St. Catharines, Ont.
Archbishop Andrew Hutchison of Montreal was elected the 12th primate of the Anglican Church of Canada today by lay and clergy delegates at the General Synod held at Brock University, St. Catharines, Ont.
Archbishop Hutchison was elected on the fourth ballot from a final slate of two candidates (including Bishop Ronald Ferris of Algoma), receiving 68 votes from clergy and 97 votes from the laity. There were 117 clergy and 144 lay members who voted in an election that took nearly five hours to finish.
“I’d really been looking forward to retirement,” Archbishop Hutchison said, with a touch of irony, after long applause and a standing ovation greeted his formal announcement as primate-elect by Archbishop David Crawley of Kootenay, the acting primate. “The good news is that it’s not for a long haul.”
Archbishop Hutchison, who at the age of 65 is only five years shy of the church’s mandatory retirement age for bishops, later told a news conference that “it was quite likely” that he would only serve one three-year-term.
But he told members of General Synod gathered at the university’s Sean O’Sullivan Theatre that he was accepting the primacy “with a profound sense of both responsibility and accountability in this wonderful Anglican Church of Canada.”
Only moments after he was announced as new primate, Archbishop Hutchison was bombarded with questions by the media about whether he was in favour of same-sex blessings – an issue that has dramatically divided not just Anglicans in Canada but has contributed to discord within the worldwide Anglican Communion.
“I personally have difficulty with same-sex marriages and it’s not something I’ll be able to take on and I’m not sure I can support that theologically,” he told a news conference. “But when two human beings active in the life of the church and the body of Christ commit themselves to each other for life and ask their faith community to bless that, I have no problem with that.”
Nonetheless, he added, he remained undecided about a resolution that will come before General Synod later this week that states that the decision on whether to bless same-sex unions resides with dioceses. “Frankly, I haven’t really taken a position on that yet,” he said. “It’s not fence-sitting. I do have my personal convictions but what will be good for the church at this point needs to unroll during the process of this synod.” (Delegates to General Synod will decide on the motion on June 2.)
When asked what he would do to restore unity within the fractured church, he said, “The way I hope to do that is to remind us of our history of unity within diversity.”
He said that the church has survived similar crises involving such issues as the ordination of women and re-marriage of divorced persons. He added that he would forge an informal dialogue with dissenting churches and parishes in the diocese of New Westminster who have formed their own coalition after their diocesan synod in 2002 approved the blessing of same-sex unions.
Archbishop Hutchison is also bishop ordinary to the Canadian Forces and metropolitan (senior bishop) of the ecclesiastical (church) province of Canada. That province includes the dioceses of Quebec, Montreal, Fredericton, Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island and the three dioceses in Newfoundland. He has had a long career in the Anglican Church of Canada, having served 15 ecclesiastical offices. A native of Toronto, he was ordained a deacon at St. James Cathedral in 1969. He was installed as bishop at Christ Church Cathedral, Montreal, in 1990, and elected metropolitan in May, 2002.
Archbishop Hutchison and his wife, Lois – a diocesan employee in Montreal – have one son, David, who joined his parents at the news conference, with his wife Jillian and 7-month-old daughter the day of the election.
The other candidates on the first two ballots were Bishop Ferris (Algoma) and Bishop Caleb Lawrence of Moosonee. Another candidate, Bishop Victoria Matthews of Edmonton, withdrew from the race last week after she was diagnosed with breast cancer. Bishop Ralph Spence of Niagara was added as a candidate after the second ballot when the clergy members requested the bishops to add more nominees to the position.
When the first ballot was cast at 11:35 a.m. Archbishop Hutchison emerged with the most votes (48 clergy and 72 laity), but fell short of the required majority (at least 59 votes from the clergy and 73 laity).
Bishop Ferris received the second highest number of votes (clergy 36, laity 31) and Bishop Lawrence ranked third (clergy 25, laity 38).
During the second ballot held at 11:55 a.m., Archbishop Hutchison received a majority from the order of laity with 78 votes, but only received 55 from the order of clergy. Bishop Ferris again emerged second, with 39 votes from clergy and 34 from the laity. Bishop Lawrence received 20 votes from clergy and 28 from laity; as the candidate with the least votes, his name was removed from the ballot under canons governing the primacy.
It was at this point that a motion was passed in the order of clergy asking the bishops to provide more nominees. After more than an hour, the house of bishops, who were in a separate location within the university called Alphie’s Trough, voted and nominated Bishop Spence.
The bishops’ first choice, however, was Archbishop Crawley, who declined the nomination. “I said no for a lot of reasons. I’ll be 67 in July. I’ve worked hard for a long time and I’m tired,” he said in an interview. He also said family considerations were a factor. “I’d miss a big chunk of my (12-year-old) daughter’s life and I didn’t want to disrupt her schooling. But it was a very great struggle for me. I’d been prodded (toward the nomination) by very kind people,” he added.
Bishop Spence, however, emerged last during the third ballot held at 3 p.m., leaving Bishops Ferris and Hutchison in the race. Once again a member of the order of clergy submitted a motion seeking for more nominees from the house of bishops. The motion was defeated, however, much to the relief of some delegates who felt worn out by the long process. A member of the order of laity also tried to revive the motion asking for more nominees, but it was also defeated, leaving only the names of Bishops Hutchison and Ferris in the ballot.
The third ballot was cast at 3:35 p.m., and at 4:05 p.m., General Synod prolocutor Dorothy Davies-Flindall announced, “We have an election.”
At 4:15 p.m. the bishops arrived at the Sean O’Sullivan Theatre to much clapping and a standing ovation.
In a speech before the delegates, Archbishop Hutchison offered thanks to his fellow candidates, saying that becoming a candidate for primate, was “a step of courage…a step of risk.” He also gave special mention to Bishop Matthews.
In his impromptu address, he also addressed the issue of unity: “One of the great challenges before our church is certainly its unity. But it is simply not unity for its own sake.” He added that the church also needs to re-examine what its purpose is.
He called his new job “overwhelming” and asked delegates to “forgive me if I’m not articulate.” As dictated by tradition, the new primate gave a blessing, which in this case, the bilingual Archbishop Hutchison offered in French and English.
Author
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Marites N. Sison
Marites (Tess) Sison was editor of the Anglican Journal from August 2014 to July 2018, and senior staff writer from December 2003 to July 2014. An award-winning journalist, she has more that three decades of professional journalism experience in Canada and overseas. She has contributed to The Toronto Star and CBC Radio, and worked as a stringer for The New York Times.