Concerned that the crisis in the worldwide Anglican Communion is
deepening, conservative Anglican primates in Africa are organizing a
second conference to discuss ways of returning the church to what they
describe as biblical faithfulness.
The primates held the first conference in Jerusalem in 2008, five
years after openly gay New Hampshire Bishop Gene Robinson was
consecrated in the Episcopal Church. The action threw the communion into
disarray.
At the Jerusalem meeting, the primates called for the creation of an
Anglican province in North America to rival the Episcopal Church. Five
years later, the primates say the new Anglican province, known as the
Anglican Church in North America, is thriving.
Now, the archbishop of Nigeria and archbishops in East Africa have
organized the second Global Anglican Future Conference at which they
hope to accelerate the process that began in Jerusalem. The so-called
GAFCON II meeting will take place Oct. 21-26 in Nairobi.
“We have succeeded in consolidation,” said Ugandan Anglican Archbishop Stanley Ntagali.
“Anglican churches have been planted in North America. The clergy
trust one another to preach according to the Bible,” he said. “But the
crisis in the communion continues to deepen as more (homosexual)
consecrations occur.”
In addition to the consecration of gay bishops, the African primates
are concerned with the growing acceptance of same-sex unions in the
West. They say attempts to discipline the Episcopal Church were not
successful, and, as a result, a “spiritual cancer” has spread to other
provinces, including the Anglican Church of Canada, the Church of
England, the Scottish Episcopal Church, the Church in Wales, and the
Anglican Church of Southern Africa.
In their words, GAFCON II seeks to restore good order, theological integrity and biblical faithfulness.
“We need to see the overthrow by some churches of the creation order
of female and male as just one symptom of the disease,” wrote Kenyan
Anglican Archbishop Eliud Wabukala, chairman of the GAFCON primates’
council in a letter to the conference dated Thursday (Aug. 22). “The
cause is spiritual.”
The primates remain optimistic that Archbishop Justin Welby, the new
global leader of the Anglican Communion, may prevent a split since he is
on record as being opposed to gay consecrations.
“The primates are happy with Welby since he has been attending our
meetings,” said Ntagali. “He has taken time to follow what we are doing
and he understands we are not breaking the communion.”