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Friday, March 14 , 2008
"Don't you know
that you yourselves are God's temple and that God's Spirit lives in
you?"
1 Corinthians 3:16 NIV
- A
Message from Bishop Anderson
-
Deposition
Votes Failed to Achieve Canonically Required Majority
-
Former Quincy Bishop Charged
-
Communique from GAFCON leadership meeting
-
Lambeth Invitations Reviewed
- ACN
Southeastern Convocation
________________________________________
Beloved in Christ,
The situation in the
Episcopal Church is very complex and not apt to be sorted out neatly and
cleanly for some time. It is clear to those who are willing to look that
the leadership of TEC has left the historic Christian faith in pursuit of a
new religion, called Anglican, but with the contents changed. It sees Jesus
as a religious figure, a way to find God, but not as Jesus himself put it,
"...the Way, and the Truth and the Life..." The attack on historic
Christian beliefs within TEC began with undermining confidence in Holy
Scripture and challenging its authority as described, for example, in II
Tim 3:16. The second line of attack has been on Jesus-who he is and what he
has done, including his sacrificial atonement itself. A third attack has
been the spiritual version of the 1970's book, I'm OK, You're OK, by Thomas
A. Harris. If we would believe the premise of the spiritual version of
this, who are we to "judge" the wrongdoing of others and their breach of
core doctrines of Christianity? If we are all OK then there is no sin
(except continuing to reject this new progressivism). With no sin, there is
no need for Atonement and no need for a Savior, for after all "I'm OK,
You're OK". In order to arrive at this foolish and incorrect assessment it
is necessary to "reinterpret" or "deconstruct" Holy Scripture, otherwise
many verses in the Bible would create a problem, such as "For all have
sinned and fall short of the Glory of God." (Rom 3:23)
Within the "progressive"
movement, which many of us usually call liberal or revisionist, the TEC
leadership is intent on using every resource available to woo or coerce and
to invite or threaten the remaining orthodox Episcopalians to fall into
line. If you have a bishop who isn't persecuting you at the moment, the
natural tendency for many orthodox Episcopalians is to keep the head down,
try and not be noticed, say your prayers and stay out of the line of fire.
This is a formula for short term safety and long term annihilation. TEC is
a train going somewhere you don't want to go, and you don't want to find
out by staying on until the final stop. Spiritually, the cost of staying on
to the final destination could cost you your faith, your relationship with
God and everything else that is of primary importance. This earthly segment
of our eternal life has eternal consequences, and I fear for and pray for
those who are trapped for various reasons.
For some in TEC the
immediate cost of realigning to an orthodox portion of global Anglicanism
seems way too high. I visited a little church that had just enlarged their
property; they had bought and paid for everything themselves. They had
painted it, carpeted it, roofed it, and used it, and it was their home. The
bishop of that diocese says it's his, not theirs. If they want to leave,
put the keys on the table and get out. They could do this and start over
worshipping in a school perhaps, but for a very small congregation that
also might break the congregation into such small pieces that nothing
survives. In many of these cases the cost to defend law suits brought by
the bishop and the national Episcopal Church are many times greater than
the value of the property-to buy or sell it-and the small congregation
simply doesn't have the financial resources to fight. Some are walking away
and starting over, some are leaving with the property and trying hard to
finance the litigation brought against them, and many are caught and feel
trapped.
In parishes throughout
TEC, there are individuals who know that things aren't right and can tell
that the false teaching of TEC's "progressives" are working their way into
what is preached and taught, but the problem is where to go. Many small
towns in America only have one Episcopal church. They can leave Anglicanism
and go to a Lutheran, Methodist, Presbyterian, Congregational or other
flavor mainline church, but the same problems in TEC are generally found
there also. Some leave TEC and opt for evangelical churches. Others go to
Roman Catholic Churches, and some go to the Eastern Orthodox. If there are
enough people who are looking for an Anglican alternative, a small home
church can be formed and led by a lay person or available Anglican clergy.
Many people, however, are staying in TEC because they are older, more
frail, and don't have options they can readily turn to, and some are just
staying home.
The intent of TEC to use
its resources is far reaching. The Executive Council of TEC has approved
using $500,000 of income from trust funds for litigation and harassment of
the orthodox, and especially to be used against Bishop John-David Schofield,
Bishop Robert Duncan and Bishop Jack Iker. This week the House of Bishops
attempted to depose Bishop Schofield and retired Bishop Bill Cox. At the
same time they are preparing to try several orthodox bishops, including
retired Bishop Edward MacBurney (Quincy) for the canonical crime of
ministering to one of the Southern Cone Anglican parishes in the "territory"
of the Diocese of San Diego. We have learned that Presiding Bishop Jefforts
Schori intends to try to depose Bishop Duncan in May, before Lambeth, even
though the three senior members of the House of Bishops did not agree with
her proposal to inhibit him for abandonment of communion. We should know
more about this soon, but the clear message is fear and terror. If you try
and leave they will still come after you. If you try and hold onto the
property that is yours, they will sue you and keep you in court until your
funds for defense run out.
With other sources of
funds they are working the field, "visiting" primates and bishops who have
a desperate need for funding for their ministries and handing them the keys
to brand new Land Rover SUVs. They appear to be working with the Anglican
Communion Office staff, Lambeth Palace staff and the Archbishop of
Canterbury himself to strengthen TEC's position and divide the conservative
orthodox.
Within the conservative
orthodox in the USA there are those who either have separated from TEC
(often at significant cost) or are in the planning stage of doing so.
Others are not quite there, but are evaluating their options about leaving.
There are those, however, for whom the emotional and cultural and perhaps,
some would argue, spiritual tie to Canterbury is so great that even though
there is the equivalent of spiritual abuse coming from the father, the
children are trying to decide whether it is better to leave and stop the
abuse or to stay, maintain the relationship, and continue to be abused.
Some orthodox in the USA and perhaps in the UK are struggling with this
decision. A simple answer is to stay and put a stop to the abuse, but alas,
that is what the Communion and specifically the Global South primates have
been trying to do since the 1998 Lambeth Conference, and although
significant progress has been made, the tide of battle has not been turned
yet.
The realignment that is
afoot in the United States and Canada is based on the most basic doctrines
of Christianity, and compromise with heresy and apostasy is not an
acceptable alternative. In other areas of the Communion the issues and the
divide may not be as crystal clear as it is in the USA. This pernicious
false gospel of theological revisionism and cultural adaptation is
nevertheless spreading throughout global Anglicanism; Western European and
Western hemisphere churches are heavily impacted. It is true, however, that
exceptions do exist: the Anglican Communion Network in the USA, groups in
Canada, and missionary outreaches of Rwanda, Nigeria, Kenya, Uganda, and
the Province of the Southern Cone, and in these can be found the faith
once delivered to the Saints.
The question remains,
however, what of the many people who are orthodox and are still in TEC and
the Church of England? How can the witness and work of the orthodox
provinces change the Anglican Communion in such a way that real help comes
to those who presently have no viable options? If we look at the tools
available, the so-called Instruments of Unity are not uniformly helpful.
The leadership of the Archbishop of Canterbury has been concerned with
holding together a badly damaged Communion rather than fixing the
Communion. The Anglican Consultative Council (ACC) receives more than a
fourth of its funding from TEC, and Presiding Bishop Jefferts Schori, as a
member of the Primates Standing Committee, also sits on the ACC Standing
Committee. Needless to say, the ACC on a good day is not helpful to
reforming and refining the Communion, and on a bad day it works in concert
with the aims of TEC. The third Instrument of Unity is the Primates,
meeting together. Some good work has come from this body, but in each case
the Archbishop of Canterbury has been able to summarize the issues, shape
the remit to a body charged with doing something, massage the reports
coming forth, and manipulate the way the Primates do or don't address these
as they meet together.
Unless the ABC repents
of his direction and style and becomes more concerned about the deep issues
of "who is Jesus" and what obedient moral discipleship means, there is
little likelihood that the Anglican Communion can proceed in its
established form. If the future is uncertain, some questions need to be
asked before the day of crisis is fully upon us, and one of those questions
is "What is the essence of Anglicanism/Anglican Christianity and what does
it look like if Canterbury and England are not at the center?" As I ask the
question, I myself don't have the answer, but the time to begin asking the
question has arrived, even as we beseech our Lord Jesus to honor and
accomplish his prayer that all might be one.
Blessings and Peace in
Christ Jesus,
The Rt. Rev. David C.
Anderson, Sr.
President, The American Anglican Council
___________________________________
Deposition Votes
Failed to Achieve Canonically Required Majority
Source:
The Living Church
Date: March 14, 2008
By: The Rev. George
Conger and Steve Waring
Slightly more than
one-third of all bishops eligible voted to depose bishops John-David
Schofield and William J. Cox during the House of Bishops' spring retreat,
far fewer than the 51 percent required by the canons.
The exact number is impossible to know, because both resolutions were
approved by voice vote. Only 131 bishops registered for the meeting March
7-12 at Camp Allen, and at least 15 of them left before the business session
began on Wednesday. There were 294 members of the House of Bishops entitled
to vote on March 12.
When questioned about canonical inconsistencies during a telephone press
conference at the conclusion of the meeting, Bishop Michael Curry of North
Carolina said the bishops had relied on advice provided to them by canonical
experts, and did not examine canonical procedure during plenary debate prior
to the votes to depose bishops Schofield and Cox.
Bishop Schofield was consecrated Bishop of San Joaquin in 1989. Last
December, he presided over a diocesan convention at which clergy and lay
delegates voted overwhelmingly to leave The Episcopal Church and affiliate
with the Anglican Church of the Southern Cone. Bishop Cox was consecrated
Bishop Suffragan of Maryland in 1972. He resigned in 1980, later serving as
Assisting Bishop of Oklahoma from 1980 to 1988. In 2005, Bishop Cox ordained
two priests and a deacon at Christ Church, Overland Park, Kan. Christ Church
affiliated with the Anglican Church of Uganda after purchasing its property
from the Diocese of Kansas.
Both bishops were charged with abandonment of communion. The procedure for
deposing a bishop under this charge is specified in Title IV, canon 9,
sections 1-2. The canon stipulates that the vote requires "a majority of the
whole number of bishops entitled to vote," not merely a majority of those
present. At least a dozen bishops voted either not to depose Bishop
Schofield or to abstain, according to several bishops. The number voting in
favor of deposing Bishop Cox was reportedly slightly larger than the number
in favor of deposing Bishop Schofield.
Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori was questioned about the history
of the canonical proceedings against Bishop Cox. At first she said during
the press conference that she had not sought the canonically required
consent of the three senior bishops of the church for permission to inhibit
Bishop Cox pending his trial. However Title IV, Canon 9, sections 1-2 do not
describe a procedure for deposing a bishop who has not first been inhibited.
Consent Never Sought
Later in the press
conference, Bishop Jefferts Schori clarified and extended her remarks,
saying she had been "unable to get the consent of the three senior bishops
last spring. That's why we didn't bring it to the September meeting" of the
House of Bishops. One of the three senior bishops with jurisdiction
confirmed to The Living Church that his consent to inhibit Bishop Cox was
never sought.
In 2007, Bishop Cox sent a written letter to Bishop Jefferts Schori,
announcing his resignation from the House of Bishops. Since he was already
retired, he did not have jurisdiction, and therefore unlike Bishop
Schofield, his resignation did not require consent from a majority of the
House of Bishops. A trial of the 88-year-old retired bishop was not
mandatory.
Bishop Cox also does not appear to have been granted due process with
respect to a speedy trial. Once the disciplinary review committee formally
certifies that a bishop has abandoned communion, the canons state "it shall
be the duty of the Presiding Bishop to present the matter to the House of
Bishops at the next regular or special meeting of the house." The review
committee provided certification to Bishop Jefferts Schori on May 29, 2007.
His case should have been heard during the fall meeting in New Orleans last
September. When asked about the apparent inconsistency, Bishop Jefferts
Schori said initially she did not include Bishop Cox's case on the agenda
for the New Orleans meeting "due to the press of business."
Title IV, canon 9, section 1 requires the Presiding Bishop to inform the
accused bishop "forthwith," in other words immediately, after the review
committee has provided a certificate of abandonment, but Bishop Jefferts
Schori did not write to Bishop Cox until Jan. 8, 2008, more than seven
months afterward.
The two-hour business session at which the deposition votes were taken ran
slightly longer than originally scheduled. First a resolution was read
followed by prayer from the chaplain. A period of silence followed the
prayer. After the silence was broken, the bishops discussed the resolution
in small table groups followed by plenary discussion. When it appeared that
everyone who wanted to speak had done so, the voice vote was taken. Each
resolution was read and voted on separately.
__________________________________
Former Quincy
Bishop Charged
Source: Diocese of
Quincy Press Release
(via email)
Date:
March 13, 2008
Bishop Edward MacBurney,
bishop retired of the Diocese of Quincy, has been formally charged with
canonical violations by the Episcopal Church in the United States of
America. These charges stem from events occurring in June, 2007 when Bishop
MacBurney was invited to make a pastoral visit to a non-Episcopal church in
San Diego, California. MacBurney, 80 years old, retired from his position
as a diocesan bishop in 1994, but as a bishop in good standing still
actively ministers to churches throughout the country and also in other
parts of the Anglican Communion.
The basis of the charges
against MacBurney relate to the allegation that he did not receive
permission to perform liturgical rites from the sitting Episcopal diocesan
bishop in San Diego. Even though the church MacBurney visited had severed
ties with the Episcopal Church in the United States and had re-affiliated
with the Anglican Bishop of Argentina, a primate of the worldwide Anglican
Communion, the charges allege that MacBurney impermissibly crossed Diocesan
boundaries.
Although MacBurney is
retired, he remains a member of the Episcopal House of Bishops with seat and
voice. The essence of the charge is the claim that MacBurney is prohibited
from ministering within the geographical territory of another Episcopal
diocese even if the church to which he ministers is no longer affiliated
with the Episcopal Church. Attorneys for MacBurney state that the charges
raise the theoretical question as to whether an Episcopal bishop exercises
total control over a certain geographical territory or whether a Bishop
merely exercises control over the Episcopal churches within that territory.
The Episcopal Church has suffered internal turmoil for a number of years and
it has been common practice for certain retired bishops to minister to
parishes experiencing ideological differences from their bishops.
The Rt. Rev. Keith L.
Ackerman, current Bishop of Quincy, when asked said, "We support Bishop
MacBurney fully in his willingness to provide pastoral care for this non-
Episcopal Church parish in California. Because of his love for people and
his commitment to serve and uphold the Gospel, Bishop MacBurney acted in
good faith with the permission of Archbishop Venables, Bishop of Argentina
and Primate of the Southern Cone. Bishop MacBurney is a loving man and is
not the kind of man who would refuse to respond to the needs of God's people
in any part of the world."
__________________________________
Communique from
GAFCON leadership meeting
Source:
Church of Nigeria
Date: March 13, 2008
We met in England as the
leadership team of the Global Anglican Future Conference and Jerusalem
Pilgrimage from March 10-12, 2008 and were encouraged by the support and
enthusiasm of bishops, clergy and lay leaders around the Anglican Communion
who have welcomed GAFCON and expressed their desire to attend.
We affirmed that the
goals of GAFCON are to:
1. Provide an
opportunity for fellowship to continue to experience and proclaim the
transforming love of Christ.
2. Develop a renewed understanding of our identity as Anglican Christians
within our current context.
3. Prepare for an Anglican future in which the Gospel is uncompromised and
Christ-centered mission a top priority.
We received reports from
our various task forces involved in logistics support and program
development and are grateful for the remarkable progress already made. We
are confident that our time together in the Holy Land will be one of great
blessing for the wider Christian community, a positive witness of Jesus
Christ as Lord and Saviour and anticipation of our future as Anglican
Christians.
Archbishop Peter J.
Akinola
On behalf of the Leadership Team
12th March, 2008
__________________________________
Lambeth
Invitations Reviewed
Source:
Church of England Newspaper
Date:
Week of March 13, 2008
By George Conger
THE QUESTION of Lambeth Conference invitations will be reviewed by the
Archbishop of Canterbury's Windsor Continuation Group (WCG), sources
familiar with its deliberations tell The Church of England Newspaper.
Chartered last month by
the Archbishop of Canterbury Dr Rowan Williams, the WCG will take a second
look at the decision not to extend invitations to the African-consecrated
American bishops of Kenya, Uganda, Rwanda and Nigeria, and may also discuss
the question of Bishop Gene Robinson of New Hampshire's non-invitation. Were
Dr Williams to accept advice to broaden the Lambeth Conference invitation
list, "that would change everything," one global south leader told CEN, and
prevent Lambeth from being a "bust."
Dr Williams' decision
not to invite Bishop Martyn Minns of Cana and Bishop Chuck Murphy of the
AMiA and their suffragans contributed to the decision by the Churches of
Nigeria and Rwanda to decline the invitation to attend Lambeth. The
Archbishop of Kenya has announced that he will not attend the July 16-Aug 3
conference after his two suffragans, Bishops Bill Atwood and Bill Murdoch,
were overlooked by Lambeth. The Kenyan House of Bishops meets later this
spring and will review its position at that time, sources in the Kenyan
church tell CEN.
At its New Orleans
meeting last year, the US House of Bishops asked Presiding Bishop Katharine
Jefferts Schori to treat with Dr Williams, and find a way to bring Bishop
Robinson to Lambeth. Acting on behalf of the presiding bishop, the bishops
of Northern Indiana, Vermont and Wyoming spoke with Dr Williams' aide, Mr
Chris Smith and ACC Secretary General Canon Kenneth Kearon on five
occasions. The three reported they had sought to find a way for Bishop
Robinson to "have the opportunity to pray with other bishops at Lambeth," to
have an opportunity to "build relationships," and that he be given a "voice
at the table" during the discussions "on human sexuality." Their approach
was unsuccessful and they reported that a "full invitation is not possible,"
for the New Hampshire bishop. Nor would he be able to participate in the
bishops' retreat or study groups.
While he could not be an
"observer" at Lambeth, he was offered the opportunity by the organizing
committee to be part of the Lambeth Marketplace--a venue where vendors
historically displayed their wares. Bishop Robinson told the House of
Bishops that he had declined the invitation to set up a stall amongst the
haberdashers, prefacing his remarks by saying he was not "whining", but the
marketplace was a "non-offer" already available to him. The controversy had
left him "dismayed and sick hearted," he said. However, he would go
independently of the invitation process as he had a duty to the children. "I
will go to Lambeth remembering the 100 or so twenty- something's I met in
Hong Kong this fall, who meet every Sunday afternoon to worship and sing
God's praise in a secret catacomb of safety - because they can't be gay and
Christian in their own churches. I will be taking them to Lambeth with me,"
he said.
The secretary to the
Windsor Continuation Group, Canon Gregory Cameron declined to confirm or
deny its agenda, telling the CEN that it had "decided not to make their work
more public" at this stage of the proceedings.
The WCG met last week in
London, spending March 4 with the ACC-Primates Joint Standing Committee and
March 5 with Dr Williams. Sources present at the joint standing committee
meeting with the WCG note the issue of invitations was not raised. Canon
James Rosenthal of the ACC noted that while he could not speak to the
invitations issue, Dr Williams was doing everything in his power to see that
as many bishops as possible could come to Lambeth. Sources familiar with the
deliberations of the WCG report the group will meet two more times and offer
its recommendations to Dr Williams. The public brief of the group, which is
chaired by the former Presiding Bishop of Jerusalem and the Middle East,
Bishop Clive Handford, is to "contribute to the shared discernment of the
bishops in strengthening the life and identity of the Anglican Communion."
Finding a way of
bringing those boycotting the Conference back into the life of the Communion
is a priority, sources tell CEN, and that will include looking once again at
the invitation question. While the WCG may recommend several courses of
action to address the dysfunction within the Communion, the question of ‘who
comes to Lambeth?' is for Dr Williams alone to decide, one global south
primate noted.
______________________________
ACN Southeastern
Convocation
Join the Anglican
Communion Network's (ACN) Southeastern Convocation for its upcoming
conference "Common Cause: Working Together in Mission and Ministry" April
17-19 at Holy Cross Anglican Church in Loganville, GA ($90). Bishop Robert
Duncan, ACN and Common Cause Moderator, will begin the conference Thursday
evening by sharing the broad vision of the Common Cause Partnership followed
by Jenny Noyes, ACN Director of Evangelism, sharing testimonies of grass
roots cooperation among the Common Cause Anglicans.
On Friday morning,
Bishops Alex Dickson and David Anderson will join other Common Cause leaders
in a panel discussion on the work that God is doing in raising up Common
Cause "clusters"(churches that can effectively partner together at local
levels) throughout the country. The workshops and networking time will help
equip you with ministry tools to play your part in rebuilding His Kingdom
through vibrant Anglican churches.
The Rev. Tom Herrick,
Executive Director of the Titus Institute, will present a pre-conference
training day on church planting ($85) on Thursday from 8:30 to 4:30.
Click here for all the conference details and to register. Discounts
available for groups of three or more for the pre-conference and for
students/seminarians for both conferences.
The Rev. Jim McCaslin,
Dean of the Southeastern Convocation, invites you to join him at this
conference for 'the calling of God to us seems clear: Rebuild my Church from
the bottom up working together in mission and ministry because the Cause
that I am giving you in Common is taking the saving Good News of Jesus to a
lost and hurting world.' |