Africa Anglican Church Set to Expand in Kenya

The Anglican Church in Kenya has announced it could have up to five archbishops and one primate in two years if changes proposed by a church committee get the go ahead.

The Church is the second largest denomination in Kenya with 5 million members. Plans for the coming years also include the appointment of two new bishops for mission work in reforms some commentators regard as an attempt to work through numerous schisms that have plagued the Church since the election of the archbishop.

The Church’s leadership has struggled to keep control in the face of squabbles over the creation of new dioceses, notably Kajiado and Katakwa, over ethnicity, politics and personalities within the Church.

A five-man committee chaired by Bungoma Bishop Eliud Wabukhala, chairman of the National Council of Churches in Kenya, has outlined several reforms, including the decision to reorganise twenty-nine dioceses into larger regional archdioceses. In an attempt to reconnect with communities with only loose ties to the Church, new bishops are to be sent into areas where the Church’s influence has been weakened.

“These will be bishops without judicial authority or physical office and will be working under a senior bishop,” said Bishop Wabukhala.

Particular areas of focus for the missionary bishops are parts of North Eastern and Eastern Province, where local dioceses in more remote areas are struggling to serve members’ needs.

The reforms are still in the consultation process, with Wabukhala saying that the changes would only be implemented with the support of the church base. If the church base consents to the reforms, these will then be ratified by the Provincial Synod, the Church’s parliament.

“We are now [engaging] the laity and clergy at the grassroots level to hear their views,” said Wabukhala.

Plans are also going ahead to decentralise the Church. Wabukhala said: “With a focused stewardship, the church will be spiritually and financially healthier.”

The reforms have been in the pipeline for decades now, being originally initiated by former Maseno South Bishop Henry Okullu in the 1980s. The reforms were given a new lease of life by Dr Wabukhala on Okullu’s death in 1999.
News
Buddhism declines worldwide as ageing and disaffiliation take their toll, Pew study finds
Buddhism declines worldwide as ageing and disaffiliation take their toll, Pew study finds

Buddhism was the only major world faith to record a decline between 2010 and 2020.

Scotland: Eleventh hour plea to MSPs to reject assisted suicide
Scotland: Eleventh hour plea to MSPs to reject assisted suicide

Bishop John Keenan, President of the Bishops’ Conference of Scotland, is urging members of the Scottish Parliament to think of the vulnerable and vote against assisted suicide. 

Archbishop of Canterbury to embark on historic six-day pilgrimage
Archbishop of Canterbury to embark on historic six-day pilgrimage

The Archbishop of Canterbury will undertake a six-day pilgrimage before she is installed as the 106th Archbishop of Canterbury later this month. 

Baptist seminary provides refuge to people displaced in Lebanon
Baptist seminary provides refuge to people displaced in Lebanon

The Arab Baptist Theological Seminary near Beirut is sheltering displaced people who fled their homes as fighting between Israel and Hezbollah forces hundreds of thousands of civilians across Lebanon to seek refuge.