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Tuesday, 28 October 2014
Goodnews: First Female Church Of England Bishop 'To Be Appointed Next Year'
The Church of England finally voted to allow
women become bishops in July after a
previous vote in 2012 failed.
The Church of England is likely to appoint its
first female bishop in 2015, BBC reports.
The general secretary of the General Synod,
William Fittall, said the body could pass an
amendment to Canon law "in minutes" when it
meets in November.
And positive discrimination could be used in the
"rare" event of a dead-heat, he said.
The Church of England finally voted to allow
women become bishops in July after a previous
vote in 2012 failed.
According to BBC » , he also said potential female
candidates were already being prepared, with the
system "gearing itself up" for change.
'Very suitable'
"When you have half the human race not eligible
even for consideration, at the point at which they
do become eligible there are manifestly people
who might well have been considered in the past.
"So there is a whole system and that does include
women in relation to archdeacons and deans but
up to now bishops haven't been able to say 'This
particular female priest would be very suitable as
a bishop'.
"So I would be surprised, personally, if we didn't
have the first announcement in 2015," he said.
The vote will take place at the General Synod
when it meets on 17 and 18 November and there
will be no additional discussion before it, Mr Fittall
said.
The move to allow women bishops would see a
line added to the start of Canon 33 that read: "A
man or woman may be consecrated to the office
of bishop."
Additional measures paving the way for the
appointment of women bishops received royal
assent from the Queen on Thursday.
In November 2012, the vote to allow female
bishops failed by six votes in the House of Laity.
The vote cost the Church "a measure of
credibility", former Archbishop of Canterbury
Rowan Williams said.
But in July, the House of Laity voted 152 in favour
and 45 against, with five abstentions.
In the House of Bishops, 37 were in favour, with
two against and one abstention. The House of
Clergy voted 162 in favour, 25 against and there
were four abstentions.
At the time, Archbishop of Canterbury Justin
Welby said he was "delighted" with the result.
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