10:16pm Friday 25th July 2008
The Archbishop of Canterbury said he aimed to heal divisions among the 77 million-strong Anglican Communion through "consent, not coercion" as he sought to gain unity.
Dr Rowan Williams insisted that there had to be protocols and conventions by which they recognised one another as churches, but that no one had the authority to impose rules.
He faces a difficult battle to unify following the Church of England's decision earlier this month to press ahead with the consecration of women bishops but without safeguards demanded by traditionalists.
Speaking to journalists at the once-in-a-decade Lambeth Conference, Dr Williams said: "I'm looking for consent, not coercion, but unless we do have something about which we consent, which we trust to resolve some of our differences, we shall be flying further apart.
"It's not as if we have co-existed without any impact on one another as local churches. There have to be protocols and conventions by which we recognise one another as churches, by which we understand and manage the exchange between ourselves.
"The difficulties we presently face have a lot to do with that recognition. No-one has the authority to impose. We have to do it by ourselves. That also means some may consent and some won't, and that in itself has implications."
Dr Williams was speaking as the Lambeth Conference started to reach the end of its first week at the University of Kent in Canterbury, attended by 670 bishops from around the world.
He said that despite the divisions facing the church, he had gained wide support.
"In the conversations that I have had with a wide variety of people among our ecumenical friends, the same message has come through - your issues, they say, are everyone's issues.
"It's not as if the Anglican Communion alone has problems about authority, problems with scriptures, problems about ethics, we all have these problems. You happen to be dealing with them in a pretty acute way. That's something that has come through and has been helpful and encouraging for some of us to hear."
FORTY schools and colleges in the borough closed today because of the early-morning snowfall.
BURY new boy Dean Howell reckons he has joined one of the best teams in League Two following his loan move from Aldershot.
Bolton and Leigh main roads were gridlocked for several hours today following a heavy snow fall during the night.
HEAVY snowfall overnight brought traffic in the borough to a standstill this morning.
TWO Bury men caught with a lethal firearms arsenal have been jailed for a total of 17 and a half years.
ROAD humps that were placed on Melton Drive in Hollins as part of a major roadworks plan will be removed.
A boy who died after being hit by a bus in Longsight today has been formally identified.
BURY police’s crime prevention trailer will be sited at the Market Hall entrance each Wednesday, Friday and Saturday, beginning next week.
COMMUNITY officials from Whitefield and Unsworth have drawn up an ambitious three-year plan to make life better in the area.
ROAD humps that were placed on Melton Drive in Hollins as part of a major roadworks plan will be removed.
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