Friday, February
8, 2008
"Return, O faithless sons, "
declares the LORD; "For I am a master to you, And I will take
you one from a city and two from a family, And I will bring you
to Zion. Then I will give you shepherds after My own heart, who
will feed you on knowledge and understanding."
Jeremiah 3:14-15 NASB
-
A Message from Bishop
Anderson
-
Western Louisiana Bishop
Critical of Archbishop Williams' Advent Letter
-
US Church will Not Back
Down on Innovations
-
Title IV Task Force
proposes revisions to canons on ecclesiastical discipline
-
Archbishop Jensen: "Why
I'm Going to Jerusalem"
-
Covenant Design Group
issues communiqué and draft
________________________________
A Message from Bishop
Anderson
Beloved in Christ,
Today is a special day in the
Anderson home as MaryAnne comes home from the hospital after
having total knee replacement surgery. After forty years of my
wife waiting on me, it is time to return the blessing and nurse
her back to health. In a few weeks we hope she can have surgery
on the other knee, so she will be recovered in time for the
GAFCON conference/pilgrimage in Jerusalem. Having a goal to work
for helps in the recovery process.
Several newsworthy events unfolded
this week. One event was a statement
released by the Rt. Rev. James
Jones, the English bishop of Liverpool, which places him
squarely in the pro-gay advocacy column. Some are surprised,
since for years he has alleged that he is orthodox, but to
participants in a meeting with him a few years ago at his
palace, it was clear that he was already in the other camp but
not ready at that point to declare it. Now he has, which is
disappointing but not surprising.
Within the USA, all but one of the
19 TEC diocesan bishops resident in Province 4 of The Episcopal
Church have signed a letter chastising
Joan Dalrymple, president of the Daughters of the King (DOK),
calling for more financial transparency. In fact many feel that
the entire issue has to do with whether the DOK has room for
Roman Catholic, Lutheran and Anglican members who are not a part
of TEC. According to TEC, it seems that the answer is, with a
vengeance, NO!, and that is truly disappointing. The average
Daughter of the King is a lovely church woman who prays
regularly, is involved in ministry, and works both for her Lord
and the church. The "inclusive" TEC is clearly not inclusive at
all, and powers from 815 down to the usual revisionist bishops
have chosen to beat up on the DOK so that we can learn what
non-inclusiveness is all about. My prayers are for the DOK
members and leaders - you deserved better from your church. It
is pleasing that Bishop Howe refused to sign the document,
knowing that it isn't true, but what is surprising is Bishop Ed
Salmon's name on the letter. It doesn't seem like Ed Salmon to
sign such a document, and I challenge Bishop Alexander to show
me where +Ed inked his approval. Perhaps Bishop Salmon could
shed light on how his name came to be included?
Other important news about the
Covenant is included in this Update, and everyone is waiting for
final plans on GAFCON to be announced.
Blessings and Peace in Christ
Jesus,
The Rt. Rev. David C. Anderson, Sr.
President & CEO of the AAC
_________________________________
Western Louisiana Bishop
Critical of Archbishop Williams' Advent Letter
Source:
The Living Church
Date:
February 8, 2008
The Rt. Rev. D. Bruce MacPherson,
Bishop of Western Louisiana, has expressed disappointment with
Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams in a letter to his
diocese. Bishop MacPherson also said he will attend the Global
Anglican Fellowship conference (GAFCON) in Jerusalem this June.
Bishop MacPherson recently wrote
his diocese with some reflections on Archbishop Williams' Advent
letter to the primates. In his highly anticipated letter,
Archbishop Williams declined to sanction The Episcopal Church
for failing to provide the unequivocal assurances sought by the
primates' in their February 2007 communiqué. Archbishop
Williams' letter also offered no substantive alternative means
of resolving the conflict within the Anglican Communion over
innovations to church teaching on sexuality, a particular point
of contention for Bishop McPherson.
"What hasn't been said is when the
continued extension of conversations and meetings will come to
an end and a definitive decision made, " Bishop MacPherson
wrote. "What also has gone unstated is when is The Episcopal
Church going to be called to a place of accountability by the
wider Anglican Communion, Lambeth 2008?
"Throughout all of this I have
stated that we needed to follow the process that would
prayerfully lead to resolution. Is there a light at the end of
the tunnel before us? I can't answer this specifically, but do
know and have shared that in order to remain informed of all
that is taking place, and the options that may well come before
us, we must remain a part of the conversations."
Bishop MacPherson said he would be
attending both GAFCON and Lambeth this summer.
"It is my prayer that through the
meeting in June and the Lambeth Conference that we will emerge
with a clear sense of what God is calling us to be about in the
Diocese of Western Louisiana, " he said. "As to the future, I
have said before and repeat here, the diocesan convention of
October 2008 will need to provide this direction."
___________________________________
US Church will Not Back
Down on Innovations
Source:
Church of England Newspaper
Date:
Week of February 7, 2008
THE EPISCOPAL Church will not back
down from its innovations of doctrine and discipline on the
issue of gay clergy, US Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts
Schori said in Chicago last week. The US church will defend its
practices at this summer's Lambeth Conference, she said, and
would not be alone in being in support of gay clergy. "Many more
[bishops] than you might expect are sympathetic, " she told
parishioners at a suburban Chicago parish. "They are not,
however, the loudest voices."
The newly consecrated Bishop of
Chicago, the Rt. Rev. Jeffrey Lee told members of the cathedral
congregation after his enthronement on Feb. 2 that the
"baptismal covenant" found in the 1979 US Prayer Book, and not
the words of Scripture were the boundaries for church life...
Read the rest of the article by
clicking
here.
________________________________
Title IV Task Force
proposes revisions to canons on ecclesiastical discipline
Source:
Episcopal News Service
Date: February 7, 2008
Building on work done before and
during the 75th General Convention in 2006, a task force has
released a second proposed revision of the Episcopal Church's
rules on ecclesiastical discipline.
The Title IV Task Force II has proposed a complete revision of
Title IV, the main clergy-discipline canons...
The current draft revisions
contain five major changes from the 2006 proposal, Hutchinson
explained...
The new Title IV proposal restores
a "little more traditional approach" to the concept of a statute
of limitations provision than did the 2006 version, Hutchinson
said. It also restores the canon on abandonment of the communion
of the church. The 2006 proposal had included abandonment of
communion as one of the listed offenses but "people didn't like
that approach, " Hutchinson noted.
The 2006 proposal's plan to subject certain lay leaders to
ecclesiastical discipline was controversial but, Hutchinson said
the current task force continues to believe some such mechanism
is needed. Thus the members now propose to amend the section of
Title I that sets out regulations for the participation of the
laity in the life and work of the church.
The proposal, Hutchinson said, "would provide a fair mechanism
for addressing problems of lay people in leadership positions
who are involved with misconduct because right now there is not
a canonical process for removing them."
"It's not a full-blown sort of trial, " he added...
Read the rest of the article by
clicking here.
_____________________________________
Archbishop Jensen: "Why
I'm Going to Jerusalem"
Source: Sydney
Anglicans
Date: February 4, 2008
A Global Anglican Future
Conference is planned for June 2008. I want those in the
fellowship of our Diocese to know what this is about and why I
am involved.
In 1998, the Lambeth Conference
made it clear that the leaders of the overwhelming majority of
Anglicans world-wide maintained the biblical view of sexual
ethics - that sexual relationships are reserved for marriage
between a man and a woman. Five years later, however, actions
were taken in Anglican Churches both in Canada and the United
States of America which officially transgressed these boundaries
in defiance of the Bible's authority...
Since 2003, patient attempts have
been made to call the offending North Americans back to biblical
standards. Many American Anglicans are now more aware of the
distress which their actions have caused others, and regret this
impact. At the same time, however, others have condemned
attempts by Global South Bishops to provide ministry for the
orthodox Christians who still wish to be Anglican, but cannot
continue to do so in the fellowship of the American churches.
Individuals, parishes and even dioceses have left the original
church, becoming associated with other dioceses in other parts
of the world, and with new bishops being appointed from overseas
to care for the disaffected.
Such has been the fall-out that it
is now clear that we will never go back to being the Communion
which we once were...
The next Lambeth Conference has
been summoned for July-August 2008. The Archbishop of Canterbury
is responsible for the guest list, and he has invited all except
for the Bishop of New Hampshire on the one hand and some of the
new bishops appointed to care for the dissidents on the other.
Thus, for example the Bishop of New Westminster has been invited
although his actions have caused the Reverend David Short and
his congregation (which includes Dr Jim Packer) to withdraw as
far as they can from the Diocese. An invitation to share the
Conference under these circumstances has posed a real difficulty
for many of us.
Several African Provinces have
indicated that they will not be attending Lambeth, because to do
so would be to acquiesce with the North American actions. They
are not ending the Anglican Communion, or even dividing it. They
are simply indicating that the nature of the Communion has now
been altered by what has occurred. They see that since the
American actions were taken in direct defiance of the previous
Lambeth Conference, the Americans have irreparably damaged the
standing of the Conference itself. They asked without success
for the Conference to be postponed. They do not think that this
Conference is what is needed now. To attend would be to overlook
the importance of the issues at stake.
The Anglican Future Conference is
not designed to take the place of Lambeth. Some people may well
choose to go to both. Its aim is to draw Biblical Anglican
Christians together for urgent consultation. It is not a
consultation which can take place at Lambeth, because Lambeth
has a different agenda and far wider guest list. Unlike
Lambeth, the Future Conference is not for Bishops alone - the
invitations will go to clergy and lay people also. It seeks to
plan for a future in which Anglican Christians world-wide will
increasingly be pressured to depart from the biblical norms of
behaviour and belief. It gives an opportunity for many to draw
together to strengthen each other over the issue of biblical
authority and interpretation and gospel mission.
I am hoping that we will also see
Sydney laypersons and clergy in attendance with our bishops. We
must look to the future, and network with Anglican Christians
from around the globe who share our fundamental trust in the
authority of God's word. We have much to learn from them and
they can benefit from our fellowship also. I hope that you will
pray for the Conference and support our decision to attend.
Read the entire article by
clicking here.
___________________________________
Covenant Design Group
issues communiqué and draft
Source:
Anglican Communion News Service
Date: February 6, 2008
The Covenant Design Group (CDG)
held its second meeting at the Anglican Communion Offices, St.
Andrew's House, London, UK, between Monday, 28th January, and
Saturday, 2nd February, 2008 under the chairmanship of the Most
Rev'd Drexel Gomez, Archbishop of the West Indies.
The main task of the group was to develop a second draft for the
Anglican Covenant, as originally proposed in the Windsor Report
2004; an idea adopted by the Primates' Meeting and the Joint
Standing Committee of the Anglican Consultative Council and the
Primates in their following meetings...
The current draft - known as the
St Andrew's Draft - will now be offered for reflection in the
Communion at large, and in particular by the Lambeth Conference,
which has been convened by the Archbishop of Canterbury to meet
in his see City of Canterbury, England, between 16th July and
3rd August of this year. The CDG hopes that bishops will study
the present draft in their preparations for the Conference,
consulting in their dioceses and sharing their reflections at
the Conference...
Read the entire article including
the St. Andrew's Draft by clicking
here.