The Church
of Scotland is braced for mass resignations over moves to allow the ordination
of gay ministers, with up to 150 conservative and evangelical ministers
threatening to quit, the Guardian can reveal.
The
rebellion began after the Church of Scotland became the first major
presbyterian church in the world to allow openly gay and lesbian ministers totake up parishes at its general assembly in May, despite evidence that 20% of
its elders and office-bearers could leave in protest.
The general
assembly also opened the way for the full ordination of gay ministers in the
church within two years, indicating the Church of Scotland was ready to accept
gay and lesbians on equal terms as heterosexual clergy for the first time since
its foundation 450 years ago.
But senior
sources in the church have told the Guardian they estimate as many as 150
serving ministers are actively preparing to leave or are considering
resignation, in the largest schism in the Church of Scotland since 474
ministers quit in 1843 to form the Free Church of Scotland.
At least
six ministers have already left since May, with one minister and his entire
congregation at Gilcomston South in Aberdeen poised to leave as a group, in the
first large-scale protest.
Mike
Strudwick, the session clerk at Gilcomston South, said he expected the
minister, Rev Dominic Smart and his congregation would resign en masse in the
near future, but were still discussing the details of how and when it would
leave.
He
predicted other churches opposed to gay ordination could follow, and perhaps
form a new breakaway church. He said he could "well believe" there
were 150 ministers considering resignation.
"Maybe
in five or six years down the line there will be a grouping of like-minded
evangelical Presbyterian churches," he said. "It is more than
conceivable that there will be a number of churches in the next months or years
who will leave the Church of Scotland."
The split
is the most significant fall-out since the ordination of Reverend Scott Rennie,
an openly gay minister in a long-term relationship, to Queen's Cross church in
Aberdeen in 2009. His appointment provoked a major dispute within the church,
mirrored in the Church of England and other churches overseas, about the role
and status of gay clergy and same-sex marriages.
In May this
year, the general assembly, the Church of Scotland's ruling body, voted to
endorse Rennie's appointment by allowing any gay minister who had declared
their sexuality before 2009 to take up new posts and parishes in the church.
While
effectively authorising gay clergy in the church, the general assembly voted to
postpone a formal decision on allowing gay people to train as ministers and be
fully ordained in future until a special theological commission reports in
2013. It also prevented serving gay ministers who declared their sexuality
after May 2009 from taking up new posts until the general assembly meets in
2013.
Other
figures in the church confirmed that other ministers are planning to resign,
although some believe the revolt will not be large. One major obstacle is that
any ministers who resigns loses their home, income and future pension payments.
Congregations would lose their church and its buildings.
Critics of
this strict ruling are thought to be planning to contest this at next May's
general assembly, in a bid to give rebellious ministers greater protection.
Rev Ian
Watson, a prominent member of the evangelical group Forward Together, said he
believed only a handful of ministers would leave in the near future.
"I
know of five who have actually left (or will do so in the next few weeks) and
maybe one more for whom this is on the cards. I am not one of them," he
said. "If there will be an exit, it will be two, three years down the line
at least."
Rev Peter
Johnston, of the liberal One Kirk group, which supports gay ordination, said he
believed some rebels were threatening to leave simply to put pressure on the
church, but hoped most critics wanted to keep talking about a harmonious
solution.
The general
assembly's decision "does leave them in an awkward position. I can grasp
that but the majority of folk in the Church of Scotland want to see what the
theological commission comes back with," he said. "From our
perspective, we're still trying to keep dialogue open with all people."
Strudwick
said: "It's very difficult to be in this position because we are the
people who are sticking to the traditional views of the Church of Scotland.
"The
Church of Scotland is putting itself out of line with the majority of
Christians worldwide. It seems very difficult for ministers to be put in this
position of sticking to their convictions but then losing their manse."
Related Articles:
About the Challenges of Being a Gay Man – Oct 23, 2010 (Saint Germain channelled by Alexandra Mahlimay and Dan Bennack) - “You see, your Soul and Creator are not concerned with any perspective you have that contradicts the reality of your Divinity – whether this be your gender, your sexual preference, your nationality – or your race, ethnicity, religious beliefs, or anything else.”
"The Akashic System" – Jul 17, 2011 (Kryon channelled by Lee Carroll) - (Subjects: Religion, The Humanization of God, Benevolent Design, DNA, Akashic Circle, (Old) Souls, Gaia, Indigenous People, Talents, Reincarnation, Genders, Gender Switches, In “between” Gender Change, Gender Confusion, Shift of Human Consciousness, Global Unity,..... etc.) - (Text version)
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