Monday, November 13, 2017

CofE Heresy - Good Work Lorna!

A leading member of the Church of England's governing body is quitting, accusing bishops of heresy in a sign of bitter divides over same-sex relationships.
Lorna Ashworth, a staunch evangelical, cited a 'revisionist agenda' and 'heretical teaching' as she announced her resignation over the Church's increasingly relaxed approach to gay couples.
VimeoLorna Ashworth announcement her resignation on Friday citing 'heretical teaching' in the Church of England.
'I am no longer willing to sit around the table, pretending that we, as a governing body of the Church of England, are having legitimate conversations about mission. I refuse to be mistaken as one participating in the fanciful notion of "good disagreement",' she said in her resignation letter.
She told Christian Today there were 'completely different agendas' at work within the Church. She said her resignation was not just about sexuality but about a fundamental understanding of the gospel.
Ashworth is a longstanding and prominent conservative presence within the CofE and sits on the influential business committee that sets the agenda for the ruling general synod as well as the Archbishops' Council - a senior advisory body to the Church.
She has spoken strongly against women bishops and gay marriage in the past and her departure will be a blow to evangelicals as they perceive the CofE is drifting towards allowing some form of gay blessing or official liturgy for same-sex couples.
Ashworth is also part of the conservative group Reform and warned evangelicals were being 'squeezed out' of the Church. She said the Archbishop of Canterbury's plea for 'good disagreement' was impossible.
'I don't think we can have good disagreement about something that is about life and death,' she said.
The General Synod last met in July and passed motions to ban gay cure therapies and consider transgender re-naming liturgies.
Evangelicals are increasingly nervous about the CofE's direction after a report maintaining the status quo on the Church's ban on gay marriage was rejected by the general synod. The Archbishops of Canterbury and York called for a 'radical new Christian inclusion' following the defeat last February and promised a new teaching document based on 'a proper 21st century understanding of being human and of being sexual'.
Since then the Church backed a ban on gay cure therapies, called for bishops to investigate re-naming services after gender transition and is set to vote on whether to adopt official service to bless gay couples.
Increasingly fraught language has followed with conservative bodies plotting a breakaway Anglican church in the UK. CP.

Farewell, Frank.

                    Frank Field’s legacy  Obituary. The political maverick understood that sooner or later we will run out of money to fund ...