28 September 2015 A.D. THE ATLANTIC: Half-way reporting on Anglican Primatial Meeting, Jan 2016
28 September 2015 A.D. THE
ATLANTIC: Half-way reporting on Anglican Primatial Meeting, Jan 2016
Duin, Julia. “How Aggregating: The Atlantic Goes Halfway in
Reporting on Anglican Primates Meeting.” Get
Religion. 21 Sept 2015. http://www.getreligion.org/getreligion/2015/9/21/the-atlantic-only-goes-halfway-in-reporting-on-the-anglican-primates-meeting.
28 Sept 2015.
I’ve been
happy to see more religion pieces in The Atlantic in recent years, as such coverage was not occurring in that publication
during my 16 years in Washington, D.C. I’m not sure what led to a change in
heart among editors there, but it’s nice to see articles like last week’s piece
on the Archbishop of Canterbury’s last-ditch attempt to hold the Anglican
Communion together.
That’s the
good news.
The bad news
is the piece is aggregated, in that it’s a patchwork of quotes from three
British media outlets along with segments from the archbishop’s press release
about a gathering of Anglican primates in January 2016 at Canterbury Cathedral
in Kent. And there were some gaping holes. The article starts thus:
Justin Welby was named archbishop of Canterbury with high hopes that he
was the man who could save the Anglican Communion. Now it appears he may
oversee its breakup – a calculated destruction intended, paradoxically, to save
it.
Welby heads the Church of England, making him also the titular head of
the affiliated Anglican churches around the world, including the Episcopal
Church in the U.S. The umbrella group, the worldwide Anglican Communion, has
been shaken by conflicts over the ordination and consecration of gays and women
and over same-sex marriage in the U.S. and U.K. According to reports in British
media, Welby will propose reorganizing the Communion as a looser affiliation at
a January gathering.
Apparently
the reporter who did the story has not been covering the Anglican Communion as
long as some of us have, as there were some major omissions. GetReligion has run plenty
about the implosion facing worldwide Anglicanism. Why? Simply because after
Roman Catholics, Eastern Orthodoxy and the complex world of
Pentecostal/charismatics the Anglican Communion, at some 80 million members, is
the next largest single Christian body. A few things that need to be noted, for
those following the coverage:
First, it’s
not a slam-dunk that all the conservative primates will come to this gathering.
Virtueonline.org points out Welby has never been to one of these
primatial meetings and has no clue as to the kind of infighting that
goes on at these gatherings between liberal and conservative. Oddly, the
archbishop of Canterbury’s website has no list of the
Anglican primates on it. Or, if it’s there, it’s hidden well. Go to Wikipedia if you want to see their names.
Secondly, the
big news of this announcement was that Archbishop Foley Beach of the Anglican
Church in North America (the body created by former Episcopalians who’ve left) was invited to the primates gathering.
Why didn't The Atlantic
mention this? The New York Times got
this fact high up in its report.
Including
Welby, there are 38 primates. With Foley Beach, that makes 39. Foley's
inclusion among the world’s primates, which is something conservatives have
been wanting for years, is an admission by Lambeth Palace that the Episcopal
Church cannot claim to represent all Anglicans within U.S. borders.
Also, the
archbishop’s press release adds that Beach will be invited for “part of the
time.”
What does
that mean? The Atlantic could have inquired about that and about the
obvious point that Welby had to have conferred in private with some of the
conservative primates before issuing this call and that Foley’s inclusion in
this gathering was the non-negotiable they insisted upon
if they were going to show up. The Episcopal sites were commenting on
this as were the Anglican ones, so The Atlantic should have picked up on these points, which were
easy to find with a few mouse clicks.
The Atlantic did note that the only female primate, Episcopal Presiding Bishop
Katharine Jefferts Schori, will not be at this January meeting because her
successor, Bishop Michael Curry, will have been installed. What should have
been added is how her absence clears the way for those of the primates who
still oppose the ordination of female bishops to attend. Now they will not have
to abstain from Communion with someone they regard as having singlehandedly
created a scorched-earth policy toward departing
conservatives plus contributed to a 12 percent drop in church membership during
her tenure. One wonders if Welby timed his gathering with that in mind.
It takes
awhile to understand the intricacies of Anglican politics. My hope is that, as
January approaches, The Atlantic and
other publications will work on getting better sources to better report on what
could be the Anglican Communion's last stand.
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