Orthodox Anglican leader: Choice is between life and death

|PIC1|The head of the newly established Anglican Church in North America has sent an open letter to the entire Anglican Communion contrasting the recent actions of his orthodox body to that of The Episcopal Church in the US.

In the letter, sent on Wednesday, ACNA Archbishop the Most Rev Robert Duncan compared the two bodies to two cities – one of which is the City of God and the other of which is the City of the World.

"Both cities are in crisis, but one operates from received values and behaviours, while the other attempts to re-make the world to its own revolutionary tastes," he wrote.

The ACNA comprises conservative Anglicans in the United States and Canada who broke from The Episcopal Church in the US and the Anglican Church of Canada.

Archbishop Duncan referred to it as the body of believers who "embraced the values and behaviours familiar to Christians in every age" during their inaugural assembly last month in Bedford, Texas.

The Episcopal Church has, meanwhile, "blessed the values and behaviours of a re-defined Christianity", including "confusing received understandings of Scriptural truth" and "enabling a revisionist anthropology", during its General Convention in Anaheim, California, this month.

"There are times in the history of God’s people when the prevailing values and behaviors of those then in control of rival cities symbolises a choice to be made by all of God’s people. For Anglicans such a moment has certainly arrived," he wrote. "The cities symbolising the present choice are Bedford, Texas, and Anaheim, California."

Last week, Episcopal leaders approved resolutions that open the denomination's ordination process to all individuals, including practising homosexuals, and also call for the development of theological and liturgical resources around the blessing of same-sex unions.

Although the Episcopal presiding bishop, Katharine Jefferts Schori, said they are still committed to the wider Anglican Communion – which had urged US Episcopalians not to pass any gay-affirming legislation – and clarified that the resolutions did not rescind an earlier ban on gay ordination and does not authorise public rites for the blessing of same-sex unions, orthodox Anglicans say The Episcopal Church has gone too far.

Earlier, Anglicans disaffected by what they argue is The Episcopal Church's departure from Scripture and traditional Anglicanism established their own conservative province in an attempt to distance themselves from the US body and stay aligned with the global Anglican Communion. The ACNA is seen as a rival body to The Episcopal Church and the Anglican Church of Canada.

"For Anglican Christians, for the Instruments of Unity (Communion), for interdependent Provinces, for ordinary believers, there is a choice to be made," Duncan stated in his letter. "The choice is between two religions, two roads, two cities, two sets of conflicting values and behaviors. In Deuteronomy, chapter 30, Moses sets the choice as between blessing and curse, life and death. For contemporary Anglicanism the present choice is this stark."

The Rev Mark Harris, an Episcopal priest in the Diocese of Delaware, interpreted the letter as saying the ACNA is an instrument of life and a blessing while The Episcopal Church is an instrument of death and a curse.

Harris says Duncan's letter makes it impossible to consider a worldwide Anglican Communion in which both The Episcopal Church and the ACNA exist together and are both recognized as provinces in North America.

It is unprecedented to establish an Anglican national province where such a national church already exists. The ACNA has not received formal recognition from the Archbishop of Canterbury, the spiritual leader of the global communion, but nine of the communion's 38 provinces indicated support for the ACNA.

News
Princess of Wales to lead Westminster Abbey carol service, celebrating kindness and community
Princess of Wales to lead Westminster Abbey carol service, celebrating kindness and community

This evening, the Princess of Wales, Catherine, is set to revisit Westminster Abbey to preside over her fifth Together at Christmas carol service - a seasonal gathering that places acts of kindness and community at the heart of its celebrations.

Marriage is the safest relationship, latest figures suggest
Marriage is the safest relationship, latest figures suggest

Of the eight children murdered during lockdown, 7 were killed thanks to the actions of a step parent or new partner.

Abortion rises in Northern Ireland for fourth year running
Abortion rises in Northern Ireland for fourth year running

Abortion was legalised in Northern Ireland in 2019.

Churches helping millions of Brits get by as living costs remain high
Churches helping millions of Brits get by as living costs remain high

Across the country, people are looking to the church for help.