Canada’s Anglicans set to debate same-sex marriage but ban likely to stay
TORONTO — The Anglican Church, the third-largest in Canada, is set to grapple with whether to allow same-sex couples to marry in a divisive debate that has already stirred strong emotion and seems destined to come down on the status quo ban.
The issue, in the form of a resolution that recommends giving formal church blessing to same-sex marriage, is to be voted on at the church’s six-day triennial General Synod that opens Thursday north of Toronto.
To pass, the resolution requires two-thirds of the hundreds of delegates to vote yes in each of three orders — lay, clergy and bishops. However, the latter group has already indicated the threshold likely won’t be met, saying in February that “some of us talked of being mortified and devastated by this realization.”
In response, Ottawa Bishop John Chapman apologized to members of the gay community and to those feeling “discouraged, angry, betrayed and hurt.”