Why it won't work
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The Covenant will 'work' in all sorts of ways, of course,
some intended and some predictable if unintended. It may well enable the North
American churches to be excluded from the Anglican Communion wholly or in
part.
What it won't do, and can't do, is what it says on the
tin. It cannot 'prevent and manage' disputes:
This Commission believes that the case for adoption of an
Anglican Covenant is overwhelming:
The Anglican Communion cannot again afford, in every sense,
the crippling prospect of repeated worldwide inter-Anglican conflict such as
that engendered by the current crisis. Given the imperfections of our communion
and human nature, doubtless there will be more disagreements. It is our shared
responsibility to have in place an agreed mechanism to enable and maintain life
in communion, and to prevent and manage communion disputes. (Windsor Report
§119)
The reason it cannot 'prevent and manage' disputes is
simple. If the Covenant mechanisms can be applied retrospectively (which is
effectively what is being attempted) then these mechanisms are applied as it
were from the outside of the dispute. They step in like courts and police to
adjudicate and enforce an outcome - in this case the expulsion (in whole or
part) of the offending members of the Communion.
But once the Covenant is in place it can never act as if
from the outside of the dispute. The next disputes, large and small, will be
conducted by people who will be acutely conscious of the Covenant and its
conflict resolution provisions. The Covenant will be inside the next dispute
and party to it.
The Windsor Report sought to address a situation in which
the storm blew across the whole Communion and no-one could catch it or control
it. Logically, therefore, they proposed a mechanism which would catch and
control the next one.
But, in creating the Covenant, they changed the
weather-pattern of next dispute. The next storm will be funnelled very quickly
into the narrower and narrower space of: mediation - Primates' Meeting and Anglican
Consultative Council - Standing Committee of the Anglican Communion. There will
be no point in disputants doing anything else. If the Standing Committee is the
point where things are determined then there is every incentive to get the
Standing Committee to decide the issue as soon as possible.
The very presence of the Standing Committee will be an
invitation to belligerents not to accept local resolution but to magnify their
case, to internationalise it, and to deliberately engage the Standing Committee
as a means of self-promotion, win or lose. The very existence of a single,
international, focal point will attract small storms and will encourage them to
expand.
If the Standing Committee is successful in resolving a few
minor ecclesiastical skirmishes its mechanisms will be hailed as proven and
greater expectations will be laid on its shoulders. Small successes will set up
bigger failures.
Disputes of the scale of the current dispute over
sexuality are thankfully infrequent. But they are analogous to civil war, not
to cases of marital disharmony. In a civil war, by definition, the mechanisms
of law and order break down and 'ordinary' conflict resolution is replaced by
force of arms.
The predictable result will be that, sooner or later, a
storm will destroy the Covenant arrangements. When the storm is still at its
most destructive it will be concentrated into a committee of 15 people, many of
whom will be partisan and none of whom will be neutral. Sooner or later the
depth and intractability of such disputes will destroy the SCAC and the
Anglican Communion will have to start again looking for a new structure.
Instead of doing what it says on the tin the Covenant will
have achieved its opposite.
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