252018 CofE must make fst move across the vide
CHURCH TIMES
CofE must make first move across the divide
02 FEBRUARY 2018
Proposals to forge closer union with the Methodists present a historic opportunity,
says Steven Croft
ANY opportunity to take a significant step towards visible Christian unity needs to be grasped
with both hands and explored fully. I believe that that is especially the case in any step forward
to closer union with the Methodist Church.
am delighted, therefore, that the proposals in the report Ministry and Mission in Covenant are
to be debated the General Synod next week (News, 26 January). I support the proposals. I
believe that they are worthy of serious debate and exploration across both Churches as we
discern together what the Spirit is saying.
“The proposals urge each Church to make a formal declaration that we are in communion with
one another, to share in the ministry of the historic episcopate, and to welcome all presbyters
and priests serving in either Church as eligible to serve in both Churches. This closer working
together will be a significant witness to the gospel, and a healing of past divisions, and will be of
immense practical benefit — particularly in rural and urban areas where resources are stretched.
THE Methodist Church and the Methodist people are part of the family. Every time I preach in
my cathedral church in Oxford, I stand for a moment on the way to the pulpit on the memorial
stone to John and Charles Wesley, who were both ordained to Anglican orders in Christ Church,
Last term, I visited the Chaplain of Lincoln College, and was moved to learn that her room in
college was John Wesley's room when he was an undergraduate and Fellow there in the 1720s
and 1730s.
htps:worchurehtimes.co.ukartcls/20 18/2februaryicommanvopinion(c-of-e-nust.ake-rst-nove-across-the-dvide 182182018, CofE must make st move across the vide
‘The Holy Club, the root of Methodism, began in the city where I now serve, and was an integral
part of the Anglican Church. From that small beginning, God brought forth a worldwide
discipleship movement shaped for mission, to the immense blessing of the whole Church and
Kingdom.
For 13 years of my ministry, it has been a privilege to work each day with Methodist colleagues.
As Warden of Cranmer Hall, in Durham, I shared daily in the formation for ministry of
Methodist ministers as well as Anglican ordinands. As the first team leader of Fresh Expressions,
Thad the brief to see fresh expressions of Church established across the Methodist Church in
Britain as well as in every diocese of the Church of England.
When I was first licensed as the team leader by Archbishop Rowan Williams, there was no team
or strategy or plan. The support of the Methodist Church was invaluable for the whole venture.
Ken Howcroft, then Assistant Secretary of the Methodist Conference (and later President), came
to represent the Methodist Church.
I have never forgotten his opening words to the congregation: “I stand here as a representative of
a fresh expression of the Church which could not be contained within the structures of the
Church of England” I have quoted him often, and came to see his words as an accurate descrip-
tion of what happened. Methodism became a separate Church because the Church of England,
at the time, could not bend and stretch enough to accommodate the new thing that God was
doing.
I feel deeply and passionately the imperative to find ways for the Methodist Church and the
Church of England to work more closely together. There are very few significant differences of
doctrine. There are significant differences in culture.
‘This next step has now been discerned as mutual recognition of ministries, which, in my view, is
long overdue. The proposals coming before the Synod and the Methodist Conference are
imaginative, careful, and thoughtfully worked through. I do not know how they will be received
in either Church. I think it is vital that they are debated carefully, transparently, and lovingly, in
the spirit of mutual friendship and joint discernment of what the Holy Spirit is saying to us.
FOR some Anglicans, some real theological concerns remain about enabling Methodist
presbyters who are not themselves episcopally ordained to serve in the Church of England once
their Church is also ordered in the historic episcopate.
tps:worchurehtimes.co.ukartcls/20 18/2februaryicommanVopinion(c-of-e-must.ake.rst-nove-across-the-dvide 2182182018, CofE must make st move across the vide
It is, of course, vital that we weigh these arguments carefully. Mission and Ministry in Covenant
uses the concept of a bearable anomaly here: drawing our Churches back together will not be a
neat process, but we will be able to go through it together because of what we have already
recognised in one another's ministries, because our bishops will be in communion with one
another and responsible for all future ordinations, and because of the shared commitment to
deeper unity between our Churches. This approach builds on precedents from across the
Anglican Communion, and also on the way in which we entered the Porvoo Agreement with
Nordic and Baltic Lutheran Churches.
For some Methodists, on the other hand, there will be genuine concerns about developing epis-
copacy in the ways proposed here. I happened to be present at the Methodist Conference the
last time something similar was raised. It was an honest, heated, and (for an Anglican)
uncomfortable debate. ‘The process has already been full and detailed, with some good prepara-
tory work. This is further work to be done; but now is the time for those conversations to
happen more widely if we are to make progress.
Because of our recent shared history of trying to come together, I believe that it is vital that the
Church of England makes the first move at this attempt. But the deep prayer of my heart is that
we will find a way to join again, more deeply, two streams of God's Church, for the sake of God’s
mission and because of the unity for which Jesus Christ prays and longs.
Dr Steven Croft is the Bishop of Oxford.
Andrew Davison: An intolerable departure from order
arch Times 2018. All rights reserved.
tps:worchurehtimes.co.ukartcls/20 18/2februaryicommanVopinion(c-of-e-must.ake.rst-nove-across-the-dvide ais