I haven't posted directly to the blog before, but I feel obligated to  offer some reflection on the recently concluded House of Bishops meeting. I  believe the meeting was a watershed time especially for trans folk in the  Episcopal Church. This assessment has nothing to do with what the bishops did,  since the actually did nothing. My categorization has to do with the fact that  the same time the bishops were meeting in New Orleans, the Consultation was  meeting in Newark. This meeting of the Consultation was the first meeting in  which there was an official trans representation. Cameron Partridge and I were  both honored and pleased to serve as representatives to this meeting. A friend  of mine, another transwoman, asked me what accomplishments I hoped would  come out of the Newark meeting. I told her the very fact that our part of the  Body was represented was accomplishment enough for me. 
 During our meeting we monitored the House of Bishops, eventually crafting a  well worded reminder to them regarding their responsibilities to the rest of us.  Cameron has posted that document. I have no idea what kind of response it  received in the bishops meeting. We are now three weeks past what Susan Russell  has called the "day after". I feel calm enough to offer some thoughts. 
 My partner has assured me that the bishops did the only thing they could.  They agreed to that which had already been decided at the most recent General  Convention. I have come to see the wisdom in that assessment. However wise the  assessment may be, I am left wanting more from those to whom I look to for  leadership. What more could they have done?
 Well, the could have acted like leaders, now couldn't they? They could have  stated categorically that, as the House of Bishops, they could neither accede to  nor turn down the requests(demands)of the Primates. Our polity requires us to  make decisions together, not unilaterally. 
 I believe the bishops wanted to pour oil on the troubled waters of the  Anglican communion. They failed in this. Conservatives felt the Bishops response  to be inadequate. Those of us in the GLBT community felt scapegoated yet again,  if only by reliving the betrayal foisted upon us at the most recent General  Convention. 
 So, the bottom line is everyone lost. Everyone but the Bishops that is.  They apparently congratulated themselves heartily for their efforts in saving  the Anglican Communion for at least another season. Bishop Robinson may get to  attend Lambeth, where he should have been invited to begin with. 
 So, we spent a lot of money to get the purple shirts to New Orleans for the  great meeting, which is certainly good for the economy of New Orleans, to arrive  at the same place we were before the "great meeting". Somewhere I can  almost hear a small voice saying, "pay no attention to the man behind the  screen, the great and powerful OZ has spoken". 
 The Rev. Gari Green