Monday, August 03, 2009

Episcopal Church Leaders in Los Angeles Nominate Gay and Lesbian Bishops

Personally, I applaud the nomination yesterday of openly gay and lesbian priests as bishops. It is most refreshing to see a denomination accept modern knowledge and move beyond a few passages in the Bible written by uneducated and by today's standards, extremely ignorant authors. However, it will likely cause the anti-gay Neanderthals within the Anglican Communion to go berserk - you know, godly folks like Nigeria's Archbishop Peter Akinola who may have been involved in the massacre of 600 Muslims. What the spineless Archbishop of Canterbury will do remains to be seen. Here are some highlights from the Los Angeles Times:
*
Episcopal Church leaders in Los Angeles today nominated an openly gay priest and an openly lesbian priest as bishops, becoming one of the first dioceses in the national church to test a controversial new policy that lifted a de facto ban on gays and lesbians in the ordained hierarchy.
*
The nominations of the Rev. John L. Kirkley of San Francisco and the Rev. Canon Mary Douglas Glasspool of a Baltimore-based diocese are likely to further inflame theological conservatives in the U.S. church and their global partners in the Anglican Communion, who have repeatedly warned about the repercussions of such action.
*
The Diocese of Los Angeles, which represents 70,000 Episcopalians in six counties, is widely regarded as one of the most liberal in the U.S. church of 2.1 million members. Its bishop, the Rt. Rev. J. Jon Bruno, is an outspoken advocate of gays rights in the church.
*
The action in Los Angeles followed a similar decision Saturday by leaders in the Diocese of Minnesota, who nominated a partnered lesbian as bishop. The Rev. Bonnie Perry is rector of All Saints Episcopal Church in Chicago and an adjunct professor at Seabury-Western Theological Seminary in Evanston, Ill. Her longtime partner is a priest in the church.
*
I continue to keep my fingers crossed that the ELCA will show the courage and willingness to do what is right like these Episcopal dioceses when it holds it Churchwide Assembly later this month. If not, the boyfriend and I may seriously consider switching to an Episcopal parish. As much as I like the ECLA, another rejection of full acceptance of LGBT Lutherans at the Churchwide Assembly may make the decision for us.

No comments: