
Archives
1773 results found with an empty search
- COLORADO SPRINGS: ECUSA SHOULD BE DISCIPLINED. REMNANT CHURCH MUST BE FAITHFUL
Remnant Church must remain faithful and live in “internal exile”, says Missiologist By David W. Virtue COLORADO SPRINGS—(4/23/2004) A world renowned missiologist and seminary head, says the Episcopal Church should be disciplined through the instruments of unity including the Archbishop of Canterbury and the Primates, for its theological and moral apostasy. The Rev. Dr. George Sumner, Principal of Wycliffe College, Toronto, and former ECUSA missionary to Tanzania, told several hundred churchmen and theologians to an Anglican Communion Institute conference that “members of the traditional wing of the Episcopal Church should endeavor to stay and be the Episcopal Church through various strategies of challenge and witness.” Outlining a three-stage strategy for staying, Sumner said the orthodox must first understand themselves as a “remnant on behalf of the whole and coming generation”; secondly “we must understand ourselves ecclesiologically as a bridge to the whole communion especially in our weakness,” and thirdly “we must understand ourselves sociologically as a subculture by creating a “rich local culture” that included strong colleges, a feisty journal, lively yearly lay and clergy conference, a strong fellowship of prayer which could constitute in embryo renewed Anglican Church in North America.” The seminary head who earned his PhD from Yale University, said that a movement among Anglican traditionalists marked by these three features stands the best chance of success and stands on the “solidest grounds theologically and spiritually.” Sumner admitted that such a strategy could fail, “but ultimately the call of our Lord is to faithfulness, and if He wills the humbling of the Episcopal and [Canadian] Anglican Churches”. Sumner acknowledged that the future of Anglicanism seemed to change almost daily, “but we are slowly and surely coming to an end and to a beginning.” The days of arguing over the issue of homosexuality are gone. Business as usual is no longer possible in the Episcopal Church. Whatever comes of the Eames Commission, sooner or later conservative Episcopalians and Anglicans will find themselves alone in official relationship with most of our Communion, a status that will probably not be recognized by our own Church officials in North America. Sumner said conservatives would sit in anomalous continuity and discontinuity for some time, in a form of “internal exile” but as “the true Episcopal Church or Anglican Church.” While the Churches of North America have a false teaching on the subject of sexuality, against the consensus teaching of all major traditions…they still confess the divinity of Christ and baptize in the name of the Father, Son and Holy Spirit. Sumner said the root of the present issues was, as in earlier eras of Church history, “a compromise with our form of Gentile culture, characterized by consumption and individualism. We are all complicit in the much wider compromise. This crisis is the final expression of weaknesses and temptations in modernist Anglicanism long a-coming, as a result of which many Anglicans in North America are effectively deaf to parts of the traditional faith.” Two options present themselves said Sumner. “One outcome is for traditional Anglicanism to break into various separate splinter groups formally departed from ECUSA.” Sumner said the record of such groups, over the past quarter century was “discouraging.” Separating Anglicans run the risk, as time goes on, of resembling those tiny Marxist/Trotskyite/Maoist splinter groups whose doctrine got purer as they got smaller and smaller. By contrast the alternative of simply staying on, to live lives of quiet dissatisfaction, also has its demoralizing prospects. Surely the conservative numbers will be weakened by defections. Young evangelicals may not choose to set out on the Canterbury way. Traditional clergy will be less willing to move to parishes in liberal dioceses that need them, or may find themselves unwelcome there. Sumner said the lesson of the United Church of Canada was an instructive lesson. It still has a brave but diminutive rump of “loyal opposition” which they call themselves. Sumner noted humorously that it was the “only Church he knew where you could move right simply by standing still.” United Church leaders still harbor hopes that further shrinkage and resultant crisis in the denomination will bring it to its senses. Sumner said Isaiah 10 was a lesson we could all absorb. “A remnant will return, the remnant of Jacob, to the mighty God. That surely is the predominant theological theme for us in this time and circumstance. The theme of remnant follows from the judgment of God which has come upon the faithless people of God.” A theology of the remnant is preserving the word of God, and contours of the life it calls us to, for a generation to come. The remnant has an obligation to this future generation, he said. “This does not mean that ECUSA will shrink or suffer in a worldly sense - they may or may not. But with respect to this decision they have molded for themselves a teaching to their own liking, disregarding the limit set by God in creation.” Being a remnant also means that we have a responsibility for the spiritual tradition of Anglicanism in this continent on behalf of the whole Church, he said. “It means that we are obliged to find a way to survive so as to pass the faith on to a new generation we hope will be more receptive to the apostolic tradition. We have the responsibility of being the Anglican Church in North America on behalf of all, including those who disregard us, criticize us, and seek to hamstring us.” Sumner said the role of being a remnant being a “bridge – the life-line between the churches in North America and the churches of the Global South. We will be defined by our continuing communion with the Global South, and we need to see this in a deeper way as integral to our vocation.” Sumner cited the historical example of the Wesleyan-Methodist movement of the later 18th and early 19th century. “The Anglican establishment was unable to find a space and sympathy enough for the new movement, and so Methodism left our church. If one considers varied forms of independent evangelicalism, the charismatic movement, and Pentecostalism as in some sense grandchildren of Methodist piety, and if we consider the astronomical rise of these movements in the past several decades, we can see what a critical historical loss the departure of Methodism was. The history of Christianity in the US in the 19th century is in large measure the history of Methodism, cut loose from Anglicanism, spreading across the prairies.” Sumner said that the views of the primate of Uganda on the Bible, and so on homosexuality, are the same as John Stott’s, and come theologically from the same lineage. “Our leaders will flunk the new Methodist challenge and that will leave us in our remnant role, with the task of maintaining this link, this bridge to the larger communion, especially the southern churches, and so passing the Methodist test.” As a result, said Sumner “all we have to offer is our own weakness and need. Matters are reversed, and the North American churches look to their southern partners for help, not only in theological legitimacy, but also in spiritual guidance and revitalization.” Our vocation is to be recipients as churches of the South will increasingly send missionaries to the North. Sumner said Tanzania Archbishop Donald Mtetemela spoke of the Churches of the West as their spiritual grandmother whom they love and revere, but now see granny’s gone daffy, she needs care, and a good talking to sometimes! The difficulty, said Sumner, will be to make the ties between churches stronger in a time of reduced resources. “Circumstances have now bound us together in a more compelling way than when, one or two decades ago, we engaged in companion diocese or invited the occasional African seminary student.” Sumner said that in a sub-culture as the orthodox now find themselves in one should “seize the radio station. The goal is not simply polemics and the ability to out narrate our peers in the national church papers, we must have our own journal of news and opinion. Sumner pointed to theological colleges like Wycliffe College, Regent College, TESM, Nashotah House, diocesan efforts, and new endeavors in theological education – seminaries are seed beds where you plan a new generation of leaders.” NOTE: If you are not receiving this from VIRTUOSITY, the Anglican Communion’s largest and most comprehensive evangelical and orthodox Anglican Online News Service then you may subscribe for FREE by going to www.virtuosityonline.org. A weekly digest of stories will come directly into your E-mail.
- CALGARY: 'GAY MILITIA' STORMS CHRISTIAN COALITION DINNER IN CALGARY
by Rev. Stephen Boissoin 4/20/2004 CALGARY, ALBERTA-- On Saturday April 17, 2004, a fundraising dinner was held on my behalf at the Coast Plaza Hotel in Calgary, Alberta. This dinner was organized and hosted by the Concerned Christian Coalition. Author of the book, Christophia, Rev. Tristan Emmanuel and myself, were the guest speakers at this event. When I arrived at the hotel, there were a few dozen protesters, picketing in front of the hotel brandishing signs and chanting their pro-homosexual mantras. Half way through the event a dozen or more self-proclaiming "gay activists", calling themselves the "gay militia", stormed into our meeting room at the Coast Plaza Hotel and surrounded the podium in the middle of an amazing presentation by Rev. Tristan Emmanuel. Rev. Emmanuel's informative and passionate presentation just happened to be about "Christophobia" and the persecution of Christians in today's society. While banging on the walls and pounding drumsticks together, these protestors cursed and yelled things like, "haters and gay power" etc etc. Many were even dressed in camouflaged military apparel with masks over their faces. On and on they went and marched around the room, swearing and yelling, making complete fools out of themselves. One of them approached a lady that attended our dinner and got right in her face. I stood there ready to defend my sister in Christ concerned that the protestor would become physically violent. Hotel management had to bring in additional staff and ask them to leave and when they would not, the police had to attend and remove them. From what I hear the hotel has pursued charges against this group. Praise God!!! It was absolutely amazing to see our group pause and join hands in the midst of this criminal outburst and pray for those that were there persecuting us. Some of us would have loved to talk with these protestors but they were far too aggressive and immature to attempt such. Coincidentally, or most likely by divine providence, I happened to be sitting with a young man who I invited as my guest, who just happens to be a homosexual. He was shocked and angered by the actions of these people. Please pray that our Lord would move the authorities to take legal action against this group as they would certainly do to us, if we acted out in such a manner and most importantly, pray that Canadian Christians would rise up against this threat. The Rev. Stephen Boissoin is an ordained minister in the Canadian Evangelical Christian Churches in Calgary, Alberta. He works for a para-church Christian ministry called the Alberta Outreach Youth Foundation. END
- LONDON: EVANGELICALS THREATEN TO 'RUIN' C OF E OVER GAY CANON
By Elizabeth Day THE TELEGRAPH 4/25/2004 Evangelical Anglican churches are threatening the Church of England with financial ruin in protest at the appointment of Canon Jeffrey John, a homosexual, as the Dean of St Albans Cathedral. Several parish churches in the Diocese of St Albans are planning to cap their financial quota contributions after Dr John's elevation, accusing the Church of pursuing "a homosexual agenda". Their move could leave the diocese several thousand pounds out of pocket. It relies on the "parish share" to provide more than £7 million annually to pay for stipends, pensions and some administrative costs. Each parish is given a "quota" that it is expected to pay to the diocese every year, depending on the number of its parishioners. If it raises more money than its allotted quota, this too goes to the diocese - and it is this contribution that the evangelical churches are threatening to cap. Parishes in the diocese of St Albans currently donate about £30,000 a year each on average, but evangelical parishes give considerably more - sometimes as much as double. They are threatening to cap the quota contributions by as much as 10 per cent. The Rev Charles Dobbie, the vicar of Holy Trinity Church in Lyonsdown, New Barnet, north London, said that he was "shocked and grieved" by Dr John's appointment and felt that he could not "in conscience" pay the full annual quota "if it's going to be used in the furtherance of this kind of agenda". He added: "Canon Jeffrey John is plainly not within the parameters of orthodoxy, as evidenced by his public call for the Church to approve life-long same-sex unions. "We will certainly be considering every option, including the review of payment of our quota." Evangelical churches tend to contribute more as they are generally bigger, explained Mr Dobbie, "and their members tend to give sacrificially". Although he declined to discuss the figures or percentages involved, he said that his actions would reflect the "shock, sadness and incredulity" of his congregation at Dr John's appointment. "We would be looking at elements of the quota that we believe we could not in conscience give if it's going to be used in the furtherance of this kind of agenda. I have yet to raise this with the [parochial] council, but we will certainly be looking at that once we've had time to digest and assess the ramifications of this appointment." Another parish priest in St Albans, who refused to be named, said that he too was considering capping the quota by "up to 10 per cent" - a loss to the diocese of several thousand pounds annually. "As far as many evangelicals are concerned, we are very frustrated because we feel that we are being pushed out even though we're the orthodox ones," he said. "When the Archbishop of Canterbury set up the Eames Commission last October [to investigate the impact of homosexual ordination on the Anglican Communion], he appealed for calm. "We have kept our end of the bargain up till now, but with Jeffrey John's appointment, they've provoked us into action." Frank Knaggs, the executive officer of the Church of England Evangelical Council and a member of the General Synod, said that quota capping would be happening "all over the country". "I know of at least 20 parishes in the St Albans diocese which are seriously considering capping their quotas as a manifestation of people's frustration. If it went ahead, the Church of England would be bust in no time as we [evangelical churches] are the biggest givers." Parish share is calculated according to numbers on the electoral roll or church membership. More than one third of Sunday churchgoers are evangelical and in 2002, non-evangelical churches had an average income of £40,000 while the average evangelical church income was £84,000. Income from evangelical churches represents about 40 per cent of total parish church income, which stood at almost £450 million in 1999. If every evangelical church in the country capped their quotas, it could cost the Church of England about £200 million. This would leave it unable to pay all its clergy stipends or its pensions and, in effect, bankrupt it within a few years. The Rev David Holloway, the vicar of Jesmond Parish Church in Newcastle, said that his congregation had already introduced quota-capping after a series of same-sex blessings in neighbouring churches. "The homosexual agenda is positively wrong," he said. "As parish priests we have a moral problem because you have a duty to make sure that your congregation's money goes precisely where the donors want it to go. It's like ethical investment. "I have to say that the appointment of Jeffrey John is very serious and it Is now not so much a question of when the split will be, it is the split. It is a complicated, countrywide issue." Dr John was appointed Bishop of Reading last July, despite revealing that he was in a long-standing celibate homosexual relationship. Then, evangelical churches in the Oxford Diocese also threatened to cap the parish share, eventually forcing Dr John to stand down from the new post. A spokesman for the Diocese of St Albans said: "We haven't yet heard anyone say this to us at this stage. We've always accepted that the appointment would prompt debate both locally and nationally. We accept that there will be a range of views and that Christians will want to take time to reflect." The Lesbian and Gay Christian Movement yesterday called for the Church of England to perform same-sex marriage ceremonies. At its annual general meeting in London, attended by more than 100 delegates, the movement said that the Church should "strive for theological recognition of partnerships". END
- KNOWLEDGE BASE
Scripture passages the group read included Leviticus 18:22, which says, "Do not lie with a male as one lies with a woman; it is an abhorrence." And Romans 1:26-27, which refers to homosexual acts as "shameless." The interpretation of these and other verses creates the chasm that divides conservatives and liberals on the issue. Conservative Christians apply the Bible literally and say it's clear that homosexuality is a sin like greed, anger or lust. And no religious leader who openly practices any sin should be endorsed, they say. But Robinson and Greenberg said there is more than one way to interpret the Scriptures. "We both take the texts very seriously," Robinson said. "We both think the way to deal with those few, brief verses which supposedly deal with homosexuality is to go through the text and not around the text by eliminating the text." Greenberg said he believes in scriptural authority and that the Torah is the word of God. But he finds it "astounding" that anyone including pastors or rabbis would claim to know the true meaning of any verse. "I just think it's marvelously, amazingly unclear, and intentionally so," he said. "Because were it clear it would have died a very early death. Its divinity is in the multiplicity of possibilities that it embodies." Rabbi Mark Diamond, executive vice president of the Board of Rabbis of Southern California, said the textual discourse was a step in the right direction, but that it's often more difficult to interact with those of the same faith. "The discourse and heated rhetoric within our own faith traditions is more challenging to us," he said. Greenberg said discussions about homosexuality are just beginning within Orthodox Judaism. The Rev. J. Jon Bruno, bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Los Angeles, said the debate has been ongoing for 30 years in his denomination. The Rev. Susan Russell, executive director of Claiming the Blessing, a collaborative of organizations that promote issues like the inclusion of homosexuals in the Episcopal church and the blessing of same-sex relationships, said only a few participants at Thursday's seminar were conservative theologically. It was mostly "preaching to the choir," Russell said. 'But the choir needs preaching, too!' Russell said conversations between people with conflicting interpretations of Scripture can take place if people don't feel they have to change each other's minds. "The essential ingredient for healthy dialogue is the willingness to admit you might be wrong," Russell said. "... My salvation doesn't depend on being right, but on being faithful." Robinson's election as bishop triggered an avalanche of controversy in the Anglican church. The Rev. Gene Wallace, of Church of the Transfiguration in Arcadia, said recently the debate has hurt his church, which has lost donations and members. Conservatives are rallying around the American Anglican Council, a group formed in 1996 to try and reform the denomination by preserving the orthodox Anglican tradition and Biblical authority. "We cannot pretend that all is well," the AAC states on its Web site. "We cannot ignore that ECUSA has abandoned 2,000 years of Christian moral teaching as well as Anglican tradition." Other conservatives have left Episcopal parishes altogether, and some who have remained are withholding their money from the diocese. Several international Anglican provinces have excommunicated the Episcopal Church USA over the issue. Robinson said he's "very hopeful" the Holy Spirit will pull the two sides together. Episcopalians hold a spectrum of viewpoints on many issues, including abortion, who should be president and the war in Iraq, he said. "The question is: Can we come together at the communion rail, be nourished by the body and blood of Christ, and then go back to our pews and fight about abortion and whether we should be in Iraq," Robinson said. The conservatives will have to decide if they can continue to come together, Robinson said. "I don't hear anyone wanting them to leave," he said. "But they'll have to decide that." END
- CAMBRIDGE: THE ARCHBISHOP OF CANTERBURY'S UNFORTUNATE SERMON
THE TIMES EDITORIAL April 21, 2004 The appointment of Rowan Williams as the Archbishop of Canterbury two years ago initially appeared a positive, even inspired, development. He came to his post with a reputation as a deep thinker, yet with a useful flair for the popular touch. Here was a man equally comfortable reflecting on the symbolism of the Gospels and the parables to be drawn from the likes of The Simpsons. He seemed to be capable of making Christianity accessible and relevant once again to those who had come to find it dull, distant or inconsequential. His elevation to the See of Canterbury was thus widely welcomed. On the basis of his sermon in Cambridge yesterday, however, Dr Williams produced a false prospectus of Shell-like proportions. Politics fascinates him, understandably, but he seems unaware of the danger of striding, in his idiosyncratic way, into the middle of political controversies. Although billed as a series of thoughts about Christianity, democracy and obedience, his address rambled through the decision to participate in the war in Iraq, the failure of the Government to secure "attention" for its actions and the possible need for civil disobedience to prevent such events from occurring in the future. For this politicised Archbishop, the "Gang of Four" plainly consists of a group other than Matthew, Mark, Luke and John. This was not a particularly coherent attempt to borrow a pulpit for political purposes. Among the many sentences whose purpose we may have to wait until the next life to ascertain was the following: "Government of whatever kind restores lost trust above all by its willingness to attend to what lies beyond the urgency of asserting control and retaining visible and simple initiative, by patient accountability and the freedom to think again, even to admit error or miscalculation." He went on, perhaps to clarify, "Happy the person or the government that can simply find the right, the inevitable gesture that fully fits the truth of circumstances as gracefully as the scoring of a goal". What does any of this mean? We think it might have been "Blair should apologise for overthrowing Saddam Hussein", but there may be other interpretations. Perhaps it was a vision of the Chelsea game last night. But whatever the real meaning, the word "gobbledegook" was invented for such a moment. It would surely have been clearer in Hebrew, Greek or Latin than in English. If it had been in Dr Williams's hands, there would not have been Ten Commandments but some 716 anguished suggestions. The Archbishop spoke yesterday about the "trivialisation of democratic government". It is the trivialisation of his office that Anglicans should be concerned about.
- LONDON: TIME TO BLESS SAME-SEX UNIONS, SAYS GAY CLERIC
By Ruth Gledhill Jeffrey John says Church and State should offer couples a covenant of faithfulness JEFFREY JOHN, the gay cleric who is to be appointed Dean of St Albans, called on the Church of England yesterday to move towards blessing same-sex unions. Dr John, the canon theologian at Southwark Cathedral who had to withdraw last year from his nomination as Bishop of Reading after concerns that the appointment would damage church unity, said that Church and State should offer gay and lesbian people a "covenant of faithfulness". Dr John was speaking at a news conference at St Albans Cathedral, where he will be installed as Dean this year, succeeding the Very Rev Christopher Lewis who is now Dean of Christ Church, Oxford. Dr John's views are significant because, although the appointment is not as provocative as if he had been made a bishop, his promotion has the support of the Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr Rowan Williams. Dr John, who abides by church rules on homosexuality and has had an abstinent 27-year relationship with his partner, another Anglican priest, pledged not to contravene canon law. He said: "Certainly I won't be attempting to do anything in the abbey which goes against the canons of the Church of England. Certainly as things stand, anything resembling a same-sex marriage service would be against these. I support the State and the Church offering gay people a framework to live their lives within, a covenant of faithfulness to each other. I do not much mind whether one calls that a marriage or not. What matters is that gay people are given that framework for stable, healthy living." He hoped the Church would follow the State in supplying that framework. He said a relationship between two men or two women could be sacramental in the same way as a heterosexual marriage because it can reflect that love of God. Dr John said he had been banned from visiting St Albans Cathedral in the past few months in case news leaked out that he was being considered for the post of dean. He said: "It's a wonderful place. It's not only a very beautiful place, it's a deep place, a profound place." Dr John, 51, said that as dean he would help the cathedral to work towards its 36.4 million pound appeal target for education, music and fabric, but he also wanted to develop his role as pastor, teacher and preacher. "This is a place that has been prayed in for a good 17 centuries by monks, parishioners and pilgrims, a think place, as the Celts say, where the barriers seem to be down between Heaven and Earth." "That's very important, because so often the Church, let alone the world, has lost this sense of place and holy presence, and losing that has left us bereft of something crucial." The Bishop of St Albans, the Right Rev Christopher Herbert, welcomed the appointment. He backed Dr John's statement on same-sex blessings, saying such relationships could have something of the mercy and the love of God. Bishop Herbert said: "I am very, very pleased that the State is beginning to recognise same-sex partnerships. I agree entirely with Jeffrey that human relationships are based on covenant. Marriage is obviously what God desires for many of us but I think what God desires overall is covenant, faithful relationships." The Bishop added: "Jeffrey John has a well-deserved reputation for being a good, caring pastor. He is an intelligent, courageous priest who will follow a long line of superb deans of St Albans and will bring to the abbey a wide range of gifts. He is a man of prayer, a preacher and teacher of real authority and grace." The appointment comes at a sensitive time in the Anglican Communion, which remains in danger of being split by the debate over gays. Dr John's remarks on same-sex blessings and Bishop Herbert's backing for him will deepen concerns among conservative evangelicals that the Church of England is heading in the same direction as Canada and the US. Last week, leaders of the Church in Africa issued a statement insisting that they would accept no future funding from dioceses in the West that took a liberal approach on the gay issue and giving the American Church three months to "repent" for its ordination of the openly gay priest Gene Robinson as Bishop of New Hampshire. Dr Williams had pleaded for a period of calm reflection in Anglican provinces worldwide until the Lambeth Commission that he has set up to resolve the issue reports at the end of the year. The appointment of Dr John to St Albans was made by the Queen on the advice of Downing Street. Because St Albans is a parish church cathedral, Bishop Herbert was consulted as patron of the parish. He said: "I had to take this entirely on my own shoulders and have not been able to discuss the appointment with my closest colleagues nor with the cathedral staff or wardens, simply because the system of appointment does not allow this."
- COLORADO SPRINGS: ARCHBISHOP MAKES IMPASSIONED PLEA FOR DEEPER FAITH AND LOVE
By David W. Virtue COLORADO SPRINGS, CO - (4/21/2004) Dr. George Carey made an impassioned plea to several hundred orthodox Episcopalians today urging them to a deeper faith, more godly living and a steady walk with God. "Spiritual power is the mastery of life which is God's ambition for each one of us," said the former Archbishop of Canterbury. "The work of the Holy Spirit is to bring us closer to Jesus Christ." In the second of three sermons delivered on Paul's Letter to the Ephesians as part of a three-day conference put on by the Colorado-based Anglican Communion Institute, the Evangelical Archbishop said not only do we have a faith we must hold without fear or compromise, but we must go deeper into that faith as debtors of God's grace. "God's power in daily living comes from a steady walk with Him," said the Archbishop who is expounding on the third chapter of Paul's Ephesian letter. "St. Paul assumed we should know God's power in our daily lives. Reading the apostle enlarges our minds and makes us aware of the Trinity in the life of every Christian. We should all want to be more powerful Christians," he said. "If the last century was the century of ecumenism this century is the century of the Holy Spirit. This Pentecostal Spirit movement is generally constructive but has some negative effects. But the Holy Spirit brings people together and does not divide us," he said. In a reference to the current travails going on in the Anglican Communion, Carey said that what the church lacked was not money, not numbers, not greater theologians, but people on fire for God. "God cries out for better people. God is looking for excellence and quality," he said. Looking back on his own life, Carey said he didn't at first love the church, but he saw that Christ loved it and he came to love it. "The church has many wrinkles, but it is love that drives her to be different. I want to know Christ's power in her love." "The foundation of the church is grounded in love. Love is the best foundation, and it is typically the work of the Holy Spirit. I want to know Christ's power in her love. You may be disappointed with our church, but we are no better than anyone else if we don't love. We are always demanding our rights but Paul says that Christ loved the church and gave himself up for her." "I have a big vision of other faiths, but I am held together by Christ who is at the center, the Omega point of my life." Carey said was possible to rise above the present situation in the Anglican Communion. Paul's understanding of the power God could unlock the hidden potential in each one of us. The power that is in us can accomplish that, he said.
- COLORADO SPRINGS: CAREY SAYS EPISCOPAL CHURCH HAS LOST ITS WAY
By David W. Virtue COLORADO SPRINGS, CO - Dr. George Carey, the former Archbishop of Canterbury said the Episcopal Church was in peril having lost its way and needs to unite in humility to truth and an unflinching commitment to Jesus Christ as Lord and Savior. Addressing several hundred Episcopalians at Grace Church & St Stephens at the beginning of a three day conference on the Future of Anglicanism in North America, Carey said, "I love my Church, I love ECUSA, it has done so much good to the world, but it is in peril now because of recent decisions." While not directly mentioning the consecration of V. Gene Robinson the openly homosexual bishop of New Hampshire, Carey said the modern church has lost the doctrine of the cross, and for St. Paul the cross was pivotal and anchor of the Faith. Many want to skip the cross, putting the focus on experience, but it must not be separated from the doctrine and redemption of our Lord, said Carey. "We live in momentous times for the Anglican Communion. Never has there been a need for leaders who have an historic faith and know where God is leading us." Carey said that what the church needs today is not adulators who want to maintain the status quo, but men who are brave under attack. The former Archbishop said that from a human perspective things can only get worse, but that is not God's perspective. From His perspective things can only get better. "When a church slackens its grip on fundamental theology it is on a slippery slope that leads beyond itself to liberalism and to death. We are called to embrace a creedal and historic Christianity." "The church grows when congregations are committed to the historic faith. God is in charge of us, He is in charge of his church and his world and he is not going to forsake us. He is going to stick with us regardless of our mistakes", said the Archbishop.
- ENGLAND: PM PERSONALLY SANCTIONED JEFFREY JOHN APPOINTMENT
19/4/04 Tony Blair personally sanctioned the controversial appointment of Jeffrey John as the next dean of St Albans - which some say is one of the most important jobs in the Church of England reports the Guardian. According to the newspaper the Prime Minister's involvement was part of a Downing Street campaign to warn Anglican leaders that a person's sexuality should not bar them from senior positions. Number 10 officials are understood to have been dismayed by recent Church infighting over homosexual clergy. However, Downing Street's decision to install the openly gay but celibate Canon of Southwark, Jeffrey John, as Dean of St Albans in Hertfordshire plunged the Church into more arguments. John's promotion, recommended by the Prime Minister's appointments secretary, William Chapman - and endorsed by Blair - will also raise questions over the extent to which politicians should decide who fills senior ecclesiastical positions. In contrast to the way bishops are chosen, Number 10 wields almost total control over the appointment of deans. Chapman is understood to have taken soundings from Church leaders but was adamant that John, seen by many as one of the most brilliant theologians of his generation, should be given a senior position. Religious groups quickly pointed the finger at the crucial role played by Downing Street over John's job. "This is Number 10 saying the way the Church treated Jeffrey John over the Reading affair was poor," said Martin Reynolds, spokesman for the Lesbian and Gay Christian Movement. But the appointment, brought condemnation from traditionalist Anglicans already enraged by the ordination in America of Gene Robinson, a homosexual, as the Bishop of New Hampshire. One cleric described Dr John's appointment as "outrageous", while others predicted that it would deepen divisions that became apparent during the row over Dr John's abortive appointment as bishop last year. The Rev David Holloway, a leading member of Reform, an evangelical group, insisted that Dr John's new role would lead to schism within the Church. "This is a very serious issue for the Church of England," he said. "It is not a secondary point that Christians can decide for themselves; it is primary. This appointment and support for homosexuality generally from the leaders of the Church is basically institutional heresy and institutional decadence."
- TANZANIA: DEAN REJECTS ECUSA FUNDS
Special Report By David W. Virtue The Dean of Christ Church in Arusha, Tanzania, has written a letter to the Presiding Bishop of The Episcopal Church Frank T. Griswold rejecting an offer of funds, citing ECUSA's stand on human sexuality and the recent Robinson consecration. The Very Rev. Jerry A. Kramer, Jr, Diocese of Mt. Kilimanjaro in the Anglican Church of Tanzania, said in his letter to Griswold that his offer to support he and his wife as Volunteers for Mission of the Episcopal Church here in Tanzania were unacceptable. The letter came unsolicited. Kramer wrote: "While we are Episcopalians in good standing in the Diocese of Texas, and very much love and respect our dear Bishop Don Wimberly, we cannot accept your offer at this time. When first arriving in Tanzania, we were told in no uncertain terms that we would be asked to leave had we come here affiliated in any way with The Episcopal Church Center. Neither can we represent the ECUSA, in conscience, having denied the truth of scripture and the Church's traditional beliefs on issues of human sexuality. We categorically reject the consecration of Gene Robinson as an act that is not of God and whose Office we will never recognize." "Our ministry here has been hampered from day one by deep suspicions directed at any one coming in the name 'Episcopalian.' We can tell you first hand that African Christians feel utterly and brutally betrayed by the Church in America. The consecration of Gene Robinson has caused enormous harm here and emboldened persecution and violence against the Christian Community." Kramer concluded saying, "our ministry here in Tanzania simply cannot be credible, nor would it be accepted, if affiliated publicly with the ECUSA. In fact it would put us at greater jeopardy than we are at present. Nor can we represent the ECUSA officially because of its sinful actions that are tearing the bonds of our Global Communion. Please keep us in your prayers and be assured of ours." A copy of the letter was sent to Texas Bishop Don Wimberly and to Charles E. Jenkins, Bishop of Louisiana. This week in Nairobi, Africa's pan Anglican bishops rejected any further funding from The Episcopal Church USA citing the recent consecration of V. Gene Robinson, an openly divorced, homosexual to the episcopacy.
- CANADA: NORTH VANCOUVER CHURCH CUTS TIES WITH ANGLICANS OVER SAME-SEX ISSUE
By Jane Seyd jseyd@nsnews.com 5/17/2004 A conservative priest at St. Simons Anglican church in North Vancouver says both he and his congregation have quit the Anglican Church of Canada over the issue of same-sex marriage. Ed Hird, the reverend at St. Simons, is one of four conservative priests who recently wrote to Anglican Bishop Michael Ingham telling him his "services as a bishop are no longer required." St. Simons is one of a number of conservative Anglican parishes that have clashed with Ingham over his willingness to bless same-sex marriages. Hird said his church voted to cut all ties with the Diocese of New Westminster because parishioners believe blessing same-sex marriages goes against biblical scripture. Hird said Ingham's position is a "violation of basic scriptural teachings and Christian morals." "The issue to us is being faithful to Anglican teachings," he said. Hird said he and his congregation have instead arranged to come under the jurisdiction of a conservative Anglican church leader in Rwanda, Africa. Hird said St. Simons is now a "missionary" church in North Vancouver. But a representative from the Diocese of New Westminster said under church laws, parishes can't unilaterally quit the Anglican church in their own country. "Parishioners may choose to leave the Anglican Church of Canada but parishes don't," said George Cadman, chancellor of the diocese. "It remains a parish of this diocese." Cadman said it's Hird's choice to resign if he wants, but the diocese still controls the church and its property. Hird disagrees with that, and said the congregation has consulted a lawyer, who told them "we have a good case" for retaining ownership of the church independently. St. Simons isn't the only Anglican church in North Vancouver that has been embroiled in legal fights with the bishop. Earlier this year, two locally-elected church officials of St. Martin's Anglican Church launched a legal suit against Ingham over his decision to oust them last September under a rarely-used church law. That power struggle also stemmed from the same-sex marriage issue. The pair filed a petition in B.C. Supreme Court, asking for a judicial review of the bishop's decision to fire them. The case is still before the courts. Meanwhile, Hird said gays and lesbians are still welcome at St. Simons. "It's not an issue of rejecting people," he said. Hird said he views homosexuality in a manner similar to the way he views alcoholism and believes people can "recover" from their sexual orientation.
- OXFORD: ORTHODOX THEOLOGIANS WEIGH FUTURE OF ANGLICAN COMMUNION
19th April 2004 OXFORD, UK - As some of the leading Northern Anglican theologians gather at Wycliffe Hall, Oxford for a two day discussion on the current crisis in ECUSA, Canada and the wider church, Anglican Mainstream managed to talk to three of the leading Mainstream players in the Anglican Church: Kendall Harmon, Canon Theologian of South Carolina, Dr Paul Zahl, Dean of the Cathedral Church of the Advent, Birmingham Alabama and Dr George Sumner, Principal of Wycliffe College Toronto. Anglican Mainstream: Can you please tell us why you're here in Oxford? George Sumner: It's a gathering of theologians. Theologians have a role to play at the present moment in the church, to give a theological rationale for our Communion. We're particularly grateful to be here with someone like Chris Sugden who reminds us of the global and southern perspective and dimension of that Communion. Mainstream: Is there anything at the start of this meeting that you'd like to share with Anglicans across the whole world? Kendall Harmon: We haven't lost our Gospel hope even in a time of great crisis. God is still God no matter what. There is a sense of central confidence in the Gospel that permeates our meeting, but also a sense of the need to respond with great seriousness to the crisis we face. It's a tremendous challenge. There's also a sense of our own inadequacy which is actually a help. I was very moved by the fact that we began the day with a devotion and prayer. Mainstream: What do you hope will be the result of this meeting? Paul Zahl: First, in a state of some despair at times and "in the trenches" as many North Americans feel it is a tremendous encouragement to be with people like Alister McGrath, Chris Sugden, Oliver O'Donovan and Andrew Goddard and others who have not yet given up the fight and are really working in fellowship to affirm the Gospel in a very troubled and muddy situation. I feel strengthened by them. In a more concrete way there's a possibility that we might produce some kind of submission to the church at large, some kind of a statement that's quiet, scholarly and theological that might make an impact for good. A positive and clear statement of Gospel orthodoxy in the face of the challenges that we very much feel in our home contexts and feel to an only slightly lesser extent here at Wycliffe Hall. I agree by the way with Kendall Harmon who spoke of the devotional at the start of the day that Alister McGrath led, that assured us that the presence of the Lord was never to be questioned. He is with us in all times and places and that inevitably gives us the sense ultimately of being on the winning side as far as the Kingdom of Heaven is concerned, and that meant a great deal to me personally. Mainstream: What's the best part about having this meeting in Oxford? Kendall Harmon: Oxford is where my two youngest children were born, where I did my doctorate and I never fail to be inspired by the Spires! George Sumner: I'm taking my children home a really nice English Soccer shirt and some sharp English shoes for my daughter. Paul Zahl: The remarkable weather that totally drenched me when I arrived at the station yesterday and all my papers and all my under-things were completely and totally destroyed. I'm very glad to be home in lovely Oxford as always! Mainstream: Thanks so much for taking time out to talk to us, and our best wishes and prayers for the rest of your meeting.



