FRED DE SAM LAZARO: Bishop Iker says a vote to affirm Robinson could splinter the Church. He and other conservatives fear many foreign church leaders, particularly those from more conservative congregations in developing countries, will break with the American church. Episcopalians belong to the so-called Anglican communion, an affiliation of 38 national churches headed by the archbishop of Canterbury in England. Although foreign members do not vote in the U.S. Church, last week many gathered together with their conservative counterparts in the U.S. to send a message to this week's convention. Peter Jensen, the archbishop of Sydney, Australia, expressed grave concern about a pro-gay vote. ARCHBISHOP PETER JENSEN: We've called it a 'salvation issue,' because it puts souls at risk. It is something that we cannot afford to allow pass. It's not simply a matter of sexuality; it is a matter of the authority of God in his own church. FRED DE SAM LAZARO: But neither U.S. nor foreign leaders in this group would say if they would break away from the Church if Robinson is confirmed. Kendall Harmon is a theologian in the South Carolina diocese. REV. KENDALL HARMON: We are trying to preserve an element of surprise. We do not know what is going to happen. But we are going to wait and see what happens, but when it happens and if it happens, we wish not to spell out all the specifics, because this is a strategy and it involves an element of surprise. BISHOP-ELECT V. GENE ROBINSON: If those people choose to leave, it needs to be said that this Church will have a division because they have chosen to leave, not because someone has wanted them to leave or asked them to leave or made them leave. And I pray every day that that will not happen. FRED DE SAM LAZARO: Many of Robinson's supporters say they don't think the split will happen. REV. SUSAN RUSSELL: It was with great fear and trembling that this Church voted in 1976 to more fully include women in the ministry, and all the dire predictions of the rupture of the Church... I mean, we heard a third of the Church was going to leave, and our statistics tell us now that we lost between 1 and 3 percent at that time, but over the last 30 years, the Church has grown and been strengthened by the ministry of women. FRED DE SAM LAZARO: But Bishop Iker says homosexuality is a far bigger threat to Church unity. BISHOP JACK IKER: Never before has the Anglican communion spoken so unequivocally about a matter as they have on this, that homosexual practice is sinful and is incompatible with the teaching of scripture. Never has the Church said that about the ordination of women to the priesthood. FRED DE SAM LAZARO: Robinson's personal history had also become an issue. BISHOP JACK IKER: The fact that he became a priest as a married man and then divorced his wife, many would consider a divorced bishop being inappropriate. But to divorce his wife and leave his children and take up with another man and then purport to be a leader of the Christian Church is very upsetting. FRED DE SAM LAZARO: Robinson has vigorously refuted that characterization of his divorce. BISHOP-ELECT V. GENE ROBINSON: We ended our marriage in church. We took a priest with us to the judge's chambers, for the final divorce decree; we went back to his church, and then returned our wedding rings to each other as a symbol of the vows that we no longer held each other to. My wife was remarried, already remarried before I ever met my partner. |