Thinking Anglicans

2020 General Synod Elections: Inclusive Church launches campaign leaflet

Nic Tall is Election Campaign Coordinator for the IC and partners’ 2020 Synod Campaign. Inclusive Church has published this article by him: 2020 Synod Elections: Shaping the future of the Church of England.

Should same sex couples be able to marry in church?  How can the church respond to the climate emergency?  How do we equip the church for the challenges of mission and ministry in the 21st Century?  Do you ever find yourself asking these questions?  And do you ever wonder who in the church has the job of answering them?

In the Church of England the big questions of the day are debated by the General Synod.  It can seem like a remote body, with little effect at parish level and no place for ordinary clergy and churchgoers, but that is a common misperception.  Many significant changes in how local churches operate come from decisions in General Synod, and the policies of the national church are shaped and decided in Synod.  Next year will see full elections for the next five year term of the General Synod, and whoever is elected will have a voice in how the church grapples with the big issues and shape its future.

Could you serve on General Synod?  Maybe you know someone you could encourage to stand for election.  The Church needs a diverse range of people on Synod, different ages, backgrounds and experience to represent the full breadth of the Church.  Inclusive Church is leading a campaign to organise for the 2020 elections, working in partnership with other inclusive organisations across the life of the church.  We have just launched our main campaign leaflet, saying what will be happening and how you can be involved.  Please download it here, and share it far and wide among people you know in the church who have inclusive values…

The campaign leaflet, Planning for the 2020 Elections to the General Synod, contains more detailed information:

Who is organising the Inclusive Synod Campaign?
This campaign is being organised by a coalition of key organisations from across the full breadth of traditions in the Church of England – evangelical, catholic, liberal. We represent the broad mainstream of the Church, those who want our national Church to be for everyone, regardless of gender, age, disability, tradition, race, socio-economic background or sexuality. Members include Inclusive Church, WATCH, One Body One Faith, Ozanne Foundation, Affirming Catholicism, Accepting Evangelicals, Modern Church, the Society of Catholic Priests, the Campaign for Equal Marriage in the C of E, the Progressive Christianity Network and Thinking Anglicans. We are the only campaign for Synod organising across the whole of the Church…

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Jane Connelly
Jane Connelly
5 years ago

Sex not gender.

Susannah Clark
Reply to  Jane Connelly
5 years ago

I don’t understand what you mean, Jane. Surely *both* sex and gender should be protected from discrimination in the Church of England?

Stanley Monkhouse
Reply to  Susannah Clark
5 years ago

I’m fed up with this politically correct claptrap. Gender refers to grammar as far as I’m concerned. According to OED, gender is “[i]n mod (esp feminist) use, a euphemism for the sex of a human being.”

Susannah Clark
Reply to  Stanley Monkhouse
5 years ago

I think the prevalent feminist view is that gender is a social construct and sex is your physical sexual identity. I don’t see it that way. I think that gender can be expressed in ways that are socially constructed, but I view gender as deeper and more integral to a person than just that alone. As for “Political correctness” – that has become a popular political slogan of conservative Christians (such as the constituency at Christian Concern or the Christian Institute). It’s used as a slogan to attack society’s protection of LGBT people from discrimination. I agree that sometimes political… Read more »

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