We are writing to express our serious concerns in regard to
the Pilling Report. We know that the House of Bishops of the Church of England
will be discussing this and we would like to assure them of our prayers so that
the Holy Spirit would guide them to the right decisions.
First, we would like to say that we believe that the church
of Christ should not in any way be homophobic or have any kind of phobia. We
should follow in the steps of Jesus Christ who embraced all the marginalized of
his society; having said that, we must say that we did not read of any
homophobic statement from any bishop or clergy in the Church of England. It is
sad that anyone who does not support the ministry of gay and lesbians, as well
as same-sex marriages, is considered homophobic. Obviously there is a big
difference between those who refuse to recognize the presence of homosexuals in
the church, i.e. homophobic, and those who do support Lambeth 1998 Resolution
1.10 and do not support the ministry and ordination of non-celibate gay and
lesbians, as well as same-sex marriages.
The Pilling Report raises an important question which
requires an answer: will the Church of England conform to its context, i.e.
will the Church of England allow the society to shape its faith and practice in
such a way in order to be acceptable by the society, or will the Church of
England recognize that its distinctive mission is to transform the society? The
Pilling Report suggests, that while the Church of England should not change its
teaching, it should give a space to provide pastoral care to gay and lesbians
such as doing same-sex blessing with unauthorized liturgies. It is similar to
what some churches in North America called “a local option” and now has become
a standard practice in these churches. In the pretext of providing pastoral
care, the suggestion in a very subtle way, encourages the turning of a blind
eye to a major alteration of the teaching of the church. This suggestion, of a
local option, likewise ignores an historic Anglican approach to doctrine,
namely lex orandi, lex credendi–what
we pray is what we believe. A pastoral provision, while not officially changing the church’s
teaching, does, in practice and in fact, change the church’s teaching. The
Global South are resolutely opposed to this.
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