HomePress ReleasesBishop Curry's thoughts on the Canterbury communique

Bishop Curry’s thoughts on the Canterbury communique

Published on

Please Help Anglican.Ink with a donation.

“This has been a disappointing time for many, and there will be heartache and pain for many” Presiding Bishop Michael Curry

[15 Jan 2016] Before I say a word about our gathering here at the Primates Meeting, I just want to say a word of thank you to you for all of your prayers: your prayers for this meeting, your prayers for me personally, both here and in my earlier sickness. We are well, and God is God, and I thank you.

Let me say a word about the meeting.

This is not the outcome we expected, and while we are disappointed, it’s important to remember that the Anglican Communion is really not a matter of structure and organization. The Anglican Communion is a network of relationships that have been built on mission partnerships; relationships that are grounded in a common faith; relationships in companion diocese relationships; relationships with parish to parish across the world; relationships that are profoundly committed to serving and following the way of Jesus of Nazareth by helping the poorest of the poor, and helping this world to be a place where no child goes to bed hungry ever. That’s what the Anglican Communion is, and that Communion continues and moves forward.

This has been a disappointing time for many, and there will be heartache and pain for many, but it’s important to remember that we are still part of the Anglican Communion. We are the Episcopal Church, and we are part of the Jesus Movement, and that Movement goes on, and our work goes on. And the truth is, it may be part of our vocation to help the Communion and to help many others to grow in a direction where we can realize and live the love that God has for all of us, and we can one day be a Church and a Communion where all of God’s children are fully welcomed, where this is truly a house of prayer for all people. And maybe it’s a part of our vocation to help that to happen. And so we must claim that high calling; claim the high calling of love and faith; love even for those with whom we disagree, and then continue, and that we will do, and we will do it together.

We are part of the Jesus Movement, and the cause of God’s love in this world can never stop and will never be defeated.

God love you. God bless you. And you keep the faith. And we move forward.

The Most Rev. Michael Curry
Presiding Bishop and Primate
The Episcopal Church

Latest articles

Vatican News editorial: Just War Theory is obsolete

Popes and wars in the contemporary era As people return to speaking about a “just...

Germany: Homosexuality and Trans Identity Are Part of God’s Plan

Bishop Ludger Schepers, auxiliary bishop of Essen and head of queer ministry for the...

The Archbishop of Canterbury joins the Pope in calling for peace

"I stand with my brother in Christ, His Holiness Pope Leo XIV, in his...

A Dark Captivity Parades in Full View: the rise in antisemitism within Western nations

This week marked the observance of Jewish Remembrance Day, Yom HaShoah – the day...

The Clash of illusory hope over Islamic Reality

The Pope’s actual job The Pope’s actual job — the irreplaceable, specific, urgent job for...

More like this

Vatican News editorial: Just War Theory is obsolete

Popes and wars in the contemporary era As people return to speaking about a “just...

Germany: Homosexuality and Trans Identity Are Part of God’s Plan

Bishop Ludger Schepers, auxiliary bishop of Essen and head of queer ministry for the...

The Archbishop of Canterbury joins the Pope in calling for peace

"I stand with my brother in Christ, His Holiness Pope Leo XIV, in his...