PASSIVE VOICE
Rowan Williams hopes that the upcoming Lambeth Conference won't be too...you know...hasty:
The Conference begins with a couple of days’ retreat. Some critics have complained that Lambeth is too focused on prayer and reflection and not enough on decision-making; but I am bound to say that I regard this as an extraordinary thing to say about any Christian gathering – as if we could make any decision worthy of the gospel without the utmost attention to listening together to God. I partly understand that some feel there may be an attempt to appeal to the need for prayer and reflection as an alibi for not grasping the nettles; but I would gently but firmly say that it is also possible to use a rhetoric about needing decisive action as an alibi for waiting on God. I simply pray that we’ll get the balance as right as we can.
As we all know, Scripture is replete with all sorts of examples of this. After all, what did Abraham do when God told him to sacrifice his son Isaac? He sat and waited for God to put a knife in his hand, waited for Isaac to lie down in front of him and waited for God to raise his arm, drop it down again, and plunge the knife into Isaac's neck.
Who doesn't thrill to those stirring words of Moses to Pharoah in Exodus? You can almost hear them, can't you? "Let my people stand in one place and wait until God moves them from Egypt to a land flowing with milk and honey!! By a series of earthquakes, maybe. How should I know?"
The scene by the Red Sea where the Israelites waited until God had parted the Red Sea, moved the land where they were standing across it(by a series of earthquakes, maybe. How should I know?) and then caused the Red Sea to close over the Egyptians is one of the foundation stories of human freedom. And when God came down from Mount Sinai and brought the tablets of the Law to the tent of Moses, the channel of human history began to flow in a new and nobler direction.
Although I should probably wait until God places one of my Bibles in my hand and causes my hands to open the book, I am going to stand up, walk a few feet to my left, pick up one of my Bibles, walk a few feet to my right, sit down, open it to Deuteronomy, read Deuteronomy 6:16 and then ponder Christ's application of this verse in Matthew 4.
Not a word of this to Dr. Williams.

Submitted by Michael D
at 2/12/2008 1:00:24 AM| I'm actually in favour of the bishops spending two days in prayer at the beginning of Lambeth, (and at the beginning of GAFCON). Then get on with the work of sidestepping the Liberal agenda and following the Holy Spirit's agenda. |

Submitted by alfonso
at 2/12/2008 2:14:00 AM| I agree there's a balance to be struck, but Dr. Williams conveniently leaves out over a thousand days of waiting in his balance equation. |

Submitted by Matthew
at 2/12/2008 4:24:04 AM| To his Lordship, I'd reply gently but firmly that we have seen your delay, your dithering, your dawdling, your grasping at straws, your eternal process and interminable dialogue, I would say that it is also possible to use your rhetoric about waiting on God as an alibi for needing decisive action. I too pray that we will get the balance right. Since we have been waiting, more or less patiently, for some time now, does this mean that things are now going to happen.? If so, let me know so I can buy my Archbishop of Canterbury action figure. Let's get metaphysical, metaphysical. I wanna get metaphysical! |

Submitted by Toral
at 2/12/2008 6:49:55 AM| Basically ditto Michael Dat But OK let's take ++Rowan seriously. Orthodox bishops shouldn't walk in and raise a point of order immediately, demanding a change of the agenda to add consideration of discipline on TEC and ACC and then, when this attempt is rejected, walk out. Instead they should spend a day in prayer and reflection. And then, raise a point of order immediately, demanding a change of the agenda to add consideration of discipline on TEC and ACC and then, when this attempt is rejected, walk out. |

Submitted by Khawk
at 2/12/2008 7:23:20 AM| God didn't dry the river Jordan until the Israelites took the first step to ford it. Noah didn't need for raindrops, which had never before fallen, to alert him to the fact that God means what He says. Our God-fearing Primates and Bishops are going to hear from the Lord and are going to know what to do. We will know if God says GO. |

Submitted by dwstroudmd
at 2/12/2008 9:45:44 AM| The agenda was set last September by the ACO and endorsed by the ABC then and publicly last month. But the ABC does tell what is to happen: "Whether or not we arrive at some unimaginable solution to both our theological and our structural challenges, I hope we shall at least have shown that it is possible to think and speak with one another in the presence of God." A solution is "unimaginable" even when it was "possible to think and speak with one another in the presence of God". Foregone conclusion as the AGENDA. Another way of saying, "There will be no resolution of this matter" at Lambeth. The cock has crowed thrice now. |

Submitted by Horseman
at 2/12/2008 10:30:11 AM| This statement by +Williams is simply more proof that he should resign his position. He is unfit to lead a Christian denomination and unfit to lead a Lamberth Conference. |

Submitted by Irenaeus
at 2/12/2008 12:11:58 PM| Look, I would concede that Williams is no administrator. And this might be some sort of stalling tactic. But I have been at so many church gatherings of various Prot denominations where prayer is a mere formality before one gets on with the 'real' business of moving lib agendas forward. So I think spending serious time in reflection and prayer is a great thing. |

Submitted by Antique
at 2/12/2008 12:20:19 PM| I would gently but firmly say that it is also possible to use a rhetoric about waiting on God as an alibi for needing decisive action. |

Submitted by Mark Windsor
at 2/12/2008 12:51:08 PM| Ya know, Chris, this is just a bit too easy for you. Where's the challenge in fisking the ABC? |

Submitted by Michael
at 2/12/2008 4:43:31 PM| Then, there's this article about closing the barn door after the cows have left. |

Submitted by Allen Lewis
at 2/13/2008 10:43:09 AM| I'm with Irenaeus on this one. But that does not mean I favor prayer and Bible study as a means of manipulating the process, as is done in the Episcopal Church. That is what I think the Lambeth planners have in mind: keeping people apart in small groups so that what happened in 1998 cannot occur again. It might be fruitful to go and re-read Stephen Noll's diaries on Lambeth 1998. It is an eye-opening tale. |










