CHNI Forums Home

Search
   
Members

Calendar

Help

CHNI Home
Search by username
Not logged in - Login | Register for Posting Access 
CHNI Forums > Fellowship Area > Religion in the News > More women than men being ordained for Church of England as attendance falls


More women than men being ordained for Church of England as attendance falls
 Moderated by: Marcus, Jim Anderson, Dave Armstrong  

New Topic

Reply

Print
AuthorPost
CajunRick
Guest
 

Joined: 
Location:  
Posts: 
First Name: 
Gender: 
Faith History: 
Status:  Offline
 Posted: Sun Nov 18th, 2007 02:16 pm

Quote

Reply
London, Nov 16, 2007 / 11:22 am (CNA).- For the first time since its 1992 approval of female clergy, the Church of England reports that more women than men were ordained in 2006.

Last year 244 women and 234 men were ordained for ministry in the Church of England.  A recent report indicates that the number of men serving as ministers may drop in half by 2025.

According to the Daily Telegraph, the church's Sunday attendance for the first time dropped below one million, out of a total population of 51 million.  About 1.7 million attend a Church of England service each month.

The Church's General Synod approved the ordination of women in 1992.  Some commentators believe the move has accelerated the decline in observant Anglicans.

Ruth Gledhill, religion correspondent at the London Times wrote, “The feminization of the ministry is one of the most significant trends of this generation. Acceptance of women in the pastoral role reverses centuries of Christian conviction and practice. It also leads to a redefinition of the church and its ministry. Once women begin to fill and represent roles of pastoral leadership men withdraw. This is true, not only in the pulpit, but in the pews. The evacuation of male worshippers from liberal churches is a noticeable phenomenon.”

Joel Hilliker claimed in The Trumpet that the 400,000 members of the Traditional Anglican Communion seeking union with Rome represent a trend.  Though a Protestant, he suggested the decline of Anglicanism would benefit the Catholic Church in England.  “What is left in this nation is a spiritual vacuum - a vacuum that provides the Church of Rome the perfect opportunity to move in. For as Britain has become more liberal, Roman Catholicism has grown more conservative, increasingly presenting itself as a rock of stability in an uncertain world,” he wrote.The Church of England's General Synod is debating allowing women to be ordained to the episcopacy, which other churches in the Anglican Communion have already done.

The above article is reposted with permission from Catholic News Agency.


Quote

Reply

 Current time is 05:54 pm
CHNI Forums > Fellowship Area > Religion in the News > More women than men being ordained for Church of England as attendance falls




Powered by WowBB 1.7 - Copyright © 2003-2006 Aycan Gulez