Windsor Knot
by
Michael McGough
On
October 18, 2004, Archbishop Robin Eames, the Anglican primate of all
Ireland, appeared at a news conference in London to unveil the voluminous
report of the Lambeth Commission he chaired on three developments that
threatened to fracture the Anglican Communion: the elevation of V. Gene
Robinson, “a priest in a committed same sex relationship,” to the bishopric
of New Hampshire; the decision of the Canadian diocese of New Westminster to
authorize a blessing service for same-sex marriages; and the activities of
conservative bishops who had been functioning as “reverse missionaries” in
the United States, treading on the turf of local liberal bishops.
As
a milestone in the Anglican Communion’s handling of what British tabloids
called the “gay bishop row,” Eames’ presentation of what came to be known as
the Windsor Report was good copy for popular and highbrow journalism alike.
How
did the press do? The short answer is that newspapers around the
English-speaking world gave predictably short shrift to the report’s
ruminations about the theory, practice, and scriptural foundations of
“communion” between independent churches that trace their lineage to the
Church of England. They did a much better job—within a conventional
journalistic groove—of covering the commission’s practical recommendations
and reactions to them from partisans on both sides of the “row.” Even here,
however, there were some lapses.
At
his press conference, Archbishop Eames said, “I am glad to be able to
commend this Report to the members of our Communion and to the wider world
this morning.” But the notion that most reporters would be parsing the
Windsor Report for its ecclesiology, invocations of Christian charity, or
nuanced approach to the interpretation of Scripture was a pious hope.
Reporters may have dutifully read the report’s theological and scriptural
arguments for preserving communion among the far-flung provinces of the
Anglican tradition, but they weren’t about to lead off their stories this
way: “A commission formed by the archbishop of Canterbury to examine
dissension in the Anglican communion over issues related to homosexuality
yesterday said that church unity is rooted in the Trinitarian life and
purposes of the one God, ‘the specific practical embodiment and fruit of the
gospel itself, the good news of God’s action in Jesus Christ to deal once
and for all with evil and to inaugurate the new creation.’” Get me rewrite!
To
be fair, reporters who skimmed over this sort of theological analysis can
argue that it was boring, the ecclesiastical equivalent of committee-speak,
and banal. Indeed, stripped of its scriptural and historical citations, the
message of the report could be reduced to the Gospel According to Rodney
King: “Why can’t we all just get along?” Still, some greater attention to
both the text and the context of the report would have helped readers to
understand that the dispute in the Anglican controversy was more than the
Culture War at Prayer.
Instead, even before Eames’ news conference, most journalists
characteristically had cut to the chase. Like Supreme Court correspondents
whose editors want to know who won and what happens now—rather than to be
treated to a deconstruction of the legal theory of the majority
opinion—reporters covering the release of the Windsor Report composed “nut
grafs” that focused more on what happened than why.
And
what happened was that the commission had rebuked the North American
dioceses for their unilateral inclusiveness, told them to declare a
moratorium on such divisive actions, and even asked them to express “regret”
for scandalizing their fellow Anglicans by ignoring a 1998 reaffirmation by
the world’s Anglican bishops that homosexual practice was incompatible with
Scripture. Then, in a conspicuous attempt at balance, the commission also
issued a cease-and-desist order to conservative bishops for their poaching
in other prelates’ patches, which the report called a violation of
“traditional and often-repeated Anglican practice.”
Before the beginning of the next news cycle, journalists in Britain, North
America, and Africa were honoring another journalistic convention by
seeking “reax”—from liberals (like Presiding Bishop Frank T. Griswold of
the Episcopal Church of the USA, who offered a grudging expression of
regret that fell short of an apology); from conservatives (like Bishop
Robert Duncan of Pittsburgh, who told the Washington Post that the
Windsor Commission was “more concerned about keeping the family together
than it is about the truth of the Gospel”); and from the African bishops
whose antipathy to homosexuality was an important factor in the crisis that
prompted creation of the Lambeth Commission.
The
leading African critic of what the Nigerian press calls “homosexualism,”
Archbishop Peter Akinola, the primate of all Nigeria, made it easy for
reporters by promptly issuing a statement faulting the commission for
failing “to confront the reality that a small, economically privileged group
of people has sought to subvert the Christian faith and impose their new and
false doctrine on the wider community of faithful believers.”
Many newspapers, particularly in the United States, aggressively localized
the story, some in their first dispatches and others in detailed follow-ups
that suggested that Archbishop Eames might have entertained at least two
pious hopes. If the first was that the press would read the actual language
of the report; the second was that partisans in parsonages and pews alike
would be inspired by the report to subordinate their strong views to the
greater good of peace in the Communion.
In
general, the English language press did a creditable job of summarizing the
Windsor Report’s “action agenda” (as a business consultant might call it)
and tracking the reaction to it. But even within this familiar frame a few
of the brushstrokes were blurry.
For
example, several reporters—for Newsday, Cox Newspapers, UPI, the
Associated Press and the Norfolk Virginian Pilot—reported that the
commission had asked the American bishops to “apologize” for consecrating
Gene Robinson as a bishop. But the actual (if arguably hairsplitting)
language of the recommendation was as follows: “The Episcopal Church (USA)
[is] invited to express its regret that the proper constraints of the bonds
of affection were breached in the events surrounding the election and
consecration of a bishop for the See of New Hampshire, and for the
consequences which followed, and that such an expression of regret would
represent the desire of the Episcopal Church (USA) to remain within the
Communion.”
The
difference is important, because as long as an “apology” was not on demand,
Griswold can be said to have heeded the commission’s plea when he allowed as
how “we regret how difficult and painful actions of our church have been in
many provinces of our Communion”—a comment he coupled with an affirmation of
the presence and positive contribution of gay and lesbian persons “to every
aspect of the life of our church and in all orders of ministry.”
Some papers, including USA Today and the Providence
Journal-Bulletin, stuck to the language of the report and referred only
to “expression of regret.” Laurie Goodstein’s October 19 article in the
New York Times had it both ways, saying that the U.S. church was being
asked to apologize but also quoting Griswold as saying the report itself
didn’t use that word.
The
second problem with coverage of the “action agenda” is that some papers did
not highlight the fact that the Windsor Report criticized the right as well
as the left by urging conservative bishops not to interfere in the dioceses
of liberal ones. Yet the language and tone of that recommendation was every
bit as judgmental as that in the section dealing with Robinson’s
consecration: “We call upon those bishops who believe it is their
conscientious duty to intervene in provinces, dioceses and parishes other
than their own: to express regret for the consequences of their actions, to
affirm their desire to remain in the Communion, and to effect a moratorium
on any further interventions.”
An
otherwise comprehensive report in the October 19 Washington Times
buried that recommendation and devoted more space to criticism of it offered
by Diane Knippers of the Institute of Religion and Democracy, who said the
report equated “the arsonist who started the fire and the fireman who must
take an ax to the door in order the save the innocents caught in the burning
building.”
Finally, perhaps because ecclesiology isn’t as sexy as sexuality, several
papers provided spotty coverage or none at all of the Windsor Report’s
intriguing suggestion that the archbishop of Canterbury be given new
authority such that, while it wouldn’t make him an Anglican pope, would
lead to more centralization than has been the custom in Anglicanism.
Specifically, the report says that “the historic position of the
Archbishopric of Canterbury must not be regarded as a figurehead, but as the
central focus of both unity and mission within the Communion.”
Granted, the report undermines its own recommendation by advocating a
“Council of Advice to the Archbishop to assist him in discerning when and
how it might be appropriate for him to exercise a ministry of unity on
behalf of the whole Communion.” The proposal was still significant, yet
generally not given its due. Nor was a related proposal for a “common
Anglican Covenant which would make explicit and forceful the loyalty and
bonds of affection which govern the relationships between the churches of
the Communion.”
If
these recommendations were to be enacted, Canterbury would acquire the
capacity to impose some measure of discipline on the far-flung members of
its Communion—a sea change in the history of Anglicanism.
No
less an expert than the current archbishop of Canterbury, Rowan Williams,
has observed that the Communion is “wary of a central executive power.” But
Williams also asked, before his elevation: “How far can the Anglican
Communion survive without some mechanism of authority more robust than
currently exists?”
Although the release
of the Windsor Report is now yesterday’s news, what the Lambeth Commission
calls its “reception”—the ecclesiastical equivalent of journalistic “reax”—
continues with a meeting of Anglican primates scheduled for February and the
decennial Lambeth Conference set for 2008. In short, the beat goes on, and
for those who cover it there is cause for pride and room for improvement.
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