I mentioned before, the ultimate court is not in Strasbourg. Furthermore, a Christian understanding of ordination means living a life of integrity, i.e. in obedience to the teaching of one’s church. It should hardly be a surprise that bishops regard one’s… Read more »

badman
badman
18 years ago

Respect for fundamental human rights is not in conflict with our Christian beliefs – quite the contrary. All modern human rights instruments have their origins in the same movement, the movement which produced the 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Christian organisations were amongst the most active promoters of this movement: see, for example, the history told by the World Council of Churches at http://www.wcc-coe.org/wcc/what/international/un-hist.html

Sean Doherty
18 years ago

Joan I feel you are imposing on others your own standard of ‘pastoral care’, which doesn’t seem to allow for a lot of room for inviting people to take up their cross and follow Jesus, no matter how costly or counter-cultural that might be. Pastoral care is not simply caring for people (though that is indispensable) but caring for them in such a way that they are able to grow in their faith. You do the same with your definition of love as you seem to imply that anyone who disagrees with you is not loving which, I venture to… Read more »

Martin Reynolds
Martin Reynolds
18 years ago

David & Sean

I read the ad clerum carefully and noted that it contained important statements on both civil and ecclesiastical law. I am assuming that the bishop has taken legal advice to come to his conclusions; I am expressing a wish to have sight of his advice. He evidently thinks these matters are of importance, and so do I. Such advice is occasionally published.

Dave
Dave
18 years ago

Dear Badman, I seem to remember that Christian groups were also on the side of the red revolution after the Russian civil war; and there was justification for opposing the Czar’s running of the country. However, Christians were eventually pushed out of the public arena as “the revolution continued” and found to be a threat to the state! This is what is now happening in the UK and at the European level. I think the original Human Rights were a great way to define the outer limits of what is acceptable way for a state to relate to it’s citizens.… Read more »

simon dawson
18 years ago

There seems to be working assumption on this thread that somehow the church is above the need for control by secular law. That is not an assumption I share. Is it the church or the secular law of libel which is protecting Davis MacIyalla in Nigeria? Closer to home, in the many hundreds, if not thousands, of cases of child sexual abuse by priests in recent decades, it was the secular police authorities that finally took took effective action. Time and time again when complaints were made to bishops they protected the priest, not the child (so as not to… Read more »

J. C. Fisher
18 years ago

“Such an interpretation, however, flies in the face of clear biblical teaching and the unanimous practice of the Church down the ages.”

When are the “non gay-relationship-accepting” (*cough* homophobes *cough*) like +Nazir-Ali going to recognize that just because they run the above tagline up the flagpole, it doesn’t mean that *faithful Anglicans* are going to salute it?

The Bible is evidently NOT CLEAR/the practice of the Church is evidently NOT UNANIMOUS—or we wouldn’t get into these shouting matches on every “Issue”-oriented thread!

:::waits for the inevitable ‘No, you’re just Unfaithful/Unbiblical/Unorthodox’ charge::: {sigh}

Peter O
Peter O
18 years ago

Quick question Simon Dawson – Is Gaia a real god?

Sean Doherty
18 years ago

Hi Simon

Of course the church should be subject to civil law. Bishops who cover-up sex abuse should suffer the full penalty of the law, etc. But unless you are prepared to side with the German Christians that doesn’t mean mindless, uncritical obedience in every circumstance. When to be faithful to the civil law would be to be unfaithful to Christ, then the church must be willing to suffer, else it is no church.

Pete – Huh?!

Peter O
Peter O
18 years ago

Sean,

Go read his website.

simon dawson
18 years ago

Peter O asks “Quick question Simon Dawson – Is Gaia a real god?” Those puzzled by this comment will need to look at my website, and in particular http://www.simondawson.com/blessing/blessphot.htm This is about the “Service of Blessing and Covenant” between my partner David and me, in which we invoke rainbow imagery – and include the text “Green is the colour of grass and leaves, and the colour of Gaia the ancient earth goddess. Green expresses the desire to live in harmony with the earth, and not to offend her.” The quick but unsatisfactory answer to your question Peter is Yes, in… Read more »

Simon Sarmiento
18 years ago

Fascinating though this digression is, I am going to ask that further discussion about it be taken elsewhere, as I don’t think it is germane to the original TA article.

Peter O
Peter O
18 years ago

Fascinating though the PV is (and it genuinely is) I just *love* the use of the language of “pantheon” on a Christian forum. I really don’t need to go on do I?

Right that’s all done – let’s get back to business. Has there actually been any negative fallout from Rochester’s Ad Clerum?

Simon Sarmiento
18 years ago

Well, Peter, what do *you* mean by negative fallout?

Does hostile reporting in the CEN, D Tel, and Times count as negative or positive?

Is silence from the Guardian a good thing or a bad thing?

🙂

Merseymike
Merseymike
18 years ago

I would have seen Rochester’s statement as being the bad-tempered grousing of someone who didn’t get his own way, Maybe he could go on the Today programme to publicise his views again? Oh, no, sorry – last time he did that he finished his chances of Canterbury, didn’t he?

Maybe he can be Akinola’s Vicar on Earth in his new church in a couple of years time?

Peter O
Peter O
18 years ago

What, you want to pick my every words? What are you? Some kind of journalist?

I guess I’m just interested that the Rochester letter has picked up little if no media interest.

Simon Sarmiento
18 years ago

I should also have mentioned that the Church Times has a short article this week too, can’t link to it until next week.

That’s five media mentions.

Most bishops would kill for a single mention 🙂

Dave
Dave
18 years ago

Dear Simon, I think that most Bishops would probably happily trade any mention in CT for a return to their predecessors’ less “interesting”, pastoral, lives of after-dinner speeches, garden parties and popping along to parishes to meet the submissive, loyal faithful.

Bring back Christendom ?

John-Francis
John-Francis
18 years ago

Having read the Ad Clerum,, I have sent my own response to the bishop from someone outside his diocese. I offer my words here and hope they might be heard and be of help: “I read your statement to the clergy of your Diocese, ‘An Answer to some Questions about the Civil Partnership Act 2004’, with a mixture of weariness and sadness that, yet again, gay and lesbian people are the brunt of condemnation. Whilst the ‘Answer’ may have concerned the CPA, the clear message from what you wrote is that, somehow, we (and we alone of humanity) are flawed… Read more »

Andrew Carey
Andrew Carey
18 years ago

Simon Sarmiento wrote:

“Does hostile reporting in the CEN, D Tel, and Times count as negative or positive?”

Could you explain to me how you come to the conclusion that the reporting of the ‘Ad Clerum’ was hostile. Certainly it was hyped-up in the CEN as a breaking of ranks (whereas the letter didn’t in actual fact make his policy towards clergy seeking a civil partnership absolutely clear). However, I certainly didn’t see it as hostile reporting in either the CEN or Telegraph.

Yours,

Andrew

Martin Reynolds
Martin Reynolds
18 years ago

John-Francis, you make some good points.

Perhaps you might have asked his Lordship, as he seems so vexed by this matter, why he had not been bothered enough to turn up to vote on the final stage of the Civil Partnership Bill.

Martin Reynolds
Martin Reynolds
18 years ago

I think Andrew Carey both asks and answers his question.

Andrew Carey
Andrew Carey
18 years ago

No, Martin I don’t think I did. I daresay when Simon has time he’ll be along to answer my question.

Simon Sarmiento
18 years ago

Yes. I think Andrew has a fair point. I possibly over-reacted – it was in a comment not a blog article – to what he aptly calls the hyping-up in the CEN report. I probably should have called JWJ’s reporting style “aggressive”. The Telegraph story is broadly similar. In both cases more is made, as Andrew says, of one issue, i.e. partnerships directly involving clergy, than the overall balance of the bishop’s text justifies. I was actually expecting a more outspoken letter than we got. Perhaps JWJ was expecting that too. Anyway, as Andrew says, we still haven’t been told… Read more »

Merseymike
Merseymike
18 years ago

Of course he would, Simon. Its called ‘spin’and ‘putting the frighteners on’

badman
badman
18 years ago

The Bishop of Rochester wrote: “It was, I believe, open to the Church, in terms of the Human Rights Act, to derogate from the legislation on the grounds that its ambiguity was not consistent with fundamental Christian teaching on marriage.” The Bishop must mean that, had the Church been able to persuade the Government to exclude clergy from the legislation, the legislation would nevertheless have been Human Rights Act compliant. No doubt this would have been on the grounds that freedom of religion and belief is one of the fundamental freedoms, as well as the right to family life and… Read more »

Jeremy
Jeremy
18 years ago

I’m afraid that all I can say is that I support my Bishop and thank him for putting his head above the parapet in order to fulfill his role as a Bishop to banish false teaching.

36
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x