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Friday, April 25, 2008
"He saved us, not because of works done by
us in righteousness, but according to his own mercy..."
Titus 3:5 ESV
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A Message from Bishop David C.
Anderson
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Canadian Clergy deny charges
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Anglican Church of Canada chooses
litigation over negotiation
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TEC Seminary
Gives Faculty Notice, Cuts Staff
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San Joaquin Incorporation Likely
Faces Court Test
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TEC House of Deputies president asks
deputies to discuss covenant draft
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Reply Brief Submitted to California
Supreme Court in Church Property Case
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Archbishop of Canterbury's Lambeth
Message
___________________________________
A Message from Bishop David C. Anderson
Beloved in Christ,
The troubles in the American Episcopal (TEC) world continue unabated,
like an aircraft that has gone into a death spiral and can't pull out. One
of the major TEC seminaries, Seabury-Western, has given termination notices
to its entire faculty. Although it was known that Seabury-Western was having
financial difficulties, this announcement came as something of a surprise.
Physically closing the doors and turning out the lights can't be too far
away. Meanwhile the two orthodox Anglican/Episcopal seminaries, Nashotah
House and Trinity, continue to prosper. Is it too much to say that the hand
of God's blessing rests on those who teach and live the true Gospel of Jesus
Christ?
TEC Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori snubbed the Pope, turning
down an invitation in order to attend to second or third-level appointments.
I'm afraid that she may miss the second coming, if only because it didn't
get on her calendar far enough in advance, and she has "see me" appearances
already scheduled in Florida or Utah.
Under the Schori public mantra, we are about at the end of the churches
leaving - most of those so disposed to leave have done so. In fact, she is
terribly out of touch with the real world; churches are leaving on a weekly
basis. Now it is true that as long as one or two people don't leave with the
rest of the parish, and the bishop can hold onto the name and the building
(four walls and a janitor) then TEC will claim that they haven't lost the
congregation. The truth is that a viable church has been lost to the
diocese, and down the street in a school cafeteria or gymnasium a new
orthodox Anglican Church has been formed with most of the former
Episcopalians, now under the care of an overseas Anglican province. This
week one of the churches departing TEC was Church of the Good Shepherd in
Tomball, Texas. The building was left behind, but the congregation will move
to a junior high school nearby for this Sunday. Pray for them on this first
Sunday "out." It kind of gives "coming out" a new and more acceptable
meaning than that to which we have been accustomed.
When the Pope spoke in New York and Presiding Bishop Schori was so very busy
elsewhere, she had Bishop Mark Sisk stand in for her. Although the Pope's
words were clearly applicable to TEC, Sisk claimed that the Pope's
observations were "respectful of our legitimate disagreement." I read the
remarks and I saw no such sentiment. The problem with using refined and
diplomatic language when speaking to revisionist TEC bishops is that they
will purposefully dodge the clear meaning.
We have read that the membership in the Anglican Church of Nigeria, using
their highly successful 1+1+3 program, has increased in the last three years
from 18 million 25 million. This growth has enabled the Province to tell the
respective dioceses to stop sending assessments, as they are no longer
needed, and to spend their resources on evangelism locally. The churches are
encouraged to have fundraising projects, for which the members donate time,
to assist in achieving financial independence. Additionally, the Province of
Nigeria has been able to raise enough money internally to provide the means
for the Nigerian bishops attend the GAFCON Jerusalem Pilgrimage.
If the Anglican Communion is supposed to have 77 million members, but of
England's 25 million only 1.6 million can be found, and of TEC's 2.4 million
only 1.6 can be found, then just between those two provinces 24.2 million
needs to be subtracted from the 77 million. That leaves a number 52.8 as a
more realistic number. If you add back in the new Nigerian increase of 7
million new members, that bumps the total up to 59.8 million. Of that number
Nigeria, Uganda and Kenya total 40-45 million or between 66.9% and 75.2% of
the Anglican Communion. Dr. Williams, are you listening? I imagine not,
since he is more concerned with reinforcing Archbishop Fred Hiltz in his
protests about Archbishop Gregory Venables visiting Canada without
permission of the Anglican Church of Canada. These Archbishops, when they
give up on the Gospel of Christ, first begin to explain things in such a
fuzzy way you can't understand them... then as the disease of revisionism
progresses they become clearer, but also more alarming in their heresy. When
they lose the power of the Gospel, they grasp for the coercive power of
Canon Law. They believe that they have an invisible but real spiritual
"force field" around their boundary, and no uninvited prelate can come in.
All I can say, from Star Trek days, is "beam me up, Scotty!" Revisionist
Anglicanism is so unlike real Anglicanism that they are in fact two
different religions entirely, just with interchangeable vestments. They
can't keep the Roman Catholic bishop out of their province, they can't keep
the Eastern Orthodox bishop out of their province, and they certainly won't
keep the orthodox Anglican bishops and archbishops from visiting their own
flocks, no matter how many fictional boundaries they have to step on,
across, or over. We wish Archbishop Greg a wonderful visit to his Canadian
flocks.
Blessings and peace in Christ Jesus,
The Rt. Rev. David C. Anderson
President and CEO, The American Anglican Council
___________________________________
Canadian Clergy deny charges
Source:
Anglican Network in Canada Press Release
Date: April 22, 2008
Clergy in six Lower Mainland Anglican Network
in Canada (ANiC) churches today denied charges they have abandoned their
ministry.
In February, Bishop Michael Ingham of the
Anglican Church of Canada Diocese of New Westminster issued a "Notice of
Presumption of Abandonment of the Exercise of the Ministry" to nine Anglican
priests and two ordained deacons. These priests and deacons - including
world renowned theologian, the Rev Dr J I Packer - all serve in churches
where parishioners had voted to join the Anglican Network in Canada.
In their response, the clergy and deacons
point out the glaring lack of evidence as required by church canons
(bylaws). They then declare that they continue to be actively engaged in
the Anglican ministry to which they were ordained and intend to continue to
minister in the Anglican Church - however, not under the jurisdiction of
Bishop Ingham and his diocese, both of which have departed from historic
orthodox Anglican teaching and practice in defiance of the Lambeth
Conference, the Windsor Report and the Primates of the global Anglican
Communion.
The clergy conclude their response by
declaring: "We have... etermined that in order to uphold our ordination
vows, we must leave your jurisdiction, and by this letter, we hereby
relinquish the licences we hold from the Bishop of New Westminster. Each
of us will receive a licence to continue our present parish ministries from
Bishop Donald Harvey, who, as you know, is under the jurisdiction of the
Primate of the Southern Cone. In this way, we will be able to continue our
Anglican ministry within the Anglican Church, under the jurisdiction of and
in communion with those who remain faithful to historic, orthodox
Anglicanism and as part of the Anglican Communion worldwide." The two
deacons signed a similar statement. ...
Read the rest of the release including the
Clergys' response by
clicking here.
_____________________________________
Anglican Church of Canada chooses
litigation over negotiation
Source:
Anglican Network in Canada
Date: April 19, 2008
The Anglican Church of Canada's House of
Bishops has rejected an overture from the Anglican Network in Canada (ANiC)
to seek negotiated settlements of property disputes rather than pursue
litigation.
Bishop Donald Harvey, moderator of ANiC,
expressed his disappointment, and said that, while he was fully aware of the
sensitivities of "diocesan autonomy" and wasn't surprised at this response,
"I had hoped the Primate would have attempted to facilitate negotiations
between the dioceses and the Anglican Network parishes..."
Read the rest of the press release by clicking
here.
Read further coverage of this story by
clicking here.
_____________________________________
TEC Seminary
Gives Faculty Notice, Cuts Staff
Source: Seabury press release, via email
April 24, 2008
EVANSTON, IL - The Trustees of Seabury-Western
Theological Seminary today declared that the Episcopal Seminary "is in (a
state of) financial crisis that threatens survival of the institution"
and has given notice to all faculty that employment will end on June 30,
2009. The school also eliminated nine staff positions. The final date of
employment for most of these staff will be May 23 - a week after graduation
and the school's 150th anniversary celebrations.
The decision was the
outcome of a special board meeting in which the trustees were presented with
recommendations by a committee charged with reviewing the seminary's
finances. In February, the board was informed that income from tuition,
fees, and endowment resources would be insufficient to overcome an ongoing
deficit of nearly $500,000 per year. The seminary currently has an estimated
$2.9 million in accumulated debt - likely to climb to $3.5 million later
this year because of transition costs. The board ordered a financial plan
that brings expenses in line with revenues.
"This is an especially
painful and difficult decision to make and announce," said the seminary's
dean and president, Gary Hall. "However, it became clear during the past 18
months that the seminary's endowment and other income sources are not
capable of sustaining a traditional residential seminary program. ...
In February the board
suspended admissions recruitment for its three-year residential master of
divinity (MDiv) program, its master in theological studies (MTS), two doctor
of ministry (DMin) and certificate programs. Students currently enrolled in
the MDiv and DMin programs will be allowed to finish their degrees at
Seabury. Some courses may be taken at other Chicago-area seminaries. ...
At the same time the
trustees have wrestled with controlling costs, they also have investigated
future program options, including merging with another institution, offering
non-residential programs, and distance learning.
The administration is
optimistic that it can resume offering the doctoral programs in preaching
and congregational development that have been a hallmark of Seabury for many
years. The trustees plan to focus on future plans during the coming months.
Further information may be
found on the
Seabury website,
___________________________________
San Joaquin Incorporation Likely Faces Court Test
Source:
The Living Church
Date: April 23 , 2008
Civil litigation to determine who is legally
authorized to make decisions affecting property and other assets belonging
to the Diocese of San Joaquin appears increasingly likely following a filing
with the state on April 8 by the Rt. Rev. Jerry A. Lamb, who in March was
appointed provisional Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of San Joaquin.
California law provides a somewhat unique form of incorporation for church
denominations. Under a "corporation sole," there is one shareholder, one
officer and one director, who are one and the same person, usually the
diocesan bishop in an Episcopal diocese.
After a majority of clergy and lay delegates voted to leave The Episcopal
Church and affiliate with the Anglican Church of the Southern Cone last
December, Bishop John-David Schofield filed an amendment to the diocese's
charter, changing the name of the corporation from "The Protestant Episcopal
Bishop of San Joaquin, a Corporation Sole" to "The Anglican Bishop of San
Joaquin, a Corporation Sole."
Since then, the name has been changed back to "The Protestant Episcopal
Bishop of San Joaquin, a Corporation Sole." Earlier this month, Bishop Lamb
swore to the California Secretary of State that there was only one Diocese
of San Joaquin and that he had been elected provisional bishop of that
diocese on March 29...
Read the rest of the article by
clicking here.
___________________________________
TEC House of Deputies president asks deputies to discuss covenant
draft
Source:
Episcopal News Service
Date: April 21, 2008
By: Mary Frances Schjonberg
Episcopal Church House of Deputies President
Bonnie Anderson has asked diocesan General Convention deputations to find
ways to comment to their bishops about the second draft of the proposed
Anglican covenant.
Anderson made her request in an April 21
letter emailed to all deputies and first alternate deputies. The full text
of the letter is below.
"We are told that the bishops at the Lambeth
Conference will not be making a decision on the Anglican covenant, nor will
they be ratifying any draft of the covenant," Anderson wrote, reminding
deputies that "the only body with authority to commit the Episcopal Church
to an Anglican covenant is the General Convention in which bishops, priests
and deacons and lay persons share authority."
Thus, she wrote, "the input of the clergy and
laity of the Episcopal Church is especially important as the Anglican
Communion considers the development of a covenant."
"In the Episcopal Church the belief that God
speaks uniquely through bishops, laity, priests and deacons, enables our
participatory structure and allows a fullness of revelation and insight that
must not be lost in this important time of discernment," Anderson wrote.
"The joint work of the House of Deputies and the House of Bishops is the
highest institutional expression of this belief. It is thus crucially
important that our bishops go to Lambeth with a sense of where their General
Convention deputations (and their diocese) are with respect to the current
state of the Anglican covenant."...
Read the rest of the article by
clicking here.
___________________________________
Reply Brief Submitted to California
Supreme Court in Church Property Case
Source: St. James Newport Beach Press Release
(via email)
Date: April 18, 2008
NEWPORT BEACH, CA - Attorneys for St. James
Church have submitted the reply brief to the California Supreme Court in our
church's property case with the Episcopal Diocese of Los Angeles and the
national Episcopal Church. This brief reinforces the strengths of our case
while responding to legal arguments made by the Episcopalians in their
briefs. The case is being watched closely throughout the nation...
Read the rest of the press release including
the actual brief by clicking
here.
___________________________________
Archbishop of Canterbury's Lambeth
Message
Source:
Anglican Communion News Service
Date:
April 23, 2008
The Archbishop of Canterbury today set out his
hopes for this year's Lambeth Conference in a video message addressed to
Bishops and Dioceses across the worldwide communion. At this
link, you can either watch the video or read the content of the speech.
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