At the end of March, the legislation allowing people of the
same sex to marry under the State comes into force. A month ago the House of
Bishops sent out their Pastoral Letter and attached Advice relating to same-sex
marriage.
Now, the bishops are struggling to come up with some way of
proceeding which preserves their sense of themselves, and the Anglican Church
as a whole, as nice, liberal, tolerant people, and their equally compelling
self-image as people attempting to follow conscientiously Scripture and the
tradition of the Christian Church. They don’t want to be horrible to anyone,
and that isn’t actually a bad thing to aim at. The trouble, of course, is that
where there are irreconcilable opinions you can’t help doing or saying
something that one side or another will interpret as being horrible. There is a
lot in the statement which is positive, and even humble: in fact, the bishops
seem to fall over themselves in their insistence on ‘acknowledging that as yet
our knowledge and understanding are partial’. The whole document gives the
sense of groping towards understanding rather than trumpeting a settled opinion
of the magisterium, and that, too, is
not a bad thing. The negative aspects of the statement – that clergy, subject
to ordination vows and canon law which demand a certain representative mode of
life which is not that of laypeople, should not marry members of their own sex
themselves and that people in a same-sex marriage will not be recommended for
ordination – are convoluted, handwringing efforts to bring about some sort of
consistency of behaviour where no consensus exists; or, viewed more cynically,
efforts to make it look as though the bishops want such consistency for the benefit of hostile observers. But I
can see where they’re coming from.
I saw a letter from a bishop to his own local clergy,
passing on the link to the document to ensure they all knew it was there. He
went on, again, in what I think is a tremendous effort to be positive:
You will notice, that a pastoral
response of prayers is encouraged, where appropriate, to gay couples who may
enquire about the possibility of some form of service. This would not be any
formal rite or liturgy but, as paragraph 22 of the Appendix states, a 'more
informal kind of prayer, at the request of the couple, might be appropriate in
the light of circumstances'. It was the last sentence which made my heart sink:
My own view is that this might be best done in the couple's home.
Why might that be? I’m writing as somebody who doesn’t think
two people of the same sex can celebrate the sacrament of matrimony, and when I
said that some time ago was regarded with incredulity by some of my more
liberal Christian friends who couldn’t believe I could express such wicked and objectionable
opinions. And even I gib at this. Surely,
if we’re trying to be consistent, a person, thing or activity which can be
prayed for in private can be prayed for in public? To say otherwise in this
case implies either that you think the relationship you’re praying for is
sinful; or that you think others will, and so publicity should be avoided. The
former idea would be bizarre: to ‘pray with’ a homosexual couple surely assumes that there is nothing inherently
sinful about their relationship; you wouldn’t go to someone’s house to pray,
say, for God’s purposes and will to be revealed as they were about to engage in
adultery – would you? If it’s the latter
thought behind the bishop’s words, well, the best you can say is that it’s understandable. What it really
represents is the desire to make the Church appear welcoming and pastorally
sensitive while not actually being willing to follow through and face the
trouble that would result even from the comparatively moderate position of
praying for gay couples in a church.
Note, also, the conditional, personal tone of the sentence:
‘my own view’, ‘might best be done’. The bishop knows that we clergy are
canonically bound to do what we are told when given direct instructions, and
quite rightly. But this stops short of issuing an instruction and instead
disguises it as a personal opinion. I wonder which it’s actually intended to
be. I suppose it may also be the case that this bishop suspects there are some
clergy who would actively disobey any instruction not to pray for gay couples
in church, so he doesn’t issue one, to avoid the confrontation.
It’s really trying to have one’s cake and eat it in two entirely
different matters, sex and authority, within a mere 14 words, and tells you a
great deal about how the Church of England works – or doesn’t.
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