Thinking Anglicans

Diocese of Blackburn clergy write to the Archbishop of York

The following press release has been received:

22 January 2013
MEDIA RELEASE:
Lancashire clergy write to the Archbishop of York

Over fifty clergy from the Diocese of Blackburn have written to the Archbishop of York, urging him to ensure that the next Bishop of Blackburn will be prepared to ordain women as priests, and fully affirm their ministry.

The letter was co-ordinated by the Vicar of Lancaster, the Revd Chris Newlands, and has been signed by fifty-five clergy from across the diocese who are keen to see a supporter of women’s ministry appointed as Diocesan Bishop.

Mr Newlands said, “Many churches across the diocese have been greatly enriched by the ministry of women, and we believe that to fulfil his calling as a focus of unity, the next Bishop of Blackburn should affirm the ministry of all the priests in the diocese who hold his licence.”

The Crown Nominations Commission will be meeting at the end of January to choose the name that will be submitted to the Queen who formally makes the appointment. An announcement is expected within the next weeks.

The last two diocesan bishops have not accepted the ordination of women as priests and the signatories to the letter have urged the Archbishop and members of the Crown Nominations Commission to ensure that the 9th Bishop of Blackburn is a supporter of the ministry of women priests in the church.

For further information please contact:

The Revd Chris Newlands, Lancaster Priory.

The first meeting of the Crown Nominations Commission for the See of Blackburn was held on 10 January. The second meeting is due to be held on 30/31 January.

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Laurence Roberts
Laurence Roberts
11 years ago

This is a new initiative which I find very encouraging.

There should be no further diocesan bishops who refuse to countenance women in the ordained Ministry. The PEVs really are more than enough.

Give Blackburn a break.

Froghole
Froghole
11 years ago

Whilst Dr Martin Warner may well prove to be an excellent choice as bishop of Chichester, there are a number of women clergy in Sussex who expressed their candid dismay at the preferment of yet another bishop who will not ordain women. There was a feeling that the CNC made some crude assumptions and generalisations about the Chichester diocese, by assuming that it must always have a diocesan of those views (or, at any rate, fewer FiF clergy would bolt for the Ordinariate if a bishop of their views was preferred). Although Chichester is often dismissed as a ghetto for… Read more »

Chuchu Nwagu
Chuchu Nwagu
11 years ago

NOT AGAIN – Let us not create another +Whitby situation. Bishops are not appointed on what they believe in or whether they agree theologically with the majority of people in their Episcopal Area but on what they as a person can offer the role. +Sentamu and the CNC should stand firm and appoint who people have recommended and shortlisted be it those opposed or those in favour of the ordination of women. Once you start basing choice of bishops of preference, we’ve lost all hope – You might as well state that I want a Bishop who went to Westcott,… Read more »

Stephen Morgan
Stephen Morgan
11 years ago

Perhaps the CNC need to consider this: How can a diocesan bishop who ‘does not accept the ordination of women as priests’ ever be a focus for unity?

Sara MacVane
Sara MacVane
11 years ago

That goes for the Diocese in Europe too.

Perry Butler
Perry Butler
11 years ago

+Truro ordains women Froghole.

Erika Baker
Erika Baker
11 years ago

“Bishops are not appointed on what they believe in or whether they agree theologically with the majority of people in their Episcopal Area but on what they as a person can offer the role.” In that case, can we please scrap the PEV scheme, because there is not a single bishop who is not male and therefore sacramental assurance is not threatened anywhere in the CoE and the whole PEV scheme is about wanting someone who agrees with you. On the other hand, if a Bishop ordains women but is male, he does not do you any actual harm. If… Read more »

nigel aston
nigel aston
11 years ago

The Newlands initiative (the Blackburn imitation of the Whitby band wagon) is actually saying to the Commission: kindly acknowledge only majority opinion in the C of E when episcopal appointments are made and just send us another liberal catholic. Such initiatives are no doubt well meant but they are inimical to that charitable comprehensiveness that honours all Anglicans which we sign away as a Church at our peril. Actually, the interests of fairness surely suggest a conservative evangelical should be appointed a diocesan bishop as a matter of urgency.

Father Ron Smith
Father Ron Smith
11 years ago

“Once you start basing choice of bishops of preference, we’ve lost all hope – You might as well state that I want a Bishop who went to Westcott, a Evangelical, a Tall guy and etc.” – Chuchu Nwagu –

It already started, Chuchu, in Chichester. Martin Warner was elected precisely because he suits the provenance of the diocese. This cannot be denied.

What’s sauce for the goose is also sauce for the gander.

Father Ron Smith
Father Ron Smith
11 years ago

Just imagine the Holy Roman Catholic Church allowing anyone to question the Bishops it sees fit to ordain. Church Order needs to be universally accepted by the memberships of the Church that ordains its clergy and bishops, surely. Otherwise, what integrity reigns in the bestowal of Orders?

Richard Ashby
Richard Ashby
11 years ago

Any dismissal of the Diocese of Chichester as a ghetto or safe haven for those opposed to the ordination of women is based on an eroneous understanding. Indeed it may have that reputation, but it is a fact that the Diocesan Synod voted FOR women bishops at its meeting to consider the legislation last year. It voted against the currently proposed legislation. Those who believe that the diocese is a safe haven are living in cloud cuckoo land. When the selection of a new diocesan was being discussed, considerable disquiet was expressed, and loudly expressed, that the Vacancy in See… Read more »

Jean Mayland
Jean Mayland
11 years ago

I welcome this initiative and hope the Crown Nominations Committee take note. We have 3 PEVs and they are enough to minister to those parishes which will not accept women priests or bishops

Martin Reynolds
Martin Reynolds
11 years ago

A simple request for the present tactic of erecting ghettos to cease.

If there are priests who oppose WO suitable to be called as bishops then they should be called to any diocese. The present arrangement is not catholic and all should be glad to see it swept away.

Savi Hensman
Savi Hensman
11 years ago

I would be most surprised if the Roman Catholic church, or any other church, appointed a bishop who did not clearly believe that the clergy who served under him were actually clergy. Even in more hierarchical churches, there might be some awareness of the oddity of a bishop who will not administer certain sacraments to, or receive certain sacraments from, the priests whose ministries he is largely there to uphold and nurture.

Geo Noakes
Geo Noakes
11 years ago

The last twenty years have shown beyond doubt that Traditionalist clergy and people cannot fully accept the sacramental ministry of a bishop who ordains women to the priesthood and cannot accept him as a focus of unity, in fact he is a focus of disunity. If we are now saying that a Traditionalist cannot be a diocesan bishop then the only answer is to make Beverley, Richborough , Fulham and Ebbsfleet dioceses.This seems to be the only logical outcome if people are determined to exclude Traditionalists from holding office as diocesan bishops or as mainstream suffrgan/area bishops.

Charles Read
Charles Read
11 years ago

Nigel: there are conservative evangelicals who support the ordination of women – unless you redefine ConEvo to mean opposition to OW is of the esse of that position.

The problem with the Whitby / Blackburn / Chichester successions has been that successive bishops have been appointed who do not regard their female clergy as actually ordained (at least not in the same way as the male clergy). Thus it is not the same as always appointing a bishop who does ordain women – he regards all his clergy as clergy.

Rosie Bates
Rosie Bates
11 years ago

‘Why can’t those supporters of the ordination of women trust that a traditionalist bishop will make sure that the ministry of women is fully embraced and nurtured regardless of his theological views’. You would need to listen to women clergy who have discovered that in certain instances they cannot be trusted. Sara McVane mentions the Diocese in Europe. The Bishop of Gibraltar in Europe has been granted an extension and so he will now serve for another five years beyond 65. One of the tactics employed in this Diocese is to put Archdeacons in charge of PTO. The last Archdeacon… Read more »

Cynthia
Cynthia
11 years ago

Wow. I can’t believe that CoE dioceses don’t get to elect their own bishops. In the 21st Century. The system is inherently patriarchal.

So interesting to see the arguments that essentially say that bigotry can be a source of unity. Or is in fact the only source of unity, as support for woman’s ordination is so “obviously” related to disunity. Wow.

Maybe unity is not more important that doing justice, showing kindness, and walking humbly with God. CoE’s brand of “unity” supports hurtful acts toward their women clergy. That’s the Good News??? And it builds up the spirits of girls…

Stephen Morgan
Stephen Morgan
11 years ago

Chuchu, what, precisely, can a bishop who refuses to ordain women as priests and does not believe that women can be priests offer them? Exactly how can their ministry be ‘fully embraced and nurtured?’

Jeremy
Jeremy
11 years ago

Apparently women cannot be foci of unity, yet bigots can.

Fr Ross Northing SSC
Fr Ross Northing SSC
11 years ago

“Bishop Nicholas has been a wonderful pastor to the clergy and all the people of the diocese. He has seen the whole diocese as his parish and has been a wonderful parish priest to everyone in it.”
Rev’d Chris Newlands
(BBC Radio Lancashire 27 October 2012)

Having made this statement to the BBC, it surely cannot be that Mr Newlands is suggesting that Bishop Reade was unable “to fulfil his calling as a focus of unity”?

Collette Drake
Collette Drake
11 years ago

“…arguments that essentially say that bigotry can be a source of unity” Why is it bigotry that those who in conscience are unable to accept the ordination of women to the priesthood or episcopacy? Those that sincerely believe this are no more a bigot than those who constantly hurl in a hurtful manner this and show why those who cannot accept women’s ordination cannot trust us or have “respect” we are not doing ourselves any favours using uncharitable, un-Christian language. No wonder my vicar feels so ashamed when such is hurled about in her name!

Anthony Archer
Anthony Archer
11 years ago

This is an important initiative which the CNC ignores at its peril. A non-ordainer is simply unappointable given recent events and in view of what is now the settled view of the Church, despite the fact that the General Synod is playing catch-up with the rest of the Church it claims to represent. A conservative evangelical would be excellent, and I can think of candidates who would ordain woman as presbyters. The last thing that Blackburn needs is the events re Whitby being played out on a larger canvas.

Mike P
Mike P
11 years ago

As a signatory of Chris’s letter, can I briefly say that I signed because
1) I wanted to ensure that the CNC was clearly aware that many clergy supported women priests in our Diocese.
2) the previous two Bishops have placed women in parishes to administer sacraments to the people that they themselves would not receive. This seems a paradox, if not a contradiction.
3) we have a traditionalist suffragan in post to serve clergy and parishes of that tradition. Many other Dioceses rely on PEVs, whereas even with a bishop who ordained women, we would have more provision.

rose
rose
11 years ago

Jean Mayland wrote:
“We have 3 PEVs and they are enough to minister to those parishes which will not accept women priests or bishops”

There may well be some mileage in that argument; as long as any new legislation re WB retains the PEVs and gives them jurisdiction.

Jeremy
Jeremy
11 years ago

“[W]e are not doing ourselves any favours using uncharitable, un-Christian language.”

Actually, if the past 30 years show anything, it is that Anglicans do themselves no favors when they avoid serious disagreements, or package them up in false politeness, euphemisms, and circumlocutions.

The CofE will benefit from honesty. It will also benefit from clearly disassociating itself from discrimination–something that the CofE has twice recently attempted, and failed, to do.

Refusing to use the words “bigotry” and “discrimination” does the CofE immense moral damage. Let’s name the sin.

Sueeve
Sueeve
11 years ago

If Blackburn continues to have a diocesan who does not ordain women that encourages a clear tradition for the diocese. Surely a bishop who does not ordain women could be appointed to other diocese, thus making a shared experience of the church. At the moment this practice is the continued lot of the few.
A priest of Chichester, who finds it hard to regard herself as in communion with her diocesan, however caring and nurturing he is.

Father Ron Smith
Father Ron Smith
11 years ago

I wonder if other branches of the Church Catholic has Bishops who refuse to recognise the integrity of legitimately ordained priest in their Communion?

By the continuation of the regrettable polity of ‘Provisional Episcopal Visitors’, the Church of England erodes any ‘catholic’ understanding of collegiate episcopal oversight. Congregationalism is not part of traditional Anglican strategy.

Better to extinguish the source and continuing culture of ‘Flying Bishops’ – this ‘rara avis’.

Geoff
11 years ago

“We have faithful catholic clergy who are more than suitable to be Bishops” [Chuchu] Indeed we do: no need then to resort to consecrating those catholic clergy who are unwilling to do bits and pieces of the job (such as presiding at ordinations) and are in that respect unsuitable. “Why is it bigotry that those who in conscience are unable to accept the ordination of women to the priesthood or episcopacy?” Excluding an entire class of people from the possibility of a particular rôle or vocation is pretty much the definition of bigotry. Slapping “in conscience” on the tin doesn’t… Read more »

JCF
JCF
11 years ago

“Why is it bigotry that those who in conscience are unable to accept the ordination of women to the priesthood or episcopacy?” Rhetorical questions like these always leave me gobsmacked. Why is it the dialogue-ending defense of “conscience” cannot be separated from the POWER-OVER implication of the word “accept”? If your “conscience” takes you out the CofE doors, there they are. Vaya con Dios. But to even PRETEND there is anything “conscientious” about using POWER-OVER to deny ***someone else’s conscious*** about their divine call to holy orders, is BEYOND decency. Why call it “bigotry”, Collette? Because, plain and simple, IT… Read more »

Cynthia
Cynthia
11 years ago

Collette asks “Why is it bigotry that those who in conscience are unable to accept the ordination of women to the priesthood or episcopacy?” Because in the 20th and 21st Centuries, a good many excellent theologians have re-examined the Gospel with an open mind. And with a keen sense that the church has gotten it seriously wrong before, with racism, slavery, colonialism, wars over belief… Theologians and historians have looked at Mary Magdalene, the First Witness to the Resurrection, and Jesus’s relationship to women, breaking taboos to teach, heal, and hang out. They’ve thrown on the spotlight that women were… Read more »

Cynthia
Cynthia
11 years ago

For those who think that making accommodation with the forces of discrimination is the “Christian” way, it might be worth reading this. It’s MLK’s letter from the Birmingham (Alabama) jail. His harshest words were for the moderates who questioned MLK’s methods. Essentially they just wanted their comfortable status quo, regardless of the fact that it meant continuing injustice for African Americans. http://www.africa.upenn.edu/Articles_Gen/Letter_Birmingham.html The oppressors have had their way for centuries. Time’s up. With modern sensibilities it is clear that oppressive policies HURT. So it is not “Christian” to continue with hurtful policies and hurtful leadership. If you have to make… Read more »

Mike P
Mike P
11 years ago

If I can get us back to the letter, a key consideration in sending this letter was that the representation from our Vacancy in See Committee is heavily weighted in the traditionalist direction. However, it’s important to note that even Blackburn Diocesan Synod [narrowly] passed the women bishops draft legislation at the consultation stage in Oct 2011. Therefore we felt a need to highlight the fact that Blackburn has a majority of clergy and people who accept the ministry of women, despite the balance of our reps on CNC

Martin Reynolds
Martin Reynolds
11 years ago

Can someone explain to an outsider how reps for the CNC are chosen?

Jeremy
Jeremy
11 years ago

Let us rightly understand one key point. Where do people’s “consciences” come from? When one opposes the ordination of women “in conscience,” one is making a claim not only about one’s own conscience, but also about the Christianity that helped form it, and that helps legitimate its claims. So such a person is really saying, “my understanding of Christianity requires me to exclude all women from this vocation.” In other words, “Christianity requires me to discriminate.” That message is incredibly damaging to the Church! If that message really is part of the CofE–if people who espouse it really have an… Read more »

james
james
11 years ago

I write to second Jeremy’s comments with regard to bigotry as a sin that needs to be named, and for which no apologies or excuses on the grounds of “conscience” in the C of E ought to be made. I also concur with the concerns expressed by Sarah and Rosie regarding the regrettable situation in the Diocese in Europe, and the needs of the said Diocese for its health and witness in the future.

Paul Waddington
Paul Waddington
11 years ago

What a state the Church of England has got into! It seems that whatever path is chosen, the outcome is discord and disunion, if not utter contradiction.

At least for some, there is a way out. I am referring to the Ordinariate of Our Lady of Walsingham. They seem a pretty happy and united bunch.

Anne
Anne
11 years ago

I expect they are, Paul, and it would be a surprise if they weren’t, bearing in mind how short their life as a community has been so far, but it won’t take long for them to find things to argue about, unless they aren’t actually human beings at all!

primroseleague
primroseleague
11 years ago

Hmmm, but the people who went to OLOW should probably always have been Roman. Those of us who are just a long way up the candle would have to have a pretty good reason to suddenly accept the papacy, etc, so it’s not like the dissenters could just run away to Rome in a heartbeat. I have to say, I think Cynthia has hit the nail squarely on the head – a male and a female bishop per diocese (not co-equal but guaranteed that if the diocesan isn’t male at least one suffragan will be, and vice versa of course)… Read more »

Peter Owen
11 years ago

In reply to Martin Reynolds The CNC for diocesan bishops has 14 members – eight central members and six diocesan members. The central members are * the two archbishops * three members of the General Synod House of Clergy elected by the House * three members of the General Synod House of Laity elected by the House The elected members serve for five years. Since the CNC for Blackburn is meeting while there is no Archbishop of Canterbury, his place is taken by the most senior bishop on the southern province willing to serve, in this case it is the… Read more »

John
John
11 years ago

As usual, I’m out of step here. I think that if (a) ‘traditionalist’ bishops who do not accept – or do not necessarily accept – the validity of women priests as dispensers of the sacraments, but (b) nevertheless support them and allow them to be ordained (by others) as priests because that is the general policy of the C of E, they are doing their job as bishops within the C of E and should be regarded as sufficiently compliant. Several women priests here have testified to the conscientiousness in this regard of e.g. Philip North, Martin Warner and Martin… Read more »

Jeremy
Jeremy
11 years ago

Yes, but John, it does not necessarily follow that such traditionalist bishops should occupy the same see one after the other in an unbroken line.

That, I believe, is what is being objected to here.

Father David
Father David
11 years ago

Surely Bishop Martin of Chichester isn’t going to be left as the sole Guardian of the Faith?

Tim
Tim
11 years ago

I read all these comments with interest. Many of them are really wise and perceptive and add to the discussion. Isnt it interesting that this post currently has 7 times more comments than the more recent one on eradicating hunger via the “IF” campaign. I wish we got more hot under the collar about what might galvanise us around making a difference to rather more lives both in this country and globally than gender and sexuality – important though that is.

Jeremy
Jeremy
11 years ago

“I wish we got more hot under the collar about what might galvanise us around making a difference to rather more lives both in this country and globally than gender and sexuality – important though that is.”

Spoken like someone who’s never been discriminated against.

Cynthia
Cynthia
11 years ago

“Spoken like someone who’s never been discriminated against.” Exactly, Jeremy. Injustice hurts. It does harm. And to say that the church should be allowed to continue harming people of various classes, female, LGBT, so that it can pursue… I’m all for getting on with the work of the Gospel, feeding the hungry, clothing the naked, healing the sick, etc. But a good portion of the Good News is liberating the oppressed. So it is quite vital for the church to stop oppressing. Otherwise, they have no credibility on the social justice portion of the Good News. And it is much… Read more »

Father Ron Smith
Father Ron Smith
11 years ago

“Surely Bishop Martin of Chichester isn’t going to be left as the sole Guardian of the Faith?”

– Father David –

Would that be the patriarchal ‘Faith of our Fathers’ then David? Certainly not the Faith of our Mothers – including that of the Blessed Virgin Mary, whose faithfulness led to the Incarnation of Christ.

Cynthia
Cynthia
11 years ago

Faith doesn’t need guarding. And God doesn’t need to be protected. People need to to make faith a verb. The actions include justice, compassion, and mercy. Exclusion isn’t compatible. Feeding the hungry, healing the sick, and including all people as brothers and sisters created in the image of God, is compatible.

God is calling. God is calling people that are different from you, no matter who “you” are. And it’s time to shed childish ideas of having to guard the faith and get out there and DO the faith.

Father David
Father David
11 years ago

Long live the “Guardians” of the Shrine of Our Lady of Walsingham.
“Lady of Walsingham, be as thou hast been, England’s Protectress, our Mother and our Queen!”

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