Nine conservative
Episcopal bishops said Thursday that they will take
Connecticut's bishop to religious court over his suspension
of one priest and threat to remove five others.
The conflict stems from Connecticut bishop
Andrew Smith's support for the Reverend V. Gene
Robinson of New Hampshire, the church's first openly gay
bishop. Robinson's 2003 consecration has divided the U.S.
Episcopal Church and expanded the rift over gay issues
among churches in the global Anglican Communion.
Dubbed the "Connecticut Six," the priests had asked to
be supervised by a different bishop because they disagreed
with Smith's support for Robinson.
Earlier this month Smith used his power to
"inhibit" one of the six, the Reverend Mark Hansen,
and appointed another priest to lead St. John's Church
in Bristol. The inhibition prevents Hansen from leading any
congregation in Connecticut for up to six months. If the
situation is not resolved by then, Smith can remove
Hansen from the priesthood. The other five priests
have been under the threat of inhibition since April.
Diocesan officials said Hansen was suspended
because he took an unauthorized sabbatical and St.
John's had stopped making payments on a loan for its
building. Hansen maintains he notified Smith about his plans.
Karin Hamilton, a spokeswoman for the diocese,
said officials who took over the church the day Hansen
was inhibited found it in financial distress. She said
the church had about $20,000 in past-due bills, which
the diocese has since paid, and a shut-off notice from the
electric company. In a letter to Smith dated
Wednesday, the nine bishops, most from the South and
Midwest, said they plan to intervene in the case of
St. John's and are prepared to do the same if the five other
priests are inhibited. "We would prefer to find some
way other than this deepening battle, but we refuse to
allow this recent aggression to go unchecked or
unchallenged," they wrote.
The bishops said they are preparing a
"presentment," a formal charge filed in ecclesiastical
court, charging Smith with "conduct unbecoming" a
bishop. Smith was traveling Thursday and was
unavailable for comment, but he responded to the bishops in
a letter posted on the diocese's Web site. "Your
public letter to us is filled with assumptions,
conclusions, and emotional, highly charged language,"
Smith wrote. "In it you have passed judgment on a
brother bishop and a diocese without even attempting to
ascertain the facts.... I regret that none of the
bishops who signed the letter had the wisdom or
courtesy to call before launching this broadside."
Bishop Robert Duncan of Pittsburgh, one of the
nine, said the charge the bishops plan to bring
against Smith stems from diocesan officials' changing
the locks and accessing computer files at St. John's. "We
would have to say that the seizure of the property and of
the computers--those things strike us as matters
that are unbecoming a bishop," Duncan said. "That's
not the kind of behavior one expects of a bishop."
The bishops also plan to raise money for any
lawsuits the six priests may file or face, to provide
care to St. John's and other parishes, and to license
Hansen for functions in their dioceses. Duncan says their
key concern now is making sure Hansen has an income.
Similar situations have played out across the country
in response to the rift over gay issues. Parishes in
Alabama and Kansas split from the church and sought instead
to associate with the 77-million-member Anglican Communion,
which traces its roots to the Church of England. The
Episcopal Church, with 2.3 million members, is the
communion's U.S. branch.
The other bishops who signed the letter are
James Adams of western Kansas; Peter Beckwith of
Springfield, Ill.; Daniel Herzog of Albany, N.Y.; John
Howe of central Florida; Jack Iker of Fort Worth, Texas;
Edward Salmon of South Carolina; John-David Schofield of
California's San Joaquin diocese; and James Stanton of
Dallas. (AP)