Beloved in Christ,
At this time of year one is
prone to think back over the past year: reflecting on what has and
hasn't happened, on what we did and didn't do, and how that can help
shape our decisions for the next year.
Intrinsic to this is
discussing it all with God and confessing the things done that
shouldn't have been done, and those things undone that should have
been done, and asking the Lord to forgive our feeble attempts at
obedience. If we do not discuss our year's work with the Lord, it
will not be truly Christian work or ministry.
This last year has been an
epic battle within the Anglican Communion. A year ago the American
Anglican Council was making preparations for our presence and
ministry at the Dar es Salaam (DeS) Primates' Meeting that was held
in February. At the last three Primates' Meetings the AAC has
arranged to be nearby for news gathering, communication, document
gathering and sharing, and the deployment of trained volunteers to
assist with any requests for informational materials. The AAC is
uniquely structured to put such teams in the field, drawing from our
own domestic volunteers in the USA and also turning to missional
partners globally to bring together a cross-cultural group that can
analyze, report, counsel and advise as occasion arises. In DeS we
also provided photos to news organizations on several continents.
Always there are high hopes
that the right people would come together as leaders and do the
right thing. Our default setting seems to be on HOPE, thinking that
surely next time the powers at the top will actually do what a
reasonable Anglican would pray that they do.
When the Panel of Reference
(POR) was created, it could have done so much to prevent the rupture
within the Communion, but they were given no funding, little
encouragement, and sparse opportunity to meet and complete. Dr.
Williams may have thought (and I shall for the moment give him the
advantage of the doubt) that they could produce something useful
when he set them up, or else WHY would he had done so?
Subsequent decisions by the
Palace however, guaranteed the POR's inability to forcefully address
the requests and problems because they were not resourced and not
put under a time schedule to produce results - results that would be
enforceable in some substantive way. A less optimistic view would be
that Dr. Williams knew this all along and it was designed as yard
art, to look like he was really trying but guaranteed to fail.
Perhaps only Dr. Williams and God know which view, the optimistic or
the other, is true. Someday all will know for certain, though by
then it may not matter.
Dr. Williams came to believe
that a mystical group called the "Windsor bishops" was the key to
moving the Anglican Communion forward. He appeared willing to
sacrifice the troubling revisionists and the most orthodox and go
with a minimalist group which could find agreement in the Windsor
Report (however interpreted and described). He forced through the
DeS Primates' Meeting a Communique which had several dubious parts,
including a belief that TEC might move toward the center if given
encouragement. It gave TEC until September 30 to decide, a date
which came and went. The AAC documented TEC's lack of compliance
during that seven month period, and yet even with this documentation
in hand, Dr. Williams could not bring himself to say forthrightly
that TEC had failed the Communique test and would be disciplined.
Truly, in Dr. Williams mind, the missionary rescues in the USA by
overseas Provinces seem to be more objectionable than the issues
behind such actions; in his view, "Border Crossings" are worse than
pantheism, syncretism, Bible editing, and the homosexual agenda
promoted by the revisionist TEC leadership.
Perhaps it is true that one
definition of insanity is to keep doing the same things and expect a
different outcome, but we do keep expecting someone to do the right
thing. Although we had hoped that it would be Canterbury who would
step forward as the "father in God" of the entire Communion, it is
again the Primates connected to the Global South who, full of
conviction and the truth of the Gospel, have courageously filled the
leadership vacuum.
Orthodox Primates with
other leading bishops from across the globe are inviting fellow
Bishops, senior clergy and laity from every province of the Anglican
Communion to a unique eight-day event in Jerusalem, to be known as
the Global Anglican Future Conference (GAFCON) 2008. This GAFCON
event, which was agreed upon at a meeting of Primates in Nairobi a
few weeks ago, will give the orthodox Anglicans from around the
world the opportunity to gather, to learn, to take counsel together
and to go forward equipped to proclaim the Gospel of Christ to a
world sitting in the shadow of unbelief. The gathering will be in
the form of a pilgrimage back to the roots of the Church's faith:
thus this journey begins with a pilgrimage.
The first thing that springs
to my mind is the planning necessary to accommodate all the people
who will want to come. I remember the summer of 2003 when Canon
David Roseberry and I had planned a small gathering of church
leaders at his church near Dallas, to take place after the General
Convention in Minneapolis and to be jointly hosted by Christ Church,
Plano, and the American Anglican Council. As people heard of the
gathering, more wanted to come, so we upped our estimated attendance
several times. Finally, as a number of unfaithful and unholy
decisions were made by the General Convention of TEC, the rallying
cry of the orthodox became, "See you in Plano," and David Roseberry
and I had to begin to think really big. Hurting people who wanted to
be hopeful came, bishops, priests and deacons and laity came, over
2000 in all. Over 800 clergy were vested in the great procession in
the Eucharist. A note of encouragement from Cardinal Ratzinger,
later to become Pope Benedict, was read by Bishop Duncan of
Pittsburgh. Plano became a term and Plano II and Plano West happened
as people took the hope and enthusiasm back home to their areas. The
relentless grinding down of the orthodox members by the Episcopal
Church, the subsequent departures and planned departures, the law
suits and litigation, the depositions and deceit of TEC have all
taken their toll, and many of our faithful Anglicans in North
America are hungry and hopeful.
Could Jerusalem 08 (GAFCON)
be more than a simple gathering of the faithful? Might this meeting
be on a global scale what Plano was in the USA: the crystallization
of the future; the future taking form and substance in our midst,
and bringing us forward into a reality shaped and formed by the Holy
Spirit of God? What might God do with Jerusalem 08 and GAFCON?
Have a Holy New Year, and
open your heart and soul for all the blessings that God has for you.
The Rt. Rev. David C.
Anderson, Sr.
President & CEO
American Anglican Council