Sunday 13 January 2013

Times: Afro-Anglican leaders denounce Church of England on gay bishops

‘Reforms could very well shatter hopes for healing and reconciliation’
http://www.timesofmalta.com/articles/view/20130111/world/Afro-Anglican-leaders-denounce-Church-of-England-on-gay-bishops.452805
Friday, January 11, 2013 by Reuters

Senior African Anglican leaders have lined up to denounce the Church of England’s decision to allow celibate gay bishops, warning it would only widen the divisions within the worldwide Anglican Communion.

Archbishop Nicholas Okoh of Nigeria, effectively the largest province in the Communion, said such reforms “could very well shatter whatever hopes we had for healing and reconciliation within our beloved Communion.”

His comments yesterday followed similar denunciations on Monday by Ugandan Archbishop Stanley Ntagali and Archbishop Eliud Wabukala of Kenya, who is also head of the Gafcon group of traditionalist Anglican primates opposed to gay clergy.

The global Communion of 80 million Anglicans split deeply after Canada’s Anglican Church began blessing same-sex couples in 2002 and the Episcopal Church, its United States branch, ordained Gene Robinson as its first gay bishop in 2003.

The African churches, a major bloc of Anglicans around the world, were in the vanguard of the traditionalists opposing the change as contrary to Biblical teaching.

The Church of England had bowed “to the contemporary idols of secularism and moral expediency,” Okoh said, and “is one step removed from the moral precipice we have already witnessed in The Episcopal Church (USA) and the Anglican Church in Canada.” The supposed assurances of celibacy, while perhaps well intentioned, are both unworkable and unenforceable, he added.

Anglican clergy, including bishops, are allowed to marry.

The Church of England decision to demand celibacy of gay bishops was a compromise between liberals ready to give them full rights and conservatives opposed to opening the episcopate to them. The Church, under pressure from public opinion after voting narrowly last November to maintain an unpopular ban on women becoming bishops, approved the change late in December but only confirmed it last Friday.

The reaction from African archbishops highlighted the challenge awaiting the new Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby, who will officially take over as head of the Church of England and spiritual leader of the Communion next month.

His predecessor Rowan Williams spent his decade in office struggling to avoid a schism between the traditionalists, mainly African with strong support from US conservatives, and liberal Church leaders in the United States, Canada and Britain.

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