The Jerusalem Declaration: Available for download

The Jerusalem DeclarationLast night, Sydney Synod enthusiastically endorsed GAFCON’s Jerusalem Declaration.

During the debate, it was suggested that the Declaration could be made available for churches – either to give copies to members or to display one in your church.

For your convenience, you can now download the Declaration as a PDF file – it’s formatted to fit two A4 pages – an 80kb download.

Sydney Synod overwhelmingly endorses GAFCON Jerusalem Declaration

Sydney Synod endorses Jerusalem StatementTonight a packed meeting of the Synod of the Diocese of Sydney very strongly supported the Jerusalem Declaration.

Read the Media Release by Russell Powell. See also this story.

Related: The Jerusalem Declaration.

Reform pledges support for GAFCON movement

Reform logoReform, the 1,700-strong conservative evangelical network, has pledged support for the initiatives of GAFCON at its annual conference in London.

Revd Rod Thomas, Reform’s chairman, welcomed the clear Biblical leadership given by the GAFCON Primates at the Jerusalem meeting in June 2008, saying that there “we saw what an Anglicanism united in the Gospel and dedicated to mission could look like.”…

– Read the full Reform statement here.
Update: The Anglican Mainstream steering committee has released a statement of support for the Jerusalem Declaration.

Sydney Synod set to support GAFCON

GAFCONThis evening, Sydney’s Synod will vote on whether or not to endorse the Jerusalem Declaration, a statement overwhelmingly supported by those who attended GAFCON in June. …

This week, as some GAFCON churches continue to be targeted by the liberal dioceses in which they find themselves, Sydney Synod is likely to uphold the historic communiqué…

– Report by Nathasha Percy at SydneyAnglicans.net. (GAFCON photo: Russell Powell.)

ACL Dinner hears of GAFCON encouragement

ACL Dinner 2008The Chapter House of St. Andrew’s Cathedral, Sydney, was tonight packed for the annual ACL Synod Dinner.

Dr Karin Sowada interviewed two of the Sydney participants at GAFCON – Bishop Glenn Davies and Rev Allison Street. Both bore testimony to the great encouragement it was to share fellowship with Bible-believing Anglicans from around the world. Both speakers also reported the excitement and enthusiasm of the GAFCON attendees over the Final Statement and the Jerusalem Declaration. (Sydney endorsement of the Jerusalem Declaration is set to be debated on Monday night October 20.)

GAFCON Theological Resource Group at work

Dr Mark ThompsonNatasha Percy  at SydneyAnglicans.net has posted a report on the GAFCON Theological Resource Group meeting last week.

ACL President Dr Mark Thompson has just returned from the meeting in Uganda.

Read the article here. Related: The Jerusalem Declaration.

GAFCON Primates’ Council on the ‘deposition’ of Bishop Duncan

GAFCONThis statement has just been released –

Statement by the Primates’ Council of GAFCON on the alleged deposition of the Bishop of Pittsburgh.

The fact, timing and manner of the action taken by the American House of Bishops toward Bishop Bob Duncan of Pittsburgh has filled us with dismay. He is a Bishop in good standing in the Anglican Communion, and is guilty only of guarding his people from false teaching and corrupt behaviour as he promised to do. Once more the upholders of the orthodox faith are made to suffer at the hands of those who have introduced new teachings.

However, the action has also had the effect of clarifying matters even further. It is now impossible to believe that the exhortations of the Lambeth Conference and the Windsor Continuation Group will be heeded. No Pastoral Forum has been established. We remain convinced that the faithful Anglicans of North America need to have their own Province recognised by the Communion as a whole. We are determined to stand with Bishop Duncan and those who, like him, have protested in the name of God against the unscriptural innovations which have caused such divisions amongst us.

In the absence of other substantive provision from the historic structures of the Communion, the Primates’ Council gives its full support to Archbishop Greg Venables in receiving Bishop Duncan as a Bishop in good standing in the Province of the Southern Cone.

1st October 2008

(Photo: Joy Gwaltney.)

Archbishop Akinola’s address to the General Synod of Nigeria

Archbishop Peter AkinolaFrom Archbishop Peter Akinola’s Opening Address at the 9th General Synod of the Church of Nigeria –

We called Gafcon because we refused to ‘succumb to the turmoil in our Communion and simply watch helplessly. We have found ourselves in a world in which Anglican leaders hold on to a form of religion but consistently deny its power.  We have a situation in which some members of the Anglican family think they are so superior to all others that they are above the law, they can do whatever they please with impunity.’

– Read the full address at the Church of Nigeria website.

‘Breakaway Anglican group uses Jensen’s postbox’

GAFCON pilgrims on the Mount of Olives“The Archbishop of Sydney, Peter Jensen, is helping to organise a breakaway faction of the global Anglican Church that is opposed to same-sex blessings and the consecration of gay clergy from his diocesan headquarters at St Andrews House.

The controversial move has angered moderates in the Australian church. …

[Yet] … The diocese denies that Dr Jensen’s new position means the GAFCON movement will be administratively headquartered in Sydney.”

– Another story mentioning controversy, subversion, that ‘breakaway faction’ and ‘strict literal interpretations of the Bible’ – from The Sydney Morning Herald.

See also An invitation from the [GAFCON] Primates Council.

Church Society Council endorses Jerusalem Declaration

Church Society logoPress Release from Church Society
15 September 2008

At its recent meeting the Council of Church Society endorsed the fourteen point Jerusalem Declaration produced at the Global Anglican Futures Conference (GAFCON) in June.

The Council welcomed the attempt by GAFCON to respond to the false teaching that has engulfed parts of the Anglican Communion.  They were also pleased that the Declaration upholds the Thirty-nine Articles of Religion “as containing the true doctrine of the Church agreeing with God’s Word and as authoritative for Anglicans today”.

The Articles are a clear statement of Reformed Protestant doctrine and a standard for the teaching of clergy and for discipline.  They must be understood in their plain historical sense.  As such they affirm, and we affirm, that salvation is only to be found through faith in Christ Jesus, and that the Church has no authority to teach or establish anything that is contrary to Scripture.  The Articles likewise deny unbiblical inventions such as transubstantiation and that Christian ministers are priests who may ‘offer Christ’ for the living and the dead.

Our hope and our prayer is that with a clear commitment to the doctrinal standard of Anglicanism the partners in GAFCON will help provinces to resist the doctrinal corruption that has infected many western churches and bring fresh impetus to the attempts to reform such churches under the Word of God.

– from Church Society.

Lambeth absentees press on as letters wait to be sent out

Archbishop Peter JensenA month after the Lambeth Conference, the 230 or so absent Anglican bishops have not yet been contacted in order to “build bridges” with them. In the mean time, their leaders have stated that they have heard nothing from Lambeth to give them pause as they seek to form a new North American province. …

– report from Bill Bowder in Church Times.
(Photo: Joy Gwaltney – taken at the final GAFCON session.)

GAFCON Communiqué on establishment of the Primates Council and Fellowship

GAFCON closing press conferenceThe first meeting of the GAFCON Primates Council took place in London from Wednesday 20th to Friday 22nd August 2008.

“Given that some esteemed colleagues from the Global South have strongly commended the Windsor Process to us, we are reluctant to say that it cannot work. But there is nothing new here such as to make us hesitate from the course we are taking, given the urgency of the situations with which we are dealing and the realities already on the ground.”

The full Communiqué is reproduced below.   Read more

Bishops write to GAFCON Primates Council

Bishop Bil AtwoodThis letter was sent to Archbishop Peter Akinola, Chairman of the GAFCON Primates Council, by five bishops from North America. It is referred to in the GAFCON Primates Council communique.

“As requested we have carefully studied the Reflections of the Windsor Continuation Group – in particular the section that refers to our ministry within North America. We offer these comments…”

Read more

Bishop Don Harvey reflects on Lambeth

Bishop Don HarveyMy dear members of our ANiC family, For the past three weeks, I have been combing the Internet for news from Lambeth. And there has been no lack of it. The blogs and (especially UK) media have been full of information. Making sense of all that information, however, has been a challenge. This is my best effort to make sense of Lambeth from this side of the Atlantic.

One of the key benefits of this Lambeth conference was the opportunity it afforded Anglican leaders from throughout the world, including our own Primate, Archbishop Greg, to meet together in groups, as well as one-on-one, to discuss important matters. There have been many reports of positive “indaba” and Bible study group meetings.

There have also been reports of frustration. Frustration that Lambeth, by design, did not produce any further clarity on the crisis – no clear direction, no decisions. However, this was indeed by design and was cited by bishops who chose not to attend as one of the factors in their decision. Two Primates – one attending Lambeth, one not – spoke passionately and eloquently of the intransigent anti-Christian actions of the North American churches, actions that precipitated the crisis. I have great respect for both Archbishop Deng Bul (Sudan) and Archbishop Orombi (Uganda) for their courage in taking their stands when silence would have been far easier. …

– Read all of Bishop Harvey’s comments at the Anglican Network in Canada.

See also his Reflections on GAFCON.

(Photo: Bishop Don Harvey of the Anglican Network in Canada at St Mary of the Incarnation, Metchosin.)

‘He just slipped away, our noble prince’

Bishop Mark Lawrence of South CarolinaCanterbury, England
I am glad I came here for this Lambeth and worshipped one last time in the Cathedral home of Augustine and Dunstan, Anselm and Becket, Cranmer and Laud, Temple and Ramsay. I had come to speak a word of hope and perhaps to intervene on behalf of our beloved, but in the last resolve the family refused the long needed measures. So he just slipped away, our noble prince, one dreary morning in Canterbury with hardly even a death rattle.

The new prince was born last month in Jerusalem. I was there—arriving late, departing early. I was never quite sure what I was witnessing. It was an awkward and messy birth. He hardly struck me as I gazed upon him there in the bassinet as quite ready to be heir to the throne. I even wondered at times if there might be some illegitimacy to his bloodlines. But that I fear was my over weddedness to a white and European world. May he live long, and may his tribe increase—and may he remember with mercy all those who merely mildly neglected his birth.

As for me my role for now is clear, to hold together as much as I can for as long as I can that when he comes to his rightful place on St. Augustine’s throne in Canterbury Cathedral he will have a faithful and richly textured kingdom. …

– From Bishop Mark Lawrence of South Carolina.

(See also, from March 2008, Bishop Mark Lawrence upholds the uniqueness of Christ.)
Photo: Bill Murton, Diocese of South Carolina.

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