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Schedule of plenary sessions laid out for last week of Lambeth


From "Lambeth98" <storm@indigo.ie>
Date 04 Aug 1998 09:58:17

ACNS LC077 - 3 August 1998

Schedule of plenary sessions laid out for last week of Lambeth

by Allan Reeder
Lambeth Conference Communications

Calls for a new international Anglican commission on ecumenical
relations will be among the first issues up for debate Tuesday
(August 4) as the world's Anglican bishops launch the business
end of the Lambeth Conference.

After two weeks of key addresses from leading experts and
closed-door group work, the bishops begin a week of intense
public plenary or business sessions, in which they will debate
the proposed resolutions to come from the once-a-decade
gathering. 

Coming to decisions together

Differing cultural approaches to making decisions may complicate
the plenary discussions, Archbishop Robin Eames of Armagh
(Ireland) told a press conference Monday (August 3).
"Some have come convinced that their way of doing business is the
right way," Archbishop Eames said. "In some areas we will find
agreement, and it won't surprise you that in some areas we will
not find agreement."

Archbishop Eames also issued a strong challenge to the 60-strong
contingent of reporters from the world's media to cover the
debate in the week ahead with depth and sensitivity. "It's easy
to go for shallow stories of various disagreements," he said. 

He also stressed that the conference is not fundamentally a
legislative assembly, and that the draft resolutions are subject
to change. "They are not carved in stone; they are in
Plasticine," he said.

Most of the 108 draft resolutions to be put to the Lambeth
conference will not be debated, the chair of the conference
resolutions committee, Bishop Michael Nuttall of Natal (South
Africa), told journalists.

"The vast majority of the resolutions are on the agreed list" to
be approved formally by the conference, Bishop Nuttall said. If
50 bishops believe a draft resolution currently on the 'agreed
list' is contentious, they can ask that it be debated, he said.
"A maximum of 30 (resolutions) will be debated," he said.

The procedures for dealing with resolutions were drafted by the
St. Augustine seminar in May last year, which laid out plans for
the conference, and are designed to facilitate debate,
Resolutions Committee Secretary Philip Mawer said. "We're not in
the business of trying to suppress voices from any quarter of the
conference," Mr. Mawer said.

Outline of plenaries

Tuesday's plenary will be followed by two on Wednesday: Section
Two, including some of the regional resolutions, on Wednesday
morning, and Section One, including any other resolutions
addressing sexuality, on Wednesday afternoon. Section Three's
resolutions will be considered Thursday, while the remaining
resolutions from the Regional Groups, the conference pastoral
letter and a report from the Spouses' Programme will be presented
Friday. 

At the opening of each plenary session, the section chair or a
representative will present a brief outline of the section's
discussions, including the draft report, which the conference
will then be asked to receive, Bushop Nuttal said. The wording of
the reports produced by the sections will not be open to detailed
debate. 

Speakers wishing to address the resolutions may submit their
names either before the plenary or during the discussion. Debate
begins when the chair of the session calls a number of speakers
to debate each resolution. Before a vote is taken, a designated
person from the section will speak to reply to the debate.

Bishop Nuttall told journalists votes will be taken first "on the
voices," then, if necessary, by a show of hands. Bishops may also
request a secret ballot, he said. Resolutions will require only a
simple majority (50% plus 1 vote) for approval.

Conference planners are asking the bishops to keep Friday
afternoon free in case an extra plenary session is needed to
handle any left-over business.


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