(Washington Post) On road to modernization, Church of England finds crisis

Posted by Kendall Harmon

The surprising defeat last month of a measure allowing the ordination of female bishops has plunged the Church of England into a crisis with one issue at its core: Should religion adapt to fit an increasingly secular society, or should it be the enforcer of tradition in fast-changing times?

Debate over that question is upending Britain’s official church, the symbolic heart of a global Anglican Communion that includes the Episcopal Church in the United States. The narrow loss of the measure has so infuriated liberal church leaders that many insist that the only way forward is to simply show conservatives the door.

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Filed under: * Anglican - EpiscopalAnglican ProvincesChurch of England (CoE)* Culture-WatchReligion & Culture* International News & CommentaryEngland / UK

1 Comments
Posted December 21, 2012 at 9:00 am [Printer Friendly] [Print w/ comments]



1. MichaelA wrote:

“At a time when casual churchgoers are abandoning pews, these conservatives argue that the Church of England cannot afford to alienate some of its most active members: Anglo-Catholics and evangelicals whose numbers are swelling ...”

Exactly.

“Inside the vaulted timber rafters of All Hallows, the Rev. David Houlding runs a citadel of conservative faith for an aging and formal congregation.”

Perhaps this one is aging, but generally speaking it is the conservatives that have youth on their side in CofE, just as it has turned out in USA where liberal TEC is characterised by ageing congregations in process of dying off.

December 22, 6:52 am | [comment link]
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