Thursday, July 20, 2006

Arkansas Bishop to Allow Same-Sex Blessings

Arkansas Bishop to Allow Non-Sacramental Same-Sex Blessings
07/21/2006
From The Living Church

In a letter e-mailed to the clergy of his diocese, the Rt. Rev. Larry Maze, Bishop of Arkansas, has given congregations permission to develop pastoral responses to same-gender couples who seek the blessing of The Episcopal Church for their relationships. Under the terms outlined in the letter, clergy are forbidden from performing sacramental rites for the blessing of same-sex unions, but clergy and congregations are permitted to experiment with pastoral responses to same-sex couples seeking affirmation and support.

The July 19 letter noted that while The Episcopal Church remains divided over the propriety of same-sex blessings, there had been agreement for more than 30 years that “homosexual persons are children of God,” and are to be shown “love, acceptance, and pastoral concern and care.”“Seeking ways of recognizing and blessing faithful, monogamous same-sex relationships falls within the parameters of providing pastoral concern and care for our gay and lesbian members,” Bishop Maze wrote, citing the 74th General Convention’s resolution that placed same-sex blessings “within the bounds of our common life.”

A spokesman for Bishop Maze, who began a two-week vacation on July 21, told The Living Church “we are not talking about same-sex marriage.” Bishop Maze “has only approved a process whereby we can explore the meaning of same-sex blessings.”In November 2000, Bishop Maze initiated a conversation within the diocese on the pastoral and sacramental implications of blessing of same-sex unions. The July 19 letter continues this trend, according to the diocesan spokesman.Bishop Maze, who will retire in January, following the consecration of a successor scheduled to be elected on Nov. 11, distinguished between a sacramental rite for the blessing of same-gender unions and a pastoral provision for blessings.

“Neither the General Convention nor the Diocese of Arkansas has produced or approved official rites for the blessing of same-sex unions,” he said, adding “no congregation, vestry, or priest is expected to interpret the pastoral concern and care of the Church for gay and lesbian persons in a way that includes the possibility of formal rites of blessing.”

Congregations, however, were encouraged to come to “clarity around the issues involved when the church blesses anything or anyone.“If a couple seeks blessing in that congregation, they will join in that exploration much to the benefit of the congregation and the couple. This is a pastoral response,” Bishop Maze explained.The bishop’s encouragement of theological speculation on the distinction between a sacramental rite of blessing of same-sex unions and a pastoral provision for blessing same-sex unions is likely to draw the ire of the wider Anglican Communion.

The Windsor Report, the Archbishop of Canterbury, the Anglican Consultative Council, and the primates have all asked The Episcopal Church to refrain from such blessings.In a report published in The Christian Challenge magazine, two Arkansas congregations, St Paul’s, Fayetteville, and St. Michael’s, Little Rock, were cited as being open to Bishop Maze’s invitation. However, neither congregation said it was ready to proceed at this time with blessings

4 comments:

RudigerVT said...

I am so proud of Larry and Lowell. St. Paul's, F'ville, is an interesting spot: steeped in tradition as only Southerners can be, and, at the same time, under Lowell's excellent pastoring, it is emerging as the bastion of a rich history progressive values in a formerly charmed spot.

I say formerly because NW Arkansas is (alas) losing its claim on a marvelous, quirky past. Being the HQ of Wal-Mart (in nearby Bentonville), the region has changed dramatically since my time there in the late 80s. These conservative cultural forces have homogenized Fayetteville, which used to be the gentle and tolerant hang-out place for residents of the several nearby land communes and various others. The joke was that of the many VW busses headed west, the least reliable broke down in Fayetteville; the slightly better ones got as far as Boulder; and the rest made it to San Francisco.

That all changed, and I feared it would take St. Paul's along with it. Better things seem to have happened. Hooray!

LPR

Dave said...

This is incredible news! On a day when we celebrate the prophetic voice of four courageous abolitionists and feminists, we also see the Spirit working in our own time, in the least likely of places. Thanks be to God!

Anonymous said...

No bridge to the AC here, folks! Move along! Move along!

Toewalker said...

Thank you +Maze and hooray for Arkansas!

I've been to NW Arkansas in the past and it was quite beautiful. Last year my partner and I went to Eureka Springs, which I guess would be considered more north central than north west, but still, its a beautiful place. And an extremely gay-friendly town. I highly recommend it as a nice laid-back vacation spot, and we plan on returning for another vacation sometime.

Maybe we'll go there on a honeymoon. After all, our Rector performs SSU's and she's been giving us that "look" that says "... so when are you two going to get married?" :-)

Congratulations, Arkansas, and may God continue to bless you.