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Church of England bishops stop planned trial of blessing services for gay couples
Church of England bishops extended the ban on clergy same-sex marriages and halted bespoke blessing service trials, citing need for rewriting canon law amid deep institutional divisions.
- Church of England bishops stopped a planned trial of blessing services and extended the ban on priests marrying same-sex partners.
- Legal and synod requirements mean bespoke blessing services need rewriting canon law and a two-thirds majority in the General Synod's three houses, a threshold seen as unlikely on Wednesday.
- While regular services will continue to allow blessings, Prayers of Love and Faith for same-sex couples remain permitted, following a 2022 milestone and the November 2023 synod vote.
- The timing matters because the decision comes less than two weeks after Sarah Mullally was named next Archbishop of Canterbury, first woman to lead 85 million Anglicans worldwide, drawing criticism from conservative Anglicans in Africa and Asia and leaving her in an awkward position.
- Looking ahead, clergy rules bar gay priests in civil marriages from ordination, while bishops cited fears of wedding-like services, legal challenges and opponents warning of withdrawal of money and schism.
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Church of England bishops stop planned trial of blessing services for gay couples
Church of England bishops have stopped a planned trial of separate blessing services for same-sex couples, saying the measure, that stoked deep divisions, needed to secure greater backing from the Church's governing body.
·United Kingdom
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Total News Sources4
Leaning Left1Leaning Right0Center3Last UpdatedBias Distribution75% Center
Bias Distribution
- 75% of the sources are Center
75% Center
L 25%
C 75%
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