Women Bishops

The Revision Committee has now reported on their proposals for the ordination of women to the episcopate.  The report can be found by following the link here.

SCP and Affirming Catholicism have both issued press releases this morning (Tuesday 11 May) in response to the report of the Revision Committee on women in the episcopate.  They can be found below.

SCP_Press_Release_Women_Bishops.pdf

Affirming_Catholicism_Press_Release_Women_Bishops.pdf


Vocations Weekend in Manchester

The SCP Vocations Weekend at St Chrystostom's Manchester was a real success. Fifteen people enrolled but the organisers had more applicants.  However, they decided to limit it to this number. The participants came from a wide variety of places, and were from different backgrounds, and stages of considering vocation - this helped make it a very varied weekend. Costs were kept low to make it accessible to everyone, and that was helped, of course, by an SCP grant. SCP Manchester priests were great in their welcome and the participants visited four different parishes all with SCP members as parish priests. And all was rounded off with Benediction.

You can find a brief report on St Chrysostom'schurch blog: www.stchrysostoms.wordpress.com

So successful was the weekend that it will be repeated next year in Manchester, so do encourage people to come:13-15 May 2011.


Company of Servers First Festival

On Saturday 24th April servers and clergy gathered from across the country for the first Annual Festival and AGM at St Saviour's, St Albans.

More information is available on the CoS website: www.companyofservers.org .


New Chapter

On Friday 26 March the Rector General, Fr Andrew Nunn, formally set up a new Chapter for the Lincoln Diocese.  Please pray for Mtr Felicity Couch and the new members of the Society.

Lincoln Chapter 26 March 2010

Congratulations...

... to Bishop Stephen Cottrell, a member of the Society, who has been appointed Bishop of Chelmsford. Further information can be found on the Chelmsford website.


Not all Catholics are traditionalists

The majority of Anglo-Catholics are in favour of women’s ministry, say SCP and Affirming Catholicism. Churches and parishes which have a catholic tradition and are served by priests, both male and female, are growing and flourishing, and look to the future with enthusiasm.

The text of the 24 October news release is below.



People must look at us and think we’re mad …

Email Fr Andrew, SCP

Are priests barmy? Television soaps have protrayed their fair share of the mad, the bad and the incompetent. In his sermon at the closing Eucharist at the 2009 SCP conference, Fr Andrew Nunn reflects on the true nature of priesthood; the text of his this address can be downloaded below.

By kind permission of the speakers, the conference addresses of the Very Revd Michael Sadgrove, Dean of Durham, and Jan Sutch Pickard, a former Warden of the Iona Community, are also available here.

Texts from the 2009 Conference

SCP_Conference_2009_Andrew_Nunn.pdf

SCP_Conference_2009_Jan_Sutch_Pickard.pdf

SCP_Conference_2009_Michael_Sadgrove.pdf


‘Love’s Labour’: Tuesday, 6 October 2009

Flyer opens in new window

SCP with our sister organisation Affirming Catholicism are proud sponsors of this practical day for all catholic Anglicans, led by Bishop Stephen Cottrell. Participants will rediscover how evangelism is close to the heart of the catholic witness to the faith. A brochure can be viewed here.  

The day will cost £20. More details and online bookings are on the Affirming Catholicism website.

Numbers are limited to 100 participants. Love’s Labour is sponsored by Affirming Catholicism and the Southwark Chapter of SCP.


Ancient Faith Future Mission

Following the success of the National Pilgrimage to Coventry, members of SCP will be present at the launch in May of a book of collective writing exploring fresh expressions from a sacramental and contemplative perspective as presented in Coventry Cathedral.

Some of the best names in the field have contributed to this book which will make a unique and important contribution to the understanding and practice of mission today: Rowan Williams, Brian McLaren, Steve Croft, Stephen Cottrell, Abbot Stuart Burns OSB, Richard Giles, Jonathan Clark, Karen Ward, Ian Mobsby, Ian Adams, Sue Wallace, Simon Rundell SCP and others. 

The book will cost £16.99 and is to be published by Canterbury Press

Fuller details can be found here


Is SCP ‘political’?

Canon Andrew Nunn, Rector General of the Society, asks whether we can afford not to be a campaigning organization at times like these. His letter is published in the Society’s January newsletter, and can be downloaded below. (Where is my newsletter?)


Download Canon Andrew’s January 2009 letter

SCP_News_January_2009_From_the_Rector_General.pdf

Click the link above to read to read or download the item published in the January newsletter.


Gospel Imprint

Gospel Imprint, launched at end of the Lambeth Conference, sets out to be a fresh voice sharing free resources with all Christians who are seeking to learn, worship and witness to the generosity of the Kingdom of God. SCP is proud to be the joint sponsor of this exciting new venture with its sister society Affirming Catholicism.

Its publications are free and intended to be shared widely. A website and initial range of leaflets were launched at the Lambeth Conference, and can be downloaded here. An initial range of prototype liturgical resources will be available shortly.


New website for ‘fresh expressions’

If you’re in SCP and interested in, or part of, fresh expressions (‘FE’), http://contemplative-catholic-fe-network.wetpaint.com is the place to go. The aim is to develop a network of practitioners and support fresh expressions of church in both the catholic and contemplative traditions. You can also join a mailing list.

Fr Jonathan, our Rector General comments, ‘It’s an experiment to see if we can build relationships and content through participation. As contemplatives and catholics, we have a reputation for being slightly Luddite, so why not visit and help us prove it’s not true?’


SCP rector to move to Worcester

We send our congratulations to The Rt Revd John Inge, Rector of the Ely Chapter of SCP and currently Bishop of Huntingon, who has been appointed as the next Bishop of Worcester.


SCP Rector General moves to amend covenant motion

Our Rector General, Fr Jonathan Clark has tabled an amendment to ensure that General Synod retains the right to endorse the Church of England's official response to proposals for an Anglican Coventant. Fr Jonathan has also published a joint article with the leading evangelical theologian, the Rev?d Canon Dr Graham Kings, which affirms the need for a covenant which can build mutual respect and increased tolerance across traditions. For more information, see the Affirming Catholicism press release.


Rector General's working party reports

2 April 2007

Our Rector General, Fr Jonathan Clark was chair of the Affirming Catholicism working party that prepared a submission to the Legislative Drafting Group asked to make proposals to enable women to become bishops in the Church of England. The working party's final submission is now available.

Fr Jonathan comments on the work:

'It wasn?t an easy task, and the conclusions are not necessarily comfortable, but they may help the church to resolve how it maintains itself as a recognisably catholic part of the whole body of Christ.

'The General Synod has asked the legislative drafting group to produce proposals which will require all members of the Church to accept the fact of women bishops but which affirms that it is possible to dissent from that decision while still remaining loyal Anglicans. We argue that the clear implication of this tough brief is that pastoral arrangements can be put in place for those who regret or disagree with the decision to admit women to the episcopate but not for those who want to insulate themselves from the rest of the Church by living as though women had never been ordained.

'We believe that as a witness to the universal nature of the priesthood of Christ the church should ordain to serve as deacons, priests and bishops in the church of God all those whom the church discerns as being called by God to such offices regardless of race, gender, disability or sexual orientation.'

The Affirming Catholicism news release can be read here.


Open letter to Archbishops from SCP

12th February 2007

An open letter has been sent today to the Archbishops of Canterbury, York, Wales and Armagh on behalf of an Anglican clergy organisation (The Society of Catholic Priests), which represents over 500 priests, calling on them to refrain from action against The Episcopal Church of the USA at their meeting in Tanzania this week. The letter warns the leaders of the Anglican Communion gathering in Dar es Salaam not to treat the Episcopal Church in the USA as the source of all the problems in the Communion. Instead, the Rev?d Jonathan Clark, who heads up SCP, asks the Primates to recognise that:

fractures within the Communion run not between but through provinces, dioceses and parishes.

Action against the Episcopal Church would only delay a discussion that needs to take place across the whole Anglican Communion. The letter points out that members of SCP would experience action against The Episcopal Church also as a rejection of their belief that issues of sexuality should not be used as doctrinal tests.

The Society of Catholic Priests represents anglo-catholic clergy working in Britain and Ireland as well as other parts of the Communion. The Society focuses on providing mutual support to priests in their spirituality and work of mission. Its position is that ?the church should ordain to serve as deacons, priests and bishops in the church of God all those whom the church discerns as being called by God to such offices regardless of race, gender, disability or sexual orientation?. This is the first public statement on behalf of the Society on the issues which threaten to divide the Communion.

The Rev?d Richard Jenkins, Director of sister Anglican organisation Affirming Catholicism said:

This letter reflects a real and concern among ordinary clergy that the Anglican leadership isn?t doing enough to value those who in conscience feel that the Church should take a more open attitude to lesbian and gays. Staying together with integrity means learning to value all shades of opinion.

ENDS

For further information please contact Rev?d Jonathan Clark
rectorofstokey@btinternet.com
/ +44 20 7254 6072 / 07968 845698

Notes.

1.In 1994 a group of priests from the Southwark Diocese, who felt they could no longer belong the traditional catholic societies for priests, met over a period of six months. The meetings allowed them to reflect on thier theological position and find a way of providing priestly support and formation as well as encouraging Catholic evangelism. From those meetings the Society of Catholic Priests was born.

2.The Society has at the last count 547 members, organized in chapters across England, Wales and Ireland. The Council of SCP is headed by the Rector General, elected by the membership for a three year term. See www.scp.org.uk for more information.

3.The present Rector General, Jonathan Clark, is Rector of St Mary Stoke Newington and St John Brownswood Park in the diocese of London and the London Borough of Hackney (see www.stmaryn16.org for more information on St Mary?s). He also represents the diocese of London on the Church of England?s General Synod.

An open letter to the Archbishop of Canterbury, the Archbishop of York, the Archbishop of Wales and the Archbishop of Armagh

The Rectory
Stoke Newington Church St
London. N16 9ES

12th February 2007

Dear Fathers in God

I am writing to you in my capacity as Rector General of the Society of Catholic Priests, a society which has over 500 members, men and women priests, across the provinces that you lead. We are not a campaigning organisation: our aims are the formation and support of priestly spirituality, and catholic evangelism. But I feel obliged, on behalf of the members of the Society, to write to you on the eve of your meeting in Tanzania.

The impression is being created in some quarters, and notably I fear in the Bishop of Winchester?s contribution to the Church of England Newspaper this week, that The Episcopal Church of the USA is the sole cause of the problems in the Communion, and that suitable action against it will lead to some sort of resolution. As you know, but may I remind you, that is not the case. The fractures within the Communion run not between but through provinces, dioceses and parishes.

Were the Primates? Meeting to follow through the Bishop of Winchester?s suggestions in creating structures of official recognition for an ?orthodox? body within The Episcopal Church, not merely the vast majority of The Episcopal Church, but hundreds of clergy and thousands of lay people across your own provinces would feel that they were being judged, excluded and condemned. Members of SCP would feel that such an act by implication judged them, along with The Episcopal Church, as ?unorthodox? ? not merely those who happen to be gay or lesbian, but all of us who believe that issues of sexuality should not be used as doctrinal tests.

I do not envy you your task of maintaining the Church?s unity at this time, and along with the whole Society I pray for you in it. But I am sure that any scapegoating of one branch of the Communion will only temporarily, if at all, put off the real work we will have to do in every part of the Church. As members of SCP we commit ourselves ?to seek the peace and unity of Christ?s church, aspiring to live in full communion with all of the baptized?. I hope that you will find a way forward which enables us to remain, along with our brothers and sisters who see things differently, valued members of the Church.

Yours in Christ

Rev'd Jonathan Clark, Rector General


Gospel Imprint

1 February 2007

This will be a new range of parish level publications and liturgical resources to be launched in mid-2007.

Available on the internet as pdf downloads, these resources will be aimed at resourcing clergy and lay people to grow in and share their Christian faith. In accessible language the library of resources will introduce people to core teaching and provide resources for worship and devotion. We are undertaking the project jointly with our sister organisation Affirming Catholicism.

We are looking for contributors within SCP and for who those who can help with project management. We would also be grateful for offers of financial sponsorship.

For more information, please email enquiries@gospelimprint.com

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