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Tip:

This year, several significant religious and cultural events fall on the same day. March 21 is the UN International Day for the Elimination of Racism. In the Christian tradition, this year it is also Good Friday where Christians commemorate Christ’s passion and death on the cross to pay for the world’s sins. Also this year, it is the Jewish holiday of Purim which celebrates victory over an oppressive ruler as related in the Book of Ester. Hindus will celebrate Holi on March 21 this year, which is a festival dedicated to Krishna. Baha’is and Zoroastrians will celebrate New Years Day on March 21 (Naw Ruz and Now Ruz). Finally, to cap off the significant events occuring on this day, there will also be a full moon.


Article Details

Article Added On: March 16, 2005 - over 3 years ago
Title: Anglican Church 'broken' over same-sex marriage, Cdn Anglican archbishop says
Author: TARA BRAUTIGAM
Publication: Macleans Magazine
Publication Date: January 01, 2005 - over 3 years ago
Faith Groups: Anglicans
Themes: same sex marriage/blessing

Abstract: Canadian Archbishop Andrew Hutchison says the worldwide Anglican Church is already split over homosexuality regardless of whether the Canadian church abides by a request to withdraw from the Anglican Consultative Council.

March 16, 2005

TORONTO (CP) - The worldwide Anglican Church is already split over homosexuality regardless of whether the Canadian church - which has blessed same-sex marriages - abides by a request to withdraw from the Anglican Consultative Council, Canadian Archbishop Andrew Hutchison said Wednesday night.

"The Communion is, in fact, broken," Hutchison told a packed church in downtown Toronto.

Hutchison held an open forum for about 400 parishioners to discuss whether a schism among the world's 77 million Anglicans was inevitable in light of a tense meeting in Northern Ireland.

In February, the leaders of the world's churches - known as primates - met in Newry, Northern Ireland where the endorsement of same-sex relationships revealed a deep divide between North America and the rest of the world that some say may be permanent.

One of the key concerns was the New Westminster, B.C., diocese's adoption of a motion in 2002 that allowed its churches to bless same-sex unions. The other was the consecration of an openly gay bishop in the Episcopal Church, the United States branch of Anglicanism.

Most Anglican bishops follow traditional Christian teaching that gay sex is sinful.

After the meeting, the Canadian church was asked to "voluntarily withdraw" its delegates from the international Anglican Consultative Council, at least until the 2008 Lambeth Conference.

But Hutchison offered no guarantees that he would oblige the appeal. "It's a request, and I have said to you I don't take that as granted," Hutchison told the predominantly sympathetic crowd.

"I think it's entirely possible that our Council of General Synod will say, 'No, this is the most important consultative body of the Communion and our presence is enormously important, so we will be attending as invited.' And we are still invited. Nobody has uninvited us."

The issue has already caused a rupture among Canadian Anglicans. Rev. Ed Hird, an opponent of same-sex unions, has helped lead a breakaway from the Anglican Church of Canada.

Hird has said the primates have found Canada's stance "very harmful because it defaces what Anglicans have always taught."

Hird is now part of a group of 11 churches - eight in British Columbia and three in Saskatchewan - that have effectively left the Anglican Church of Canada over the issue and are now affiliated with the church in Rwanda.

The Canadian Council of General Synod will review its position in early May.

Original article



 
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