A senior Church of England clergyman yesterday became the first to enter into a gay marriage – in direct defiance of the Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby – plunging the Church into a fresh crisis. Canon Jeremy Pemberton tied the knot with Laurence Cunnington under new laws allowing same-sex marriages pushed through by David Cameron in the face of bitter opposition from backbench MPs and the Church. But Canon Pemberton, 58, now faces disciplinary action from the Church and could be expelled from his work as a priest because the House of Bishops has barred clergy from entering such unions, saying they undermine its traditional teaching that marriage should only be between a man and a woman....
Speaking exclusively on Sunday, he described the private ceremony in front of family and friends in a local hotel as ‘very joyous, very happy’.
He said he had
told the Bishop of Lincoln, Christopher Lowson – in whose area he works as
deputy senior chaplain of the United Lincolnshire Hospitals NHS Trust – of his
intention to marry Mr Cunnington, 51.
But he refused to
comment on the conversation, saying he was fully aware of the Church’s
position. Asked how he expected to feel after the ceremony, he said: ‘We will
feel married.’
Bishop Lowson confirmed he had told Canon Pemberton of the House of Bishops’ statement but would not say if he was planning disciplinary action.
Canon Pemberton,
a former parish priest and a divorced father of five, held his wedding under
new laws that came into force last month giving gay couples the same rights to
marriages as heterosexuals.
Gay clergy can
already enter into civil partnerships if they promise to remain celibate, but
these are primarily legal arrangements while marriages include public vows.
Under guideline from
bishops published in February, clergy are not only barred from gay marriages
but they cannot conduct them for others or bless such unions in church.
The House of
Bishops’ Pastoral Guidance on Same-Sex Marriage admitted there were
disagreements even among the bishops, but said: ‘We are all in agreement that
the Christian understanding and doctrine of marriage as a lifelong union
between one man and one woman remains unchanged.’
The guidance,
signed by Archbishop Welby and his counterpart in York, John Sentamu, said the
House of Bishops ‘considers it would not be appropriate conduct for someone in
holy orders to enter into a same-sex marriage, given the need for clergy to
model the Church’s teaching in their lives’.
The bishops will
now come under huge pressure to crack down on Canon Pemberton, especially as
there are other clergy lining up to enter into gay marriages.
One senior
traditionalist cleric in the Church’s General Synod said: ‘This will
become a crisis if no action is taken.
‘People are looking
to the Church to enforce its teachings and discipline. The clergy have taken
vows of obedience in public and they ought to live by that. Canon
Pemberton should be stripped of his right to function as a clergyman.
‘This is a test
of the authority of the bishops and a critical test for Archbishop Welby.’
But one leading
liberal cleric said: ‘This is wonderful. I congratulate the couple and hope the
Church will accept gay marriage very soon.’
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