In the Anglicans' fundamental dispute over homosexuality, the church's honorary leader called on all sides to be more willing to compromise. "Everyone is challenged," Archbishop Rowan Williams of Canterbury said Tuesday night. The dispute between the conservative and liberal wings centers in part on whether homosexuals should be allowed to be ordained bishops.

"Mutual generosity" is the way to go, Williams told the clergy. He again spoke in favor of the creation of a new international advisory body. "The key words are trust and authority," he said. A new basic treaty for the community is also desirable, he says: "Some are dissatisfied because they don't want an agreement with a legal character. But good law ensures cohesion and fairness," Williams emphasized.The line of conflict in the dispute runs between African nations and North America, among others. In the U.S., gay clergyman Gene Robinson was consecrated bishop of New Hampshire in 2003. In parts of Canada, the public blessing of same-sex couples has been possible for some years now. Parties to the conflict need to understand each other's concerns and needs, Williams said. For example, in some parts of the world, it could be very dangerous to belong to a church known as a "gay church".The Canterbury conference had begun in mid-July and continues until 3. August. A high-level task force had proposed on Monday to stop episcopal ordination and public blessing for practicing homosexuals until further notice. There were reservations about this initiative from bishops in North America.

Christina Cherry

The Anglican world church is apparently on the verge of schism. There is "no longer any hope" of unity with the liberal wing of the Communion, which accepts homosexual priests in the church, writes the Archbishop of Nigeria, Peter Akinola, in a statement by Anglican traditionalists quoted by the British newspaper The Daily Telegraph.

It goes on to say that church unity can only be restored by a "conversion" of U.S. Anglicans. The Episcopal Church there sparked the controversy in 2003 with the appointment of Gene Robinson, a self-confessed homosexual, as bishop of New Hampshire. The conservative church wing emphasizes in its statement that "great efforts" had been made to prevent the crisis; action must now be taken. Otherwise, the church threatens to lead "millions of people" away from the true faith revealed in Scripture. The statement, titled "The Way, the Truth and the Life," was to be released Thursday evening ahead of a conference on the future of the Anglican world church (GAFCON) that begins Sunday in Jerusalem and Amman. The meeting, ahead of the Lambeth Conference, the highest decision-making body of the Anglican world communion, which meets in England at the end of July, is seen as crucial to the conservative wing's decision-making process.

Christina Cherry

A new president enters the White House in Washington – and the whole world looks on with hopeful glances. Admittedly, in addition to the general sigh of relief, more pensive tones are likely to be heard in the Vatican: Under the aegis of George W. Bush's contacts were good, despite all the disagreements that also existed. With the new president and his world views, the relationship could cool considerably.

Bush, a so-called born-again Christian, holds in high regard both John Paul II. (1978-2005) as well as Benedict XVI. personally very. In all, he met with a Catholic church leader six times – more than any U.S. president before him. The Protestant gave the current pope a warm reception at the White House in April 2008. While there had been serious differences with Rome over the 2003 U.S. invasion of Iraq. But Bush's staunch endorsement of key points of Catholic moral teaching helped repair the relationship. Uncompromisingly, the president opposed abortion, embryonic stem cell research and so-called gay marriage.

Christina Cherry
Guidelines and a counter

The German Catholic bishops have adopted guidelines for the church's refugee work. Christians are "resolutely committed to the concerns of refugees and asylum seekers," the paper says.

It was adopted on Thursday at the end of the spring plenary meeting in Schontal, Baden-Wurttemberg. At the same time, however, the church "always has the well-being of society as a whole in mind, and especially the needs of the disadvantaged people in our country.".

Caring is in line with the church's self-understanding

Christina Cherry

From August 2002 to July 2003, rival rebel groups in Congo fought a bloody power struggle. Two militia leaders now face trial at the International Criminal Court in The Hague. They are accused of indescribable atrocities.

Germain Katanga (31) and Mathieu Ngudjolo Chuis (39) are accused of mass murder, rape, recruiting child soldiers and attacking civilians. Both men denied the allegations. This is the second war crimes trial in Congo.The two rebel leaders had planned and ordered a "ruthless and systematic attack" on the village of Bogoro in the eastern province of Ituri in February 2003, said chief prosecutor Luis Moreno-Ocampo. "The goal was to wipe out Bogoro." At least 200 people were killed, according to the indictment. "They were shot, cut to pieces with machetes or burned alive," said Moreno-Ocampo.With deadpan faces, Katanga and Ngudjolo followed the prosecution's opening statement. Moreno-Ocampo cited eyewitnesses that hundreds of women and girls were raped and made sex slaves for the rebels. Children are said to have been taken prisoner and forced to fight. Katanga himself had stated after the attack, "Nothing and no one was spared.

Christina Cherry

Marriage and the family, Pope Benedict XVI. The Pope named marriage and the family as one of his central themes at the beginning of his pontificate seven years ago. He will also emphasize its importance from Friday to Sunday, when he visits Milan on the occasion of the VII. World Meeting of Families visited. The line of the Catholic Church leader is clear.

He emphasizes the great importance for every society of the family built on marriage between a man and a woman. For him, this leads to the conclusion that politics and the Church should support families in all situations of life.

Christina Cherry

The FDP wants to make the introduction of "marriage for all" a condition of their party's future participation in government. Without "marriage for all" in the coalition agreement, there will be no government with FDP participation, said FDP party leader Christian Lindner.

"I will recommend to my party to make marriage for all a coalition condition for the federal election," said FDP party leader Christian Lindner to the "Westdeutsche Allgemeine Zeitung".

Christina Cherry

European policy ies and the relationship between religions and denominations dominated the Catholic Day in Osnabruck on Friday. Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso called the European Union a community of values. FDP leader Guido Westerwelle and Federal Interior Minister Wolfgang Schauble (CDU) also came to Osnabruck.

In initially sunny weather, many thousands strolled through the city center and, in addition to discussion forums and church services, visited the associations, aid organizations and dioceses that presented themselves to the public on the Church Mile with colorful activities. German President Horst Kohler is expected to attend on Saturday. The meeting ends on Sunday.Barroso said the EU is not an end in itself, but plays a role in and for the world. At the same time, the Commission President called for the ability to engage in intercultural and interreligious dialogue. This discussion is the best means against the clash of civilizations and for peace in Europe and the world. In this regard, he highlighted the role of the churches.Margot Kabmann, the Protestant bishop of Hanover, was optimistic about the opportunities in ecumenism. While ecumenism is "not in a honeymoon phase at the moment," much is feasible below the level of a common communion. The Lutherans, for their part, wanted to do everything possible to celebrate the Lord's Supper in a dignified manner so that a joint celebration would eventually become possible."A new situation" in the controversy between Jews and Catholics is seen by the Central Committee of German Catholics (ZdK) after Thursday night's Christian-Jewish community celebration. ZdK Secretary General Stefan Vesper, speaking to journalists in Osnabruck on Friday, recalled the announcement made the previous evening by the top representatives of Christians and Jews to continue the dialogue.During a tour of the city center, Westerwelle described Catholic social teaching as a decisive guideline for political action. At the same time, he praised the Christian commitment: "Charity is not a state service". He also spoke of a further normalization in the relationship between the liberals and the Catholic Church.Hamburg Auxiliary Bishop Hans-Jochen Jaschke called for the ie of sexual violence to be dealt with wholeheartedly in the church. "Silence must not be the right way," Jaschke demanded. It is not enough to transfer pedophile priests; they must be removed from their ministry, the auxiliary bishop said.

Christina Cherry

In the opinion of child protection expert Hans Zollner, the church should have always clearly and decisively punished all kinds of abuse – regardless of the social situation. The Jesuit priest thus contradicts Manfred Lutz.

Already due to the classical moral theology, abusers should always have been punished severely, said the Jesuit priest Hans Zollner to the Catholic weekly newspaper "Die Tagespost" (Saturday online).

Even if social positions and evaluations influence church attitudes and actions, this does not exempt the church from its own conscientious examination of the event and the corresponding decision, added the head of the Vatican's Child Protection Center and staff member of the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors established in 2014.

Christina Cherry
Criticism of the church by cardinal muller

Cardinal Muller © Lena Klimkeit

Cardinal Muller took ie with Pope Francis' conduct of office: It should not be that "the universal church is run according to the rules of the Jesuit order," he told Der Spiegel magazine. He had a lot to criticize not only about the Pope.

Cardinal Gerhard Ludwig Muller criticizes Pope Francis' conduct in office while attesting to his orthodoxy. Francis, for example, makes personnel decisions "dependent on inductees and their often ignoble motives," the former head of the Vatican's Office for the Doctrine of the Faith told "Der Spiegel" magazine.

Christina Cherry