Episcopalian church approves gay bishop
The Anglican Church in America has voted to confirm by a comfortable margin the appointment of an openly gay bishop.
The Episcopal Church's House of Deputies - composed of clergy and lay people - decided that the Reverend Canon Gene Robinson of New Hampshire can serve as a bishop.
Mr Robinson said he was calm but joyous after the vote, adding that he hoped the decision would lead to growth rather than a split in the church.
Mr Robinson's selection has brought heavy fire from conservatives at home and religious leaders in the developing world, including in parts of Asia and Africa, where Anglicans tend to be more traditionalist.
There will be one final vote in the House of Bishops on Monday, but BBC correspondent Jane Little says that it is likely this vote will also be in favour of Mr Robinson.
A committee at the Church's general convention in Minneapolis - the Committee for the Consecration of Bishops of the American Anglican Church - had already backed the bishop on Friday.
Walk-out threatened
"I think I can do more for gay and lesbian folk in the Church by being a good bishop than by being the gay bishop," Mr Robinson said.
"The people of New Hampshire just want me to be their bishop and I can't wait to exercise that ministry."
Mr Robinson - a divorced father of two - has been in a committed male relationship for 14 years.
Advocates for gay rights say the Church will thrive as it grows more accepting of homosexuals.
But some of the more conservative elements within the church have threatened to walk out should the final vote be in Mr Robinson's favour.
"We're not going to accept this," Bishop Edward Salmon of South Carolina told Reuters news agency.
"We will not accept a change in doctrine. If you're asking whether we're soft on this point, the answer is no."
Gay marriage
There is a movement in the Church pushing for the creation of a formal right to bless same-sex unions, something that already happens in many American diocese.
The debate over gay unions is a contentious one in American society at large.
Recent advances in the courts for gay rights and a move to legalise gay marriage in the state of Massachusetts has prompted the intervention of the president.
US President George W Bush has said that marriage should be between a man and woman and the administration is considering a proposal to amend the constitution to preclude gay marriage.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/3120171.stm
The Anglican Church in America has voted to confirm by a comfortable margin the appointment of an openly gay bishop.
The Episcopal Church's House of Deputies - composed of clergy and lay people - decided that the Reverend Canon Gene Robinson of New Hampshire can serve as a bishop.
Mr Robinson said he was calm but joyous after the vote, adding that he hoped the decision would lead to growth rather than a split in the church.
Mr Robinson's selection has brought heavy fire from conservatives at home and religious leaders in the developing world, including in parts of Asia and Africa, where Anglicans tend to be more traditionalist.
There will be one final vote in the House of Bishops on Monday, but BBC correspondent Jane Little says that it is likely this vote will also be in favour of Mr Robinson.
A committee at the Church's general convention in Minneapolis - the Committee for the Consecration of Bishops of the American Anglican Church - had already backed the bishop on Friday.
Walk-out threatened
"I think I can do more for gay and lesbian folk in the Church by being a good bishop than by being the gay bishop," Mr Robinson said.
"The people of New Hampshire just want me to be their bishop and I can't wait to exercise that ministry."
Mr Robinson - a divorced father of two - has been in a committed male relationship for 14 years.
Advocates for gay rights say the Church will thrive as it grows more accepting of homosexuals.
But some of the more conservative elements within the church have threatened to walk out should the final vote be in Mr Robinson's favour.
"We're not going to accept this," Bishop Edward Salmon of South Carolina told Reuters news agency.
"We will not accept a change in doctrine. If you're asking whether we're soft on this point, the answer is no."
Gay marriage
There is a movement in the Church pushing for the creation of a formal right to bless same-sex unions, something that already happens in many American diocese.
The debate over gay unions is a contentious one in American society at large.
Recent advances in the courts for gay rights and a move to legalise gay marriage in the state of Massachusetts has prompted the intervention of the president.
US President George W Bush has said that marriage should be between a man and woman and the administration is considering a proposal to amend the constitution to preclude gay marriage.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/3120171.stm
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