Dear Archbishop Rowan,
Lesbian and gay Anglicans are deeply shocked by the failure of the
recent meeting of Primates in Tanzania to condemn a new law in Nigeria
that will imprison those who wish to openly debate a change of
attitude to homosexuality in that country.
We are all keenly aware that the Nigerian Anglican church has been an
avid promoter (some say the drafter) of this law which bizarrely
claims to outlaw something (same-sex marriage) already not legally
permissible in Nigeria. The darker and deeper purpose of this law is
to prevent any "listening process" by criminalising those who would
openly engage with such a process.
When the Primates met at the Dromantine they issued a statement
anathematising what this new Nigerian law sets out to do. As the
Primates met in Dar es Salaam this legislation was being discussed in
a public hearing of the Nigerian House of Representatives - yet you
remained silent. At a time when many are loosing confidence in this or
that group of Primates, we find ourselves loosing confidence in them
all.
The United Nations have had no difficulty recognising the purpose of
this law as "an absolutely unjustified intrusion of an individual's
right to privacy and contravene Article 1 of the Universal Declaration
of Human Rights that '(a)ll human beings are born equal in dignity and
rights', and point out "During the last session of the Human Rights
Council in Geneva, the Government of Nigeria expressed its view that
the death penalty by stoning for "unnatural sexual acts" such as
lesbianism and homosexuality may be considered "appropriate and just
punishment"."
I append the whole UN report for your study.
http://www.lgcm.org.uk/html/OpenLetter.html
All the concerns addressed in my letter to you of 13 December 2004
remain unanswered and the failure of the Primates to even discus at
Dar es Salaam the increasingly dangerous homophobia within the
Communion is shameful. We would love to honour and respect our
Primates as faithful shepherds, but we cannot as long as they deal
with us as sheep to be slaughtered.
If maintaining the "catholic" nature of the Anglican Communion can
only be bought at the price of your silence and collusion with such
calumnies you will not be surprised to know we will have none of such
catholicity.
Has the spiritual health of our Communion and its Primates sunk so low
that they are willing to spend days preparing to outlaw the blessings
of our loving relationships in America, while ignoring completely such
an imminent threat to our lives and liberty?
With the Bill now having passed two readings in the Senate we await to
see what the Bill will look like when it becomes law.
I am afraid to say, and do so with a very heavy heart, that it is
clear you have failed your own test and lost much moral authority in
this thankless process. It is hardly surprising then that we and
increasing numbers of faithful Anglicans find any attempt to give the
Primates the "enhanced" authority they seek through the Covenant,
risible.
We note you continue to lament how lesbian and gay people are treated
with contempt and ignored, yet we see little hope of this changing.
Tell me, if America has failed to follow the teaching of the first
part of Lambeth 1.10, and so sets itself apart from the Communion, why
is it that those who act as the Nigerian Church and defy its teaching
on "listening" are not in the same position?
Sadly we do not like the look of your new "catholic" church – it seeks
order but finds ordure.
Yours sincerely
Richard Kirker (Revd)
Chief executive Lesbian and Gay Christian Movement