OHH JESUS!
The Church of Scotland General Assembly has
voted to affirm its historic position on homosexuality but with opt outs for
revisionist churches that choose to be headed by ministers in same-sex civil
partnerships.
The compromise vote came
after the former Moderator of the General Assembly, the Very Reverend Albert
Bogle tabled a new motion in an attempt to bridge the gap between the original
revisionist and traditionalist motions on offer.
His version was adopted
after motion 2b advocating only a traditional understanding of same-sex
relationships fell in the first round of voting.
Bogle's motion 2d asked
commissioners to "affirm the Church's historic and current doctrine and
practice in relation to human sexuality" but "nonetheless permit
those Kirk sessions who wish to depart from that doctrine and practice to do
so".
It also allows ministers
and deacons, current and prospective, in civil partnerships to be selected for
training.
Motion 2d was passed by
340 votes to 282, defeating motion 2a, which had asked the Church to continue
on a revisionist trajectory with an opt-out for traditionalist congregations.
The Legal Questions
Committee will now have the task of drawing up the legal framework for liberal
congregations wanting a minister in a civil partnership.
Their recommendations
will be laid out in new legislation to be put before the next General Assembly
in 2014. The Overture will then be referred to presbyteries according to rules
under the Church of Scotland's Barrier Act, which prevents the General Assembly
from making decisions on its own that radically affect Church policy.
Mr Bogle insisted his
motion was not a delaying tactic but a way of giving the Church more time to
move forward together.
He also admitted to
commissioners that, as a traditionalist, the "permissive" motion was
a considerable compromise on his own convictions.
"None of us will be
completely happy but we'll get over it … and be able to grow together," he
said.
"I'm moving a huge
bit - you don't know how much - but that doesn't matter, we're moving
together."
Explaining why he was
prepared to compromise on the issue, he said: "Because I want to stand
with my Greek Orthodox brothers and my Roman Catholic brothers and I don't want
to be so divided that they will not understand."
In an impassioned
debate, revisionists and traditionalists alike spoke of their desire to move on
from years of difficult debate over an issue that has divided the Church and
prompted congregations, ministers and individuals to leave.
Former Moderator of the
Church of Scotland the Very Reverend Alan McDonald, who had argued for 2a said:
"The time to do this is now. People don't want to wait any longer."
The Reverend Elisabeth
Spence, the gay minister of Ibrox Parish Church, Glasgow, said the debate over
homosexuality "undermines my call".
"Society has got
bigger things to think about, the world needs us to do bigger things," she
said. "It is time to decide so that those of us who are in this limbo can
get under the wire."
The Reverend Dr David
Ferguson said the "mixed economy" was the right direction for the
Church to take not in a way that "enforced victory" on one side. He
spoke of his respect for evangelical ministers and also expressed concern that
continuing on a revisionist trajectory would put off more young evangelicals
from joining or remaining in the Church of Scotland.
Seconding Bogle's
motion, the Reverend Alan Hamilton said motion 2a was "too fast",
"too painful" and "too destructive", but that it was time
for traditionalists like himself to "concede space" to others with a
revisionist view on homosexuality because the debate was "destroying"
the witness of the Church.
Reverend David Randall
was one of the few to take to the floor to speak against either form of mixed
economy, saying the issue of homosexuality had been "forced upon"
traditionalists.
He warned the Church
against going with the "flow of social trends and political
correctness", saying it was "no time for compromise" or
"fudging of this issue".
He added: "Many
feel they have been very patient with the Church of Scotland over these years
but if we try and sit on the fence or a mixed economy, which is revisionism
under another name, we will lose many more members and congregations, and defy
the King and Head who has given us these Scriptures."
Principal Clerk of the
General Assembly, John Chalmers, disagreed however, telling reporters it had
been a "massive vote for peace and unity in the Church" and a
"step change", although he admitted "the debate is not
over".
Also speaking after the
debate, the Moderator of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland, the
Reverend Lorna Hood praised commissioners for being "willing to listen to
one another" and discussing the issues with a "huge amount of grace".
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