Church of England May Split Over Ordaining Women
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LONDON — The Church of England, headed by the country’s monarch for 4 1/2 centuries, may split if it proceeds with plans to ordain women as priests, a report said Thursday.
The report outlining proposals on how the church can deal with the ordination of women will figure prominently in debates at the church’s Fourth General Synod in York July 4-8.
The synod, comprising the houses of bishops, clergy and laity, voted 307 to 183 in 1984 to draft legislation for the ordination of women.
The report, drawn to serve as a basis of discussion for drafting the necessary legislation, said the committee of representatives from all three houses “found itself about equally divided” on the issue.
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