Archive for March, 2010

Robinson + Glasspool = 2

Friday, March 12th, 2010

LOS ANGELES: Mary Glasspool receives required number of standing committee consents in unofficial tally

[Episcopal News Service] Diocese of Los Angeles Bishop Suffragan-elect Mary Douglas Glasspool has received the required number of consents from diocesan standing committees to her ordination and consecration, pending verification by the presiding bishop’s office.

The Diocese of Los Angeles announced March 10 that Glasspool had received 61 standing committee consents, in an unofficial tally. A majority of consents, or 56, were required from standing committees in the Episcopal Church’s 109 dioceses.

“I give thanks for the standing commitees’ prompt action, and for the consents to the elections of my sisters,” Los Angeles Bishop Diocesan J. Jon Bruno said on March 10, referring to both Glasspool and Bishop Suffragan-elect Diane Jardine Bruce.

“I look forward to the final few consents to come in from the bishops in the next few days, and I give thanks for the fact that we as a church have taken a bold step for just action.”

Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori’s office has yet to verify the official number of bishops with jurisdiction who have consented to Glasspool’s ordination and consecration.

The Rev. Canon Charles Robertson, canon to the presiding bishop, told ENS that the consent process for a bishop-elect lasts the full 120 days as prescribed by the canons of the church, unless that person receives the required majority of consents before the period is over, at which time an announcement can be made. Until the required number of consents is received, or the 120-day period ends, bishops and standing committees are able to change their vote, he said.

Glasspool, 56, was elected bishop suffragan on Dec. 5. Jefferts Schori is expected to be the chief consecrator May 15 for Glasspool, and for Bruce, who was elected bishop suffragan Dec. 4. The presiding bishop’s office on March 8 announced a successful consent process for Bruce.

Glasspool has served as canon to the bishops in the Baltimore-based Diocese of Maryland for the past eight years. During her 28-year ordained ministry, Glasspool has served congregations in Maryland, Massachusetts and Pennsylvania.

Glasspool is the second openly gay partnered priest to be elected a bishop in the Episcopal Church. The first was Bishop Gene Robinson of New Hampshire, who was elected in 2003.

Under the canons of the Episcopal Church (III.11.4), a majority of bishops exercising jurisdiction and diocesan standing committees must consent to a bishop-elect’s ordination as bishop within 120 days of receiving notice of the election.

The 120-day process for Glasspool lasts until May 5 and the Diocese of Los Angeles has been updating the process each Wednesday on its website.

As outlined under Canon III.11.4 (a) for every bishop election, the presiding bishop confirms the receipt of consents from a majority of bishops with jurisdiction, and reviews the evidence of consents from diocesan standing committees sent to her by the standing committee of the electing diocese.

In Canon III.11.4 (b), standing committees, in consenting to ordination and consecration, attest they are “fully sensible of how important it is that the Sacred Order and Office of a Bishop should not be unworthily conferred, and firmly persuaded that it is our duty to bear testimony on this solemn occasion without partiality, do, in the presence of Almighty God, testify that we know of no impediment on account of which the Reverend A.B. ought not to be ordained to that Holy Office. We do, moreover, jointly and severally declare that we believe the Reverend A.B. to have been duly and lawfully elected and to be of such sufficiency in learning, of such soundness in the Faith, and of such godly character as to be able to exercise the Office of a Bishop to the honor of God and the edifying of the Church, and to be a wholesome example to the flock of Christ.”

The canons do not specify the wording that bishops must use to give their consent, other than to say in Canon III.11.4 (a) that the presiding bishop requests of each bishop with jurisdiction “a statement of consent or withholding of consent.”

The consent process begins after post-election procedural matters, including physical and psychological examinations, have been completed and formal notices are sent by the presiding bishop’s office to bishops with jurisdiction, with separate notices from the electing diocese to the standing committees of each of the dioceses in the Episcopal Church.

Homosexuality is ‘Totally Destructive of Christian Teaching’

Friday, March 12th, 2010

Homosexuality is ‘Totally Destructive of Christian Teaching’ Says Traditional Anglican Primate: Says “the family is under attack in more ways than it’s been since the Roman Empire”

March 11th, 2010 Posted in News |

See Part I and Part II of this LifeSiteNews exclusive interview.
HALIFAX, Nova Scotia, March 10, 2010 (LifeSiteNews.com) – The head of the Traditional Anglican Communion (TAC), Archbishop John Hepworth, told LifeSiteNews (LSN) that it is “ludicrous” to suggest that God is present with same-sex couples in the same way as he is with husband and wife, and urged clear teaching on the true nature of human sexuality.
“Homosexual sexuality played out in a same-sex relationship is, in fact, totally destructive of the heart of Christian teaching because it’s destructive of God as Creator, it’s destructive of God as Teacher, and it’s destructive of God as Redeemer,” he said.
“There is no space in Christianity for brute force condemnation, hate, and all that,” he continued. But, he said, “there is space within Christianity for absolutely, clearly teaching what Christ teaches.  And if there’s one thing the New Testament and the Old Testament are clear on, it’s homosexuality.”

AKINOLA A DETRIBALISED LEADER/PREACHER: ARCHBISHOP EGBUNU.

Friday, March 12th, 2010

AKINOLA A DETRIBALISED LEADER/PREACHER: ARCHBISHOP EGBUNU.

The Archbishop of Lokoja Province Church of Nigeria Anglican Communion the Most Rev Emmanuel Egbunu has said that the retiring primate of all Nigeria Anglican Communion the Most Rev Peter Jasper Akinola would have made a greater impact in the world, or in the African Continent rather than the narrow world of the gospel.

He made this remark at the send forth thanksgiving service packaged by four provinces of Abuja, Kaduna, Jos, and Lokoja at the Cathedral church of St Michaels Kaduna.

The Archbishop who took his text from the gospel according to St Mark chapter 14 verses 3 to 9 thanked God for his faithfulness over Peter Akinola and showered encomiums and eulogies which according to him is not out of place, it is well deserved”. He said the potentials and leadership abilities in Akinola is appreciated because he gave his everything into the ministry in Anglican Communion worldwide and deserves to be celebrated because of his outright doggedness, resilience, patience, innovation, courage and Missionary passion.

He said that many books are being written worldwide about his ministry and standing firm on the undiluted word of God which he said is a boost for the church in Nigeria, Africa and the world at large.

He compared the gospel in mark 14, relating the highly priced and valued oil poured generously on Jesus by Mary with Akinola’s larger than life posture. He noted that at a point in one’s life one is celebrated, Akinola he said is a workaholic who chose hard work that preceded his many successes despite many odds. Bishop Egbunu said Archbishop Akinola is a long time planner, who doesn’t take chances or procrastinate, adding that the outgoing Primate is a mover who always put the past behind him. A generous man of vision, mission, the preacher said that Primate Akinola’s creation of Missionary Dioceses is a boost because according to him his gains outweighs his pains and this has paved ways through imperfections of men.

The Archbishop of Lokoja Province said outgoing Primate Akinola is leaving many legacies which the church and ministers of God should emulate. He said Akinola is a detribalized leader and preacher who knows how to bring out hidden potentials in people of which the preacher says he is a beneficiary.

According to the Cleric, Akinola’s generosity is unsurpassed because he committed the proceeds of his 60th birthday to the families of deceased Priests as an endowment fund.

In his response the outgoing Primate thanked everybody that packaged the memorable programe for him and asked for the blessings of God on their families nuclear and extended.

He gave a testimony with nostalgic feelings of how his ministry was packaged and blessed to a very large extent at the Cathedral church of St Michael Kaduna. According to him it was there he got his preferment as Canon and the announcement of his election as Bishop took place in the same Cathedral that hosted the service of thanksgiving of his retirement .

He went down memory lane how he suffered humiliation which according to him had a serious impact on his ministry as it led to his determination of erasing the idea of going Cap in hand begging for money hence the idea of the many investments he embarked upon in the church which is yielding dividends today.

Three melodious musical presentations were rendered by the Cathedral Choir, Matan-Zumata Holy Trinity Anglican Church Television, All Saints Anglican Church Mass Choir Samaru Zaria, well arranged, meaningful danceable and award winning praises unto the Lord.

The Holy Eucharist thanksgiving Service was celebrated by the Archbishop of Jos Province the Most Rev Benjamin Kwarshi. It had in attendance array of Bishops, Archbishops, members of the clergy and well wishers from the four provinces of Kaduna, Abuja, Jos, and Lokoja with the Primate and his Wife as special guests.

From Bishop Ben Kwashi in Jos, Nigeria, on recent Muslim violence against Christians in Jos, Plateau State, Nigeria

Tuesday, March 9th, 2010
Scene from January Violence in Jos

Scene from January Violence in Jos

Please bear in mind that this harrowing letter comes from Bishop Ben Kwashi, who is “on the ground” in Jos, Nigeria. If you need to catch up on recent events from Jos, then click; here, and here.

Anglican Mainstream:-

People were in deep sleep and woken up by about three this morning to meet with death. Men women children and pregnancies were all littered on the road as they were  killed as they were probably fleeing to God knows where. This is a premeditated killing in the worst way. Please continue in prayers for us. The cost of being a Christian is rising by the day.

+ben

Bloody heartrending…

Here is a report from the LA Times today:-

Nigeria massacre leaves more than 120 dead – Witnesses say Muslim herdsmen armed with guns and machetes attacked three Christian villages outside Jos. The violence may have been in revenge for an attack last month.

Reporting from Kano, Nigeria – The attacks came in the night, as the villagers slept. Hundreds of Muslim herdsmen armed with guns and machetes swooped down on three Christian villages outside Jos in central Nigeria, killing more than 120 people early Sunday, according to witnesses.

There were contradictory reports on the casualties. Some said more than 120 were killed, while others put the number at about 200.

The massacre in volatile Plateau state — long beset with ethnic-religious violence — was apparently a revenge attack. Nomadic Fulani herdsmen had accused a group of local indigenous Christians — Berom people — of attacking their camp late last month, killing four people and stealing about 200 cattle.

In the latest violence, which appeared unrelated to national sectarian political frictions, hundreds of herdsmen launched coordinated attacks about 3 a.m. on three villages, Dogo Nahawa, Ratsat and Zot, about six miles south of Jos.

The herdsmen charged the villages, firing in the air, then cut down villagers as they fled their huts, witnesses said.

“Some people, whom we believed to be pastoralists, attacked three villages including our own with machetes, killing and burning people,” said Fidelis Tawkek of Dogo Nahawa in a phone interview. “They burned down most of the houses. They killed many women and children.

“They escaped after the attack. Up to this moment, houses are still burning and barns are smoldering.”

Jos and the surrounding areas had seen a series of violent attacks in January, which left more than 320 dead, police figures show.

Plateau state is on the dividing line between Nigeria’s predominantly Muslim north and the mainly Christian south, but the recurrent violent outbreaks have as much to do with bitter rivalry between the indigenous Christian Beroms and Muslim Hausas who came later, settling in Jos about a century ago.

The city lives on a knife’s edge, with friction between the Christians and Muslims who compete for jobs, business, land and resources. Similar tensions radiate throughout the state: Thousands have died in ethnic-religious violence in Plateau state in the last decade.

Sunday’s violence — allegedly involving the nomadic Fulani herdsmen — was slightly different. Because it was said to involve nomads, who reportedly fled after the attack, it was probably not related to the usual flare-ups resulting from the bitterness between the Christians and Hausa Muslims in the Jos area.

But the violence underscores the Muslim-Christian rivalry that permeates Nigerian political and economic life. The most recent example has been the bitter power struggle in the ruling People’s Democratic Party between southern Christians and northern Muslims over the presidency, following the illness of President Umaru Yar’Adua, a Muslim.

The country’s political stability hinges on a ruling party deal that the Muslim north and Christian south should rotate power: eight years to the north and eight to the south. The jostling over the presidency was resolved when the PDP affirmed that a Muslim northerner would rule until 2015.

On Sunday, acting President Goodluck Jonathan placed security forces in Plateau state on alert and ordered them to track and arrest the killers.

UPDATE: The BBC report has upped the number of murdered to 500.

BBC

Some 500 people were killed in Sunday’s revenge attack after religious clashes near the Nigerian city of Jos, local officials say.

The figure had previously been put at about 100 – it is always difficult to get accurate figures for such clashes in Nigeria.

Officials say two mainly Christian villages near Jos were attacked from nearby hills by people with machetes.

There is a long history of local tension between Muslims and Christians.

The attacks are said to have been in revenge for the killing of several hundred people in January.

Acting President Goodluck Jonathan has put security forces on alert to stop the flow of weapons to the area.

Many of the dead in the villages of Zot and Dogo-Nahawa are reported to be women and children.

Jos lies between the mainly Muslim north of Nigeria and its largely Christian south.

Some further Internet links on this:-

Muslims slaughter hundreds of Christians in Nigeria (Catholic Culture)

Violence Erupts in Nigeria’s State of Jos (Vatican Radio)

Nigeria: Radical Islam and the challenge of dialogue (ACN News)

400 Killed in Fresh Jos Crisis (Lagos Daily Champion)

If you have stumbled onto this blog and are not a Christian, get yourself a hot drink, pull up a comfy chair and then tuck into the following article written by one of the best in the business:- All Of Grace by Charles Spurgeon

Anglo-Catholics gather to pray over Pope’s offer

Tuesday, March 9th, 2010

holics gather to pray over Pope’s offer
Posted by David Virtue on 2010/2/27 8:20:00 (1450 reads)


by Bill Bowder
http://www.churchtimes.co.uk/content.asp?id=90053
February 25, 2010

NO FORMAL response is expected from the UK to the Pope’s offer of a Personal Ordinariate to Anglican groups until after the General Synod meet ing in July, it emerged this week.

On Monday, dozens of churches, both Church of England and Roman Catholic, opened their doors for a day of prayer about the Pope’s offer. The invitation was extended last autumn to groups of Anglicans to enter into full communion with the Roman Catholic Church while pre serving elements of the distinctive Anglican spiritual and liturgical patrimony (News, 23 October 2009).

The Bishop of Ebbsfleet, the Rt Revd Andrew Burnham, had asked members of Forward in Faith, and others, to make Monday, the feast of the Chair of St Peter, “an opportun ity to reflect, pray, and discern the way forward for each of us, our priests and our parishes”. But on his website he said that the day would not be “a day of decision”.

After the General Synod post poned until its July sessions the revision stage of the legislation for women bishops, it is thought that most traditionalists will wait until after that debate before react ing to the Pope’s offer. This means that they will participate actively in elections for the new Synod, which take place during the summer.

Bishop Burnham wrote: “The Apostolic Constitution (Anglican orum Coetibus) is not a crisis point but the opening up, permanently, of a new way into unity with the See of Peter. Decisions about how and whether this should happen for each of us will take place in different ways, and at different times.”

One cleric who spent the day in his church in prayer was the Vicar of St Mark’s, Stockland Green, Bir ming ham, the Revd Stuart Powell. “The Bishop of Ebbsfleet was asking for a day of discernment. I think some people may feel they want to take advantage of the Ordinariate, and some people will decide to stay. I think that I and my people will stay,” he said on Tuesday.

“The worry is the way that the movement is being split: those who are going may not fight so hard for those who are staying. It is not just over women’s ordination; it goes much wider than that. It is the question of authority, whether the Church of England is becoming a liberal Protestant Church. It de pends on how we are treated by the diocese. I am committed to carrying on; it may not be an easy future. It all depends on the next Synod.”

In Coventry, the RC priest of the Sacred Heart parish, Fr Tony Norton, said that the day had been well attended, with both Catholics and Anglicans praying together. With regard to the Ordinariate, he said: “This is just an initial approach, and we are not quite sure how it will pan out. We are not sure if it applies to individual Anglicans or parish communities.”

The Vicar of Longford, Coventry, the Revd Paul Burch, who attended the day, said on Tuesday: “This is an ongoing process of discernment, and the day of prayer was an element in that process. These are exciting and dangerous times.”

His colleague, NSM of Ansty and Shilton, the Revd Norman Stevens, said: “I would be letting people down to make any decision at this stage. I don’t think anything is going to happen before the autumn, because there is nothing yet to commit to. We have a part of the vineyard to work on, and we don’t let people down. If we have booked someone for a wedding, you take the wedding. It may cost us, but I don’t think that the Holy Spirit is going to be very upset about that.”

A website, “Friends of the Ordin ariate”, appeared this week, inviting Anglicans in the UK to indicate their interest. It appears to have been set up by the Scottish regional dean for Forward in Faith, Canon Leonard Black, and is intended for tradition alists throughout the UK. The former Bishop of Rochester, Dr Michael Nazir-Ali, told an Irish journalist this month that “for the first time officially, the Roman Catholic Church at the highest level acknowledges the Anglican patri mony”. He warned, however, of the dangers of being absorbed into the RC Church.

“If the Latin bishops give the oversight, the people will become Latin.” One of the “objective criteria” that must be included in an Ordin­ariate was “the experience of An glicans themselves, that, on the one hand affirm the value of celibacy for clergy, and on the other affirm the value of married priests, who bring something quite differ ent”.

Why James Jones is Wrong

Sunday, March 7th, 2010

Welcome to An Exercise in the Fundamentals of Orthodoxy. If you are new here, you might want to subscribe to the RSS feed to keep up to date with what I’m writing. Alternatively, if you want to contact Peter in relation to issues of human sexuality, please use the contact form here. Thanks for visiting!

Church of England Ecclesiastical Secular / Christian Sexuality Theology Wholeness

In his speech to Liverpool Diocesan Synod today, Bishop James Jones has argued that the Church should view the debate over human sexuality in the same way that in the past we have agreed to disagree over Just War. He says,

A cursory glance at the history of the just war theory and the ethics of pacifism show that for the last two thousand years the church has been exercised about whether or not it is ever right for a Christian to take up arms and to take the life of another human being.  Although it has been agreed that the early church (from the period of persecution within the Roman Empire until the conversion of Constantine) was the age of pacifism, since then the church has not only allowed but embraced a breadth of ethical opinion on the taking of life.

Augustine made the point that Jesus ruled out Malatia (hatred) not Militia (military service) and the church, without compromising the principle of the sanctity of human life, has made space within the Body of Christ for a variety of ethical positions.

I suspect that within our Synod there is a similar spectrum of moral conviction about whether or not it is ever justified to take the life of another.  No doubt should our nation ever find itself in another period of compulsory conscription to military service we would have lively debates on the floor of this Synod to argue the case and to discern the truth.  Meanwhile, on this the most fundamental of all ethical issues in spite of any divergent views, we sit comfortably with each other, recognise each other’s integrity, respect one another’s faith and moral judgement and enjoy communion in Christ with one another.

I have to say that I am not fazed by this for with you I recognise that in a complex world of absolute moral principles the application of them is rarely a straightforward process.  That is why our courts are presided over by people and not computers.

Even though we live in a society tempted to reduce every decision to a box-ticking exercise that can be processed through a computer, when it comes to making moral judgements about a person’s behaviour we have to hear the human story and form a moral judgement with regard not only to the nature of the action but also to the intent and the consequences.  And although I am not a lawyer I know enough to see that context frames a deed and can either mitigate or aggravate the seriousness of an action.

The histories of the First and Second World Wars when conscription was in force show how many wrestled with their conscience as they sought to apply moral principles to their own particular context.  As we look back, our society and the church both approve and salute the courage shown by both pacifists and conscripts even though at the time there were passionate debates, fierce division of opinion and great hostility shown to conscientious objectors.

Read here

Bishop James Jones: Liverpool’s Muddy Waters flow towards Africa

Sunday, March 7th, 2010

The Bishop of Liverpool, the Rt Revd James Jones, has today shown just what a liability the Church of England is becoming to

Bishop Jones at Greenpeace

Bishop Jones at Greenpeace

the rest of the Anglican Communion. Liverpool stands to the north of the estuary of the great Mersey River, now cleansed and restored to life after the pollution of the industrial age, but its spiritual waters are being sadly muddied.

In his Presidential Address to the Liverpool Diocesan Synod, Bishop Jones argues that the Church of England and the Anglican Communion should embrace diversity and accept that those who believe homosexual relationships are morally wrong and those who believe that, within a ‘stable and faithful relationship’, they are right can enjoy a peaceful co-existence.

He is of course by no means the first bishop of the Church of England to put this argument forward, but this is a significant moment because he is a prominent evangelical. In 2003 he was one of those who successfully protested the attempt to appoint Canon Jeffrey John, a high profile advocate of the gay lesbian movement in the Church of England, as Bishop of Reading. Yet in February 2008, he apologised, saying ‘I deeply regret this episode in our common life’ and expressed his sorrow ‘for adding to the pain and distress of Dr John and his partner.’ Today’s address confirms his ‘conversion’.

We are given a clue as to the cause when, referring to his diocese, he comments that ‘Like the rest of England, ours is a culture of diversity.  One of the positive aspects of a rich ecumenical landscape is that we have a variety of doors through which different people might enter into the Christian faith.’ No doubt, but the deification of diversity by the English political establishment has enfeebled moral discourse by the suppression of both logic and evidence, and the Bishop’s argument suffers from the same malaise.

In fairness, he is as much a symptom as a cause of the Church of England’s confusion. He offers a kind of ‘Rowan-lite’ proposal which proceeds along similar lines to Rowan Williams’ Plenary Address ‘On Making Moral Decisions’ to the 1998 Lambeth Conference. Essentially he tried to persuade the orthodox that gay sex should not be seen as a cause of separation since the Church had not disowned those from the past who had practiced slavery and it had not split in the present on nuclear weapons, despite the deeply held convictions against them of those like himself. Similarly, Bishop Jones argues that if we can maintain mutual respect and fellowship while disagreeing about the taking of human life in war, then

‘Just as Christian pacifists and Christian soldiers profoundly disagree with one another yet in their disagreement continue to drink from the same cup because they share in the one body so too I believe the day is coming when Christians who equally profoundly disagree about the consonancy of same gender love with the discipleship of Christ will in spite of their disagreement drink openly from the same cup of salvation’.

As with Rowan Williams’ original presentation, the problem lies in the assumption that all these issues relate to Scripture in the same way, whereas in fact the biblical material on homosexuality is direct and unequivocal, that on slavery less so and on nuclear weapons completely indirect. Likewise the biblical witness on war is less direct, as reflected in the development of the Church’s theology of ‘just war’ over the centuries, whereas questions about homosexuality have arisen only after some 2,000 years within churches influenced by strongly secularised cultures.

The extent of the influence of this popular thinking on James Jones’ is revealed by the way that he repeats, in the face of overwhelming evidence, that our sexuality like ethnicity is not a matter of choice’. This is also a serious misunderstanding of gay /lesbian thinkers for whom, following Foucault, the point is not so much to establish a gay ‘identity’ as sexual freedom. So the veteran gay activist Peter Tatchell looks forward to a ‘state of greater sexual freedom, where homosexuality becomes commonplace and ceases to be disparaged or victimised’ and in which ‘gayness would no longer have to be defended and affirmed. Gay identity (and its straight counterpart) would thus, at last, become redundant.’

James Jones reflects a way of thinking which is gaining ground amongst English evangelicals and fails to recognise that the deep logic of the gay/lesbian movement is the abolition of the Judaeo-Christian understanding of human identity ( gay ‘marriage’ is a key step). Faced with the very uncomfortable prospect of having to finally challenge the reality of quietly established ‘facts on the ground’ which gay activists by their own admission have been following for years, the temptation to reduce the whole problem to one of ‘go along to get along’ becomes almost overwhelming. It is recast not as an issue of false teaching, as the GAFCON Jerusalem Statement truthfully described it, but as an essentially pastoral problem.

So the ideal becomes ‘diversity without enmity’, and to be ‘a Diocese refusing to allow anything to undermine our oneness in Christ.’ But this only becomes possible by downgrading the clear biblical teaching that homosexual relationships are ‘incompatible with Scripture’, as reaffirmed by the 1998 Lambeth Conference Resolution 1.10, to being merely the ‘traditional’ view, an opinion which can coexist with its opposite. So whatever unity exists is not a oneness in Christ because it refuses to be faithful to the Scriptures which authoritatively reveal Christ.

This has pastoral consequences. Rhetorically, the Bishop asks ‘If on this subject of sexuality the traditionalists are ultimately right and those who advocate the acceptance of stable and faithful gay relationships are wrong what will their sin be?  That in a world of such little love two people sought to express a love that no other relationship could offer them? ‘ Unfortunately no – actually their sin would be that they had acted in a way which Scripture specifically says will exclude a person from the Kingdom of Heaven (1 Corinthians 6:9) and, tragically, they would have had the Church’s encouragement or at least toleration.

But what is particularly arresting about the Bishop of Liverpool’s address is its scope. It presents a vision which does not stop at the boundaries of his own diocese. His plea is ‘that the Church of England and the Anglican Communion must allow a variety of ethical views on the subject as in this Diocese we do’ and he adds ‘This is I believe the next chapter to be written in the Church of England and the Anglican Communion.  It is the chapter that is already being written in our Partnership in Mission with the Diocese of Virginia and with the Diocese of Akure in Nigeria.’

A partnership with this aim constitutes a serious challenge to the Church of Nigeria in particular and the GAFCON Primates as a whole who have as a matter of principle withdrawn from sharing ‘the same cup of salvation’ at Primate’s Meetings with those Primates who are sponsoring sexual immorality. It illustrates the subtle reality of the way that false teaching spreads; an evangelical bishop who has learned to accommodate himself to the secular pressures of England nonetheless retains a certain credibility with fellow evangelicals in Africa and then seeks to present partnership as collusion with his compromise.

In this light we see the wisdom of clause 13 of the GAFCON Jerusalem Declaration which affirmed the need to break communion with those who deny the orthodox faith in word or deed. The commentary on this clause (Being Faithful, p64) calls for action which is precisely the opposite of James Jones’ strategy for the Communion when it states ’there is a moral obligation to reject any teaching that denies or undermines the authority of God as revealed in the Scriptures, to expose its falsity and to break fellowship with those who promote it (Ephesians 5:11, Titus 3:10).’

James Jones’ address today not only marks a further stage of the Church of England’s long drift from orthodox faith, but also serves as yet another warning sign that the Lambeth led Covenant process is a false hope, not least because the internal stresses created by the moral and doctrinal incoherence of the Church of England mean that it has a vested interest in encouraging the rest of the Communion to adopt a similar pluralism. Much more promising is the potential of the GAFCON movement which has restored the Reformers’ high doctrine of Scripture to its central place in Anglican ecclesiology. Article XIX affirms the treatment for Liverpool’s muddy waters: ‘The visible Church of Christ is a congregation of faithful men, in the which the pure Word of God is preached, and the sacraments be duly ministered according to Christ’s ordinance in all those things that of necessity are requisite to the same.’

Charles Raven