An Anglican Future without
~ David W. Virtue ~
www.virtueonline.org
There is an old fable of
the scorpion and the frog. The scorpion wanted to cross the river and asked the
frog if he would carry him on his back to get across to the other side. The
frog replied that if he tried to help him, the scorpion would surely try to
kill him. The scorpion replied, "If I try to kill you, then I would die
too, for you see I cannot swim!" The frog agreed to carry the scorpion.
Halfway across the river, the scorpion began to sting the frog. The frog
protested, "You promised not to sting me. Now we shall both die. Why did
you do it?" The scorpion shrugged, "I could not help myself. It is my
nature."
This is precisely what is
happening in The Episcopal Church. The scorpion of liberalism has been riding
the frog of orthodoxy for more than 40 years. The frog has vainly believed that
its generosity in carrying the scorpion would lead him to believe that he has
been wrong on matters of faith and morals, and would reform, repent and return
to the faith once delivered for all to the saints.
Alas, it is has not
happened. As the journey of orthodoxy in The Episcopal Church nears its end, again
and again the scorpion sting of revisionism has pierced the shell of orthodox
Anglicanism, leaving the orthodox faith without hope of carrying the
scorpion to any kind of repentance.
The analogy, of course, is
not perfect. Orthodoxy never dies. Jesus said his Church would prevail against
any evil that it might face including the revisionist theological sting of a
scorpion. In the end only the scorpion dies. Theological and ecclesiastical
revisionism, like all the other isms
of the last century: Socialism, Communism, Nazism, and the newer revised forms
of revisionisms: materialism, Gnosticism, Arianism, Donatism, Pelagianism,
and so forth, will die in due course. The Faith, though under serious attack,
will remain.
What we see playing out now
in the worldwide Anglican Communion, as the new century dawns, is the death of
a post-colonial church caught in the vortex of post-modernism with its loss of
absolutes, its acquiescence to moral relativism, its succumbing to political
correctness and its overt acceptance of pansexual sin. This has led, in the
case of the Episcopal Church and increasingly across the Anglican Communion,
to ordaining non-celibate homosexual clergy, rites for same-sex "marriage"
and the cultural and ecclesiastical acceptance of a deadly behavior.
This summer, the great divide
in The Anglican Communion was highlighted by two important conferences: GAFCON and Lambeth.
The first conference was
called The Global Anglican Future Conference (GAFCON). It was held in
GAFCON met to find a way
forward, and they did. By contrast, when the 600 plus bishops (the greatest
single majority of them from The Episcopal Church [TEC]) met in
Lambeth was structured to
avoid any decision. The Indaba concept of listening and conversation produced
nothing except the need for even more listening and more conversation. There
was no resolution to anything of substance.
There was a palpable unity
and joyfulness at GAFCON. Pilgrims came from multiple countries and different
races, spoke numerous languages, yet had a definite fix on what the content of
the gospel was. There was no black or white theology. There was only biblical
theology. And nobody wrestled with
defining missions — The Great Commission
— they all knew what it was. The
only issues were regarding strategies on how to reach the whole world for
Christ with the life-changing message of Good News.
By contrast, Lambeth's
divisions were a sorrow for all to see and experience. Interfaith dialogue
replaced gospel proclamation. Beneath the surface of pleasant Indaba
conversation, there lurked a cauldron of anger and discontent. Pansexual
Western bishops privately, and not so privately, belittled their fellow
African bishops as uninclusive and lacking diversity.
The true nature of what was
really going on erupted briefly when the Archbishop of Sudan held an impromptu
press conference calling on the homosexual Bishop of New Hampshire to resign,
saying that homosexual behavior is unacceptable with Anglicans in general and
Africans in particular, that it hampered Muslim evangelism, and much more. It
was a major blow to the liberal spin doctors and official media types at
Lambeth who daily tried to put a good face and positive spin on what was going
on behind closed doors.
At GAFCON there were no
closed doors. Church leaders were empowered to lead the church. At Lambeth
there was no such empowerment. It was “go along to get along”. It was “find the
lowest common denominator that everyone could agree upon and cross your fingers
so that no one will leave angry”. Of course, that is precisely what happened.
Both sides went away angry.
The Pansexualists, led by US Integrity leader Susan Russell said Rowan Williams
had betrayed lesbitransgays. Richard Kirker, leader of the Lesbian and Gay
Christian Movement in
At Lambeth the doctrine was
accepted that there are various ways to read the Bible. One of them, the common
sense and traditional, says homosexual behavior is sinful, while another,
favored by "the Gay Movement," does not. They actually celebrate
covenanted same-sex partnerships as a means of displaying the Gospel of love
and acceptance. Traditional views that sex must remain between a man and a
woman in marriage or celibacy were not in the cards, even though Lambeth 1:10
(1998) still stands as the church's litmus test on sexual behavior.
Even a Moratorium not to
ordain active homosexual bishops or perform official liturgies for same-sex
blessings until the global or western Church had matured in understanding, when
their agenda could return, failed to ignite unity. At the same time,
"moratorium" was being sold to everyone else as meaning
"cessation" or "removal" for as far as we can see down the
line. The Windsor Process and The Windsor Continuation Group refused to drop
the word "moratorium." The Pansexual Movement in the West took it
to mean "a delay in implementing the desired agenda" but not to cease
such activity forever. That too fell on deaf ears.
The orthodox left Lambeth
more or less convinced that it would be the last Lambeth Conference. They saw
no future for themselves at any future pan-Anglican event that saw liberals
unable to confirm the faith they swore to uphold. At the end, Lambeth proposed
another committee. No Resolutions came out of Lambeth. The African-style
discussion groups revealed a general readiness to hear and talk sympathetically
about the homosexual lifestyle. North American bishops did much for the
"Gay" cause, privately and publicly promoting Gene Robinson. In the
end, it was clear to all observers of the North American scene that the
blessing of same-sex couples, done with or without an official diocesan liturgy,
will continue and that no one can do much to stop it. Furthermore, there will
be no discipline (read interference) in a Province that does not implement the
moratoria against sexual innovations or against those bishops and archbishops who
perform border crossings. Any reprimand from Rowan Williams with an exhortation
to behave will amount to a mere slap on the wrist. Everyone will remain the
official Communion of Churches.
The real winners at Lambeth
were the advocates of the "Gay Lifestyle" as a Christian Lifestyle
and adaptable to the
TEC has a winner-take-all
policy. There is no let-up here. Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori
and her attorney David Booth Beers have given no indication that litigation
will cease. Revisionism brooks no opposition.
At GAFCON a "Jerusalem
Declaration" was made that established 14 mainstream Christian points.
It called for the creation of a new council of primates overseeing a volunteer
fellowship committed to mission and biblical Anglicanism, as well as a new
structure of accountability. It signaled the move of most of the world's practicing
Anglicans into a post-colonial reality, where the Archbishop of Canterbury is
recognized for his historic role, but not as the only arbiter of what it means
to be Anglican.
The GAFCON Statement concluded:
The primary reason we have
come to
Interestingly enough, the
Jerusalem Declaration represented more than 35 million practicing Anglicans
worldwide, constituting the vast majority of Anglicans. While it drew
some 303 bishops, they represented more than 75% of the Anglican Communion. By
contrast, Lambeth had over 600 bishops speaking for less than 25% of the
communion. At GAFCON those North American Anglicans who had felt confused and
abandoned by their fellow Anglicans/Episcopalians found a home for themselves.
Those US and Canadian orthodox in socially liberal provinces, who had set up
their own networks, supervised by province-breaking African bishops like
Rwanda, Kenya, Uganda and Nigeria, now believed they had a place to stand. And
stand they did. Their reward will be the establishment of a new North American
Anglican province.
GAFCON gave promise of a
post-colonial Anglicanism. Lambeth merely substituted process for substance.
The GAFCON bishops noted that the Communion actually fractured in 2003, when
fellowship was "torn at its deepest level."
Now, after years of endless
and fruitless Canterbury-centered statements, meetings, commissions, panels,
reports, and crises, orthodox Anglicans are taking responsibility for their
own future. The truly faithful are no longer the remnant; they are the show.
They will no longer be told what to do or believe by a Western white-male
dominated church led by a bearded academic whose theological and moral
fuzziness frustrates them. A new day has dawned.
The spiritual logjam in
which orthodox Anglicans have been living since 2003 has broken. The Anglican
flotilla will accelerate slowly and then carry forward in a rush. Over the next
year more dioceses will leave The Episcopal Church. Common Cause Partnership
will morph into a North American Anglican province replacing The Episcopal
Church as the official voice of orthodox Anglicanism in the
Dr. Rowan Williams' passionate belief in unity as the glue to hold the Anglican Communion together belies the cost. The price of putting unity above truth can be summed up in the words of the Duke of Norfolk when he said to Sir Thomas More, "come with us for the sake of fellowship." More replied, "and if I do disregard my conscience, when I die and go to hell, will you go with me for the sake of fellowship?"
David W. Virtue is a theologically
trained journalist and a pioneer in Internet journalism. He has been a
newspaper reporter and editor in
David studied theology in
He is the author of three books on
social justice and evangelism: A Flame for Justice, the Life of Caesar
Molebatsi of Soweto, South Africa; A Vision of Hope, the Life of Samuel
Habib of Egypt; and Good and Right in the Eyes of God, The truth about
Homosexuality (co-authored with Dr. Earle Fox) and is presently completing a
Memoir on the life of Malcolm Muggeridge.
David has been writing about Anglican
issues for more than two decades and attended and reported on the 1998 and 2008
Lambeth conferences in