Mike, you're correct that The Epicopal Church in the USA (TEC, formerly ECUSA) is part of the Anglican Communion (Church), just as is the Church of England over here. To answer your questions:-
1. I wouldn't be comfortable if that were the case but actually it's not correct that the leadership of the Anglican Communion is of the view that practising homosexuals are fully acceptable as bishops. In fact, if you look at the ruling of the last Lambeth Bishops' Conference (which is the nearest we get to a leadership meeting) of 1998 plus the pronouncements of the Archbishop of Canterbury, the opposite would tend to be the case: Lambeth 1998 made it quite clear that practising homosexuals were
not to be consecrated as bishops and, by consecrating Gene Robinson as +NH, TEC are in defiance of this and are in danger (as they have been warned by ++Rowan Catuar (the Archbishop of Canterbury) of being excommunicated; the fact that they haven't yet been thrown out is less due to a lack of will as to the factthat, compared to eg: the SBC, Anglican wheels grind exceedingly slowly (Lambeth Conferences are only once every 10 years). My advice is to watch this space, particularly Lambeth 2008 this year.
2. For the record, I'm against the practise of homosexuality because it is not in accordance with
Scripture as correctly interpreted; the attempts of various liberals eg: in TEC to 'explain away' the OT and NT verses which condemn same-sex sexual relationships are not in accordance with how Church
Tradition has interpreted those Scriptures throughout the centuries.
DHK said:
And herein sola scriptura reigns.
Matthew 8:14 And when Jesus was come into Peter's house, he saw his wife's mother laid, and sick of a fever.
The claim of so many Protestant sect's because every sect has there own interpretation holds no water. It is plain and simple--The RCC and others plainly reject the Word of God. It is very obvious that Peter had a wife. Jesus came into his own home, where his wife and mother were staying at the time, and he healed his wife's mother. Peter was married. Mandatory celibacy is absolutely wrong, and there is no Biblcal mandate for it. That tradition is unScriptural and there is no need to look to the ECF or tradition for any support.
Oh I agree. But you're pushing at an open door here: I'm not Catholic and have already stated I'm against clerical celibacy because it falls outside of both Scripture
and Tradition.