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Archbishop of Canterbury Issues Invitations to Lambeth Conference
Jun 1, 2007
The
following is the text of Archbishop Rowan Williams’s invitation to bishops of
the Anglican Communion to attend the 2008 Lambeth Conference:
Dear
Bishop,
I
am delighted to invite you to the Lambeth Conference of 2008 and I very much
look forward to our gathering together as bishops of the Anglican Communion.
The
dates of the Conference are 16 July-4 August 2008 and I trust you will already
have heard something of the vision for the Conference as it has been unfolding.
It will focus on our equipping as bishops for leadership in mission and
teaching, and it will also be an opportunity for all of us to strengthen our
commitment to God's mission and to our common life as a Communion. In connection
with this latter point, we shall be devoting some time to thinking about the
proposals for an Anglican Covenant, and about other ways in which we can deepen
our sense of a common calling for us as interdependent members of the body of
Christ.
This
will be my third Lambeth Conference and I am very confident of the quality of
the programme being developed for it. I want to offer my warm public thanks to
all those from across the world who have worked so hard at planning this -
especially the devoted Design Group under the Archbishop of Melanesia, those
who attended the St Augustine's Seminar last year, and our Conference Manager,
Sue Parks. Their vision and their advice has been an inspiration at every stage
so far. I am hugely excited by the possibilities the programme offers for a new
and more effective style of meeting and learning, and for greater
participation, which will help us grow together locally and internationally.
Because
there has been quite a bit of speculation about invitations and the conditions
that might be attached to them, I want to set out briefly what I think the
Conference is and is not.
The
Conference is a place where our experience of living out God's mission can be
shared. It is a place where we may be renewed for effective ministry. And it is
a place where we can try and get more clarity about the limits of our diversity
and the means of deepening our Communion, so we can speak together with
conviction and clarity to the world. It is an occasion when the Archbishop of
Canterbury exercises his privilege of calling his colleagues together, not to
legislate but to discover and define something more about our common identity
through prayer, listening to God's Word and shared reflection. It is an
occasion to rediscover the reality of the Church itself as a worldwide
community united by the call and grace of Christ.
But
the Lambeth Conference has no 'constitution' or formal powers; it is not a
formal Synod or Council of the bishops of the Communion, which would require us
to be absolutely clear about the standing of all the participants. An
invitation to participate in the Conference has not in the past been a
certificate of doctrinal orthodoxy. Coming to the Lambeth Conference does not
commit you to accepting the position of others as necessarily a legitimate
expression of Anglican doctrine and discipline, or to any action that would
compromise your conscience or the integrity of your local church.
At
a time when our common identity seems less clear that it once did, the
temptation is to move further away from each other into those circles where we
only related to those who completely agree with us. But the depth and
seriousness of the issues that face us require us to discuss as fully and
freely as we can, and no other forum offers the same opportunities for all to
hear and consider, in the context of a common waiting on the Holy Spirit.
I
have said, and repeat here, that coming to the Conference does not commit you
to accepting every position held by other bishops as equally legitimate or
true. But I hope it does commit us all to striving together for a more
effective and coherent worldwide body, working for God's glory and Christ's
Kingdom. The Instruments of Communion have offered for this purpose a set of
resources and processes, focused on the Windsor Report and the Covenant
proposals. My hope is that as we gather we can trust that your acceptance of
the invitation carries a willingness to work with these tools to shape our
future. I urge you all most strongly to strive during the intervening period to
strengthen confidence and understanding between our provinces and not to
undermine it.
At
this point, and with the recommendations of the Windsor Report particularly in
mind, I have to reserve the right to withhold or withdraw invitations from
bishops whose appointment, actions or manner of life have caused exceptionally
serious division or scandal within the Communion. Indeed there are currently
one or two cases on which I am seeking further advice. I do not say this
lightly, but I believe that we need to know as we meet that each participant
recognises and honours the task set before us and that there is an adequate
level of mutual trust between us about this. Such trust is a great deal harder
to sustain if there are some involved who are generally seen as fundamentally
compromising the efforts towards a credible and cohesive resolution. I look
forward with enthusiasm to the Conference and hope you will be able to attend,
or your successor in the event that you retire in the meantime. My wife Jane
will be writing with an invitation to the Spouses Conference which will run in
parallel to the Lambeth Conference. Further communication to bishops will
follow soon from the Lambeth Conference Office, including details of the costs
and a reply slip on which you can respond formally to this invitation. It would
be a great help if these replies were received by 31 July 2007. In the
meantime, should you have any queries about the Lambeth Conference itself, or
if you will be retiring before the Conference, please contact the Lambeth
Conference Manager at the supplied email address or consult the Lambeth
Conference website www.lambethconference.org.
I
trust you and your diocese will join with me in praying for God's gracious
blessing of our time together.
Yours
in Christ,
Rowan
CANTUAR:
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