First Reflection on the
Lambeth Conference.
From Bishop Martin.
Argyll and The Isles.
The Pre-Lambeth Visit:
Planes and Boats and Buses.
Bishop Surya and his wife Veendya [The
Diocese of Karimnagar, North India] stood on the deck of David Ainsley’s powerful
boat ‘Porpoise’ and played right into my romantic conceptions of that mystical
looking which I associate with those of a spiritual nature from the Indian
Subcontinent. They were one of the episcopal couples who were being hosted in
the Diocese of Argyll and The Isles as part of the Pre-Lambeth Conference
programme. The appeal of what I have imagined to be an Indian spiritual temperament
arose in my early experiences of being an Episcopalian. Back in the 1960s, the
Rector of St Barnabas, Paisley, my home town, was the saintly John Aaron, originally
from the Church of South India, whose wife Grace had that redoubtable quality
of not having to try too hard to convey her authority. Both John and Grace had
that look, as if they were patiently waiting for a realisation to come from
some distant place about which the rest of us were unaware. I could see the
same in Surya and Veendya. When Surya looks at the camera, it seems to me he
sees a reality in the ordinariness of the moment that comes from a still place.
Veendya was obviously taking no chances!

Bishop Wayne and I were
wondering, before the conference began, whether he would still be the tallest
Bishop in the Anglican Communion. The verdict now is…just! He is closely
followed by a Bishop from

I plan to be writing several
reflections on Lambeth, which will include my experience of sharing the
conference with the Bishops of the American Episcopal Church and their spouses.
I would only comment, at this stage,
that most of the American Bishops I met at the conference, including Wayne
himself, were enormously patient and generous, given their experience of
Bishops from other parts of the communion who exercise alternative episcopal
oversight without courtesy or consent. This practice has developed as a result
of a reaction from some parts of the Anglican Communion to the American
Episcopal Church’s decision to permit the nomination and ordination of a bishop
[Gene Robinson] in a same-sex relationship. Although this was expected to be
and became an important feature of the conference, from my perspective it was
by no means the most significant given the global environmental, poverty and
conflict issues that were addressed and engaged with at depth. (More of this in
further reflections]
One of our experiences
during the Pre-Lambeth weekend was the welcome Festival Evensong for the Feast
of St Benedict at the Cathedral of the Holy Spirit, Cumbrae. Alastair Chisholm
and the St Maura Singers prepared fine music and with the beautiful and
traditional liturgy of the Cathedral, our episcopal guests were truly
introduced into the small, beautiful and challenging life of our Diocese.

The Archbishop of Aoterea,Turei, [

Yes, during the Pre-Lambeth weekend,
we had a visit to
I caught one of our guests
staring open-mouthed at the hall in the castle filled with pikes, swords and
muskets. I commented, perhaps inappropriately, that the images of Argyll that
such a quantity of weaponry creates, was of a part of Scotland in 18th
century, not unlike the Balkans and the Caucasus in the 20th and 21st
century. Our guide was fascinating. But I shall never forget her answer to the
question: ‘What is that huge wool tassel just under the sharp part of the pikes.
The calm answer? ‘Oh, that’s to collect the blood so that the handle of the
pike doesn’t become slippery’!

Elspeth, my dear wife, with
her trusty team – Beth Connolly, Fiona Rice, Christiane Lee and Vanessa
Kilpatrick, have given time, creativity and careful organisation to the
pre-Lambeth visit of the four Bishops and their wives: Hospitality, Ceilidh,
Minibus, Travel, Boats and the hosting Charges of Dunoon, Duror, Campbeltown
and Oban. Thank you to them for their hard work and many gifts. That work, I
believe, set a tone of care and friendship which was essential for the
Conference itself. However, none of that welcome would have been possible if it
was not for the generosity of charges across our Diocese that contributed to
the weekend. Christ was ‘on the ground’ with us throughout and we set off for
One footnote to this
reflection…. The journey from
My next reflection will be on the
Retreat in Canterbury Cathedral for Bishops before the conference itself began.
Watch this space…
+Martin
Argyll
and The Isles
Sunday
10th August 2008.