Resolved,
the House of _____ concurring, That the 75th General
Convention adopt the following statement as its response to the Windsor Report:
The 75th General Convention expresses its deep
desire to remain a member church of the Anglican Communion, which we understand
to be a fellowship of churches in communion with the See of Canterbury,
committed to mission together for the sake of the Gospel of Jesus Christ in a
spirit of mutual respect and forbearance.
We understand and regret that decisions made at the
74th General Convention have caused a strain in this spirit and, indeed, been
received by many in the Communion as an unacceptable deviation from Scripture
and the tradition of the Church. We
acknowledge that this is true even within our own church. We wish to state
clearly that we have no desire to impose a uniformity of position either in our
own church or the Communion itself on these matters. We cannot, however, as a
church, receive the statement of resolution 1.10 of the 1998 Lambeth Conference, "rejecting homosexual practice as
incompatible with Scripture," as definitive Anglican teaching on this
matter.
We do not believe that the current controversy regarding
different understandings of the place of our members who happen to be
homosexual in their orientation is a matter on which our essential unity
depends. We believe that our unity as a
Church is best expressed by our commitment to serve together in mission to the
world, and that the theological essentials that unite us are best expressed in
the Chicago-Lambeth Quadrilateral.
We acknowledge the House of Bishop's Delegated Episcopal
Oversight Plan (DEPO) as an important tool for maintaining our essential unity
in a time of strain. We also accept the Executive Council's
decision to voluntarily withdraw our members from the Anglican Consultative
Council (ACC) until the Lambeth Conference 2008. However,
we look forward to our full participation in that Conference and our return to
full participation in the ACC following it.
We also acknowledge the listening process begun by
the ACC in 2005 and urge that in all member churches of the Communion it
include the voices of faithful gay and lesbian Anglicans. We commend the document To Set our Hope on Christ as a positive contribution of the
Episcopal Church to this process.
Finally, we affirm the place of our members who are
gay and lesbian, both laity and clergy. In this affirmation we believe the
words of To Set Our Hope on Christ,
to be an accurate description of the experience of a majority of us that
"For forty years, members of the Episcopal Church have discerned holiness
in same-sex relationships and have come to support the blessing of such unions
and the ordination or consecration of persons in those unions" (section
2.0).