Church of England postpones vote on female bishops

(RNS/ENInews) The Church of England voted to postpone draft legislation that would have allowed women to become bishops. By Trevor Grundy.

 Religion News Service file photo courtesy Alex Dyer/Episcopal News Service

(RNS/ENInews) The Church of England's General Synod decided on Monday (July 9) to delay a final vote on allowing women to become bishops until a meeting in London this November.

Proposed legislation at the General Synod, the church's governing body, would have created a two-tier system in which female bishops and men who ordained women or who had been ordained by women would fall under a separate category.

The House of Bishops had introduced an amendment in which a church that objected to the authority of a woman could request a male replacement. Senior Anglican campaigners condemned the amendment, saying it would have legitimized discriminatory laws in the United Kingdom.


Episcopal Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori, seen here at her 2006 installation at Washington National Cathedral, was told to remove her miter (bishop's hat) when she preached at services in London, in part because the Church of England does not allow women bishops.

Episcopal Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori, seen here at her 2006 installation at Washington National Cathedral, was told to remove her miter (bishop’s hat) when she preached at services in London, in part because the Church of England does not allow women bishops.

The House of Bishops will now meet in September to take another look at its proposal.

“It's a victory for the Church of England, which has issued a resounding 'No' to discrimination,” said Christina Rees, a member of the General Synod and the Archbishops' Council. “Had this measure been approved it would have had the effect of discriminating against people who believe men and women are equal.”

The decision to delay further debate gives the bishops about four months to come up with a fresh plan to allow women to hold senior jobs in the Church of England, while satisfying traditionalists who don't accept the authority of women.

Amid the debate, a woman was appointed to head one of England's top two cathedrals. The appointment of the Very Rev. Vivienne Faull as dean of York makes her the most senior female in the Church of England. Faull succeeds Keith Jones, who retired in April. She is expected to take up her post in September.

There are only three other female deans in England.

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