Thursday, July 3, 2008
"Brethren, my heart's desire and my prayer
to God for them is for their salvation."
Romans 10:1 NASB
-
A Message from
Bishop Anderson
-
ABC responds
to GAFCON statement
-
Anglicans
poised to split from church
-
Church of
England crisis
-
GAFCON Petition of Solidarity
-
CANA Congregations Win Again
_________________________________
A Message from
Bishop Anderson
Dearly Beloved in Christ,
Where do I begin to share all that transpired
in the Jerusalem GAFCON meeting? Primates, archbishops, bishops, priests and
laity came together in the Holy City to make pilgrimage, to hear
presentations, and to take counsel together on the future of Anglicanism.
Miracles seemed to abound. After a lifetime in the Episcopal Church where I
watched church leaders write the conclusions before meetings began and
ignore everything that didn't fit the predetermined direction (and in fact
seeing Lambeth Palace do much the same since 2003), I was almost afraid to
hope that orthodox Anglicans could shed the old Anglican DNA and actually do
it right.
I came to the meeting personally wanting bold
action with regard to the global Anglican Communion, and at least provision
for a future North American Anglican Province. I know the top leadership of
GAFCON and have great trust in them; still, when the church has betrayed you
over and over again for years, I wondered if this meeting could really be
the decisive one we were waiting for.
Early in the meeting, those gathered were
asked for their hopes and desires with regard to this GAFCON meeting, and
where God might be leading us in an Anglican future. Participants wrote down
their thoughts and shared them with their affinity groups, usually their
home province. Thoughts were collated and forwarded to the Statement
Committee, who put together a first draft. As I listened to what people were
saying in gatherings, at coffee/tea breaks and in the lobby, it was clear
that the majority wanted strong action within the greater Anglican family.
When the first draft was read in plenary session there was a great show of
approval. My temptation was to call for immediate adoption of the draft - I
didn't think it could be improved, it was so clear and so bold.
The commitment, however, was to take what the
participants were saying and refine the text until it most accurately
reflected the will and the wisdom of those gathered. Comments were recorded
and more suggestions were gathered and given to the Statement Committee.
They worked long hours again, praying and pondering which comments were
widely held and how to incorporate them. It was steel sharpening steel. The
product was given to the Leadership Committee for additional comment, and
the final draft was set before the GAFCON Primates, who were in agreement
and prepared to sign it. The Jerusalem Declaration was then brought before
the entire GAFCON gathering. It met with roaring approval. It was a
momentous occasion; there was a sense that history was taking place before
our very eyes.
Instead of the Primates Council forming at
some future date, the Primates' Council was already in existence with their
signing of the Jerusalem Declaration. The GAFCON ship has embarked on its
voyage. We all saw our role - to take the GAFCON Declaration back home and
implement it. I am humbled that I was able to be there and to be a part of
what God is doing to reform and reshape the Anglican expression of
Christianity.
For us in North America, we have come home to
work on our Common Cause Partners Federation and to prepare to submit it to
the Primates' Council for recognition as the North American Province, Deo
volente.
In this past weeks' news, we note with
approval the ruling of Judge Bellows in Virginia, finding that the State of
Virginia's Division Statute for Churches is constitutional. The ruling
favors those orthodox Anglican churches that pulled out of the Episcopal
Church over theological and spiritual issues and have realigned.
Separate from these remarks, I have commented
on The Archbishop of Canterbury's response to the GAFCON statement. This
commentary is found below.
Blessings and peace in Christ Jesus,
The Rt. Rev. David C. Anderson Sr.,
President and CEO, American Anglican Council
______________________________
ABC responds to GAFCON statement
Source: Archbishop
of Canterbury's website
Date: June 30, 2008
The following is The Archbishop of
Canterbury's response to the final declaration of the Global Anglican Future
Conference. Bishop David Anderson's commentary and analysis have been added
to the original text.
ABC: The Final Statement from the GAFCON
meeting in Jordan and Jerusalem contains much that is positive and
encouraging about the priorities of those who met for prayer and pilgrimage
in the last week. The 'tenets of orthodoxy' spelled out in the document will
be acceptable to and shared by the vast majority of Anglicans in every
province, even if there may be differences of emphasis and perspective on
some issues. I agree that the Communion needs to be united in its
commitments on these matters, and I have no doubt that the Lambeth
Conference will wish to affirm all these positive aspects of GAFCON's
deliberations. Despite the claims of some, the conviction of the uniqueness
of Jesus Christ as Lord and God and the absolute imperative of evangelism
are not in dispute in the common life of the Communion.
Anderson: It is amazing that Dr.
Williams would make this statement in light of the evidence to the contrary
that the American Anglican Council has placed before him, especially in the
Dar es Salaam Compliance documents. One is forced to ask whether Dr.
William’s avoidance of the truth is deliberate and a tactical dissemblance.
The evidence is clear that the uniqueness of Jesus Christ as Lord and God is
being contradicted by top Episcopal Church leaders, not the least of which
is the Presiding Bishop, Katherine Jefferts Schori. What will it take for
Dr. Williams to acknowledge what is staring him in the face? Does Dr.
Williams really want to know what is happening on his watch? We are sorry
that we have to ask this; it is a question that in 2003 we would not have
even thought to ask.
ABC: However, GAFCON's proposals for the way
ahead are problematic in all sorts of ways, and I urge those who have
outlined these to think very carefully about the risks entailed.
Anderson: I do
believe that GAFCON did indeed think about the risks entailed, weighed the
much more problematic approach of waiting for Dr. Williams to do the right
thing, and decided that, post-Panel of Reference, post-Dar es Salaam
Communique, the way forward could not risk Lambeth again subverting right
action.
ABC: A 'Primates' Council' which consists only
of a self-selected group from among the Primates of the Communion will not
pass the test of legitimacy for all in the Communion.
Anderson: Since the primates in attendance
at the GAFCON were validly elected by their respective provincial Houses of
Bishops, in contrast to Dr. Williams, who was chosen by the British Prime
Minister Tony Blair, the issue of legitimacy is an area he may wish to
quietly pass by. The Primates’ attendance at GAFCON was a choice of free
assembly, and their membership and participation in a Primates’ Council
clearly supported by the large portion of the Anglican Communion represented
by those present.
ABC: And any claim to be free to operate
across provincial boundaries is fraught with difficulties, both theological
and practical – theological because of our historic commitments to mutual
recognition of ministries in the Communion, practical because of the obvious
strain of responsibly exercising episcopal or primatial authority across
enormous geographical and cultural divides.
Anderson: Why does
Dr. Williams find crossing provincial boundaries to offer pastoral care a
more grievous sin than the revisionist false gospel and persecution of the
orthodox Anglicans that is the cause of the boundary crossing? Perhaps Dr.
Williams is confusing the peculiarities of quantum physics with theological
cause and effect. Additionally, the Communion is already so deeply torn in
its fabric by the actions of TEC and the Anglican Church of Canada and by
Dr. Williams’ questionable leadership that mutual recognition of ministries
is already something of the past. If he needs specifics, he should consider
the list of bishops (I would suppose that I am included) who most of the
communion do recognize, but he himself does not. As to great distance and
cultural divides, I do note he uses email, fax and phone, and the Global
South primates are equally adept in such usage; the colonial days of writing
a letter and waiting for months for a steam ship to deliver it to Africa are
over. Those overseas provinces having a mission presence in North America
also have on-site bishops to provide more immediate ministry to the
congregations - though of course those are some of the very bishops that Dr.
Williams fails to recognize.
ABC: Two questions arise at once about what
has been proposed. By what authority are Primates deemed acceptable or
unacceptable members of any new primatial council? And how is effective
discipline to be maintained in a situation of overlapping and competing
jurisdictions?
Anderson: One would
presume that if primates can affirm the Jerusalem Statement, they could
apply to the Primates’ Council for membership. As to discipline, several
issues of discipline have arisen in North America, and effective measures
have been applied. I am sure that if Dr. Williams is truly interested in
this, details could be provided to him.
ABC: No-one should for a moment impute selfish
or malicious motives to those who have offered pastoral oversight to
congregations in other provinces; these actions, however we judge them,
arise from pastoral and spiritual concern.
Anderson: The
problem is that where interim measures could have helped, Dr. Williams has
consistently blocked or ignored them. Witness the Panel of Reference, which
if Dr. Williams wished, could have worked, but his inaction and screening
only made matters worse. Additionally, TEC’s lack of Dar es Salaam
Communique compliance, which was carefully documented and given to Dr.
Williams prior to the TEC House of Bishop’s meeting in New Orleans, resulted
in Dr. Williams giving them a passing grade.
ABC: But one question has repeatedly been
raised which is now becoming very serious: how is a bishop or primate in
another continent able to discriminate effectively between a genuine crisis
of pastoral relationship and theological integrity, and a situation where
there are underlying non-theological motivations at work?
Anderson: The answer
is local, on-site supervision by North American bishops, which is now a
reality.
ABC: We have seen instances of intervention in
dioceses whose leadership is unquestionably orthodox simply because of local
difficulties of a personal and administrative nature. We have also seen
instances of clergy disciplined for scandalous behaviour in one jurisdiction
accepted in another, apparently without due process. Some other Christian
churches have unhappy experience of this problem and it needs to be
addressed honestly.
Anderson: Perhaps
instead of setting up a straw man, Dr. Williams could provide names, dates
and places so that the reader could either agree with him over the
seriousness of the problem, or alternatively, come to a different
conclusion. Charges leveled by a revisionist bishop in Canada or the United
States does not establish guilt; that is what the court system is for. When
charges pertain to property or assets of the church that are titled or held
by government or financial institutions, the county, state or federal court
system would hold venue.
ABC: It is not enough to dismiss the existing
structures of the Communion.
Anderson: They have
not been dismissed by GAFCON; the existing structures, however, have proved
an obstacle to good governance, and any reformation will have to find ways
to work around the structural dysfunction.
ABC: If they are not working effectively, the
challenge is to renew them rather than to improvise solutions that may seem
to be effective for some in the short term but will continue to create more
problems than they solve.
Anderson: When
instruments or structures of the Communion position themselves to block
reformation and renewal, they may find that they render themselves
irrelevant at best.
ABC: This challenge is one of the most
significant focuses for the forthcoming Lambeth Conference. One of its
major stated aims is to restore and deepen confidence in our Anglican
identity. And this task will require all who care as deeply as the authors
of the statement say they do about the future of Anglicanism to play their
part.
Anderson: Dr.
Williams was given an opportunity to a play a part in the future in October
of 2006, and he chose to talk but not to act; in fact he played the silent
partner to TEC’s disregard and arrogance toward the global Anglican
Communion.
ABC: The language of 'colonialism' has been
freely used of existing patterns. No-one is likely to look back with
complacency to the colonial legacy. But emerging from the legacy of
colonialism must mean a new co-operation of equals, not a simple reversal of
power.
Anderson: Is is not interesting that those
in ecclesial positions of power and privilege, when their ability to rule
their supposed “equals” (as in primus inter pares) falters, do not wish a
democratic shift to the centers of Anglicanism’s membership, but a
co-operation of supposed equals ... with Dr. Williams as the Archbishop of
Canterbury remaining more equal than the others. GAFCON has served notice to
Dr. Williams that they see through his words and actions, and a new
relationship is required.
ABC: If those who speak for GAFCON are willing
to share in a genuine renewal of all our patterns of reflection and
decision-making in the Communion, they are welcome, especially in the
shaping of an effective Covenant for our future together. I believe that it
is wrong to assume we are now so far apart that all those outside the GAFCON
network are simply proclaiming another gospel. This is not the case; it is
not the experience of millions of faithful and biblically focused Anglicans
in every province. What is true is that, on all sides of our controversies,
slogans, misrepresentations and caricatures abound. And they need to be
challenged in the name of the respect and patience we owe to each other in
Jesus Christ.
Anderson: We have
indeed exercised patience in Jesus with those who have caused and allowed
the false gospel to be propagated, and now finally the time has come for
action. The blame cannot be added up and simply divided by the 38 provinces
to determine a relative share of the blame, and it is immature foolishness
to suggest it. The blame for tearing the communion fabric at its deepest
levels rests with two provinces and an Archbishop of Canterbury who, for
whatever reason, has been unwilling to defend orthodox belief and practice.
What needs to be challenged is the prevarication, duplicity and conspiracy
of TEC, the Anglican Church of Canada, and those in Lambeth Palace who have
aided and abetted them.
ABC: I have in the past quoted to some in the
Communion who would call themselves radical the words of the Apostle in I
Cor.11.33: 'wait for one another'. I would say the same to those in whose
name this statement has been issued. An impatience at all costs to clear
the Lord's field of the weeds that may appear among the shoots of true life
(Matt.13.29) will put at risk our clarity and effectiveness in communicating
just those evangelical and catholic truths which the GAFCON statement
presents.
Anderson: The passage is a partial text
having to do with decorum at the Lord’s Supper and, if you will, Parish
Suppers, and has little to do with issues of false gospels and apostasy
among some who formerly desired to be part of the discipline of the Lord. If
the Apostles had waited indefinitely, they would all still be in Jerusalem.
____________________________
Anglicans poised to split from church
Source:
The Washington Times
Date:
June 29, 2008
By George Conger
JERUSALEM | Conservative Anglicans will
declare a split from the U.S. Episcopal Church on Sunday, but will stop
short of schism with the archbishop of Canterbury, the head of the worldwide
Anglican Communion.
”There will be permanent division, one way or
the other,” said Archbishop Peter Jensen of Sydney, Australia, one of the
organizers of the weeklong Global Anglican Future Conference (GAFCON),
adding that he expected “long-term consequences” for the Anglican Communion.
Archbishop Jensen pinned the blame for the
schism on the Episcopal Church, calling its 2003 consecration of a
practicing homosexual as bishop of New Hampshire “an extraordinary strategic
blunder” that has divided the church.
In a statement to be released here Sunday
morning, the GAFCON churches, mostly from Africa and elsewhere in the
developing world, are expected to form a “church within a church,” breaking
with the liberal churches of North America that also have permitted the
blessing of same-sex unions.
Relations with the office of the archbishop of
Canterbury will not be severed, but it appears likely that they will be
qualified in some form.
The new “church within a church” will force
the 80-million member Anglican Communion either to become a weak federation
of independent churches or, in the unlikely event that Canterbury either
kicked out the GAFCON churches or the North American churches, will produce
one of the most far-reaching Christian schisms since the Protestant
Reformation...
Read the rest of the
article by
clicking here.
___________________________________
Church of England crisis
Source: The
Guardian
Date: July
2, 2008
By Riazat Butt
Hundreds of English clergy appear poised to
defect from the Church of England to join a new conservative movement after
a conference led by rebel archbishops was swamped with delegates in London
yesterday.
The 750 delegates attending the meeting in
central London were asked to pledge their allegiance to a 14-point manifesto
issued last weekend in Jerusalem by the Global Anglican Future Conference (Gafcon),
a coalition of traditionalist clergy who have challenged the authority of
the archbishop of Canterbury.
According to the conservative website,
Anglican Mainstream, clergy and churchwardens are asked to "stand in
solidarity" with Gafcon by registering their support online.
The popularity of the event caught organisers
and speakers by surprise, as only half that number were expected. The
attendance level, in addition to the 50 serving English clergy sponsoring
the meeting, indicated the disillusion felt by conservative evangelicals.
Their interest in Gafcon threatens to further
undermine the authority of Rowan Williams, the archbishop of Canterbury, who
also faces a rebellion at General Synod this weekend over the ordination of
women bishops.
During the day, leading figures from Gafcon
urged delegates to support the movement. They also offered parallel
jurisdiction and oversight where clergy believed their bishops had strayed
from biblical teaching.
The archbishop of Sydney, Peter Jensen, told
the assembly: "Gafcon exists and is on your side. We need mutual support
within the Anglican Communion and across it. This is the moment. England,
don't fail us. We are looking to you. We need you to be strong and brave and
true. We will help you..."
Read the rest of the
article by
clicking here.
________________________________
GAFCON Petition of Solidarity
Source:
Anglican Mainstream
Date: July 3, 2008
In June 2008 the Global Anglican Future
Conference took place within the context of a pilgrimage to Jerusalem.
GAFCON was organized in response to the spread
of wrongful theological teachings and practices within the Anglican
Communion, demonstrated and symbolised by the ordination and consecration of
people in active same-sex relationships and the formal blessing of same-sex
unions, though by no means confined to these issues.
At the end of the Conference the Jerusalem
Statement and Declaration were issued, which may be found here, and should
be read before signing this petition.
On the 1st July 2008, two meetings took place
at All Souls Church, Langham Place, England, the first for incumbents and
other church leaders in the Church of England, the second particularly for
members of Parochial Church Councils.
Arising from this, it was decided that an
online petition should be made available for individuals and for groups such
as PCCs to indicate to the wider Anglican community the degree of support
there is for the GAFCON movement within England.
Given that a number of signatories to the
first petition were from outside England, it has been decided to add this
third petition specifically for any other members of the Global Anglican
Communion who wish to sign.
If you feel led, please
sign the petition by
clicking here.
_________________________________
CANA
Congregations Win Again
Source:
CANA
Date: July
3, 2008
FAIRFAX, Va. – The 11 churches sued by The
Episcopal Church and the Diocese of Virginia celebrated today’s Fairfax
County Circuit Court ruling that confirms the constitutionality of Virginia
Division Statute (Virginia Code § 57-9). The 11 churches named in the
lawsuit are members of the Anglican District of Virginia (ADV).
“We are pleased with Judge Bellows’ ruling
today. After meticulous examination, the judge ruled to uphold the
constitutionality of the Virginia Division Statute which states that the
majority of the church is entitled to its property when a group of
congregations divide from the denomination. Therefore, The Episcopal Church
(TEC) and Diocese of Virginia had no legal right to our property. We have
maintained all along that our churches’ own trustees hold title for the
benefit of these congregations.
“While we will continue to defend ourselves in
court, we are hopeful that TEC and the Diocese will put aside this
expensive distraction. While we disagree with their decision to walk apart
from the worldwide Anglican Communion, we acknowledge their right to do so.
We would hope that they would acknowledge our right to remain faithful to
the tenants of faith that have given comfort to our forbearers who built the
churches TEC and the Diocese are now trying so hard to take,” said Jim
Oakes, vice-chairman of ADV.
On April 3, 2008, Judge Bellows issued a
landmark ruling that acknowledged a division within TEC, the Diocese and the
larger Anglican Communion.
The Episcopal Church and
the Diocese abruptly broke off settlement negotiations in January 2007 and
filed lawsuits against the Virginia churches, their ministers and their
vestries. The decision of The Episcopal Church and the Diocese to
reinterpret Scripture caused the 11 Anglican churches to sever their ties.