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There is a point when a frayed rope finally snaps, and if the Anglican
Church were a rope, the breaking point may be very near.
November 2 might be the moment of truth, because thats the
day when the consecration of an openly homosexual bishop is scheduled
in New Hampshire. Canon Gene Robinson, a practicing homosexual who
left his wife and family more than 13 years ago to live with his
male lover, was elected bishop at the Episcopal Churchs annual
meeting, its 74th General Convention in Minneapolis last summer.
The Episcopal Church, with almost 2.4 million members, is the U.S.
branch of the Anglican Church. Its bishops voted by an almost 2-1
margin to elect Robinson to the New Hampshire episcopate.
The vote threatens to destroy not only the Episcopal Church, but
also the nearly 77-million-member worldwide Anglican community.
Conservatives in the U.S., led by the American Anglican Council,
quickly called for a meeting of like-minded Episcopalians, in Dallas,
Texas, in early October. Nearly 3,000 people attended a gathering
that included 46 bishops, 46 deacons, 799 priests, 1,413 laypersons
and 103 seminary students representing 600 parishes and 105
dioceses in the Episcopal Church.
The attendees approved a declaration disavowing the election of
Robinson, and demanded that the Episcopal leadership repent
of and reverse the unbiblical and schismatic decision made
in Minneapolis. The group also called on Anglican leaders worldwide
to guide the realignment of Anglicanism in North America
so conservatives could have spiritual oversight apart from the increasingly
leftist U.S. church.
Also approved by the conservative meeting in Dallas: a recommendation
that conservative churches redirect financial resources away from
the support of the national Episcopal Church to biblically
orthodox mission and ministry.
While admittedly in the numerical minority, conservatives in the
Episcopal Church carry a lot of financial weight. Out of the U.S.
branchs more than 7,300 churches, one third are considered
conservative, according to World magazine but those
conservative churches account for 70% of the denominations
income each year.
A
looming split?
Rowan Williams, the Archbishop of Canterbury and head of the Anglican
Church, summoned the individual primates of the Anglican Churchs
38 provinces to London for a two-day meeting in mid-October to discuss
the crisis.
Williams position as Archbishop holds no actual authority
in the Anglican Church, nor do primates have any authority to reverse
the decision of the U.S. church to elect Robinson. Nevertheless,
much of the Anglican Church outside the U. S. and Europe is conservative,
and leaders around the world were horrified at Robinsons election.
Archbishop Peter Akinola of Nigeria, for example, called the election
of a homosexual man to the bishopric a satanic attack on Gods
church.
In London the Anglican primates stopped short of any call for a
drastic schism within the worldwide communion, but also placed the
ball firmly in the court of the Episcopal Church and, specifically,
the New Hampshire diocese. A statement issued by the leaders said
that the unity of the worldwide Anglican communion would be put
in jeopardy if Robinson is consecrated in November.
But Robinson has refused to withdraw his name at this point
the only conceivable step that could avert the crisis within Anglicanism.
Concerning his appointment as bishop, he said, I believe with
my whole heart that it is Gods will..
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