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Rebel Anglican meeting lamentable - US Church leader

Posted: Wednesday, July 2, 2008, 10:42 (BST)
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A meeting of conservative church leaders in the worldwide Anglican Communion last week will have little lasting impact, the head of the Episcopal Church, the faith's US branch, said on Monday.

"Much of the Anglican world must be lamenting the latest emission" from the Global Anglican Future Conference issued on on Sunday in Jerusalem, said Katharine Jefferts Schori, presiding bishop of the Episcopal Church.

A communique issued at the end of the meeting of conservatives, who are upset by the Episcopal Church's consecration of an openly gay bishop and worried about other issues in the global Anglican church they consider an assault on orthodoxy, "does not represent the end of Anglicanism," she said.

Rather it is "merely another chapter in a centuries-old struggle for dominance by those who consider themselves the only true believers," said Jefferts Schori, who in 2006 became the first woman to head a national branch of the global church.

The Jerusalem meeting, whose participants said they represented 35 million people in the 77-million strong Anglican Communion, promised on Sunday to remain part of the global Communion.

But they said they would form a council of bishops to provide an alternative to churches they said were preaching a "false gospel" of sexual immorality.

They pledged to continue sponsoring breakaway conservative parishes in what they consider liberal western countries and called for a separate conservative province or group of churches in North America.

Jefferts Schori issued a statement in response saying that "Anglicanism has always been broader than some find comfortable".

"Anglicans will continue to worship God in their churches, serve the hungry and needy in their communities, and build missional relationships with others across the globe, despite the desire of a few leaders to narrow the influence of the gospel," she added.

The Jerusalem meeting took place ahead of the Lambeth Conference, the Anglican Communion's once-a-decade meeting which takes place later this month in Canterbury.

Jefferts Schori said she was looking forward to that meeting for "constructive conversation, inspired prayer, and relational encounters".

Bishop Martyn Minns, a Virginia-based leader of the conservative Convocation of Anglicans in North America who attended the Jerusalem meeting, told US reporters by phone from Israel on Monday that a split in the Anglican church is not being discussed.

"The language of split was not part of the conversation," he said. "We're all part of the family. It's more like the traditional family where children grow up and are treated differently," he said.

A number of US congregations have left the Episcopal Church and placed themselves under the jurisdiction of church leaders in Africa and other countries. Minns was consecrated a bishop in 2007 by Archbishop Peter Akinola of Nigeria, a leading force among the Anglican conservatives.

The Anglican Communion and the 2.4-million-member Episcopal Church have been in upheaval since 2003 when the US Church consecrated Gene Robinson of New Hampshire as the first bishop known to be in an openly gay relationship in the more than four centuries of church history.

Disputes over scriptural authority, the blessing of gay unions and other matters have become a worldwide issue.



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The comments below are readers' personal opinions and are in no way intended to reflect the editorial opinion of Christian Today.

Added: Thursday, July 3, 2008, 22:24 (BST)

Well, there it is.

Whatever the translation, either God said what He said, or He didn't. Why do we dare presume the mind of God? What did He say to Job, when he questioned God? What did John write as a warning at the end of Revelations?

Can we really cherry-pick the Bible to justify our own prejudices and predilictions?

I know that over the last 2000 years people have done just that, but how much longer does God's patience last? Does that make God, who does not change, a right-wing 'conservative', a hate criminal, a bigot? Times change, cultures change, but self-centred human nature does not, and it is a fallen nature. We seek to do what we want to, religious or not, and then cast around for a way to justify our position, so we can carry on. God is love, but He cannot abide sin before Him, and He is the ultimate Authority of what sin is. He directed that that decision be put down in words so there should be no ambiguity, but we have made it ambiguous, for our own ends.

The Spirit is talking to the Churches, and we need to listen, and return to our first love, get back to basics, and learn who we are before God, The Psalmist, and the Philosopher, said we are dust in God's eyes, and through Jesus we are redeemed dust, and we would do well, no matter how learned and erudite we consider ourselves to be, to remember that.

The 'True Believers', as described Bishop Katherine Jefferts Schori, are those whom God has written in the palm of His Hand, NOT those who say they are. However, people are seduced by power, and there is much power in human organisations. And false gospels.

The Church needs to awaken.

Chris Maguire, Ventnor, IoW

Added: Thursday, July 3, 2008, 17:46 (BST)

Excuse me, but just who writes your "headlines" and who is to call GAFCON a "Rebel group"? What would you call a group which ordains whomever they like, regardless of the Church cannons and who does not really believe in any of the historic doctrines of the church, but are essentially Unitarian Pantheists in ecclesiastical garb?
I would call them "rebels" in the true sense of the word.

C.A. McCoy, San Jose, CA. USA

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