Friday,
July 27, 2007
"You also must be ready, for the Son of Man is coming at an
hour you do not expect."
Luke
12:40 ESV
-
A
message from The Rev. Canon David C. Anderson
- June
Communiqué Compliance Report Available
-
British Bishops Could Boycott Lambeth
-
Archbishop Warns Anglican Conservatives
- Press
Release: AAC Supports Global South's Position
-
Assassination Attempt on Bishop of Jos
A
message from The Rev. Canon David C. Anderson
President and CEO, American Anglican
Council
Beloved in Christ,
It was just a week ago that the Global South Steering Committee released
a statement which touched on conditions in both the United States and
the
global communion, and suggested that other meetings separate from the
Lambeth Conference might be called for. Some readers have raised
questions about the form of the statement, particularly why it didn¹t
have a "Pauline" salutation. I suspect that the form is the answer: it
is not a letter, it is a statement. I also suspect that in this world of
email, cell phones and faxes, those in attendance and those remotely
located were able to communicate adequately in order to validate the
content and force of resolve that the final message conveyed.
The Communiqué Compliance
Office has released its fourth report on the state of the American
Episcopal Church¹s compliance (or lack thereof) to the Tanzanian
demands. A copy of the report is posted on the AAC website and may be
downloaded. In electronic form the report has web links which take you
to a copy of original texts cited. In print form you lose the electronic
links.
With increased awareness of
the scope of the strategic litigation that the Episcopal Church is
sponsoring against local church congregations, vestries, and vestry
members individually and personally, it raises several questions. First,
is it safe to serve on an Episcopal Church vestry, since the Episcopal
Church is disregarding both federal and state legal protection granted
to volunteer (unpaid) individuals who agree to serve on non-profit
boards of directors? This is doubly troublesome since a few important
insurance companies, who purportedly issue Directors and Officers
Liability Insurance which is routinely purchased by churches, are
refusing to provide legal defense or coverage for the vestries and
individuals once they are sued. The second major question is, "Where is
all the money coming from to wage this litigation campaign by TEC?"
Various possibilities have been suggested based on remarks made by some
Episcopal Church officials, and speculation about the handling of TEC
finances is not healthy for TEC itself. The American Anglican Council,
representing many parishes, clergy and individuals still within TEC
therefore calls on the Episcopal Church to make the funding for the
litigations underway and the source of the funding open and transparent
for all to see. To this end the AAC applauds the request that several
TEC bishops have made to the administration of TEC for financial
transparency with regard to the litigation efforts.
It was a great sorrow months
ago to learn that the Presiding Bishop had ruled against the Diocese of
South Carolina pertaining to the form of their Bishop Election
Confirmation documents. The ruling cancelled the election and has forced
the diocese to rerun the process, although at an accelerated rate. Now
we discover that the same Presiding Bishop has two sets of rules, one
for her enemies and one for her friends. She doesn¹t like South Carolina
(and the Chancellor David Booth Beers certainly doesn¹t either) so their
election is null and void. Virginia, on the other hand, is considered a
friend of the Presiding Bishop and the Chancellor, and when they use a
non-canonical form to report the confirmations for their bishop-elect,
no issue is made, all is wonderful, and the consecration of the new
bishop is now history. It is sometimes said by those of the world that
all is fair in love and war. Well, this certainly isn¹t love, so
orthodox dioceses should be well advised.
Speaking of love and war,
Trinity Church, Wall Street, probably the wealthiest church in the
world, has decided to cooperate with the TEC plan to use money to try to
fracture the Global South unity. Trinity Church hosted a summit meeting
in Madrid, Spain, inviting Global South bishops to sit down with
Episcopal Church leaders and talk about mission opportunities in their
dioceses. When the Israelites left Egypt, fleeing Pharaoh's army, they
took Egyptian gold with them. Although we would advise orthodox bishops
against going to lunch with the spider, if you have any of the spider's
gold, get out of the web as fast as you can.
The Archbishop of York, His
Grace John Sentamu has publicly remarked that other than the sexual
issues, there is really nothing wrong with the orthodoxy of the
Episcopal Church. We are afraid he speaks of things he does not know
about. Sexuality is a tertiary issue. The most dangerous issues are
TEC's abandonment of orthodoxy concerning the person of Jesus Christ and
the authority of Holy Scripture. In reality, if we lose Jesus and the
Bible out of the Anglican faith, why would we care about the sexuality
issue?
The issues which confront
the American and Canadian churches are not isolated to North America,
and the division is touching England itself. Reports coming to us from
the UK indicate that up to ten orthodox diocesan and suffragan bishops
may stay away from the Lambeth Conference unless the issues are
satisfactorily dealt with.
As this Weekly Update goes
to press, representatives of the Anglican Communion Network are
traveling to Bedford, Texas for an annual ACN Council meeting. A great
deal has changed since the last meeting a year ago. The Council will
take stock of the reality of the current landscape and chart a path
forward for orthodoxy. Elections are scheduled for this meeting for both
the Moderator and Secretary positions. We will bring you news next week
of the progress reported at the Council meeting.
June
Communiqué Compliance Report Available
The fourth
report of the American Anglican Council's (AAC) Communiqué Compliance
Office (CCO) has been posted online and is available in PDF format on
the AAC Web site. You may also download the report directly at the
following link:
Download CCO Report No. 4
In addition, for
background information on the CCO and its purpose, view this press
release.
British
Bishops Could Boycott Lambeth
Source: Church
of Ireland Gazette
Date:
July 27, 2007
Following the
debate on the Anglican covenant process at the meeting of the Church of
England General Synod earlier this month in York, the Bishop of
Winchester, the Rt Revd Michael Scott-Joynt, told the Gazette that if
the bishops of The Episcopal Church (TEC) in the United States do not
meet the demands of the Dar es Salaam Primates’ Meeting required by next
September’s deadline, and if the bishops of the Global South decline to
attend next year’s Lambeth Conference, as many as six in ten Church of
England bishops could be considering their own positions about attending
the ten-yearly episcopal gathering.
However, Bishop
Scott- Joynt added that such bishops would feel "constrained" by their
loyalty to the Archbishop of Canterbury, who personally invites the
bishops.
Bishop Scott-Joynt
also said that if the US bishops were not attending and the Global South
bishops were, his estimated four in ten minority among the English
bishops would be facing similar considerations to those of the majority
in the opposite situation.
The issue of
disagreement was the consecration in 2003 of the openly gay Bishop of
New Hampshire, the Rt Revd Gene Robinson.
In their
February communiqué, the Primates requested, through TEC’s Presiding
Bishop, that the House of Bishops of TEC "(1) make an unequivocal common
covenant that the bishops will not authorise any Rite of Blessing for
same-sex unions in their dioceses or through General Convention … and
(2) confirm that the passing of Resolution B033 of the 75th General
Convention means that a candidate for episcopal orders living in a
samesex union shall not receive the necessary consent … unless some new
consensus on these matters emerges across the Communion …"
The Primates
requested that the answer of the House of Bishops be conveyed to the
Primates by TEC’s Presiding Bishop, the Most Revd Katharine Jefferts
Schori, by 30th September. In their communiqué, the Primates warned that
if the reassurances requested of the House of Bishops could not in good
conscience be given, the relationship between The Episcopal Church and
the Anglican Communion as a whole would remain "damaged at best", and
that this would have "consequences for the full participation of the
Church in the life of the Communion".
View the rest of the article here.
Archbishop Warns Anglican Conservatives
Source:
The Daily Telegraph
Date:
July 23, 2007
The Archbishop
of York has warned conservative Anglican leaders that they will
effectively expel themselves from the worldwide Church if they boycott
next year's Lambeth Conference.
Dr John Sentamu
said the conservatives risked severing themselves from the Anglican
Communion
In an exclusive
interview with The Daily Telegraph, Dr John Sentamu pleaded with them to
attend the conference despite their war with liberals over
homosexuality.
But he told them
that if they "voted with their feet" they risked severing their links
with the Archbishop of Canterbury and with historic Anglicanism, a
breach that could take centuries to heal.
"Anglicanism has
its roots through Canterbury," he said. "If you sever that link you are
severing yourself from the Communion. There is no doubt about it."
The archbishop's
outspoken comments will dismay conservatives, who blame the liberals for
bringing the Church to the brink of schism by consecrating Anglicanism's
first openly gay bishop in 2003.
A handful of
archbishops and hundreds of bishops from Africa and Asia, representing
well over a third of the 70 million strong worldwide Church, are
threatening to boycott the Lambeth Conference, the 10-yearly gathering
of all Anglican bishops in Canterbury. They are angry that the
Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr Rowan Williams, has invited liberal
American bishops.
Conservative
leaders are now planning an alternative summit, which would destroy Dr
Williams's efforts to hold the factions together.
View the rest of
the article here.
Press
Release: AAC Supports Global South's Position on Lambeth and the
Episcopal Church
July 20, 2007
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact:
Robert Lundy
American Anglican Council
770-595-6979
The American Anglican Council (AAC) applauds the recent statement from
the Global South Steering Committee. The statement is "a clear warning
to both Presiding Bishop Schori and Archbishop Williams," said AAC
President and CEO the Rev. Canon David C. Anderson.
"The Global South and their 40 million congregants refuse to sit by and
watch The Episcopal Church (TEC) defy Communion agreements and legally
persecute those U.S. parishes that wish to remain faithful to the Gospel
and church teaching," said Anderson.
The Global South Primates urged TEC to reconsider its rejection of the
Dar Es Salaam Communiqué requests and principles and called for TEC's
"heartfelt repentance and genuine change" in order to restore true
communion. The statement also called the Anglican Church of Canada to
task for their declaration that “same-sex blessing is not core doctrine”
and their defiance of Windsor Report recommendations. The statement made
clear the Global South's intention to continue extending pastoral care
to U.S. based churches and to make similar provisions for biblically
faithful churches in Canada. It also showed the Global South's resolve
to not attend next year's Lambeth conference unless the Archbishop of
Canterbury reconsiders his Lambeth invitations and allows for discipline
in the Communion and true reconciliation.
Anderson said the statement "is the best news and the clearest word we
have received in a very long while."
The Global South Steering Committee reiterated the Primates’ request for
TEC to immediately suspend litigation against “congregations and
individuals which wish to remain Anglican but are unable to do so within
TEC.” It also alluded to a future where orthodox Anglican churches in
the U.S. have their own ecclesiastical structure separate from the
Episcopal Church.
"This is more than a message of hope for weary Christians; this is a
call to action from the Global South Primates. Our plan at the AAC is to
act alongside the Global South and fellow orthodox Anglican Christians,”
Anderson said.
Assassination Attempt on Bishop of Jos
Source: Anglican
Mainstream
Date:
July 24, 2007
by Chris Sugden,
Canon of St Luke’s Cathedral, Jos, Nigeria
For the second
time in 18 months an attempt has been made on the life of Bishop
Benjamin Kwashi, the Bishop of Jos, Plateau State in Northern Nigeria.
Early on the morning of Tuesday July 24 at 2.15 a.m. a gang of men, more
than five in number bound the two security guards at the gates of his
compound and locked up the four domestic staff.
Armed with guns and knives, they then battered through the doors of the
house, went upstairs and marched Bishop Ben Kwashi downstairs and
outside.
They told Bishop Ben, they were going to kill him. Then, inexplicably
the men changed their minds, gave up that plan, took him back inside and
ransacked the house for valuables. They beat up his teenage son Rinji.
Help came after about half an hour.
“I have seen a miracle”, Bishop Kwashi said to me this morning. “Join me
in thanking God that my life has been spared again. This is the second
time in 18 months that an attempt has been made on my life.” (In
February 2006 a gang came in search of him to the house, but he was
away. They beat up his wife Gloria and left her blinded for a while.)
“This is now the second time that Gloria has seen all this. It is worse
for her. Please pray for her.”
View the rest of
the article here.
|