Archbishop's Summer Plans May Preclude Meeting With Bishops Source: The Living Church By the Rev. George Conger April 3, 2007 Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams’ withdrawal from the international Anglican scene this summer presents a smaller window of opportunity for him to accept the invitation from the House of Bishops to meet before the primates’ Sept. 30 deadline to respond to the Dar es Salaam communiqué. Archbishop Williams will take a two-month study leave in June and July, and will be on vacation in August. A spokesman for Lambeth Palace told The Living Church the three-month break for the archbishop has been listed in his calendar for several months. He added that Archbishop Williams intends to write a book during his leave. In a March 21 interview, Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori said that while she and Archbishop Williams were together during the February primates meeting, she had invited him to visit the United States this year. She said he declined the invitation at that time, citing the press of other business and a full calendar. She added that she hoped he would reconsider the invitation in light of the House of Bishops’ formal request for a meeting. No decision on this second invitation has been made, a spokesman for the archbishop said, but he said it was under consideration. While the prospects for a U.S., trip this year appear problematic, observers note that an emergency primates’ meeting, similar to the one in London called by Archbishop Williams in 2003, is likely to be held later this year in order to consider the response requested from the House of Bishops in the primates’ communiqué. In a letter to his diocese, the Bishop of Northern Michigan, the Rt. Rev. James Kelsey, recounted a meeting between Archbishop Williams and American bishops attending last month's TEAM Conference in South Africa. “When asked what would happen after the Sept. 30 deadline set by the primates’ communiqué, and who would decide about the adequacy of the response of The Episcopal Church to its demands, Rowan Williams responded that it would not be he who would decide since, as he said, ‘I’m not a pope; that’s not how our system works... I’ll take it to the primates, and they will decide’.” At the press conference held at the close of the Dar es Salaam meeting, Archbishop Williams said that if the House of Bishops declined to honor the primates’ requests, there would be consequences. “If the reassurances cannot [be given] in good conscience, then in fact the damage is not repaired, and that has to affect some of the consideration we would want to give about the organs of the Communion,” he said. Since the release of the primates’ communiqué, members of Archbishop Williams’ staff report a significant increase in the amount of correspondence sent to Archbishop Williams by grass-roots members of The Episcopal Church. While the correspondents represents a diversity of views on the issues currently dividing the Anglican Communion, many of the notes and letters express pain and surprise upon learning of the tenuous position of The Episcopal Church within the Anglican Communion at present.