Tuesday, December 16, 2008

Provisional constitution endorsed for North American Third Province

Leaders of the Third Province movement sidestepped the contentious issue of women clergy last week, and have endorsed a provisional constitution and canons governing the emerging Third Province in the Americas.

“God did a great work today,” Pittsburgh Bishop Robert Duncan told supporters at a church service in Wheaton, Illinois at the end of the Dec 1-3 gathering, as the disparate members of the Common Cause Partnership (CCP) of Anglican traditionalists in the US and Canada “came together with the proposed draft of the constitution and canons” and after discussing each proviso, “adopted unanimously” each article of the code.

This was “staggering considering who was around the table” said Bishop Duncan—the moderator of CCP and now the interim primate and archbishop of the provisional province.

Comprised of approximately 700 congregations with an average Sunday attendance of 100,000, the newly created Anglican Church in North America (ACNA) boasts Anglo-Catholics, Evangelicals, Charismatics, and a variety of traditionalists at odds with the Episcopal Church and Anglican Church of Canada.

Its members include the four breakaway dioceses of Pittsburgh, San Joaquin, Quincy and Fort Worth and the Anglican diaspora of the last 125 years: evangelical groups that seceded within the past eight years, Anglo-Catholic groups that left following changes to the Book of Common Prayer and the introduction of the ordination of women in the 1970s, and the Reformed Episcopal Church---an independent Evangelical Anglican church that seceded in the 1870s in protest to the high church movement then controlling the Episcopal Church.

While the document must be ratified by the individual governing bodies comprising ACNA to give it de jure effect, it had already received de facto authority from its members. “We are not operating under it,” he said. The CCP leadership council is “now the provincial executive committee,” and “I am archbishop and primate-designate.”

The “seven primates meeting in Jerusalem [at Gafcon] asked us to prepare this “document, he said, and “I have fair reason to believe they will recognize it.” The Gafcon primates met in London on Dec 4 to receive the ACNA documents, and gave it their endorsement. Archbishops Emmanuel Kolini of Rwanda, Peter Akinola of Nigeria, Gregory Venables of the Southern Cone, Henry Orombi of Uganda and Benjamin Nzimbi then went to Canterbury on Friday, a spokesman for Lambeth Palace told CEN, and presented the documents to Dr. Rowan Williams.

Bishop Duncan was optimistic the new province would be incardinated as the 39th province of the Anglican Communion. “I have to believe,” he said, “the system will have to recognize the province before too many years pass.”

The “majority of Anglicans will recognize us” within a short time, he noted, and added that the ACNA would be recognized as a valid ecclesial body by other members of the Catholic faith as what ACNA stands for “looks like the Christian faith” and its apostolic witness would be recognizable to all.

A spokesman for US Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori declined to speculate on the ramifications of the Dec 3 rollout of the ACNA constitution. However, the Rev Canon Charles Robertson said he wanted it “to be clear that The Episcopal Church, along with the Anglican Church of Canada and the La Iglesia Anglicana de Mexico, comprise the official, recognized presence of the Anglican Communion in North America.”

Dr Robertson told The Church of England Newspaper that as a matter of doctrine and church tradition, separation in the face of division was not the apostolic solution. “Paul spoke of the importance of being together ‘in Christ’ to believers who were more apt to form sectarian movements and follow certain leaders while decrying others and even speaking ill of Paul himself.”

He noted that that “consummate Anglican,” Richard Hooker “both proclaimed and modeled a life in Christ that welcomed the diversity of his time, in the face of people who only recently before had been killing one another--literally killing one another--because each believed the other to be a heretic.”
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Disclaimer

No responsibility or liability shall attach itself to either myself or to the blogspot ‘Clerical Whispers’ for any or all of the articles placed here.

The placing of an article hereupon does not necessarily imply that I agree or accept the contents of the article as being necessarily factual in theology, dogma or otherwise.

Sotto Voce

(Source: RI)