Mind of the
House of Bishops Resolution Addressed to the Executive Council
of the Episcopal Church
Resolved, the House of Bishops affirms its desire that The
Episcopal Church remain a part of the councils of the Anglican
Communion; and
Resolved, the meaning of the Preamble to the Constitution of
The Episcopal Church is determined solely by the General
Convention of The Episcopal Church; and
Resolved, the House of Bishops believes the proposed Pastoral
Scheme of the Dar es Salaam Communiqué of February 19, 2007
would be injurious to The Episcopal Church and urges that the
Executive Council decline to participate in it; and
Resolved, the House of Bishops pledges itself to continue to
work to find ways of meeting the pastoral concerns of the
Primates that are compatible with our own polity and canons.
Adopted March 20, 2007
The House of Bishops
The Episcopal Church
Spring Meeting 2007
Camp Allen Conference Center
Navasota, Texas

To the Archbishop of Canterbury and
the members of the Primates' Standing Committee:
We, the Bishops of The Episcopal Church, meeting in Camp
Allen, Navasota, Texas, March 16-21, 2007, have considered the
requests directed to us by the Primates of the Anglican
Communion in the Communiqué dated February 19, 2007.
Although we are unable to accept the proposed Pastoral
Scheme, we declare our passionate desire to remain in full
constituent membership in both the Anglican Communion and the
Episcopal Church.
We believe that there is an urgent need for us to meet face
to face with the Archbishop of Canterbury and members of the
Primates' Standing Committee, and we hereby request and urge
that such a meeting be negotiated by the Presiding Bishop of The
Episcopal Church and the Archbishop of Canterbury at the
earliest possible opportunity.
We invite the Archbishop and members of the Primates'
Standing Committee to join us at our expense for three days of
prayer and conversation regarding these important matters.
Adopted March 20, 2007
The House of Bishops
The Episcopal Church
Spring Meeting 2007
Camp Allen Conference Center
Navasota, Texas

A Communication to The Episcopal
Church from the March 2007 Meeting of the House of Bishops
We, the Bishops of The Episcopal Church, meeting at Camp
Allen, Navasota, Texas, for our regular Spring Meeting, March
16-21, 2007, have received the Communiqué of February 19, 2007
from the Primates of the Anglican Communion meeting at Dar es
Salaam, Tanzania. We have met together for prayer, reflection,
conversation, and listening during these days and have had the
Communiqué much on our minds and hearts, just as we know many
in our Church and in other parts of the world have had us on
their minds and hearts as we have taken counsel together. We are
grateful for the prayers that have surrounded us.
We affirm once again the deep longing of our hearts for The
Episcopal Church to continue as a part of the Anglican
Communion. We have gone so far as to articulate our
self-understanding and unceasing desire for relationships with
other Anglicans by memorializing the principle in the Preamble
of our Constitution. What is important to us is that The
Episcopal Church is a constituent member of a family of
Churches, all of whom share a common mother in the Church of
England. That membership gives us the great privilege and unique
opportunity of sharing in the family's work of alleviating human
suffering in all parts of the world. For those of us who are
members of The Episcopal Church, we are aware as never before
that our Anglican Communion partners are vital to our very
integrity as Christians and our wholeness. The witness of their
faith, their generosity, their bravery, and their devotion teach
us essential elements of gospel-based living that contribute to
our conversion.
We would therefore meet any decision to exclude us from
gatherings of all Anglican Churches with great sorrow, but our
commitment to our membership in the Anglican Communion as a way
to participate in the alleviation of suffering and restoration
of God's creation would remain constant. We have no intention of
choosing to withdraw from our commitments, our relationships, or
our own recognition of our full communion with the See of
Canterbury or any of the other constituent members of the
Anglican Communion. Indeed, we will seek to live fully into, and
deepen, our relationships with our brothers and sisters in the
Communion through companion relationships, the networks of
Anglican women, the Anglican Indigenous Network, the Francophone
Network, our support for the Anglican Diocese of Cuba, our
existing covenant commitments with other provinces and dioceses,
including Liberia, Mexico, Central America, Brazil, and the
Philippines, our work as The Episcopal Church in many countries
around the world, especially in the Caribbean, Latin America,
Europe, and Taiwan, and countless informal relationships for
mission around the world.
Since our General Convention of 2003, we have responded in
good faith to the requests we have received from our Anglican
partners. We accepted the invitation of the Lambeth Commission
to send individuals characteristic of the theological breadth of
our Church to meet with it. We happily did so. Our Executive
Council voluntarily acceded to the request of the Primates for
our delegates not to attend the 2005 meeting of the Anglican
Consultative Council in Nottingham. We took our place as
listeners rather than participants as an expression of our love
and respect for the sensibilities of our brothers and sisters in
the Communion even when we believed we had been misunderstood.
We accepted the invitation of the Primates to explain ourselves
in a presentation to the same meeting of the Anglican
Consultative Council. We did so with joy.
At the meeting of our House of Bishops at Camp Allen, Texas
in March, 2004 we adopted a proposal called Delegated Episcopal
Pastoral Oversight as a means for meeting the pastoral needs of
those within our Church who disagreed with actions of the
General Convention. Our plan received a favorable response in
the Windsor Report. It was not accepted by the Primates. At our
meeting in March 2005, we adopted a Covenant Statement as an
interim response to the Windsor Report in an attempt to assure
the rest of the Communion that we were taking them seriously
and, at some significant cost, refused to consecrate any
additional bishops whatsoever as a way that we could be true to
our own convictions without running the risk of consecrating
some that would offend our brothers and sisters. Our response
was not accepted by the Primates. Our General Convention in 2006
struggled mightily and at great cost to many, not the least of
whom are our gay and lesbian members, to respond favorably to
the requests made of us in the Windsor Report and the Primates'
Dromantine Communiqué of 2005. We received a favorable response
from the Joint Standing Committee of the Anglican Consultative
Council and the Primates, which found that our effort had
substantially met the concerns of the Windsor Report with the
need to clarify our position on the blessing of same sex
relationships. Still, our efforts were not accepted by the
Primates in the Dar es Salaam Communiqué.
Other Anglican bishops, indeed including some Primates, have
violated our provincial boundaries and caused great suffering
and contributed immeasurably to our difficulties in solving our
problems and in attempting to communicate for ourselves with our
Anglican brothers and sisters. We have been repeatedly assured
that boundary violations are inappropriate under the most
ancient authorities and should cease. The Lambeth Conferences of
1988 and 1998 did so. The Windsor Report did so. The Dromantine
Communiqué did so. None of these assurances has been heeded.
The Dar es Salaam Communiqué affirms the principle that
boundary violations are impermissible, but then sets conditions
for ending those violations, conditions that are simply
impossible for us to meet without calling a special meeting of
our General Convention.
It is incumbent upon us as disciples to do our best to follow
Jesus in the increasing experience of the leading of the Holy
Spirit. We fully understand that others in the Communion believe
the same, but we do not believe that Jesus leads us to break our
relationships. We proclaim the Gospel of what God has done and
is doing in Christ, of the dignity of every human being, and of
justice, compassion, and peace. We proclaim the Gospel that in
Christ there is no Jew or Greek, no male or female, no slave or
free. We proclaim the Gospel that in Christ all God's children,
including women, are full and equal participants in the life of
Christ's Church. We proclaim the Gospel that in Christ all God's
children, including gay and lesbian persons, are full and equal
participants in the life of Christ's Church. We proclaim the
Gospel that stands against any violence, including violence done
to women and children as well as those who are persecuted
because of their differences, often in the name of God. The Dar
es Salaam Communiqué is distressingly silent on this subject.
And, contrary to the way the Anglican Communion Network and the
American Anglican Council have represented us, we proclaim a
Gospel that welcomes diversity of thought and encourages free
and open theological debate as a way of seeking God's truth. If
that means that others reject us and communion with us, as some
have already done, we must with great regret and sorrow accept
their decision.
With great hope that we will continue to be welcome in the
councils of the family of Churches we know as the Anglican
Communion, we believe that to participate in the Primates'
Pastoral scheme would be injurious to The Episcopal Church for
many reasons.
First, it violates our church law in that it would call for a
delegation of primatial authority not permissible under our
Canons and a compromise of our autonomy as a Church not
permissible under our Constitution.
Second, it fundamentally changes the character of the Windsor
process and the covenant design process in which we thought all
the Anglican Churches were participating together.
Third, it violates our founding principles as The Episcopal
Church following our own liberation from colonialism and the
beginning of a life independent of the Church of England.
Fourth, it is a very serious departure from our English
Reformation heritage. It abandons the generous orthodoxy of our
Prayer Book tradition. It sacrifices the emancipation of the
laity for the exclusive leadership of high-ranking Bishops. And,
for the first time since our separation from the papacy in the
16th century, it replaces the local governance of the Church by
its own people with the decisions of a distant and unaccountable
group of prelates.
Most important of all it is spiritually unsound. The pastoral
scheme encourages one of the worst tendencies of our Western
culture, which is to break relationships when we find them
difficult instead of doing the hard work necessary to repair
them and be instruments of reconciliation. The real cultural
phenomenon that threatens the spiritual life of our people,
including marriage and family life, is the ease with which we
choose to break our relationships and the vows that established
them rather than seek the transformative power of the Gospel in
them. We cannot accept what would be injurious to this Church
and could well lead to its permanent division.
At the same time, we understand that the present situation
requires intentional care for those within our Church who find
themselves in conscientious disagreement with the actions of our
General Convention. We pledge ourselves to continue to work with
them toward a workable arrangement. In truth, the number of
those who seek to divide our Church is small, and our Church is
marked by encouraging signs of life and hope. The fact that we
have among ourselves, and indeed encourage, a diversity of
opinion on issues of sexuality should in no way be misunderstood
to mean that we are divided, except among a very few, in our
love for The Episcopal Church, the integrity of its identity,
and the continuance of its life and ministry.
In anticipation of the traditional renewal of ordination vows
in Holy Week we solemnly declare that "we do believe the
Holy Scriptures of the Old and New Testaments to be the Word of
God, and to contain all things necessary to salvation; and we do
solemnly engage to conform to the doctrine, discipline, and
worship of The Episcopal Church." (Book of Common Prayer,
page 513)
With this affirmation both of our identity as a Church and
our affection and commitment to the Anglican Communion, we find
new hope that we can turn our attention to the essence of
Christ's own mission in the world, to bring good news to the
poor, to proclaim release to the captives and recovery of sight
to the blind, to liberate the oppressed, and to proclaim the
year of the Lord's favor (Luke 4:18-19). It is to that mission
that we now determinedly turn.
Adopted March 20, 2007
The House of Bishops
The Episcopal Church
Spring Meeting 2007
Camp Allen Conference Center
Navasota, Texas