26 September 2015 A.D. IRISH TIMES: Anglicanism in crisis: Canterbury’s risky move
26 September 2015 A.D. IRISH
TIMES: Anglicanism in crisis: Canterbury’s risky move
Editors. “Anglicanism in crisis: Canterbury’s risky
move.” The Irish Times. 18 Sept 2015.
http://www.irishtimes.com/opinion/editorial/anglicanism-in-crisis-canterbury-s-risky-move-1.2355660.
Accessed 26 Sept 2015.
Anglicanism in
crisis: Canterbury’s risky move
The dividing issues are sexuality and the authority of bishops and the
Bible, and, to a lesser extent, ordination of women
The Archbishop of Canterbury is proposing to restructure the Anglican
Communion, turning the third largest global family of churches into a much
looser federation or grouping. The Archbishop of Armagh, Dr Richard Clarke, and
37 other Anglican primates from around the world have been invited to
Canterbury next January to discuss Archbishop Justin Welby’s proposals. In the
new scheme of things, Anglican churches, including the Church of Ireland and
the Church of England, could be linked to Canterbury without necessarily being
linked to each other.
With 80 million members, Anglicans form the third largest Christian body, after
the Roman Catholic and Orthodox churches.
Archbishop Welby’s predecessor, Rowan Williams, became disheartened in his
fraught efforts to hold Anglicans together, and they collapsed when they were
rejected by the dioceses in his own Church of England. Over the past two
decades, it has become more and more difficult to hold Anglicanism together.
The main dividing issues are sexuality and the authority of bishops and the
Bible, and, to a lesser extent, the ordination of women.
But there is also a power battle between churches in the northern and
southern hemispheres, and a widening chasm between more liberal churches in
North America and churches in Nigeria, Uganda and Kenya that actively support
harsh legislation against gay people. The irony is that the churches most
opposed to pluralism and diversity may have forced the creation of a new world
Anglicanism characterised by greater diversity and pluralism.
In the midst of mayhem, the Church of Ireland is caught between the two
factions. While some bishops encourage change and progress, others support and
encourage dissident conservative bishops and clergy who have seceded from the
Episcopal Church in the US. Constitutionally, the Church of Ireland is
committed to maintaining communion with the Church of England. But the
challenge facing both churches is whether they can hold together.
In some places that unity is little more than a figment. In many cases, the
parishes that claim to be most conservative on sexual issues have all but
abandoned the form and content of traditional Anglican worship and liturgy.
The Archbishop’s proposals risk redefining the Anglican theology of the
nature of the church, with a communion of churches being replaced by a
federation of sects. Without shared discipline or doctrine, it is difficult to
see how any new federation or alliance can pretend to hold together. The
proposals could leave bishops and dioceses in the Church of Ireland and the
Church of England free to pick and choose which churches and dioceses they cosy
up to, and the Anglican churches on these islands risk becoming more fractious
and divided.
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