England: Synod approves next steps for women to become bishops

Posted Nov 20, 2013

[Church of England press release] The General Synod of the Church of England has Nov. 20 approved a package of measures as the next steps to enable women to become bishops.

In the debate in the morning session the synod welcomed the package of proposals outlined in the report of the Steering Committee for the Draft Legislation of Women in the Episcopate (GS 1924).

The Steering Committee’s package of proposals follows the mandate set by the synod in July and includes the first draft of a House of Bishops declaration and a disputes resolution procedure. This debate invited synod to welcome the proposals and the five guiding principles, already agreed by the House of Bishops, which underpin them.

Proposing the package of measures Bishop James Langstaff of Rochester said: “These measures look to the day when the Church of England as an ecclesial entity will have made a clear decision to open all orders of ministry to women and men without distinction, whereby all those so ordained are true and lawful holders of the office which they occupy.”

The following motion was carried this morning with 378 votes for, eight against and 25 abstentions:

‘That this Synod, welcoming the package of proposals in GS 1924 and the statement of principles endorsed by the House of Bishops at paragraph 12 of GS 1886, invite the House of Bishops to bring to the Synod for consultation in February a draft declaration and proposals for a mandatory disputes resolution procedure which build on the agreement reached by the Steering Committee as a result of its facilitated discussions.”

In its afternoon session, the synod also voted to progress the legislation to the next legislative stage of revision at its meeting in February 2014.

As a result of the votes carried today, synod has agreed to dispense with the normal Revision Committee process and move straight to revision in full at synod which next meets in February 2014, thereby clearing the way for a possible vote on final approval later in 2014.


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Comments (1)

  1. The Rev. William J. Fleener, Sr. says:

    Justice delayed is justice denied!
    The ONLY reason women have not been ordained priests and bishops from the early days of the Christian Way, is that women were not considered fully human. Men, perhaps out of a need to control what they fear, kept women identified as a “thing” which BELONGED to a man.

    We know better now. We are having our own “Galileo moment” concerning the way God actually has created the human race, as opposed (where necessary) to what the Biblical writers thought and wrote. Women are fully human, neither things belonging to a neighbor (the 10th commandment) nor just dirt in which men plant their seed (Ps. 139:14-15).

    William J. Fleener, Sr.
    Priest of the Episcopal Diocese of Western Michigan

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