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Texas Diocese facing multi-million lawsuit: CEN 5.29.09 May 29, 2009

Posted by geoconger in Abuse, Church of England Newspaper, Texas.
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The Diocese of Texas is a defendant in a lawsuit seeking £28 million in damages for allegedly covering up the molestation of school boys by an Episcopal priest.

In extracts of a transcript from a 2008 pre-trial hearing printed in the Houston Press, the former chaplain of St. Stephen’s Episcopal School in Austin, Texas, the Rev James Tucker is accused of having molested students at the boarding school that caters to Texas’s upper classes.

After allegations of abuse were made against Mr Tucker, who served as chaplain to the boy’s school from 1958 to 1968, the Diocese of Texas transferred him to another school in the diocese, and then assigned him to St James’ Episcopal Church and School in Austin, which served the diocese’s black community. Mr Tucker retired in 1994 but was deposed by the diocese in 2008.

Read it all in The Church of England Newspaper.

Texas Diocese facing multi-million lawsuit

Bomb blast kills two at Nepal church: CEN 5.29.09 May 29, 2009

Posted by geoconger in Church of England Newspaper, Nepal, Politics, Terrorism.
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A bomb blast at a Roman Catholic Church in Nepal has killed two and wounded a dozen more.

The May 23 attack on the Church of the Assumption in Lalitpur, three miles south of the capital Kathmandu, comes amidst growing political instability in Nepal. On May 4, Prime Minister Pushpa Kamal Dahal, who is also known by his guerilla nom de guerre “Prachanda” or “fierce”, resigned after President Ram Baran Yaday refused to relieve army chief of staff General Rookmangud Katawal.

The Maoists refused to endorse a replacement and a leader of the Communist UML party, Madhay Kumar Nepal was elected Prime Minister, hours after the attack on the Catholic Church.

The Rev Normal Beale, priest in charge of the Church of Christ Our Peace in Phnom Penh, Cambodia a former missionary and Dean of the Anglican Church in Nepal told The Church of England Newspaper: “We are shocked and saddened by the violence used against Christians while worshipping in Nepal this morning. We deplore the use of terror and the targeting of innocent civilians in this atrocity.”

Read it all in The Church of England Newspaper.

Bomb blast kills two at Nepal church

Breakaway church leader indicted: CEN 5.29.09 May 29, 2009

Posted by geoconger in Church of England Newspaper, Colorado, Property Litigation.
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The leader of Colorado’s largest breakaway congregation, the Rev Donald Armstrong has been indicted on charges of misappropriation of church funds by a Colorado Springs grand jury.

On May 21, Mr Armstrong was briefly held at the El Paso County Criminal Justice Center and released after posting a $20,000 bond. Details of the 20-count indictment were not released by the police, but come in the wake of a bitter split between Grace Church & St Stephens and the Diocese of Colorado.

Mr Armstrong told local reporters after his release that he was confident he would be exonerated. “I will, after years of unbridled false accusations, have my day in court, so this is a good step in that direction,” he said.

Read it all in The Church of England Newspaper.

Breakaway church leader indicted

Allegations fly in e-mail row: CEN 5.27.09 May 29, 2009

Posted by geoconger in Church of England Newspaper, Free Speech, Religion Reporting, The Episcopal Church.
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A “dirty tricks” campaign has blown up in the faces of liberal activists in the Episcopal Church, as the publication of purloined e-mails has led to allegations of “conduct unbecoming a member of the clergy” being lodged against the leader of the gay-pressure group Integrity and a member of the Episcopal Church’s Executive Council.

Bishops associated with the Anglican Communion Institute (ACI) have asked the bishops of Los Angeles and Delaware to look in to the conduct of the Rev Susan Russell and the Rev Canon Mark Harris for having surreptitiously obtained and then posting on their blogs the text of private correspondence exchanged among the ACI and its attorney.

A request has also been made to Bishop John Chane of Washington to review the actions of one of his staffers in the anti-ACI campaign. The dispute centres around e-mails published by Canon Harris and Ms Russell though written and exchanged by the ACI leadership on the crafting of a position paper entitled the “Bishops’ Statement on the Polity of the Episcopal Church”, released last month by the ACI and subsequently endorsed by 14 bishops.

Priests “publishing the private e-mails of bishops is a matter of grave pastoral disorder,” ACI member the Very Rev Philip Turner, former Dean of the Berkeley Divinity School, at Yale charged. However, writing on the Integrity blog website, Ms Russell applauded the “outing” of the ACI, saying the Bishops’ Statement was an “unprecedented power grab by anti-gay bishops” that should be made known to the wider church.

The ACI case will likely test the free speech limits of clergy blogs and amateur church news gathering. The explosive growth of the internet, which has seen many clergy turn to blogging in recent years, has not been matched with a code of conduct that draws the line between libel, copyright theft, defamation and aggressive reporting with a priest’s obligation to engage in moral and civil conduct.

Read it all in The Church of England Newspaper.

Allegations fly in e-mail row

California bans gay ‘marriage’: CEN 5.27.09 May 29, 2009

Posted by geoconger in California, Church of England Newspaper, Human Sexuality --- The gay issue, Los Angeles.
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The California Supreme Court has upheld Proposition 8, the state’s referendum banning “gay marriage.” By a vote of 6-1 the court held that the November 2008 referendum which amended the state constitution to say that “only marriage between a man and a woman is valid and recognized in California” did not violate the state’s constitution.

The decision comes as a major blow to gay activists as California becomes the first US state to pull back from legalizing same-sex marriage.

In May 2008 the state supreme court ruled in a 4-3 vote that the state must offer same-sex marriage alongside traditional marriage. Opponents of the ruling responded with a petition drive seeking to place the matter before the voters. By a margin of 52 to 48 per cent California voters amended the state constitution adding a clause that said “only marriage between a man and a woman is valid and recognized in California.”

Gay political action groups, along with other civil rights organizations as well as the Episcopal Bishops of Los Angeles and California filed several lawsuits to overturn Proposition 8. The Episcopal bishops’ lawsuit argued that Proposition 8 unlawfully altered the California Constitution by altering fundamental constitutional principles—a power granted only to the legislature and not to ballot initiatives.

Read it all in The Church of England Newspaper.

California bans gay ‘marriage’

3 Bishops, ACI Call for Email Investigation: TLC 5.27.09 May 28, 2009

Posted by geoconger in Free Speech, Living Church, Religion Reporting, The Episcopal Church.
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First published in The Living Church.

Allegations of conduct unbecoming a member of the clergy will be lodged by three bishops against a member of the national Executive Council and the president of Integrity in response to the misappropriation and publication of private correspondence.

Bishops John Howe of Central Florida, Mark Lawrence of South Carolina, and D. Bruce MacPherson of Western Louisiana, along with other leaders of the Anglican Communion Institute (ACI), are concerned about a possible “dirty tricks” campaign waged against the ACI by the Rev. Canon Mark Harris, the Rev. Susan Russell, and an unidentified member on the staff at the Diocese of Washington.

Priests “publishing the private emails of bishops is a matter of grave pastoral disorder,” said the Very Rev. Philip Turner, former dean of Berkeley Divinity School at Yale and a member of the ACI. The publication of the correspondence also may violate laws concerning attorney-client privilege, Bishop MacPherson said.

The dispute involves the misappropriation of emails and a draft of an ACI paper titled “Bishops’ Statement on the Polity of The Episcopal Church.” Most of the private correspondence contained a standard legal disclaimer noting that the information was privileged and intended solely for those to whom it was addressed.

On April 21 Canon Harris published snippets from the bishops’ statement and 13 email messages exchanged among the ACI leaders and their lawyer. The following day, Ms. Russell published the bishops’ statement along with extracts from the emails and the Washington Blade, a secular gay-interest newspaper, published an expurgated version of the email exchange.

“Since when do we have priests publishing the private correspondence of bishops to each other?” Bishop Howe asked.

Writing on an internet blog maintained by Integrity Ms. Russell applauded the “outing” of the ACI because she said it was advocating an “unprecedented power grab by anti-gay bishops.”

A spokesman for the ACI said the organization did not contemplate pursuing civil or criminal remedies for the misappropriation of the private documents. One of the bishops said that formal ecclesiastical charges have not been preferred against either Ms. Russell or Canon Harris, but the matter has been brought to the attention of Bishop J. Jon Bruno of Los Angeles, which is where Ms. Russell is canonically resident, and the Bishop of Delaware Wayne Wright, where Canon Harris resides.

Bishop MacPherson said it was a sad commentary of the current state of the church that such correspondence would be published, but he was more distressed by the damage the leaked information had done to the point the 14 bishops who signed the statement were trying to make.

“My prayer is that we will be able to find our way back as a church to following the constitution and canons that have been handed down to us,” he said. “The current leadership is moving away in another direction.”

Sri Lanka Bishop pleads for Tamils to be treated with dignity: CEN 5.22.09 p 7. May 26, 2009

Posted by geoconger in Arms Control/Defense/Peace Issues, Church of Ceylon, Church of England Newspaper.
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The Bishop of Colombo has called upon his government not to treat all Tamils as potential terrorists, but to affirm their “rights and dignity” as citizens of Sri Lanka.

In a statement published in Sri Lanka’s national newspapers, Bishop Duleep de Chickera has also urged the government to take swift action to address the address the humanitarian crisis in Northern and Eastern Ceylon left in the wake of the 26 year long civil war between the government and the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), or Tamil Tigers.

On May 18 the BBC reported the Sri Lankan army had killed the leader of the Tamil Tigers, Velupillai Prabhakaran. The government reported that over 200 Tamils, including Prabhakaran and seven other senior Tamil Tiger leaders, were killed in a “final battle” between rebels and government troops. The war was now over, the government’s information ministry said as the army had “liberated the entire country by completely liberating the north from the terrorists.”

On May 7, Bishop de Chickera urged the government to take the necessary steps to ensure that its military victory would be followed by a just and lasting peace. The hundreds of thousands of refugees “crushed and deprived for years” by war, should be treated humanely, he said.

“We require a visible shift from sympathy” for Tamil refugees from their status as the human flotsam of war towards their acceptance as fellow citizens, he said, which affirms “their rights and dignity as Sri Lankans.”

“If a lasting solution to our larger and more tragic conflict is ever to be reached we need to engage in two more crucial shifts,” Bishop de Chickera argued. The first is “to overcome the tendency to see ghosts of the LTTE in every Tamil. If not, an entire community will be held under surveillance for the rest of their lives, some of whom will inevitably be driven into the arms of the next Tamil militant resurgence.”

The second is for a “just and speedy political response to the grievances of the Tamil people,” the bishop said.

Mired in ethnic conflict since independence from Britain in 1948, the civil war began in 1983 and has led to the deaths of an estimated 70,000 civilians. According to a 2001 government survey, Sri Lanka’s main ethnic groups are the Sinhalese (82 percent), Tamil (9.4 percent), and Sri Lanka Moor (7.9 percent). In the wake of independence, the Sinhalese majority began to disenfranchise Tamils, who they charged had been favored by the British in the colonial era. In 1972 the country’s name was changed from Ceylon to Sri Lanka, Sinhala made the official language and Buddhism declared the nation’s primary religion.

Formed in 1976, the LTTE under the leadership of the charismatic Velupillai Prabhakaran began a campaign for a Tamil homeland in northern and eastern Sri Lanka, where the majority of Tamils reside. In August 2005, the assassination of Sri Lanka’s foreign minister, Lakshman Kadirgamar, intensified the conflict, and in 2008 a hard-line anti-LTTE government ended a Norwegian brokered ceasefire and began the military campaign that led to victory this week.

Sudan Church expels US missionary: CEN 5.22.09 p 7. May 26, 2009

Posted by geoconger in Church of England Newspaper, Episcopal Church of the Sudan, Human Sexuality --- The gay issue, Virginia.
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The Archbishop of Juba has expelled an American missionary for having claimed the Episcopal Church of the Sudan backed the Episcopal Church’s stance on gay blessings.

On May 13, the Diocese of Virginia reported that the Rev. Lauren Stanley’s comments to the January meeting of its diocesan synod “were deemed offensive” to the Episcopal Church of the Sudan.

“As a result,” Archbishop Daniel Deng of Juba, the Primate of the Sudan, requested that Ms Stanley “be withdrawn from that mission field permanently. Bishop Lee brought Lauren home in early March in response to that request.”

Virginia Bishop Peter Lee stated that Ms. Stanley had “served faithfully in the Diocese of Renk, Sudan, for nearly four years, receiving widespread support among her students and the local community” and as an advocate for the Church in the Sudan amongst parishes in the US and was currently seeking a new mission posting overseas.

Mary Ailes, an Anglican writer in Northern Virginia, reported that at the January Virginia synod meeting, a resolution affirming the blessing of same-sex unions was put forward that endorsed the “inherent integrity of and blessedness of” such “committed Christian relationships.”

Ms. Stanley, a lecturer at Renk Theological College endorsed the amendment, and discounted concerns raised by other delegates that the resolution would lead to strained relations with the diocese’s partners in the Sudan.  Ms. Stanley argued same-sex blessings in the US church were not problematic for the church in the Sudan.

While open to financial and administrative support from progressive Western dioceses, the Church of the Sudan has taken a dim view of the innovations in sexual ethics made by the Episcopal Church and Anglican Church of Canada.  The Sudanese House of Bishops has rejected gay bishops and blessings, and at the 2008 Lambeth Conference Archbishop Deng called upon New Hampshire Bishop Gene Robinson to resign.

Breakaway parish will not have to repay fees to Diocese: CEN 5.22.09 p 6. May 26, 2009

Posted by geoconger in Church of England Newspaper, Los Angeles, Property Litigation.
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A California court has rejected the bid by the Diocese of Los Angeles to recoup its legal costs from the wardens and vestry members of a breakaway parish that quit the Episcopal Church for the Province of Uganda.

On May 15, Orange County Superior Court Judge Thierry Colaw rejected the diocese’s motion to collect an estimated £4.5 million in attorney fees from the volunteer board. The procedural victory for the breakaway parish of St James in Newport Beach does not address the broader issues of ownership of the property or its case before the US Supreme Court, however, a win by the diocese would have effectively bankrupted the parish leaders, and would have served as a strong financial disincentive for secession for other parishes.

Today’s motion was a heavy-handed attempt by the Diocese, which has engaged in “scorched earth” litigation tactics against St. James Church for years, to recoup its attorneys’ fees, parish attorney Eric Sohlgren said.

In its motion for costs, the Diocese of Los Angeles argued the parish’s motion to strike off the complaint was “frivolous” and warranted the sanction of a fees award. The case began when the diocese brought suit against St. James and its vestry in September 2004 following its August secession from the Episcopal Church. St James, along with two other breakaway parishes, filed a motion to strike the diocese’s lawsuit under a California statute that provides for speedy evaluation of cases involving free speech rights.

The lower court granted the parishes’ motion to strike, but was overturned on appeal. In January the California Supreme Court upheld the appellate court’s ruling, and an appeal was lodged with the US Supreme Court in Washington.

At the May 15 hearing, Judge Colaw noted that while the special motion for review based on free speech rights had never been used in church property disputes, it was not “frivolous.” The initial case brought by the diocese in 2004 has yet to be argued before the court, and the next hearing is scheduled for September.

No gay marriage debate in Canada: CEN 5.22.09 p 6. May 26, 2009

Posted by geoconger in Anglican Church of Canada, Church of England Newspaper, Human Sexuality --- The gay issue.
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Gay marriage will not be on the agenda of the 2010 meeting of the Anglican Church of Canada’s General Synod, the church’s Council of General Synod (CoGS) has decided.

Meeting from May 8-10 in Mississauga, Ontario, CoGS—the church’s senior governing body between meetings of General Synod released a statement at the close of their meeting saying “this is not the time to ask General Synod to amend the marriage canon to allow for the marriage of same-sex couples.”

The 2007 General Synod asked CoGS to direct the Primate’s Theological Commission to consult with dioceses and parishes as to whether the blessing of same-sex unions was a “faithful, Spirit-led” development of Christian doctrine, and to address Scripture’s “witness to the integrity of every human person” and the concomitant question of the sanctity of human relationships.

Earlier this month the Primate’s Theological Commission released its Galilee Report, stating that it could not reach a consensus on the moral efficacy of same-sex blessings, and could not speak as one on this issue.

In March 2008, CoGS asked the church’s Faith, Worship and Ministry Committee to prepare “a theological rationale to allow for the marriage of all legally qualified persons.” Committee chairman Janet Marshall told CoGS they were unable to respond fully to the request as many on the committee were concerned they were being asked to support only one side of the debate.

In a communiqué released at the end of their meeting CoGS stated that “further work needs to be done” on the distinction between “a blessing and a nuptial blessing”, “any distinctions among marriage, the blessing of a civil marriage, and the blessing of a union”, “and the theological significance of blessing the civil marriage of a same-sex couple.”

The resolution to be sent forward for consideration by General Synod would be to affirm the church’s current practice of allowing limited pastoral blessings of gay couples, while not permitting gay nuptial blessings, and for “continued study, discussion and discernment within the church of what God is saying to us about publicly authorized rites for the blessing of unions, the blessing of civil marriages, and marriage in the church, of same-sex couples.”

Military action in Niger Delta attacked: CEN 5.22.09 p 6. May 24, 2009

Posted by geoconger in Arms Control/Defense/Peace Issues, Church of England Newspaper, Church of Nigeria.
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Archbishop Peter Akinola has denounced the Nigerian military’s search and destroy campaign targeting militants in the oil-rich Niger Delta. Unless the military campaign that has included air strikes on villages suspected of harboring militants was halted, Nigeria’s democracy was headed for doom, Archbishop Akinola said according to a May 19 report in the Lagos Vanguard.

The Vanguard reported on May 18 that three villages were attacked by helicopter gunships on Friday and seven other villages attacked on Sunday, leaving 65 dead and over 100 wounded. Ijaw tribal leaders claimed more than 30,000 villagers in the region were taking shelter in the mangrove swamps to escape the fighting between government soldiers and militants.

The Ijaw national leader, Chief Edwin Clark released an open letter to Nigerian President Umara Yar’Adua pleading for him to “to stop your government’s decision to declare a full blown war against the Ijaws of the Niger Delta by using jets and helicopters in bombing towns and villages killing innocent children, women and old people who are not part of the militants.”

Chief Clark said the government had accomplished its objective of destroying the militants’ base camps, and appealed to the president to “cease fire and bring normalcy to the area.”

In a statement given to the Nigerian press, the Movement for Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND), the main guerilla group said the government claims of victory were hollow. “Considering that ours is a war of detachment and our camps are not meant to serve as permanent barracks, fighters from Camp 5 simply relocated to another camp with all their weapons and ammunition intact. This is normal in guerrilla warfare”.

The guerillas added that “if the army’s mission was to also rescue the hostages, then that again was a botched and ridiculous attempt because the hostages were not at any immediate risk to their lives except for their temporary freedom.” MEND stated that two western hostages had been killed in the air attacks, and that a third British hostage, Mathew Maguire “had been relocated to Delta state and will be a guest of one the camps there.”

In a report released last week, the International Crisis Group stated that civil unrest was rife across the Niger Delta. In the first nine months of 2008 over 1000 people had been killed and 300 kidnapped by criminal gangs and guerillas. The government also reported that attacks on oil pipe lines, theft and sabotage during the first nine months of 2008 had cost £15 billion in lost revenue.

While the Niger Delta produces most of Nigeria’s oil wealth, successive governments have not returned the oil income to the region. Nigeria produces one-fifth of the US’s energy needs, yet some parts of the region like the Bayelsa state are not linked to the national electricity grid.

In December a government committee recommended the appointment of a mediator to facilitate negotiations between militants and the government, the granting of amnesty to militant leaders not involved in crime, the disarmament and rehabilitation of guerillas, and channeling 25 percent of the country’s oil revenues back in to the region—up from the current 13 percent.

However, in February President Yar’Adua announced a new committee would be formed to study the old committee’s recommendations.

Archbishop Akinola told the Vanguard the government must act quickly to stem the violence in the Niger Delta and address the people’s economic, social and ecological needs. Corruption and favoritism in state and industry that favored outsiders over local residents must stop, he said.

Ireland’s Articles disclaimer: CEN 5.22.09 p 6. May 24, 2009

Posted by geoconger in Church of England Newspaper, Church of Ireland.
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The General Synod of the Church of Ireland has passed the second reading of a bill that will insert a disclaimer before the Articles of Religion in all new imprints of the Book of Common Prayer repudiating the “tone and tenor” of its historic anti-Catholic language

Meeting at the Armagh City Hotel on May 8, delegates endorsed the bill put forward by the Dean of Armagh to preface the 39 Articles with a Declaration adopted by the 1999 session of synod.

New editions of the Book of Common Prayer of the Church of Ireland will state that it is “part of the one, holy, catholic, and apostolic Church, worshipping the one true God – Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. It professes the faith uniquely revealed in the Holy Scriptures and set forth in the catholic creeds: which faith the Church is called upon to proclaim afresh in each generation. Led by the Holy Spirit, it has borne witness to Christian truth in its historic formularies – the Thirty-nine Articles of Religion, the Book of Common Prayer, the Ordering of Bishops, Priests and Deacons and the Declaration prefixed to the Statutes of the Church of Ireland (1870).”

“These historic formularies are a definition of the faith as proclaimed by the Church of Ireland, and thus form an important part of the inheritance through which this Church has been formed in its faith and witness to this day. The formularies that have been passed on are part of a living tradition that today must face new challenges and grasp fresh opportunities. Historic documents often stem from periods of deep separation between Christian Churches.

Whilst, in spite of a real degree of convergence, distinct differences remain, negative statements towards other Christians should not be seen as representing the spirit of this Church today. The Church of Ireland affirms all in its tradition that witnesses to the truth of the Gospel. It regrets that words written in another age and in a different context should be used in a manner hurtful to or antagonistic towards other Christians.

The Church of Ireland seeks the visible unity of the Church. In working towards that goal this Church is committed to reaching out towards other Churches in a spirit of humility and love, that together all Christians may grow towards unity in life and mission to the glory of God.”

Speaking in support of the Bill, the Bishop of Clogher, Dr. Michael Jackson affirmed the importance of the articles and noted that “If I take the 39 Articles themselves, assent to them is required of those being ordained deacon, priest or presbyter, bishop.”

However, the Articles are not to be the “focus of belief in as such. Belief, in our understanding, is a category appropriate to God Almighty,” he said.

Bishop Jackson urged support for the Bill as it would strengthen relations with the Roman Catholic Church. It was necessary to “repudiate any who would today wish to align the Church of Ireland of 2009 with those who actively hate those for whom the 39 Articles express what I might call: an acute theological distaste.”

Adding the Declaration to the Book of Common Prayer repudiates the sentiment “I hate Catholics,” he said, and commits the church to accepting the hard lessons of Ireland’s sectarian past.

MP attacks Archbishop: CEN 5.22.09 p 6. May 24, 2009

Posted by geoconger in Church in Wales, Church of England Newspaper, Politics.
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A Welsh Conservative MP has launched a verbal attack on the Archbishop of Wales, accusing Dr. Barry Morgan of abusing his episcopal office when he denounced as immoral those who oppose granting greater political powers to the Welsh Assembly.

In an exchange of correspondence published by the Western Mail on May 2 between Dr. Morgan and Monmouth MP David Davies, Mr. Davies objected to the archbishop’s assertions that Wales was being treated unfairly by the government.

In April Dr. Morgan told the Western Mail “If we were to have imposed the political settlement on any Commonwealth nation that has been imposed on Wales, there would have been a huge outcry. Because, I say, this isn’t right, this isn’t fair, this is immoral.”

Dr. Morgan was arrogant for asserting that his views commanded the moral high ground, Mr. Davies said. “It is disgraceful that you are using your position as the Archbishop of the Church in Wales to promote a political cause with which many of your parishioners disagree. I was brought up in the Anglican faith, but I would never have the audacity to think that my role as an MP gives me any greater credibility to comment on the state of the church than any other parishioner.”

The archbishop’s time would have been more profitably spent in addressing the problems of the Church in Wales, Mr. Davies said. “Congregation numbers are collapsing because instead of taking a strong moral line on numerous issues, including abortion, the breakdown of traditional family structures and the oppression of Christians in various countries around the world, leading prelates are more concerned in speaking out about the benefits of adopting Sharia law or involving themselves in straightforward political campaigns which are certain to be divisive among churchgoers.”

A spokesman for Dr. Morgan defended the archbishop’s involvement in secular politics as just and right, while the pressure group Tomorrow’s Wales criticized Mr. Davies for drawing church politics into secular disputes over the powers of the Welsh Assembly.

ACC-14: Moratorium on property disputes fails to win support: CEN 5.22.09 p 8. May 22, 2009

Posted by geoconger in ACC 14, Church of England Newspaper, Windsor Continuation Group.
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ACC-14 has reaffirmed the Anglican Communion’s moratoria on gay bishops and blessings, and the integrity of diocesan boundaries, but has turned aside a plea to back a ban on further property litigation in the US and Canada.

Meeting at the Pegasus Hotel in Kingston, Jamaica delegates to the 14th triennial meeting of the Anglican Consultative Council voted to maintain the status quo, rejecting pleas from the Episcopal Church to relax the ban on gay bishops and blessings, while also turning aside a request to condemn the Episcopal Church’s litigation campaign against breakaway dioceses and congregations.

By affirming the recommendations of the WCG, ACC 14 have asked the Primates, the ACC, Dr. Williams and the Lambeth Conference to “commit themselves to the renewal of the Listening Process, and a real seeking of a common mind upon the issues which threaten to divide us.”

It asked Dr. Williams to “revisit the idea of a bishop, appointed from a wider Communion, to work closely with him and act on his behalf in Communion affairs;” revise the schedules, agenda and guest lists of the Lambeth Conferences; clarify the role of the Primates Meeting; study how the ACC’s “effectiveness and confidence in its work can be enhanced;” and give the Inter-Anglican Standing Commission for Unity, Faith and Order a mandate to “produce a concise statement on the Instruments of Communion, their several roles and the authority inherent in them and to offer recommendations for developing the effectiveness of the instruments.”

The WCG further recommended the creation of a “Pastoral Forum” and a “Pastoral Visitors” programme to assist in “any given situation of tension;” establish a scheme of professionally mediated conversation to deal with the issue of parallel jurisdictions; and back an Anglican Covenant “as an essential element in rebuilding the confidence in our common life.”

The chairman of the resolution committee, Dr. Anthony Fitchett of New Zealand opened the proceedings drawing the delegates attention to changes made by the committee to a draft resolution prepared earlier in the week by the ACC and Primates Joint Standing Committee.

Rather than affirm the recommendations of the Windsor Continuation Group, the committee urged that the ACC note the recommendations, thereby receiving but not endorsing the committee’s recommendations. An eighth clause was also added to the resolution that acknowledged the “gracious restraint” of the Episcopal Church in abiding by the moratoria despite the “deep costs” such forbearance had had.

Bishop William Godfrey of Peru asked the chairman of the meeting, Bishop John Paterson of Auckland, New Zealand for a break to study the new revised resolution which was not being seen for the first time for the delegates. Bishop Paterson declined the request for a recess and a vote was taken on the first clause thanking Dr. Rowan Williams and the WCG for their recommendations. This passed without debate by a vote of 64 to 1 with 1 abstention.

Bishop Andrew Curnow of Melbourne rose to ask that the original language of the resolution affirming the WCG be restored. “This counsel should give some warmer feeling” to the resolution and a “bit more indication of how it feels” about the WCG report, rather than rely on the bloodless language put forward by the committee.

American delegate Josephine Hicks urged the ACC not affirm the WCG’s recommendations, but only note them, arguing that “there are many recommendations” put forward in the document. Following a vote by secret ballot, Bishop Curnow’s amendment was accepted by a vote of 36 to 29 to 1. No vote on the amended clause was taken, however, before debate began on clause c, an endorsement of the communion’s moratoria on “the consecration of bishops living in a same gender union, authorization of public rites of blessing for same sex unions, and continued intervention in other provinces.”

Ms Hicks returned to the microphone and asked that the moratoria be rejected. She said the “stated reason” for “cross border” violations was the consecration of the Bishop of New Hampshire, Gene Robinson. However, “they began three years earlier” as the Anglican Mission in America was active in 2000, while Bishop Robinson was not elected until 2003.

The supporters of the third province movement in North America “had no intention of stopping, regardless of what took place” at ACC-14, she argued. It was “time to move on” and allow the Episcopal Church and the Anglican Church of Canada to be “true to themselves.”

The President Bishop of Jerusalem and the Middle East, Dr. Mouneer Anis of Egypt asked that the moratorium on litigation that had been backed by the primates at their 2007 meeting in Dar es Salaam be added to clause c. Dr. Fitchett stated the fourth moratoria had not been included in the resolution as it was a “later addition,” not mentioned in the Windsor Report.

Bishop Godfrey stated he shared the concerns about “intervention,” but noted that “when good and godly men choose to set aside” church tradition, “one must ask why.”

“If we ignore the question of litigation, we are just postponing addressing the ills that affect the communion,” he argued. The moratorium on gay blessings was “not being kept by Bishop Bruno” of Los Angeles, Bishop Godfrey observed, recommending that “everything that is a problem be put on the table.”

The Presiding Bishop of the Episcopal Church, Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori rose to object to Dr. Anis’ amendment, saying the “reality is that those who have sought to remove property” had “done so without consultation, with an unwillingness to be in dialogue.”

A ban on litigation would also effect the diocese of Harare, the cathedral in Khartoum, and the dispute in Jerusalem “where the last bishop” had “sought to remove property” of the diocese.

When “leaders assert that the property of the church is personal property and are unwilling to discuss the issue,” there is a “fiduciary and moral duty” to engage in litigation to recover the property, Bishop Jefferts Schori said.

The Rev. Ian Douglas of the Episcopal Church also urged the delegates to reject a fourth moratorium, but took a different tack than the presiding bishop. He argued the meeting was in danger of “moratorium creep” that would dilute the work of the drafting committee. His concerns found support from the Archbishop of Wales, Dr. Barry Morgan and Canadian delegate Suzanne Lawson, who claimed that it was the rule “across the communion” that “dioceses own the property.”

However, the Bishop of Khartoum, the Rt. Rev. Ezekiel Kondo stated the presiding bishop’s argument linking the dispute between the Episcopal Church of the Sudan and a deposed renegade bishop who had gone over to the National Islamist Front government was fallacious, and urged the delegates to endorse Dr. Anis’ amendment.

The Bishop of Iran also urged the delegates to accept the Anis amendment, adding the presiding bishop had misstated the facts in the dispute between the current and former bishops of Jerusalem, and that that case was not on par with the doctrinal disputes the US church sought to settle by use of the secular courts.

Stanley Isaacs of Southeast Asia urged the delegates “not to be afraid of moratoria.” “It speaks of restraint,” he argued, as there “should be no limit on restraint when it is for the good of the church.”

After the Rev. Maurice Elliot of the Church of Ireland spoke in support of the Anis amendment, Bishop Paterson put the matter before the meeting for a vote. The delegates rejected the Anis amendment adding a fourth moratorium on litigation by a vote of 32-33, and then endorsed the original clause endorsing the three original moratoria by a vote of 43-19 with 1 abstention.

No debate was offered on clause d, and thanks to those who exercised “gracious restraint” was endorsed by the delegates by a vote of 55-12.

Debate turned to clause e, asking that “urgent conversation” be facilitated where the “applications of the moratoria gives rise to concern.”

Rising to speak on a point of order, Bishop Godfrey said that he had spoken with Bishop Jefferts Schori and she was agreeable to participating in a “listening process for those involved in litigation.” It was essential to get “to the roots of what is troubling the communion,” he argued, and “unless justice is done” litigation would continue.

The Archbishop of Canterbury rose in response to Bishop Godfrey, saying “we have no affirmed the WCG overall,” including mediation between the communion’s warring parties. However, Dr. Williams said he was “not in favor of spelling it out further.”

Bishop Catherine Roskam of New York stated she was concerned that the one “conversation that had not been heard” had been the “joyful conversation with the liberal and conservative congregations in the faithful reconstituted dioceses” of San Joaquin, Pittsburgh, Quincy and Fort Worth. Bishop Roskam’s words elicited no response from the meeting, and the clause was put to the vote and adopted 60 to 4 with 2 abstentions.

The remaining three clauses of the resolution were quickly adopted by votes of 64 to 2, 66 to 0, and 65 to 1. They called for Dr. Williams and the JSC to carry forward the WCG recommendations, create a commission whose mandate would be to find an “ecclesiological rationale” for the current structures of the Anglican Communion, and call the communion to “pray for repentance, conversion and renewal.”

As the proceedings came to a close, Irish clergy delegate Maurice Elliot rose on a point of order and told the meeting that he was concerned with “language problems,” suggesting that some delegates may not have been able to understand the nuances of “notes” versus “affirms” or some of the other language used in the meeting. The chairman declined to address Mr. Elliot’s concerns and the meeting moved on to announce the results of elections.

Speaking to delegates during the tea break, members of the conservative Global South coalition stated that while they regretted having lost the vote on a fourth moratorium, it had been a good morning, nonetheless. The Archbishop of the West Indies Drexel Gomez and Dr. Anis told The Church of England Newspaper they were pleased with the outcome, while Dr. Douglas said he felt the mood of the meeting had been to work with what was before them, and not add extraneous moratoria.

However, the Irish delegates concerns over “language problems” appear to have been borne out, in one case. When asked how he had voted on the moratorium on litigation, one Francophone delegate told CEN he had voted “no”, as he did not know what litigation meant.

Chaos as ACC battle on covenant plan: CEN 5.15.09 p 1. May 22, 2009

Posted by geoconger in ACC 14, Church of England Newspaper.
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The Anglican Consultative Council (ACC) will not endorse the Anglican Covenant and has voted to send it back to committee for further review. The vote comes as a major defeat for the Archbishop of Canterbury who had championed the covenant as the one way to keep the Anglican Communion from splitting.

However the defeat appears self-inflicted, as Dr. Rowan Williams’ ambiguous intervention in the closing moments of the covenant debate confused some delegates, and resulted in the adoption of a compromise resolution that holds off acceptance of the covenant until a new committee reviews and revises the disciplinary provisions in section 4 of the agreement—a process ACC secretary general Canon Kenneth Kearon said could take up to a year.

Questions of perfidy and incompetence were lodged against Dr. Williams by conservative members of the ACC in interviews with The Church of England Newspaper immediately following the vote. But the anger with Dr. Williams’ performance softened to exasperation by the following day for some conservative delegates to the May 2-12 meeting.

Delegates from the Church of Nigeria stated they were perplexed by Dr. Williams having endorsed the covenant at the start of the debate, and then apparently reversing himself and backing the call for delay by the end of the session.

“All of the Archbishop of Canterbury’s contributions were positive” up until the last moment of the meeting Bishop Ikechi Nwosu of the Diocese of Umuahia, Nigeria said.

Nigerian delegate Archdeacon Abraham Okorie said there was a “satanic” spirit of confusion in the air. He noted it was hypocritical of the ACC to make a great noise of using African ways of decision making in addressing the covenant, but then resorting to slippery parliamentary tricks to thwart the will of the meeting.

Dr. Williams had been a “very weak leader,” Bishop Nwosu observed. “Of course we pray for him, but couldn’t he be courageous for once?”

Over three years in the making, the work of the Anglican Covenant Design Group (CDG) was presented by its chairman Archbishop Drexel Gomez of the West Indies on May 4 to the representatives of the 38 provinces of the Communion gathered at the Pegasus Hotel in Kingston, Jamaica for the 14th triennial meeting of the ACC. It was imperative the delegates endorse the covenant as the Anglican Communion “is close to the point of breaking up,” Archbishop Gomez said.

After the discussion plenary, the delegates broke apart into “discernment groups” modeled upon the indaba process of “respectful listening” first employed at the 2008 Lambeth Conference.

The decision plenary for the covenant began midmorning on May 8. The chairman of the meetings resolution committee, Dr. Anthony Fitchett of New Zealand told delegates there had been “mixed views on section 4” from the discernment groups, and the committee had decided to frame the debate on the covenant round objections to its disciplinary provisions.

Two resolutions, A and B, were offered to the delegates. A called for section 4 to be detached from the covenant and sent to a committee for further study and revision, while B adopted the Ridley draft as presented by the CDG.

Debate began with supporters of resolution A asking for further time to study section 4. The Rev. Ian Douglas of the Episcopal Church said the Ridley draft was “immature” and “too many ambiguities.” He added that it opened the door to churches not part of the ACC to endorse the document. He speculated that if the breakaway Anglican churches in North America signed the covenant, while the Episcopal Church’s legislative process made it unlikely a final decision could be made in less than six years, this could lead to the “question at ACC-15 about who is the Anglican body” in America?

Delegates from Brazil, Ireland, South Africa and Scotland urged adoption of resolution A, but other delegates were not persuaded by the call for delay.

The President Bishop of Jerusalem and the Middle East, Bishop Mouneer Anis stated that without section 4 the “covenant was no covenant.” The Ridley draft was “most perfect covenant we can get,” he argued, while Southeast Asia delegate Stanley Isaacs said the vote on the covenant was the “defining” moment for the communion, and it would be “disastrous” to remove section 4. Delegates from the Sudan Tanzania, Iran, Peru, Australia Nigeria, and Central Africa endorsed the “no” vote on resolution A, as did the Archbishop of Canterbury.

Dr. Williams told the delegates that he did not see how adopting A “gets us much further along.” He also noted its language was ambiguous. “What would be the remit for redrafting,” he asked, urging the defeat of the resolution.

After a break in the proceedings for lunch, the Primate of Australia offered a new resolution, named C, to the meeting that sought to combine portions of A and B. Objections to C were raised, and it was set to one side.

Following further debate on A, Dr. Williams spoke against A, and a vote was taken by secret ballot which defeated the resolution 17-47, with 1 abstention.

Debate followed on B, with the chairman of the meeting, Bishop John Paterson of New Zealand stating each clause of the resolution would be put to the vote.

After the first two clauses of B passed by near unanimous margins, South African delegate Janet Trisk offered an amendment that sought to incorporate portions of Archbishop Aspinall’s resolution C. The new amendment sought to add the language from the defeated resolution A that would send section 4 to committee for review. Bishop Paterson stated he would not accept the amendment as its substance had already been rejected by the meeting.

Dr Williams then rose on a point of order stating “it did seem to me that the voting on A may very well have been properly influenced by the fact that an alternative form of A is known to be about to be tabled. That I suggested the material of C should be moved as part B, I suspect that people may have voted with that in view.”

Bishop Paterson reversed himself and set the amendment before the meeting. Prompting Dr. Anis to object saying “We have already voted against A, that is deciding to bring in A again, but in a different form.” After one delegate spoke in support of the amendment, it was put to the test and was accepted 34 to 31. Two more votes were held on the remaining clauses of B, but no vote was taken on the amended additions to the resolution.

A tea break was called, but as the delegates streamed out of the room, Bishop Paterson said there was some confusion as to the outcome and proceedings and the subject would be revisited at the 5:00 pm session.

While the delegates gathered in the tea room, a visibly angry Dr. Williams met with his advisers for over a half hour on the floor of the deserted conference room. Dr. Anis subsequently approached Dr. Williams stating his objections to the breach of parliamentary procedure of resubmitting a defeated resolution for consideration. Dr. Anis declined to comment on the substance of his conversation with Dr. Williams, but confirmed Dr. Williams was not pleased with the outcome.

Delegates questioned by the CEN appeared confused by the proceedings. One francophone delegate stated he had voted against A, but as Dr. Williams had commended the Trisk amendment, he had switched his vote. A second delegate from Africa told CEN he had understood Dr. Williams as not having commended the Trisk amendment but was offering housekeeping advice to the meeting to straighten out a confused situation, while a third delegate whose native tongue is English said he understood the Archbishop to have switched horses, and was now calling for section 4 to be stripped out of the Covenant.

Upon resumption of business at 5:00 pm, Bishop Paterson announced there would be no further vote on the Covenant, as the “legal advice” he had been given stated the matter had been settled.

Dr. Anis rose to object, saying “Resolution A was defeated, then brought back as a resolution. It is illegal. How can we bring back a defeated clause?” Bishop Paterson responded that the vote on A was “in anticipation that other material will be taken” into consideration, closing debate.

Members of the Episcopal Church’s delegation told the Episcopal News Service they were pleased by the outcome. “We came up with what was clearly a compromise,” Josephine Hicks said. “Not everyone is entirely happy with what we came up with, I feel certain, but that’s what compromise is all about.”

Dr. Anis told CEN he was “very disappointed” by the “manipulation” of the proceedings. “It was not right. It was absolutely wrong,” he said. The registrar of the Church of Nigeria, Abraham Yisa, said he was amazed by the proceedings, which were “contrary to all known rules” of parliamentary procedure.

However, Bishop William Godfrey of Peru stated that while Friday’s session had been “a difficult time, a painful time,” and it was sad that we “will have to wait longer” for a covenant, it “could have been worse” as section 4 could have been thrown out entirely rather than sent back for further review.

“Everything is in God’s hand,” Bishop Godfrey said. “He is in control” and we just have to be patient.

Zimbabwe appeal raises £300,000: CEN 5.21.09 May 21, 2009

Posted by geoconger in Archbishop of Canterbury, Archbishop of York, Church of England Newspaper, Zimbabwe.
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The Archbishops’ Zimbabwe appeal has raised almost £300,000 to support church programmes providing food and medical assistance to the needy in the Central African nation.

In a statement released on behalf of the Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr Rowan Williams and the Archbishop of York, Dr John Sentamu, a spokesman for Lambeth Palace said £292,330 had been donated to the fund administered by the USPG Anglicans in Mission.

Read it all in The Church of England Newspaper.

Zimbabwe appeal raises £300,000

Fort Worth moves to dismiss Church lawsuit: CEN 5.14.09 p 8. May 18, 2009

Posted by geoconger in Church of England Newspaper, Fort Worth, Property Litigation.
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The Diocese of Fort Worth has filed a motion to dismiss the lawsuit brought by the Episcopal Church and its allies seeking control of church property in North Central Texas.

On May 8 lawyers for Fort Worth Bishop Jack Iker said the April 14 suit brought against the conservative bishop and diocesan officers should be dismissed as the court lacked “subject-matter” jurisdiction to hear the dispute.

Lawyers for Bishop Iker (pictured) asked the court to take “judicial notice” that the Episcopal Church was a voluntary association of dioceses and not a hierarchical church organization with dioceses and bishops subordinate to a metropolitan or national church. The court lacked subject matter jurisdiction to hear the dispute, the motion said, as the underlying petition brought by the national church was seeking to resolve an ecclesial dispute by resorting to secular law — a course of action forbidden under the American principle of separation of church and state

Read it all in The Church of England Newspaper.

Fort Worth moves to dismiss Church lawsuit

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MP attacks Church Commissioners over redevelopment plans: CEN 5.14.09 p 5. May 18, 2009

Posted by geoconger in Church of England, Church of England Newspaper, Environment, Politics.
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Bognor Regis, the English south coast holiday resort, is horrified by the Church Commissioners’ disregard for the ecological and fiscal well-being of rural England, a Conservative MP charged in Parliament last week.

Mr Nick Gibb, the Conservative MP for Bognor Regis and Littlehamptom denounced plans to develop agricultural land owned by the church in his constituency, charging the Church Commissioners with willfully disregarding the needs of their tenants and rural communities in the pursuit of income.

Read it all in The Church of England Newspaper.

MP attacks Church Commissioners over redevelopment plans

Clergy should avoid partisan politics, says Archbishop of Singapore: CEN 5.14.09 p 6. May 18, 2009

Posted by geoconger in Church of England Newspaper, Church of the Province of South East Asia, Politics.
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Clergy should steer clear of partisan politics and not use their pulpits to advance secular causes, the Archbishop of Singapore said last week.

Archbishop John Chew’s statement, released as president of the National Council of Churches of Singapore (NCCS), comes amidst a squabble over an Anglican congregation’s involvement in a hotly contested election battle to replace the leadership of the Association of Women for Action and Research (Aware) — a women’s advocacy organization.

Read it all in The Church of England Newspaper.

Clergy should avoid partisan politics, says Archbishop of Singapore

Priest awarded peace prize: CEN 5.14.09 p 6. May 18, 2009

Posted by geoconger in Church of England Newspaper, Church of the Province of Uganda, Health/HIV-AIDS.
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A Ugandan Anglican priest who in 1992 became the first African Christian leader to announce that he was HIV positive, was awarded the 26th annual Niwano Peace Prize in Tokyo.

The Rev Canon Gideon Byamugisha was honoured by the Niwano Peace Foundation for his work in promoting Aids awareness in Africa. The Primate of the Nippon Sei Ko Kai, Archbishop Makoto Uematsu accepted the award on behalf of Canon Byamugisha, who was advised against travel to Japan due to the H1N1 flu alert.

Read it all in The Church of England Newspaper.

Priest awarded peace prize

Supreme Court to decide on California property case: CEN 5.15.09 May 16, 2009

Posted by geoconger in Church of England Newspaper, Los Angeles, Property Litigation.
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The California Episcopal Church property case is headed to Washington.

On May 5 attorneys for St James Anglican Church in Newport Beach announced that they would file a petition for writ of certiorari asking for review from the United States Supreme Court in Washington of the California Supreme Court’s mixed January decision.

The California court dealt the Diocese of Los Angeles a defeat holding that church property disputes must be adjudicated under the theory of neutral principles of law — where the court looks solely at the title deeds to determine trusteeship of church property. However, the parish was dealt a defeat by the Court which also held that the Episcopal Church’s 1979 “Dennis” Canon created a trust interest in favour of the diocese in property owned by congregations.

The parish will ask the US Supreme Court to decide whether the US Constitution permits the state to favour religious organizations over secular groups, allowing the state to give an exemption to the common law “statute of frauds” doctrine to certain hierarchical denominations.

Read it all in The Church of England Newspaper.

Supreme Court to decide on California property case

‘Green Jesus’ is key to interfaith dialogue, says bishop: CEN 5.15.09 May 16, 2009

Posted by geoconger in Church of England, Church of England Newspaper, Environment.
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The ‘green’ Jesus should be the opening salvo from Christians in interfaith dialogue with Muslims and Jews, the Bishop of Liverpool told an American audience in light of the pressing demands of climate change.

Speaking to members of the Virginia Theological Seminary in the annual Kreitler Environmental Lecture Bishop James Jones argued the “future stability of the world depends upon the fostering of good relationships between the faith communities internationally and locally.”

A tool for building this dialogue lay in talking about “Jesus and the earth with Islam and Judaism where the concept Son of Man” was “neither strange nor aggressive,” he said.

Read it all in The Church of England Newspaper.

'Green Jesus' is key to interfaith dialogue, says bishop

Banking bailout will lead to 1980s inflation levels, says Church Commissioner: CEN 5.15.09 May 16, 2009

Posted by geoconger in Church of England, Church of England Newspaper, Development/Economics/Govt Finances.
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The British government’s decision to bail out the banking industry will likely lead to levels of inflation not seen in Britain since the 1980s, First Church Estates Commissioner Andreas Whittam Smith (pictured) stated in the Church Commissioners 2008 annual report released on May 12.

Inflation is the “most likely consequence of the Government’s decision to bail out the banks and pump billions of pounds into stimulating economic activity,” he said, and was not very “different from printing money.”

Inflation fears follow a slump in property values and the sharp downturn in the global equity markets that shaved £1.3 billion pounds from the value of the Church of England’s investment funds in 2008.

Read it all in The Church of England Newspaper.

Banking bailout will lead to 1980s inflation levels, says Church Commissioner

Archbishop says summit ended in ‘glorious failure’: CEN 5.13.09 May 13, 2009

Posted by geoconger in ACC 14, Archbishop of Canterbury, Church of England Newspaper.
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First published in The Church of England Newspaper.

The Archbishop of Canterbury has conceded that ACC-14 in Kingston, Jamaica was a “failure” that disappointed many Anglicans across the communion. However, the meeting of the Anglican Communion’s fourth ‘instrument of unity’ had been a “glorious failure” that saw the Anglican Communion rise from its “deathbed” to address its own shortcomings, Dr. Rowan Williams said in his closing presidential address on May 11.

It was unhelpful to establish criteria for success or failure for Anglican meetings, Dr. Williams told delegates to the May 2-12 meeting in Kingston, Jamaica said, as there was “no absolute measure for achievement. In critical times – small things might be large achievements. Our willingness in certain areas to act as one and to discover more deeply how we pray as one is, by God’s grace and gift, for no other reason, an achievement,” he said.

At ACC-14 “we got up every morning, we prayed every morning, read Scripture, we affirmed our will to stay in relation, we’ve done some planning,” he noted, adding that significant progress had been made in forming an Anglican relief and development network, committing the communion to evangelism, endorsing the recommendations of the Windsor Continuation Group (WCG), and “we even agreed on the substance of the covenant and the time scale of that work.”

Predictions of the demise of the communion were unfounded. “If someone diagnosed as terminally ill has prayed and planned and given new evidence of energy and life from their deathbed to begin new things we might just possibly question the diagnosis of a terminal outlook,” he said.

However, concerns the Anglican Communion could dissolve into Anglican federations or an “association within which some groups are more strongly bound to one another and some groups less strongly bound” could not be dismissed, he said. “I suspect that will be more inevitable if not all provinces do sign on to the covenant. And I hasten to add that’s not what I hope. It is what I think we have to reflect on as a real possibility.”

Delegates nonetheless sought the unity of the church. “We have not in this meeting given evidence of any belief that we have no future together,” he said, but conceded there remained “in a good few areas an intensely felt standoff between groups in our communion.” He also noted the anger expressed by some delegates over the handling of the debate over the covenant was understandable as “one thing we’re not terribly good at is resolution passing,”

The heart of Dr. Williams’ speech though focused on the theological lessons that could be drawn from the meeting. He chided those on either side of the political and theological divide for acting like the apostles portrayed in Mark’s Gospel who were blind to the true nature of Christ: with “their obsessiveness about getting their questions answered and their future sorted out and their status assured.”

In the Gospel the apostles’ “obsessiveness is challenged again and again by the clear simplicity of those who simply see in Jesus where there is bread to be had for nourishment,” he argued, adding this Gospel was “bad news for Christian elites, all of whom need to grow by being humbled: Archbishops, ACC members, experts of whatever kind, even commentators on the Anglican Communion.”

Drawing upon a phrase coined by the English Roman Catholic nun, Maria Boulding, Dr. Williams stated “the alternatives for Christians were not success or failure, but glorious failure and miserable failure. Glorious failure is the recognition that we fall again and again and have a Lord and Saviour whose promise is so inexhaustible that we can pick ourselves up and begin the world all over again, newly created. Miserable failure takes many forms, including the form of telling ourselves that we haven’t really failed at all.”

“The Apostles of Mark” stopped being “miserable failures” and “decided that the story they were going to tell was of how they had misunderstood and abandoned and betrayed their Lord who had still loved them and returned to them. That is what I call being a glorious failure.”

Dr. Williams concluded his remarks by saying that “as we look back on these ten days we ask ourselves has this been a failure or a success, maybe we should step back and think a few Mark-shaped thoughts. And maybe if we ask is the Anglican Communion at the moment a failure or a success, we should ask the same thing. Because the Gospel seems to be saying to us: first face your failure” not that of your neighbor.

“Perhaps thinking about those potentially glorious failures, opens us out onto the prayer that turns us back to Christ-like self-giving that lets the glory through. That’s what we hope for in our fellowship, our very fragile, very flawed, very precarious Anglican fellowship,” the archbishop said.

Anti-Christian violence erupts: CEN 5.07.09 p 6. May 12, 2009

Posted by geoconger in Church of England Newspaper, Church of Pakistan, Persecution.
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Paramilitary troops are patrolling the streets of Karachi following a week of sectarian and political violence that has shut down much of the city. In an April 30 email to The Church of England Newspaper Bishop Ijaz Inayat reports “it is yet another sad day in Pakistan as over thirty persons were killed in violent clashes in different areas of Karachi and over 24 vehicles set ablaze, even houses and shops in big numbers set on fire.”

Clashes between Muhajirs, Muslims who migrated to Pakistan from India following the 1947 partition, and ethnic Pashtuns have killed over two dozen people, while Christians have taken to the streets to protest attacks on churches and members of their community.

Anti-Christian violence erupted when pro-Taliban militants tried to prevent local Christians from removing graffiti on their church that demanded Christians convert to Islam or pay jiziya, the poll tax levied on non-Muslim minorities living under Islamic rule as sanctioned by Sharia, the Daily Times reported on April 23.

When the police arrived to break up the fighting between Christians and Muslims, they turned their guns on the Christians, Bishop Inayat reported, shooting three men.

Michael Javaid, a former member of the Sindh Provincial Assembly, told the ANS news service Christians were afraid as a sizable number of Taliban had entered the city “in an attempt to press their demands of enforcing Sharia Justice System” in the city.

“I fear the Taliban will start demanding minority tax from Pakistani Christians too,” he added.

Last month the Taliban began demolishing the homes of members of the Sikh community in the Ferozkhel area of Orakzai Agency along the North West Frontier after the Sikhs failed to make a 15 million rupees jiziya payment to the Taliban. Taliban militants had demanded 50 million rupees, holding local Sikh leader Sardar Saiwang Singh captive and occupying a number of Sikh-owned houses until the minority community complied, the ANI news service said.

The imposition of the poll-tax on non-Muslims and increased violence has led many Sikhs, Hindus and Christians to flee Taliban controlled areas. The government is continuing its military operations against the Taliban, but the militants last week took control of the town of Buner, less than sixty miles from the capital of Islamabad.

On April 29, US President Barack Obama stated he was “gravely concerned about the situation in Pakistan.” He said, “I’m … concerned that the civilian government there right now is very fragile.”

Pakistan’s President Asif Ali Zardari said his country was facing a “critical hour.”

“The time has come for the entire nation to give pause to their political differences and rise to the occasion and give full support to our security forces,” he said in a statement released on April 29.

Archbishop of Cantebury’s adviser is elected as the new Bishop of Harare: CEN 5.07.09 p 6. May 12, 2009

Posted by geoconger in Church of England Newspaper, Zimbabwe.
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The Rev Canon Chad Gandiya, the USPG’s Africa desk officer, has been elected bishop of the troubled Diocese of Harare.

Originally scheduled for April 25, the election had been postponed to May 2 to allow the Dean of the Church of the Province of Central Africa (CPCA), Bishop Albert Chama of Northern Zambia to attend the meeting following a trip to the United States.

Sharply divided in the wake of the secession of its former bishop, Dr. Nolbert Kunonga, the CPCA appointed Dr. Sebastian Bakare interim bishop on Nov 7, 2007. Aided by the security services, Dr. Kunonga has kept control of the diocese’s properties, using force to drive out clergy and congregations that backed Dr. Bakare.

At its 2008 Diocesan Synod, the diocese began structural reforms to repair the damage left from the Kunonga era. In place of the closed system that critics charge had been susceptible to influence from the CIO—Zimbabwe’s secret police, the diocesan synod elected a six member search committee to screen nominations.

Five names were submitted to the 22-member Elective Assembly, comprised of 6 clergy and 6 lay electors chosen by the diocesan synod, Bishop Chama, and three bishops, three clergy and three lay electors chosen by the CPCA. At a meeting held May 2 at the Arundel School Chapel in Harare Canon Gandiya was elected bishop by secret ballot of the 22-member diocesan Elective Assembly.

A former Dean of Bishop Gaul Theological College, Canon Gandiya oversees the USPG’s Africa operations, and has been appointed by Dr. Rowan Williams to the Archbishop of Canterbury’s Pastoral Visitor team. The bishop-elect is scheduled to be consecrated on July 25.

Following Canon Gandiya’s election, Dr. Bakarare told reporters he had been appointed Bishop of Harare on a “caretaker basis. I was here on a caretaker basis. I was here because of Kunonga’s behaviour. I was a shepherd looking after its sheep.”

On May 4, Bishop Chama and the new bishop-elect and other church leaders met with Zimbabwe Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai, briefing the government leader on the situation with the Anglican Church, and to offer condolences for the recent death of his wife and nephew.

The bishops “used the opportunity for the Prime Minister to hear from the horse’s mouth what is happening in the Anglican Church in Zimbabwe where Kunonga and [Bishop] Jakazi are clinging to church property,” Bishop Chama told local reporters.

Bishop Elson Jakazi of Manicaland and Dr. Kunonga were excommunicated by the CPCA on May 16, 2008 for “withdrawing from the Province of Central Africa, forming another Church, and casting aside the Constitution and Canons of the Church of the Province of Central Africa.”

“It was a good opportunity to brief [the prime minister] especially on our two friends that have left the church,” Dr. Chama told Zimonline.

Defeat for Archbishop as Covenant draft is rejected: CEN 5.11.09 May 11, 2009

Posted by geoconger in ACC 14, Anglican Covenant, Church of England Newspaper.
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First published by The Church of England Newspaper.

The Anglican Consultative Council (ACC) will not endorse the Anglican Covenant, and has voted to send it back to committee for further review.  The vote comes as a major defeat for the Archbishop of Canterbury who had championed the covenant as the one way to keep the Anglican Communion from splitting.  However the defeat was self-inflicted, as Dr. Rowan Williams’ ambiguous intervention in the closing moments of the debate led to the loss.

Delegates adopted a compromise resolution, whose provisions Dr. Williams had rejected at the start of the May 8 debate but backed by its end, to appoint a committee to review and revise section 4 of the covenant and report its recommendations to the Joint Standing Committee of the Primates and the ACC for adoption.  A process, the ACC’s secretary general Canon Kenneth Kearon said would likely take up to year to bring to fruition.

Questions of treachery and incompetence were lodged against Dr. Williams by conservative members of the ACC in interviews with The Church of England Newspaper following the vote, but the next day softened to exasperation with the archbishop’s ambiguous way of speaking that critics said was unsuited to the political rough and tumble of a meeting where many delegates had limited English-language abilities.

Delegates from the Church of Nigeria stated they were perplexed by Dr. Williams’ actions.  “All of the Archbishop of Canterbury’s contributions were positive” up until the last moment of the meeting Bishop Ikechi Nwosu of Nigeria said.

Nigerian Archdeacon Abraham Okorie said there was a “satanic” spirit of confusion in the air.  He noted it was hypocritical of the ACC to make a great noise of using African ways of decision making in addressing the covenant, but then resorting to slippery parliamentary tricks to thwart the will of the meeting.

Dr. Williams was a “very weak leader,” Bishop Ikechi Nwosu of Nigeria observed.  “Of course we pray for him, but couldn’t he be courageous for once?”

Over three years in the making, the work of the Anglican Covenant Design Group (CDG) was presented by its chairman Archbishop Drexel Gomez of the West Indies on May 4 to the representatives of the 38 provinces of the Communion gathered at the Pegasus Hotel in Kingston, Jamaica for the 14th triennial meeting of the ACC.

Archbishop Gomez, who retired as Primate of the West Indies on Dec 31, outlined the history of the document commissioned by Dr. Williams and the circumstances that led to the creation of the final “Ridley” draft.  It was imperative the delegates endorse the covenant as the Anglican Communion “is close to the point of breaking up,” he said.

The covenant would provide a degree of order, discipline and mutual responsibility.  “Either we are a family, which means that each member of the family has care for and respect for the other members of the family, or we will have to learn to go our separate ways. The question is, do we wish to remain a Communion?” Archbishop Gomez asked.

Dr. Rowan Williams also added his endorsement to the covenant in remarks to the meeting, while a letter of greetings from the Roman Catholic Church urged delegates to adopt the covenant.

In a letter of greetings distributed to the delegates written by the President of the Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity, Cardinal Walter Kasper gave an oblique but clear endorsement of the covenant.  He stated the “consideration” the delegates would give to the covenant would “play an essential part in discerning the way forward for the Anglican Communion in the light of current complex issues.”

The covenant debate would “encompass not mere external links which regulate the lives of respective provinces from outside, but rather the internal bonds that spring from deep within the heart of each individual church,” he said, adding that he prayed the debates would “contribute to the healing, articulating and strengthening of these bonds of love that unite” the Anglican Communion.

Following Archbishop Gomez’ presentation, a model resolution prepared by the Joint Standing Committee (JSC) of the primates and ACC endorsing the covenant was distributed to the delegates, who were divided into “discernment groups” operating on the “indaba” principle.  First tried out with the bishops attending the 2008 Lambeth Conference, indaba is a faux African decision making process based upon a Zulu council meeting where tribal elders discuss an issue until a common mind is reached, however in the Anglican version debate is ended at a set time.

A discussion paper submitted to the JSC’s November meeting in London argued that while the indaba process used at the Lambeth Conference was “not designed to achieve final decisions”, the format of “respectful listening” could be adapted to the ACC’s needs for an up or down vote on the covenant.  The ACC paper proposed dividing the discussions into a presentation by Archbishop Gomez, an information plenary session, discernment groups, and a decision making plenary, with delegates seated at tables of 6 to 10 people before the speaker’s platform.

Comments arising from the discernment groups would be passed to the ACC’s resolution committee, chaired by Dr. Anthony Fitchett of New Zealand, for crafting into a resolution set down for debate at the decision plenary.

The decision plenary began at the midmorning session of May 8.  Dr. Fitchett noted the resolutions prepared by the committee sought “to be as inclusive as possible,” but noted there were “mixed views on section 4” from the discernment groups.

The committee decided to frame the debate on the covenant around concerns, The Church of England Newspaper learned, had arisen in one discernment group around the disciplinary provisions of section 4 of the covenant.

Resolution A sought to detach section 4 from the covenant for further study and possible revision, but was silent on sections 1-3 of the document.

The Archbishop of Cape Town was the first to rise, offering his support for the resolution, saying it would “allow more time” for debate.  The Rev. Ian Douglas of the Episcopal Church also endorsed A saying he was concerned section 4 had not undergone the scrutiny and “same review process” parts 1-3 had had.

There were “too many ambiguities” in section 4, he argued, saying it was “immature.”  He added that the current language of section 4 opened the door to churches not part of the ACC to endorse the document.  He speculated that if the breakaway Anglican churches in North America signed the covenant as now written, while the Episcopal Church’s legislative process made it unlikely a final decision could be made in less than six years, could lead to the “question at ACC-15 about who is the Anglican body” in America?

Delegates from Brazil, Ireland, and Scotland urged adoption of resolution A, but other delegates were not persuaded by the call for delay.

Bishop Ezekiel Kondo of the Sudan urged rejection of resolution A as section 4 of the covenant was its “most important” clause.  The President Bishop of Jerusalem and the Middle East, Bishop Mouneer Anis stated that without section 4 the “covenant was no covenant.”  The Ridley draft was “most perfect covenant we can get,” he argued.

Southeast Asia delegate Stanley Isaacs said the vote on the covenant was the “defining” moment for the communion, and it would be “disastrous” to remove section 4.  Delegates from Tanzania, Iran, Peru, Australia Nigeria, and Central Africa endorsed the “no” vote on resolution A, as did the Archbishop of Canterbury.

Dr. Williams told the delegates that he did not see how adopting A “gets us much further along.”  He also noted its language was ambiguous.  “What would be the remit for redrafting,” he asked, urging the defeat of the resolution.

In response to Dr. Williams, Josephine Hicks of the United States said that if the “covenant is sent to the provinces with section 4, some provinces may reject” it.

After further debate the delegates broke for lunch.  When business resumed, the Primate of Australia, Archbishop Phillip Aspinall offered a new resolution, labeled C, that sought to combine elements of A’s call for further study of section 4, and B’s call for adoption of the covenant.

Bishop Andrew Curnow of Australia objected to the introduction of C, saying it “moved the goal posts” and confused the issue while A had yet to be decided.  Janet Trisk of South Africa rose in support of C, but Bishop Anis and Mr. Isaacs also objected to the introduction of a third resolution, while other delegates from South Africa and the Church of England rose in support of the original A, and Bishop Gerald Mpango of Tanzania stated C was improperly before the meeting anyway, as it had not been passed through the resolutions committee.

Ugandan delegate Jolly Babirukamu said she was worried the meeting lacked the “spirit of discernment.”  It was the “devil’s plan” to divide the church, she said, and the introduction of C had led to “anger and confusion”.

Dr. Williams closed the debate, saying he believed the meeting should “move to A, then B” while the “extra material” introduced by Archbishop Aspinall could be added as an amendment to B.

Following a vote by secret ballot, Resolution A calling for section 4 of the Covenant be sent back for further study was defeated by a vote of 17 in favor, 47 opposed, 1 abstention.

Debate then began on Resolution B.  After an introduction to the resolution by Dr. Fitchett, the chairman of the meeting, Bishop John Paterson of New Zealand, stated each clause of the resolution would be put to a vote.

Clauses a and b of Resolution B, thanking the CDG for its work and affirming the need for a covenant passed with little comment or debate, by votes of 60-2-1 and 61-3.  Janet Trisk of South Africa then rose and offered an amendment, seeking to introduce two clauses from Archbishop Aspinall’s resolution C into B, as paragraphs c and d.

Paragraph c of the Trisk amendment was a verbatim repetition of clause b of the defeated resolution 2 which asked the resolution be sent back for “possible” revision, while clause d gave the JSC the authority to approve the final form of section 4 before it was sent on to the provinces.

Resolution A was voted down.  Janet Trisk of South Africa then offered an amendment to resolution b, inserting two sections from the Aspinall amendment into resolution B.  Bishop Paterson responded that he would not accept the amendment as “the difficulty I have is that the house has already decided not to proceed along the lines of resolution A.”

Dr Williams rose to offer a point of order stating “it did seem to me that the voting on A may very well have been properly influenced by the fact that an alternative form of A is known to be about to be tabled.  That I suggested the material of C should be moved as part B, I suspect that people may have voted with that in view.”

Bishop Paterson reversed himself and set the amendment before the meeting.  Prompting Dr. Anis to object saying “We have already voted against A, that is deciding to bring in A again, but in a different form.”

Bishop Paterson did not respond to the objection, an Australian lay delegate then rose in support of the Trisk amendment and the question was put to vote.

Bishop Paterson said, “The question is whether or not for the introduction … for the amendment or against the amendment, with the introduction of those two clauses, and the subsequent renumbering from 15 to 16″ of the vote.

Following a secret ballot, the vote was 34 to 31 for accepting the Trisk amendment.  The renumbered clauses e and f, asking to the covenant to be sent to the member churches of the ACC for consideration and adoption and for a report from each province to be given to ACC-15 in 2012 on its progress on adoption the covenant were passed by votes of 63-2.  While a vote to introduce the Trisk amendment was held and adopted by the meeting, no vote on the substance of the amendment was held.

A tea break was called, but as the delegates streamed out of the room, Bishop Paterson said there was some confusion as to the outcome and proceedings and the subject would be revisited at the 5:00 pm session.

While the delegates gathered in the tea room, a visibly angry Dr. Williams met with his advisers for over a half hour on the floor of the deserted conference room.  Dr. Anis subsequently approached Dr. Williams stating his objections to the breach of parliamentary procedure of resubmitting a defeated resolution for consideration.  Dr. Anis declined to comment on the substance of his conversation with Dr. Williams, but confirmed Dr. Williams was not pleased with the outcome.

Aides to the Archbishop explained to CEN that Archbishop Aspinall’s amendment had been preserved as it had been offered before a final vote on A, and thus could be discussed later.

Delegates questioned by the CEN appeared confused by the proceedings.  One francophone delegate stated he had voted against A, but as Dr. Williams had commended the Trisk amendment, he had switched his vote.  A second delegate from Africa told CEN he had understood Dr. Williams as not having commended the Trisk amendment but was offering housekeeping advice to the meeting to straighten out a confused situation, while a third delegate whose native tongue is English said he understood the Archbishop to have switched horses, and was now calling for section 4 to be stripped out of the Covenant.

Upon resumption of business at 5:00 pm, Bishop Paterson announced there would be no further vote on the Covenant, as the “legal advice” he had been given stated the matter had been settled.

Dr. Anis rose to object, saying “Resolution A was defeated, then brought back as a resolution.  It is illegal.  How can we bring back a defeated clause?”

Bishop Paterson responded that the vote on A was “in anticipation that other material will be taken” into consideration, closing debate.

Members of the Episcopal Church’s delegation told the Episcopal News Service they were pleased by the outcome.  “We came up with what was clearly a compromise,” Josephine Hicks said.  “Not everyone is entirely happy with what we came up with, I feel certain, but that’s what compromise is all about.”

Bishop Catherine Roskam said there had been “a lot of graciousness” in the midst of “a lot of pressure” to adopt the Ridley draft of the covenant.  Passage of the Trisk amendment would allow further work on section 4, “we were grateful for that and the tone of that vote.”

Dr. Anis told CEN he was “very disappointed” by the “manipulation” of the proceedings.  “It was not right.  It was absolutely wrong,” he said.

It was “unfair” for the resolution committee to have staged the debates by arranging the resolutions in that order, he charged. And it was “unfair to appoint three members [to the committee] from countries known to reject the covenant: New Zealand, America and Scotland,” he said.

“All that happened was to increase the distrust” and dysfunction of the communion, Dr. Anis said.

The registrar of the Church of Nigeria, Abraham Yisa, said he was amazed by the proceedings, which were “contrary to all known rules” of parliamentary procedure.

Bishop Nwosu asked why the ACC needed to spend £330,000 to meet in Jamaica, when “we could have just asked [Dr. Williams] what he wanted” and all stayed at home.  Bishop Paterson was “taking direction” from Dr. Williams and it “was not fair.  The whole thing was manipulated.”

However, Bishop William Godfrey of Peru stated that while Friday’s session had been “a difficult time, a painful time,” and it was sad that we “will have to wait longer” for a covenant, it “could have been worse” as section 4 could have been thrown out entirely rather than sent back for further review.

“Everything is in God’s hand,” Bishop Godfrey said.  “He is in control” and we just have to be patient.

Nigeria added to list of offenders of religious freedom: CEN 5.07.09 p 7. May 11, 2009

Posted by geoconger in Church of England Newspaper, Church of Nigeria, Persecution.
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The Nigerian government’s blind eye toward the persecution of Christians has led to its being added to the list of the world’s worst offenders of religious freedom by the US Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF).

In its annual report to the US State Department, the USCIRF recommended that Nigeria join the list of 13 nations whose governments have engaged or tolerated systematic and egregious violations of the universal right of freedom of religion or belief.

Nigeria now joins: Burma, China, Eritrea, Iran, Iraq, North Korea, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Sudan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan and Vietnam on the US government’s “country of particular concern” or CPC list. USCIRF commissioner Leonard Leo told a Washington press briefing that the commission had asked Congress to add Nigeria to the rogues gallery after a fact-finding mission held earlier this year “concluded the government was tolerating” sectarian violence. There had been an “unbroken chain of sectarian and communal violence the government has not addressed,” he said.

The 2009 USCIRF Report is the most extensive in the Commission’s 10-year history, documenting serious abuses of freedom of thought, conscience, religion and belief around the world. The report provides policy prescriptions for each nation on the CPC list.

The USCIRF report “details a vital, yet sometimes underappreciated aspect of human rights facing lawmakers here and abroad,” the chairman of the USCIRF, Felice Gaer (pictured) said.

Read it all in The Church of England Newspaper.

Nigeria added to list of offenders of religious freedom

Sudan ‘on brink of third civil war’: CEN 5.07.09 p 6. May 11, 2009

Posted by geoconger in Arms Control/Defense/Peace Issues, Church of England Newspaper, Episcopal Church of the Sudan.
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The Archbishop of the Sudan has issued a plea for international help to prevent the outbreak of a third Sudanese Civil War. Weapons have flooded the country, Archbishop Daniel Deng of Juba has warned in a May 4 letter to the international community and the Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA) that ended the Second Sudanese Civil War is in danger of collapse.

Signed in January 2005, the CPA or Naivasha Agreement ended the war between the Arab Islamist government in Khartoum and the predominantly Christian and African Sudan People’s Liberation Movement (SPLM). Almost 2 million people died from war-related famine, disease and violence from the conflict, the US Committee for Refugees and Immigrants reported, while four million people, an estimated 80 per cent of the population of Southern Sudan were forced into flight during the war.

Sudan’s first civil war lasted from independence in 1955 to 1972 and its second civil war was fought over the same ground and same issues from 1983 to 2005. A third civil war was on the horizon, Archbishop Deng warned, unless the US, UK, the Netherlands and other regional governments that had guaranteed the CPA took action.

“Peoples in Western and Central Equatoria are being attacked, murdered and displaced by the Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA), rumoured to be supplied by people within Sudan,” he said, while “a large number of civilians in Eastern Equatoria, Lakes and Jonglei states are armed.”

Read it all in The Church of England Newspaper.

Sudan 'on brink of third civil war'

Church must nor remain silent, says South African Archbishop: CEN 5.06.09 p 6. May 11, 2009

Posted by geoconger in Anglican Church of Southern Africa, Church of England Newspaper, Politics.
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Churches must not abandon the public square and withdraw from engagement in political life, the Archbishop of Cape Town writes following last month’s general election in South Africa.

On April 22, South Africa’s 23 million voters returned the African National Congress to power giving it 65.9 per cent of the vote. The ANC will hold 264 seats in parliament, while the Democratic Alliance will have 67 seats and Cope 30 seats. ANC leader Jacob Zuma will be sworn in as president after his election by the new parliament.

“After the counting is done,” Archbishop Thabo Makgoba wrote on April 30, “the church must lend its voice to ensuring that those who are elected pursue the common good of everyone — not only of themselves and their families, friends and supporters.

“As St Paul tells us, we will support our governments, our elected representatives, as long as they are ‘God’s servants for our good.’ But where they fall short, we will be unafraid to tell them so,” he said.

Read it all in The Church of England Newspaper.

Church must nor remain silent, says South African Archbishop

British politicians join Burma campaign: CEN 5.11.09 May 11, 2009

Posted by geoconger in Anglican Church of Myanmar, British Foreign Policy, Church of England Newspaper, Persecution, Politics.
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William Hague, Neil Kinnock and Lord Steel have lent their support to Christian Solidarity Worldwide’s (CSW) ChangeforBurma petition, which calls upon the UN Security Council to bring Burma’s military junta before the International Criminal Court to answer for its crimes against humanity, and for UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon to make the release of the regime’s 2100 political prisoners one of his top priorities.

Shadow Foreign Secretary William Hague MP (pictured), who led the Conservative Party from 1997-2001 last month endorsed the petition saying, “In the wake of the shocking prison sentences imposed on activists in Burma, and the regime’s continuing crimes against humanity, it is vital that we do everything in our power to summon up the will of the international community to influence the junta in Burma and seek the release of all political prisoners.”

Read it all in The Church of England Newspaper.

British politicians join Burma campaign

Anglicans urged to embrace Covenant to avoid split: CEN 5.08.09 p 1. May 7, 2009

Posted by geoconger in ACC 14, Anglican Covenant, Church of England Newspaper.
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The Anglican Communion is in imminent danger of collapse unless it endorses an Anglican Covenant and agrees to hold fast to the moratoria on gay bishops and blessings and cross-border incursions by foreign bishops, delegates to ACC-14 were told this week.

Representatives of the 38 provinces of the Communion gathered at the Pegasus Hotel in Kingston, Jamaica, for the 14th triennial meeting of the Anglican Consultative Council were offered a sombre picture of the state of church. Archbishop Drexel Gomez, the recently retired Primate of the West Indies and chairman of the Covenant Design Group, told delegates in a May 4 speech presenting the third “Ridley” draft of the Covenant, that “the Communion is close to the point of breaking up” over the issue of the morality of homosexuality.

“If we are not able to commit ourselves to this sort of being a communion, the break-up of its life is staring us in the face,” he said. The choice was simple, he said. “Either we are a family, which means that each member of the family has care for and respect for the other members of the family, or we will have to learn to go our separate ways. The question is, do we wish to remain a Communion?” Archbishop Gomez asked.

Read it all in The Church of England Newspaper.

Anglicans urged to embrace Covenant to avoid split

Row erupts as Uganda cries foul over ban: CEN 5.08.09 p 7. May 7, 2009

Posted by geoconger in ACC 14, Church of England Newspaper, Church of the Province of Uganda.
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The spat over the seating of a delegate from the Church of Uganda to ACC-14 in Kingston has dashed the hopes of the Archbishop of Canterbury for his speedy reconciliation with the estranged Anglican Churches of Africa.

The May 1 decision by the Joint Standing Committee to reject the credentials of the Rev. Philip Ashey as a clergy delegate from Uganda, has outraged the Ugandan Church, but also served to solidify pan-African solidarity and strengthen the global south bloc of delegates to the May 2-12 meeting of the Anglican Consultative Council at the Pegasus Hotel in Kingston, Jamaica.

The Joint Standing Committee of the ACC and the Primates stated they were “not satisfied” that Mr. Ashey was “qualified” to serve as an Ugandan delegate because he was a former Episcopal priest currently licensed by the Church of Uganda, but serving in the United States as chief operating officer of the American Anglican Council—a conservative pressure group.

Mr. Ashey’s ministry in the US was a “result of cross-provincial intervention,” Canon Kenneth Kearon, the ACC Secretary General told a press conference on May 4. These interventions had “never been recognized by the four instruments of communion and the Joint Standing Committee felt that it was not possible for an American priest residing in the United States to be recognized as the duly recognized representative of an African province,” he said.

Uganda’s right to select its own delegates to the ACC was subordinate to the JSC’s power to determine who was qualified to serve, he argued, according to “legal advice” the JSC had received.

The JSC’s decision was “unjust, unbiblical, [and] unconstitutional” Archbishop Henry Orombi of Uganda charged. It also appears to up end prior ACC practice of allowing member churches to select their own delegates, whether such a selection conforms to the rules or not.

On April 23 Archbishop Orombi wrote to Canon Kearon informing him that Mr. Ashey had been chosen as Uganda’s clergy delegate to ACC-14. Canon Kearon responded by email the following day, “welcoming the nomination.”

Following a review of the delegate and press list Canon Kearon wrote to Archbishop Orombi stating that the JSC questioned Mr. Ashey’s registration as a Ugandan delegate, as he was already accredited as a member of the press to the conference, and was not a resident of Uganda.

Archbishop Orombi responded Mr. Ashey had “relinquished” his press credentials and was a priest in good standing of the Diocese of Ruwenzori. However, the selection of delegates was the prerogative of the provinces, and “not subject to review by any body within the ACC, including the [JSC].” Canon Kearon responded the JSC was not satisfied with the explanation offered by Uganda, and would not seat Ashey as he was not a “qualified” member according to Section 4e of the ACC constitution.

Archbishop Orombi responded in a letter to Dr. Williams asking him to intervene in the affair, arguing that the JSC “would assume such authority is a gross violation of our constitutional relationships, not to mention a further tearing of our bonds of affection. Our reasons for appointing one of our American priests to represent us as our clergy delegate are our reasons, and are not for the Joint Standing Committee to question. Section 4(e) does not give the Joint Standing Committee or the ACC the right to interfere in the appointing body’s determination of the “qualification” of a delegate. For the Joint Standing Committee to assume this power is nothing short of an imperialistic and colonial decision that violates the integrity of the Church of Uganda.”

Dr. Williams acknowledged Archbishop Orombi’s concerns in a return email, but backed the JSC’s decision.

Articles 7 and 8 of the ACC Constitution provides for decisions between councils to be made by the ACC Standing Committee, not the JSC, suggesting that not only was there no constitutional power to make this determination, the wrong body made it.

At the 1999 meeting of ACC-11 in Dundee, the Episcopal Church sent as its episcopal representative, Bishop Mark Dyer, the retired Bishop of Bethlehem. Article 4d of the Constitution states, “Bishops and other clerical members shall cease to be members on retirement from ecclesiastical office.”

When The Church of England Newspaper in 1999 questioned the seating of Bishop Dyer at the meeting in contravention of the ACC constitution, ACC Secretary General John L. Peterson responded that it was the ACC’s practice to leave the selection of delegates to the member churches, and that it placed the onus on conformance on to the province.

While the absence of Uganda’s clerical delegate may have achieved a short term victory for the Episcopal Church in its fight with the breakaway groups in the US, and deprived the conservative bloc of one vote in Kingston, it appears to have solidified the Global South delegates, and at this point in the proceedings, strengthened their resolve to resist any watering down of the Covenant or undue extension of time to permit its ratification.

Setback for Third Province movement in San Jaoquin ruling: CEN 5.06.09 May 6, 2009

Posted by geoconger in Church of England Newspaper, Property Litigation, San Joaquin.
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First published in The Church of England Newspaper

The third province movement in the United States may have received a severe setback this week after a California court issued a tentative ruling holding that dioceses are creatures of the national Episcopal Church and may not secede.

On May 4, Judge Adolfo Corona of the Fresno Superior Court issued a preliminary opinion, stating that he would likely issue a summary judgment on behalf of the Episcopal Church against Bishop John-David Schofield and the Anglican Diocese of San Joaquin.

As a matter of law and fact the judge argued, the Episcopal Church was a “hierarchical church is one in which individual churches are organized as a body with other churches having similar faith and doctrine, and with a common ruling convocation or ecclesiastical head vested with ultimate ecclesiastical authority over the individual congregations and members of the entire organized church.”

“In a hierarchical church, an individual local congregation that affiliates with the national church body becomes a member of a much larger and more important religious organization, under its government and control, and bound by its orders and judgments,” he said. Under this principal, a parish is a subunit of a diocese, which is itself a subunit of the national Episcopal Church, the Judge Corona reasoned.

As the Episcopal Church held that Bishop Schofield had been deposed and that it recognized Bishop Jerry Lamb as Bishop of San Joaquin, the assets and property held by the Anglican diocese should revert to the loyalist group, the judge argued. The actions of the San Joaquin synod to amend its constitution to secede from the Episcopal Church were “ultra vires”, unlawful and void.

Judge Corona scheduled a hearing for May 5 for the parties to respond to his tentative opinion which accepted at face value the opinions of the Episcopal Church’s expert witness as fact, but rejected the diocese’s expert witness testimony as opinion.

Canon Bill Gandenberger of the Anglican Diocese of San Joaquin told The Church of England Newspaper the judge’s opinion was a “preliminary ruling which shall be argued against in court tomorrow.” San Joaquin looked “forward to the opportunity to present our positions properly and convincingly” before the judge.

The proceeding before the court was a motion for summary judgment by the Episcopal Church against the Anglican Diocese. Under California law a Summary Judgment or Motion to Adjudicate can be made when there are no disputed issues of fact, and the court may decide the issues on their merits.

However, in this case the judge’s assumption that as the Episcopal Church is “hierarchical” in a manner akin to the Roman Catholic Church is a disputed material issue of fact, upon which the whole case turns for the diocese.

Attorneys for the diocese argued in the May 5 hearing the judge erred as a matter of law in accepting the Episcopal Church’s expert witness testimony on the ecclesial structures of the Episcopal Church as uncontroverted, while the diocese’s expert witness testimony offered contrary evidence, asserting that when the two sides dispute the facts to which the law is applied, there is a disputed issue of fact, and as such the matter cannot be resolved via a summary judgment.

The diocese’s attorneys also argued in the hour and twenty minute hearing that the attempt by Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori to place Bishop Lamb in the San Joaquin see violated the constitution and canons of the diocese. Since the rules were not followed, the diocese argued, Bishop Lamb could not be Bishop of San Joaquin and had no standing to claim the assets of the diocese.

Attorneys for the Episcopal Church rejected the charge that the election of Bishop Lamb was defective, and cited the judge’s opinion that the synod votes to secede were ultra vires. The national church also argued that the courts had no authority to review the Episcopal Church’s internal procedures, and must accept the decision of the Presiding Bishop as to whom she recognizes as the lawful bishop of the diocese.

A decision by the court is expected in the coming weeks, however, whichever way the court rules, an appeal by the losing party is all but certain.

Militant threat in Pacific island: CEN 5.01.09 p 8. May 5, 2009

Posted by geoconger in Anglican Church of Melanesia, Church of England Newspaper, Islam.
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Militant Islam poses a threat to social stability in the Solomon Islands, the Bishop of Malaita tells The Church of England Newspaper. Muslim missionaries funded by Malaysian and Saudi Islamist groups have led to heightened tensions in the South Pacific nation, which erupted in violence in December after a Muslim leader attacked an Anglican priest.

On Dec 16, the Rev. James Utamaesia was beaten by Jack Rade, leader of the Muslim League Community of East Malaita. Provincial Police Commander David Diosi told the Solomon Star Rade had threatened to cut off Fr. Utamaesia’s head and “destroy anyone who goes against the will” of the Muslim League.

The attack was allegedly in retaliation for Anglican youths having throne stones at a Muslim League truck, police said.

On Jan 5, Malaita Bishop Sam Sahu met with Muslim leaders and urged them to turn over Rade to the police to forestall retaliation or communal violence. Muslim community leaders agreed to surrender Rade to the police and discussed the rising tensions between the Muslim and Christian communities.

The bishop said although the meeting was productive, there were disagreements on certain issues that were discussed, such as “Who is Jesus?”

Bishop Sahu told CEN that “at the moment relations between the Muslim followers and the Anglican community on Malaita are fine” in the wake of the interfaith talks. “We agreed to respect each other and to ask our members to remain calm while we deal with the situation on the ground.”

However, “the form of Muslim religion we are experiencing on Malaita tends to be aggressive, militant, in nature,” Bishop Sahu said.

“The Christian churches and the Government must be quick to realise that that Islam in the Solomon Islands and on Malaita in particular, has a capacity for thinking strategically, acting structurally and working towards ‘conversion’ of Christians and non-Christians to Allah and the Muslim faith.”

“They enter this country, as they do in other developing countries, in the name of business and development, using money from the rich Arab world, only to spread Islam. As a church leader I can speak for many people on Malaita and the Solomon Islands as a whole: We want to remain as a Christian country; we can accommodate moderate Muslims but not militant Muslims,” Bishop Sahu said.

28 Dioceses to form new US church: CEN 5.01.09 p 7. May 5, 2009

Posted by geoconger in Anglican Church of North America, Church of England Newspaper.
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The Anglican Church in North America (ACNA) will be comprised of 28 dioceses and dioceses-in-formation, the breakaway group’s leadership council said at the close of an organizational meeting held in Dallas, Texas on April 25.

“It is a great encouragement to see the fruit of many years’ work,” said Pittsburgh Bishop Robert Duncan, archbishop-elect of the ACNA. “Today 23 dioceses and five dioceses-in-formation joined together to reconstitute an orthodox, Biblical, missionary and united Church in North America.”

The ACNA will hold its inaugural provincial assembly June 22-25 at St. Vincent’s Cathedral in Bedford, Texas, and adopt a constitution and canons for the proto-province of 100,000 active members in 700 churches across the US and Canada.

Earlier this month the seven archbishops of the Fellowship of Confessing Anglicans (FCA) primates’ counsel gave their backing to the formation of the province. “Though many Provinces are in impaired or broken communion with [the Episcopal Church] and the Anglican Church of Canada, our fellowship with faithful Anglicans in North America remains steadfast,” the primates said.

“The FCA Primates’ Council recognizes the Anglican Church in North America as genuinely Anglican and recommends that Anglican Provinces affirm full communion with the ACNA,” they said.

President says church and state must work together: CEN 5.04.09 May 4, 2009

Posted by geoconger in Church of England Newspaper, Church of the Province of Central Africa.
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Church and state must work together to develop the moral and economic welfare of the nation, the President of Zambia told the 18th meeting of the Diocese of Lusaka synod last week

President Rupiah Banda also endorsed the planned reorganization of the Anglican Church in Zambia and the reform of its administrative structures. While it undertook a review of “church rules and regulations,” the president urged synod that it consider “enhancing justice for all, strengthening the spiritual and social wellbeing of everyone and the extension of God’s glory on earth.”

In fulfillment of these aims, “my government is open to dialogue that will change the livelihood of Zambians and therefore I wish to encourage you to feel free to discuss matters of national interest with my government,” the president said on April 24.

Discussions on dividing the Church of the Province of Central Africa into three national churches: Zambia, Zimbabwe and Malawi were held by synod. However, while administrative structures are in place in Zambia and Malawi to create new national provinces, the difficult political and economic situation in Zimbabwe, coupled with the Kunonga schism, led synod to conclude that creation of the new provinces would be unwise at this time.

Read it all in The Church of England Newspaper.

President says church and state must work together

No need for ‘flying bishop’ in Wales, says Archbishop: CEN 5.01.09 p 6. May 4, 2009

Posted by geoconger in Church in Wales, Church of England Newspaper, Women Priests.
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There is no need for a “Flying Bishop” for Welsh traditionalists, the Archbishop of Wales told members of the church’s Governing Body last week, as the pastoral care offered by the current bishop’s bench is sufficient to meet the needs of all Welsh Anglicans.

Responding to a question from a member of the Governing Body during is April 22 session in Llandudno, Dr. Barry Morgan said the bishops were offering “pastoral and sacramental care to every member of the Church in Wales, without exception.”

He added that there was “room in the Church in Wales for those who in conscience cannot accept the ordination of women.” However this latitude did not extend to episcopal oversight.

The bishops would not “perpetuate a system whereby conscientious objectors may avoid not only the ministry of ordained women but also the ministry of male bishops who have ordained them. That leads in the end to fundamental division and a denial that things are other than they are – that we do live in a church that ordains both women and men,” he said.

Dr. Morgan’s comments follow upon his Sept 17 announcement that no successor would be appointed to succeed the Rt. Rev. David Thomas—the Church in Wales Provincial Assistant Bishop. Following the introduction of women priests in the Church in Wales in 1996, the position of provincial assistant bishop was created to offer delegated episcopal oversight to those who could not accept the innovation.

September’s decision to end alternative oversight was greeted with regret by the Rev. Alan Rabjohns, Chairman of Credo Cymru, Forward in Faith Wales. Last year he stated the group rejected “the claim that such an appointment is unnecessary and do not regard what was said yesterday as the final word on this subject.”

However, Dr. Morgan last week said the issue was closed as matters of personal conscience could not trump church law, he argued. “There is a difference between recognising the fact that some individuals hold personal views that are at variance with what the Governing Body has decided about the ordination of women and reflecting those views in the structures of the church as if the Church in Wales as a whole had doubts about women’s ordination and the bishops who ordained them. That to my mind would be a real act of injustice – to ordained women, bishops, indeed to the whole church.”

Will new evidence clear Bennison?: CEN 5.01.09 p 6. May 4, 2009

Posted by geoconger in Abuse, Church of England Newspaper, Pennsylvania.
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New evidence has been unearthed that defense attorneys claim exonerates Pennsylvania Bishop Charles Bennison of the charges of conspiracy and misconduct. In an April 17 motion filed with the Episcopal Church’s Court for the Trial of a Bishop, lawyers for the suspended bishop have asked the court to toss out their guilty verdict, or grant the controversial bishop a new trial.

Letters allegedly written by the victim to her abuser, the Rev. John Bennison, brother of the bishop, the bishop’s lawyers argue impeach her testimony at trial that the bishop knew about his brother’s abuse but took no action.

On June 26, a trial court convicted Bishop Bennison on two counts of conduct unbecoming a member of the clergy. The bishop was found guilty of having failed to respond appropriately in 1973 after having learned his brother, whom he had engaged to be his youth minister, had “engaged in a sexually abusive and sexually exploitive relationship” with a 14-year-old girl. Bishop Bennison was also found guilty of having conspired to cover up that abuse.

In September the court ordered Bishop Bennison be defrocked and that he “no longer serve as a member of the clergy of the church.” Bennison’s attorney James Pabarue objected to the sentence saying it was “utterly immoral” and “completely wrong,” and that his client would appeal.

The April 17 motion states that new evidence has been unearthed in the form of 200 letters written by the victim to John Bennison. In testimony before the court last year, the victim stated that she wanted Charles Bennison to intervene and stop his brother’s affair with her, a teenaged member of the church youth group. However, the bishop’s lawyers claim the letters show the affair was consensual, and that the victim sought to hide the affair from Charles Bennison.

The motive for the victim’s actions against Charles Bennison was revenge, the bishop’s lawyers said. “John Bennison ultimately left his wife, not for [the victim], but for another woman. It was after John married the second woman that [the victim] lodged her allegations of a cover-up against Bishop Bennison, 17 years after the relationship with John Bennison ended,” the bishop’s lawyers claimed.

“As the trumpet of the priests brought down the walls of Jericho, this latest revelation destroys the foundation of the case against Bishop Bennison,” the motion argues, as the letters show “Charles Bennison was deceived and duped.”

Under American canon law, the presiding judge of the court sets a briefing schedule for consideration of the motion. If it rejects the April 17 motion, Bishop Bennison may then ask for appellate review of the lower court’s proceedings.

‘No bribery’ as new Kenyan primate is elected: CEN 5.01.09 p 8. May 2, 2009

Posted by geoconger in Anglican Church of Kenya, Church of England Newspaper.
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A conservative academic and ecclesial statesman has been elected Primate of the Anglican Church of Kenya (ACK).

The Bishop of Bungona, the Rt. Rev. Eliud Wabukala overcame charges of simony leveled by one of the unsuccessful candidates in the race to elect Kenya’s fifth primate and archbishop to win two thirds of the votes of the delegates to the April 24 electoral synod meeting in Nairobi.

Educated at Toronto’s Wycliffe College, St. Paul’s College, Limeru and Makere University in Uganda, Dr. Wabukala served as academic dean of St Paul’s, the ACK’s primary theological college, until his election as first Bishop of Bungona in 1996.

Until 2008 Dr. Wabukala was chairman of the National Council of Churches of Kenya and is a member of a government commission charged with investigating the 2007 post-general election political and tribal violence that killed over a 1000 and left tens of thousands homeless.

The Kenyan Church has been divided along the tribal lines that reflect Kenya’s fragile political state, observers note. Archbishop-elect Wabukala is expected to continue his predecessors’ drive towards unity and reconciliation with the ACK and within Kenyan society.

Following his election, the new archbishop told reporters he would “continue from where my predecessor left…I call for reconciliation and harmony in all dioceses.”

Four representatives from each of the ACK’s dioceses along with the members of the church’s House of Bishops met in private session at All Saints Cathedral in Nairobi on April 24 to choose from among the four candidates on offer: the Bishop of Taita Teva, Rt. Rev. Samson Mwaluda; the Bishop of Maseno West, the Rt. Rev. Joseph Wasonga; the Bishop of Kitale, the Rt. Rev. Stephen Kewasis; and Dr. Wabukala.

On April 18, Bishop Mwaluda—the ACK’s representative to the Anglican Consultative Council–charged an unnamed rival with simony. “I have heard money is already exchanging hands but I will not do that because I know I have what it takes to lead the church,” he told the Daily Nation.

Speaking to reporters after the election, a spokesman for the ACK, Bishop Stephen Njihia Mwangi said the charges of vote buying were false. “Those are lies. Nobody can use money in this exercise. If one does that, they are disqualified,” he said.

After each round of voting, the candidate with the lowest total was eliminated from consideration. On the first round Bishop Mwaluda was eliminated and after round two Bishop Kewasis was removed, leaving Dr. Wabukala and Bishop Masonga—who came runner up in the 1996 election to Archbishop David Gitari and runner up in the 2003 election to Archbishop Benjamin Nzimbi.

Kenyan canon law, however, requires the winner to receive a supermajority of votes, and a fourth round of voting was necessary for Dr. Wabakala to win a supermajority from the 162 delegates present.

A participant in the 2008 Gafon Conference in Jerusalem, Dr. Wabukala is expected to maintain the ACK’s present stance of impaired communion with the Episcopal Church and join the primates’ council of the Fellowship of Confessing Anglicans (FCA), and support the third province movement in North America.

Bishop Bill Atwood, who serves as suffragan bishop of All Saints Diocese in Nairobi and one of the ACK’s two bishops for the US, told The Church of England Newspaper the new archbishop was “gracious and humble, yet a courageously principled man who lives for the Gospel of Jesus Christ.”

His election was “a great day for the Anglican Church of Kenya and the Anglican Communion,” Bishop Atwood said.

Dr. Wabukala will be assume office on July 1, and be consecrated Bishop of All Saints Diocese—the titular see for the Archbishop of Kenya—on July 5.

New Congo Primate Elected: CEN 5.01.09 p May 2, 2009

Posted by geoconger in Anglican Church of the Congo, Church of England Newspaper.
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The Dean of the Anglican Church of the Congo writes that following a meeting of the church’s House of Bishops in Goma on April 28, the Bishop of Boga, the Rt. Rev. Henri Isingoma has been elected Primate and Archbishop of the Congo.

Two candidates, the Rt. Rev. Zachary Masimango, Bishop of Kindu and Dean of the Province and Bishop Isingoma stood for election. Following a secret ballot, Bishop Isingoma was elected by a vote of four to three.

Educated at the Congo’s Anglican Theological Seminary in Bukavu and at the Faculté de théologie évangélique in Bangui in the Central African Republic, Bishop Isingoma served as principal of the Anglican Theological Seminary from 1993 to 1997, and was elected Bishop of the southern Congolese diocese of Katanga in 1997, and is the church’s representative to the Anglican Consultative Council. In 2007 he was translated to the eastern Diocese of Boga along the Congo’s border with Rwanda.

Married with six children, the 58 year old archbishop-elect will be installed as primate of the province in July, upon the retirement of Archbishop Fidele Dirokpa.

In his announcement of the election, Bishop Masimango wrote the new primate would “emphasize faith in the Word of God, joined with work” in leading the church.

The majority of the 500,000 members of the Anglican church in the Congo are concentrated along the country’s Swahili speaking eastern region, the epicenter of two wars that have claimed 5.4 million lives over the past decade, a January 2008 report by the International Rescue Committee (IRC) said.

Last year, war, disease and malnutrition killed an estimated 45,000 Congolese every month. “Congo’s loss is equivalent to the entire population of Denmark or the state of Colorado perishing within a decade,” George Rupp, president of the IRC said in a statement.

Sporadic fighting continues to erupt between rival warlords and tribal militias in the Eastern Congo.

In October a fresh round of fighting stranded Bishop Isingoma and 150 delegates to the Diocese of Boga synod. After the fighting subsided, and the delegates were able to return home, many found their homes and churches destroyed—some for the fifth time, the Congo Church Association reported last year.

Canada bishops avoid addressing the gay issue: CEN 5.01.09 May 1, 2009

Posted by geoconger in Anglican Church of Canada, Church of England Newspaper.
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THE GLOBAL economic meltdown and the Anglican Communion’s divisions over homosexuality took centre-stage last week at the Canadian House of Bishops’ meeting in Niagara Falls.

However, in their April 23 “letter to the church” the bishops declined to address head-on the splits within the Canadian Church over gay marriage, saying only that they had “reviewed motions by General Synod 2007 concerning same-sex blessings.”

Divisions over doctrine and discipline centring round sexual ethics have so far led to the creation of 28 parishes served by three former Anglican Church of Canada bishops and 73 priests and deacons under the umbrella of the Anglican Network in Canada (ANiC) — the Canadian wing of the third province movement in North America. In 2007 General Synod declined to authorize rites for same-sex blessings, but asked for further study as to “whether the blessing of same-sex unions is a faithful, Spirit-led development of Christian doctrine.”

The discussion of human sexuality was held in a closed-door session during the April 18-23 meeting, with no report issued on the deliberations. However, tensions over sexuality remain high, with Toronto and a half dozen other dioceses indicating they will go ahead with gay blessings in violation of the 2008 Lambeth Conference call for a “season of restrain” over further liturgical innovations on same-sex blessings.

Read it all in The Church of England Newspaper.

Canada bishops avoid addressing the gay issue
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