I am in the wrong London. It is all happening in London, Ontario, today at Huron University College
Faith Seeking Understanding: The Windsor Report, the St. Michael Report, and the Challenge Ahead
Much has been said and written about the conflicts that have arisen over the past decade in the Anglican Communion and the Anglican Church of Canada. This two-day conference for Canadian Anglicans about Anglicanism in Canada will provide an opportunity for clergy and laity to learn, discuss and understand the reality and rhetoric of the recent public documents such as “The Windsor Report” and Canada’s own “St. Michael’s Report,” as well as to discuss such related larger issues as the use of scripture, the theological dimension of human sexuality, and the nature of authority in the Church. As the intent is understanding and not advocacy, the conference will close with a Eucharistic gathering.
Some great papers are promised:
Timothy Connor & George Sumner Toward an Anglican Theology in the Spirit of Windsor
Gary D. Badcock What is a Communion, Anyway?
and in particular
Darren C. Marks Overcoming the New Gnosticism: Re-founding Theological Anthropology
Over the course of modernity embodiment has become a major theme of theology and as such has introduced a theological anthropology that is at variance with its origin in Christology or Christ as the pneumatic human. As a result of this morphing of theological anthropology, sexuality, as echoed in the work of Foucault, has become a dominant dialogue partner in identity let alone theological anthropology by assuming nature as antithetical to spirit. This, I argue, introduces a host of issues that are centripetal to the hope of dialogue with a Christian culture in the Global South that has not undergone this morphing of [sexuality] identity and embodiment. Instead, a re-founding of theological anthropology in Christology, and specifically in the concept that God only knows the human person as sinner (Bonhoeffer), might provide a way forward that proves acceptable to both Western and Global minds, or at least provide a place from which a theological anthropology can initiate a dialogue. Finally, and tethering to the St Michael Report, I suggest that just such a theological assumption resolves the centripetal forces in the document’s conclusions and mixed message on the nature of adiaphora and core doctrine.
Is this the Darren Marks of ‘The Windsor Report: A Theological Commentary’ (Journal of Anglican Studies Vol 4.2 pp157-76)? It is ‘a profound piece of writing influenced greatly by John Webster’ according to my informant. Now I am really am interested – John Webster is one of the UK’s finest – Anglican of course, but I hadn’t noticed a lot of ecclesiology from him yet. Please rush me a copy.
