Canterbury comes to Canada

Published by
Solange DeSantis

The Canadian primate, Archbishop Andrew Hutchison (right), announced in January that the April meeting of the Canadian House of Bishops would be visited by the Archbishop of Canterbury, Rowan Williams. The two men are pictured above on an earlier visit by Archbishop Hutchison to Lambeth Palace in London.

The Archbishop of Canterbury, Rowan Williams, will make his first visit to Canada as Archbishop of Canterbury with a visit to the April meeting of the Canadian house of bishops in Niagara Falls, Ont.

“We have had the invitation in the works for over a year; we struggled with his calendar and we received the answer today (Jan. 26). We’re delighted,” said Archbishop Andrew Hutchison, primate of the Anglican Church of Canada.

The move is significant since Archbishop Williams has come under criticism for avoiding the U.S. and Canadian churches since his election in 2002 and since the Episcopal Church and Anglican Church of Canada moved toward more-liberal views on homosexuality at about the same time.

He declined an invitation to attend a joint meeting of U.S. and Canadian bishops in Windsor, Ont. in 2005, drawing criticism from Archbishop Hutchison at the time: “It does send a very, very negative symbol to the Canadian church, no question. The message it sends to us is that at the moment he does not want to be associated with the Canadians,” he said before the Windsor meeting.

Speaking in an interview on Jan. 26, Archbishop Hutchison noted that in 2005, “the water was really churning over ‘the issue’ (of homosexuality and the church).” In addition, the bishops attending included Gene Robinson of the diocese of New Hampshire, who lives in a long-term partnership with another man and whose election in 2003 was one of the flash points for the current worldwide controversy within the Anglican Communion. Coincidentally, another bishop who attended was Katharine Jefferts Schori, now Presiding Bishop of the Episcopal Church.

More recently, Bishop Paul Marshall, of the diocese of Bethlehem in Pennsylvania, wrote to fellow bishops upbraiding Archbishop Williams for not personally visiting the U.S. church’s General Convention last June. “We deserve to hear from him, in the room with us,” he said, adding that Archbishop Williams had spent more time talking to a bishop leading a breakaway group than in talking to “our entire house of bishops or even our church gathered in convention.” Bishop Marshall’s letter was reported in the British newspaper Church Times in January.

However, the Canadian house of bishops does not plan officially to discuss current affairs with Archbishop Williams. He is scheduled to arrive on the evening of Monday, April 16 at the Mt. Carmel retreat house and participate in a full-day retreat on Tuesday, April 17, said Archbishop Hutchison.

“He is a brilliant theological thinker whom we want to have access to. I anticipate he’ll give a series of addresses that the bishops will be reflecting upon,” said Archbishop Hutchison. There is no theme or scriptural reference as yet for the retreat day, he said, noting that the bishops’ agenda committee is continuing to plan the meeting, which will run from April 16 to 20, although Archbishop Williams is scheduled to leave after the April 17 retreat day.

The bishops’ spring meeting is significant since they will be choosing candidates for the office of primate. The election of a new national bishop is scheduled to take place on June 22 at the triennial General Synod meeting in Winnipeg that runs from June 19-25.

“We (bishops) need to do some careful reflection on the future of the church, so we have taken a full day ahead of the house of bishops (business) meeting to center ourselves,” Archbishop Hutchison said.

Although political subjects are not on the agenda, Archbishop Hutchison said “there are mealtimes and coffee breaks” at which such discussions might take place during the retreat day. In addition, the Archbishop of Canterbury’s visit comes the year before the decennial Lambeth Conference in 2008, a gathering in England of the world’s Anglican bishops. The last conference in 1998 saw heated disagreement over the issue of homosexuality.

Before he visits the bishops, Archbishop Williams is also scheduled to deliver a lecture, cosponsored by Trinity and Wycliffe Colleges, at Trinity College in Toronto.

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Published by
Solange DeSantis