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Olde Tyme Religion
Church of England: Archbishop confronts Anglican rebels
2008-07-01
The Archbishop of Canterbury last night directly challenged the rebel Anglicans who have launched a breakaway faction within the global communion. In unusually forthright language, he accused them of lacking legitimacy, authority and, by implication, integrity.

Breaking his silence over the threat to the unity of the 77 million-strong communion, Williams warned the leaders of the conservative coalition that demolishing existing structures was not the answer to their concerns.

Responding to the creation at the weekend of the Fellowship of Confessing Anglicans (Foca), a global network for millions of Anglicans unhappy with liberal teaching on matters such as homosexuality and women priests, Williams said: "If they [the teachings] are not working effectively, the challenge is to renew them rather than to improvise solutions that may seem to be effective for some in the short term but will continue to create more problems than they solve."

The announcement of the new body came at the culmination of the Global Anglican Future Conference (Gafcon), a rebel summit in Jerusalem that attracted more than 300 bishops.

In a statement issued on the eve of the arrival of some of those bishops in London today, Williams said: "Gafcon's proposals for the way ahead are problematic in all sorts of ways and I urge those who have outlined these to think very carefully about the risks entailed."

He focused his criticism on the leaders of the new primates council, which is tasked with recruiting existing Anglicans into the network. "A primates council which consists only of a self-selected group from among the primates of the [Anglican] communion will not pass the test of legitimacy for all. And any claim to be free to operate across provincial boundaries is fraught with difficulties," he said.

Church sources said last night that Williams opposed Gafcon because it lacked legitimacy, authority and integrity. There was no information, they said, on who wrote the Gafcon document, how many primates had signed up to it or whether it was legally possible to set up an alternative communion.

One Lambeth Palace official said: "It is ludicrous to say you do not recognise the Archbishop of Canterbury or the see of Canterbury; they are the defining characteristics of Anglicanism. By doing away with the role and the place, these people are becoming a Protestant sect."

The Church of England is facing dissent on a second front, with a group of clergy and bishops expressing their antipathy to another divisive issue: women bishops. More than 1,300 clergy and 11 bishops have written to Williams threatening to defect if women are consecrated bishops, according to the Times. The issue is set to dominate a General Synod meeting that starts on Friday.

Leading Gafcon figures arrived in London yesterday to woo parishes which are considering opting out of mainstream Anglicanism to join the new network. The Archbishop of Sydney, Peter Jensen, and the Archbishop of Uganda, Henry Luke Orombi, will be among those addressing an audience of more than 750 clergy and churchwardens at All Souls' Church on global Anglicanism and English orthodoxy.

The Gafcon team have declared that they are ignoring historic links with Canterbury, deeming them to be superfluous, and are severing ties with the US church and the Anglican church in Canada.

In a statement on Sunday, they said: "We do not accept that Anglican identity is determined necessarily through recognition by the Archbishop of Canterbury."
But they DID re-affirm the 39 Articles and the original Book of Common Prayer, thereby noting that it is they and not the Arch Druid who are true to the Anglican tradition. They even (gasp) noted the desireability, nay the command, to preach the Gospel where +++Rowan fears to tred.
Posted by:Fred

#6  Excellent point Procopius2k. I think you're coorect.
Posted by: MarkZ   2008-07-01 11:19  

#5  Good people like Bishop Michael Nazi-Ali have the courage of their convictions. Rowan Williams can't relate to that.

I'm speculating, but I think that when, a few months back, Rowan suggested that England could find room for sharia law along side secular civil society, the camel's back was forever broken. Nazi-Ali (and others) have thrown down the guanlet. God bless 'em.

Rowan is more critical of his own (Nazi-Ali) than he has been toward the muzz who represent the real threat to England. Rowan is dhimmi through and through. Worse. Rowan is a traitor to his faith and the civilization that gave birth to his faith.

Nazi-Ali is saying to Rowan it's well past time to pick the team you want to play for. Who's side are you on?
Posted by: MarkZ   2008-07-01 11:17  

#4  Go preside at another funeral, you godless heathen clock-watcher. That's your job, isn't it? The Grave-Digger of the Faith.
Posted by: Mitch H.   2008-07-01 10:53  

#3  So rowan is the traditionalist and the others are rebels according to this article? Perhaps there are -other- issues involved besides the women priest meme?

Perhaps, if the see of Canturbury is blind (or worse)...
Posted by: swksvolFF   2008-07-01 10:37  

#2  Williams warned the leaders of the conservative coalition that demolishing existing structures was not the answer to their concerns.

I'm sure Williams misses the irony given that was basically what the Pope probably communicated to Henry VIII when he created the Anglican Church separate from Rome.
Posted by: Procopius2k   2008-07-01 08:40  

#1  Compare wid TOPIX > BRITISH MUSLIMS' DEMAND FOR SHARIA IS A THREAT TO BRITAIN, FAITH.

COLD WAR Myth > Europe = NATO would be in serious trouble iff the Soviet Army + WarPact ever broke through the Germans.

YOOKAY, I'll BITE, ISN'T GREAT BRITAIN, etc. ALREADY BEHIND GERMANY, GERMAN ARMY, + FULDA GAP!
Posted by: JosephMendiola   2008-07-01 00:43  

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