New U.S. primate calls faithful to 'sainthood'.Thousands braved the cold weather Nov. 4 in Washington, D.C., to witness the installation service of Katharine Jefferts Schori Katharine Jefferts Schori, D.D., Ph.D. (born March 26, 1954 in Pensacola, Florida) is the Presiding Bishop of Episcopal Church in the United States of America. She is the first woman elected primate in the Anglican Communion. as the first female presiding bishop The Presiding Bishop is an ecclesiastical position in some denominations of Christianity. Anglican Anglican Church of New Zealand For a short period the style Presiding Bishop was used by the Anglican Church in New Zealand. of the Episcopal Church Episcopal Church, Anglican church of the United States. Its separate existence as an American ecclesiastical body with its own episcopate began in 1789. Doctrine and Organization in the United States and the first woman to head a province in the Anglican Communion. Bishop Schori, 52, officially took her seat in Washington's National Cathedral a day after her investiture investiture, in feudalism, ceremony by which an overlord transferred a fief to a vassal or by which, in ecclesiastical law, an elected cleric received the pastoral ring and staff (the symbols of spiritual office) signifying the transfer of the office. , in a festive All Saints Sunday Eucharist during which she called Episcopalians to sainthood. "Saints are those who are vulnerable to the gut-wrenching pain of this world," she said in her sermon. "Some of us have to be seized by the throat or thrown into the tomb before we can find that depth of compassion. And perhaps, unless we are, we won't leave our comfortable narrow lives--or our remarkably nasty ones--to wake up and begin to answer that pain." She also urged the 2.4-million member church to recommit re·com·mit tr.v. re·com·mit·ted, re·com·mit·ting, re·com·mits 1. To commit again. 2. To refer (proposed legislation, for example) to a committee again. itself to the concept of "shalom" (Hebrew for peace). She said, "Shalom means all human beings live together as siblings, at peace with one another and with God, and in right relationship with all of the rest of creation." Bishop Schori also made reference to recent disputes within the American church over issues such as the ordination of homosexual clergy and her own election. (Eight out of 110 American bishops have said they will not support her and are seeking alternative episcopal oversight from a male archbishop.) "If some in this church feel wounded by recent decisions, then our salvation, our health as a body, is at some hazard, and it becomes the duty of all of us to seek healing and wholeness," she said. Some of Bishop Schori's fellow primates (bishops heading Anglican provinces) within the Anglican Communion have also stated that they will not recognize her when she attends a meeting of primates scheduled in February. In response, Bishop Schori sent a letter seeking a dialogue with these primates, stating, "I deeply value the possibilities we have in the Anglican Communion for addressing the mission God has given us to reconcile the world he has created." The letters were addressed to Archbishops Peter Akinola (Nigeria), Drexel Gomez (West Indies), Benjamin Nzimbi (Kenya) and Justice Akrofi (West Africa). The Archbishop of Canterbury The Archbishop of Canterbury is the main leader of the Church of England and by convention is also recognised as head of the worldwide Anglican Communion. The current archbishop is Rowan Williams. Rowan Williams sent John Saxbee, bishop of Lincoln
The Bishop of Lincoln heads the (Anglican) Diocese of Lincoln in the Province of Canterbury. The bishops were in communion with the See of Rome until the English Reformation of the 1530s. , to represent him in the installation. Earlier in November, Bishop Schori and Bishop Frank Griswold, her predecessor, held a 90-minute private meeting with Archbishop Williams at Lambeth Palace. The Anglican Church of Canada was represented at the service by the primate, Archbishop Andrew Hutchison, and three bishops--Michael Ingham (bishop of New Westminster), Colin Johnson (diocesan bishop of Toronto) and Philip Poole (suffragan bishop Noun 1. suffragan bishop - an assistant or subordinate bishop of a diocese suffragan bishop - a senior member of the Christian clergy having spiritual and administrative authority; appointed in Christian churches to oversee priests or ministers; considered of Toronto). |
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