Thinking Anglicans

ACC-16 – It's all over now

Madeleine Davies presents her final report from Lusaka for the Church Times: ACC members depart with stories of unity.

The Anglican Communion website has published a list of the resolutions passed by ACC-16: Resolutions. In this list the earlier temporary numbering of the draft resolutions has been replaced by permanent numbering. In particular Resolution C34 has now become Resolution 16.23.

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Kate
Kate
8 years ago

It has been a bad year for the Archbishop of Canterbury. It is clear that GAFCON doesn’t believe he is supporting them. He has totally alienated himself with many liberals too. Worse his claim that ACC in Resolution 34 endorsed the consequences for TEC looks as dubious as his claims of unanimity at the primates gathering which transpired to be unity only among those who had not walked out or left. I no longer trust his veracity and I doubt I am alone. And his apologies to LGBT people are looking vacuous. Worse still, my impression is that ACC-16 was… Read more »

Father Ron Smith
8 years ago

Kate, don’t rush into too hasty a judgement on the Archbishop of Canterbury. At least he was brave enough to face Zimbabwe’s Prime minister, Robert Mugabe; informing him of the Primates’ call to denounce the criminalisation of LGBTQI people around the Anglican Communion. That’s more than any other Church of England prelate has done, so far. After all, he needn’t have bothered, but was determined to do so. Now, that’s pretty brave!

Father David
Father David
8 years ago

“If he was a Prime Minister” then the one I think he would most resemble would be Harold MacMillan for, like him, Justin Welby seems to be “unflappable”

Andrew Lightbown
Andrew Lightbown
8 years ago

++Justin is caught between a rock and a hard place. I do think he needs to be a little more specific in what he thinks the Church (& specifically the C of E) is apologizing for in an environment where it seems unlikely that there will be in a substantive change towards fully affirming LGBTI brothers and sisters in Christ. Unanimity is to be aimed for, of course, but only top the extent that is animated through virtue. I worry that with the focus on phrases like ‘the majority…..’ leadership is becoming increasingly utilitarian. (I also don’t think that the… Read more »

Leonard Clark
8 years ago

“Kate, don’t rush into too hasty a judgement on the Archbishop of Canterbury. At least he was brave enough to face Zimbabwe’s Prime minister, Robert Mugabe; informing him of the Primates’ call to denounce the criminalisation of LGBTQI people around the Anglican Communion. That’s more than any other Church of England prelate has done, so far. After all, he needn’t have bothered, but was determined to do so. Now, that’s pretty brave!” Father Ron Smith I agree, the ABC, is showing signs of enlightenment, real concern and serious interest in OUR LGBTI Anglican lives…maybe his time has come, as OURS… Read more »

Kate
Kate
8 years ago

Where is the bravery?

President Mugabe reportedly asked about the Anglican Communion’s stance on same sex marriage. ABC,gave a factual answer – one which President Mugabe probably already knew. There is no indication that ABC expressed his personal view, nor that he expressed any criticism of Zimbabwean law.

The Archbishop was accompanied by several bishops and the British Ambassador.

Jeremy
Jeremy
8 years ago

When it comes to communications, this Archbishop of Canterbury and his successor have both spun far too aggressively. The idea that Primates2016 was unanimous is silly. And the idea that the ACC is united and walking together is equally silly. Four Primates tried to instigate a boycott. And with three delegations, they succeeded. The Archbishop is trying to tamp down expectations, which is good; but he’s also trying to misportray the facts on the ground. Despite what he is saying or implying, “received” does not mean “accepted” or “agreed with.” Let’s just acknowledge that the ACC did not agree with… Read more »

cseitz
cseitz
8 years ago

“Welby’s claim that the Primates got what they wanted has as much do more to Douglas’ gesture as it does with the somewhat pacific resolution 16:23.”

Rest assured there were many discussions between the two parties well before Lusaka took place, and at Lusaka itself. +Douglas wasn’t operating in a beneficent bubble.

Jim Naughton
Jim Naughton
8 years ago

Rod, all the other primates on the steering committee were there. As I understand, Archbishop Makgoba arrived a day late and Archbishop Deng Bul left a couple of days early, both due to previous commitments in their home countries.

Cynthia
Cynthia
8 years ago

“+Douglas wasn’t operating in a beneficent bubble” Nonetheless, he made a great gesture that removed at least one distraction from the excellent Gospel work of ACC-16. ACC acted independently of the primates, as their organizational policies call them to do. It also includes a much more diverse assembly then the exclusive, older men, in the primates. It shouldn’t be surprising that in a diverse body, people can “walk together with difference” far more generously than in a small homogeneous group. The age of top down polity is over. Few people are going to accept spiritual leadership from those who support… Read more »

cseitz
cseitz
8 years ago

Surely you are joking? If anyone believes that as of the conclusion of the Primates Meeting, the various lines of communication amongst +Welby, +Josiah, +Curry, and other TEC operatives, including the Bishop of CT, were not going full-time, well… If you believe +CT just decided to demur without any input or discussion from the ABC or head of of ACO… Of course the alternative is to believe that +Welby genuinely seeks to get the Instruments to present a common face. You may not like that, or the idea of Instruments as such, but just read what is being put forward.… Read more »

Kate
Kate
8 years ago

Cynthia

Dr Tengatenga agrees with you. http://www.anglican.ink/article/tec-will-go-acc-meeting-lusaka-and-they-will-vote-acc-chairman-says

«He observed the “primates think they are more important than anyone else. When they attempt to bottle up the fizziness [of the development of doctrine within the Communion] that is when things explode.”»

Kate
Kate
8 years ago

«Rest assured there were many discussions between the two parties well before Lusaka took place, and at Lusaka itself. +Douglas wasn’t operating in a beneficent bubble.”»

I see that as quite a serious charge. In Anglicanism not only are the provinces independent (and interdependent), so too are the Instruments of Communion. You seem to be suggesting that one Instrument of Communion (are you suggesting the Primates or ABC?) attempted to dissuade a province from exercising their independence in the context of another Instrument. That’s a big deal.

Jeremy
Jeremy
8 years ago

Kate, isn’t that exactly what happened?

cseitz
cseitz
8 years ago

Kate:

Purple-to-purple talk has its own area code. Always has. Always will.

Kate
Kate
8 years ago

I Googled the term HB2 and was surprised just how much support LGBT people now have in USA. (HB2 is the anti-LGBT House Bill in North Carolina – the so-called ‘bathroom bill’.) Even more surprising is the widespread support for trans people who are overlooked by most Christian liberals focused only on same-sex marriage but ignoring that trans people need recognition by the church in their new genders. Even conservative Ireland now popularly backs same-sex marriage and, being one of the latest to the party, has the most progressive approach to gender recognition in Europe. Against that background, if Anglicans… Read more »

Cynthia
Cynthia
8 years ago

Whatever happened, Christopher, the Standing Committee doesn’t contain members from all provinces and TEC has had plenty of representation in that last term. Rotating off, was perfectly natural. As for not running to chair the committee? Given that only one province is ever represented in the chair position, it doesn’t really seem like a “consequence.” Whatever led to +Douglas’ decision not to stand for election, it was wise and generous. I personally had no appetite to fight over TEC’s “right” to lead an elected body!!! ACC wants to walk together, Anglican Women want to walk together, so let’s walk together… Read more »

Father Ron Smith
8 years ago

But Cynthia, don’t expect Christopher to ‘walk together’ with anyone but his own ideas at ACI – 3 theologians and a web-site. He gets his kicks from ‘kicking against the pricks’ that he lives with in TEC and the A.C of Canada

Kenneth Jones
Kenneth Jones
8 years ago

TEC will rotate off, but their strong influence will remain, unfortunately.

cseitz
cseitz
8 years ago

Fr Smith, is life getting that bad? Lighten up on the personal attacks, please. Everything will work out in the end as God wills. I don’t “live with pricks” (I believe that word must mean the same as in your cultural home) in TEC or the ACC. Sunday blessings. It’s a blog. Let’s keep things in perspective!

Father Ron Smith
8 years ago

Christopher, the term you seem to object to is specifically biblical. Perhaps the word I should have used is ‘goad’ – that may better suit the sort of pressure being exerted on ACI to act as though it were still part of TEC, instead of being a constant pain in the arras.

Cynthia
Cynthia
8 years ago

“TEC will rotate off, but their strong influence will remain, unfortunately.” Hm. Our “strong influence” is merely the Gospel of the Radical Love of Jesus Christ, crucified on the cross for ALL people. And it seems to me that lots of people in the ACC are arriving at that conclusion of their own accord. Inclusion is the imperative of the Gospel of Jesus. There simply is no justification for letting difference get in the way of walking together and enacting a Gospel of Love that addresses violence, climate change, etc. I think, Kenneth, that your beef is with Jesus and… Read more »

Susannah Clark
8 years ago

Dear Cynthia… “There is no evidence of Jesus excluding or condemning people.” I share so much of your theology, and the over-riding imperative of God’s love, but… “Every tree that does not produce good fruit will be cut down and thrown into the fire…” “He will burn up the chaff with unquenchable fire…” “I have come to bring fire upon the Earth… Do you think I came to bring peace on Earth? No, I tell you, but division…” “Are only a few going to be saved?”… “Many will try to enter through the narrow door but will not be able… Read more »

Kenneth Jones
Kenneth Jones
8 years ago

Cynthia, Jesus and I have a good relationship, and it is TEC’s leaders that I have a beef with….not Him. Unfortunately, TEC will continue to try to influence the ACC by using their money, as they have in the past. That has got to end if the ACC is going to be fairly run and benefit all….including the ACNA, which is a member province of GAFCON.

cseitz
cseitz
8 years ago

Mr Smith, This sentence just seemed incoherent. “…that may better suit the sort of pressure being exerted on ACI to act as though it were still part of TEC.”

What pressure is being exerted on ACI? and “to act as though it were still part of TEC”? What does that mean?

Your frame of reference frequently baffles me, but you’ve outdone yourself this time!

Father Ron Smith
8 years ago

Perhaps, Christopher, you might better understand my comment if I were to be more specific: ACI’s ‘Institutional’ provenance douesn’t really mean anything to anyone outside of your own little clique. The only people clinging to your skirts from any other province of the Anglican Communion are those like ex-bishiop Nazir-Ali – now a subscriber to ACNA-theology – and other assorted malcontents. This is no basis from which to preach the Good News of God’s love for ALL people. You may be right though, about no real ‘goad’ being applies to you to remain within the eirenic family of TEC. They… Read more »

Cynthia
Cynthia
8 years ago

Kenneth, Jesus and I also have a great relationship too, and I’m gay and got married in the Episcopal Church to my spouse, after 23 years. It’s pretty insulting to our sisters and brothers in the ACC to say that TEC money is influencing their theology. I just met a bunch of Anglican Women from around the world at the UNCSW; they are an amazing group of strong, brilliant, passionate, and independent sisters. Walking together is a theology and it has nothing to do with money. Jesus commanded us to love one another. He didn’t give us an “opt out”… Read more »

Susannah Clark
8 years ago

Cynthia: “Jesus commanded us to love one another.”

That is such an urgent imperative.

Far more important than being right, is finding grace.

This thread has not been a stellar example of that exhortation.

It’s a lesson I need as much as anyone else. We all need it.

The whole Anglican Communion at this time needs it.

cseitz
cseitz
8 years ago

Dear Mr Smith: you seem to consume a lot of bandwidth diagnosing a 501c3 ACI you struggle to understand, much as your previous confusions over the GS, Gafcon, etc. Is ACI presently doing something you dislike or is this just a tic on your part? Radner: priest in TEC, now retired and no longer in TEC, formerly missionary Priest in Burundi and Haiti, presently licensed in the ACoC. Living in Toronto. Professor of Historical Theology. Turner: retired from TEC. Wife priest in TEC. Missionary Priest in Uganda in the Idi Amin period. Doing a locum stint to assist EDOT. 80… Read more »

Jim Naughton
Jim Naughton
8 years ago

cseitz, please stop pretending you know why Ian Douglas decided what he decided. He talked to many people and made up his own mind.

cseitz
cseitz
8 years ago

Of course he talked to many people and made up his mind. That is exactly my point! If you think he only spoke to TEC folk, you are living in a fog bank.

Christopher Seitz
Christopher Seitz
8 years ago

Mr Jim Naughton– please forgive me. You speak as though your perspective is self-explanatory on a UK blog site.

And with a good deal of forcefulness!

Are you the same Jim Naughton who used to work for the Diocese of Washington (DC)? I am not sure what he now does.

I may have assumed wrongly that you were this person.

Father Ron Smith
8 years ago

” Is ACI presently doing something you dislike or is this just a tic on your part?” – cseitz –

Well Mr Seitz, from the record of retirements you have listed above; it would seem that ACI is now quite moribund. So, No, Christopher, now that the 3 theologians seem to be out of the picture; they are no longer a real threat to anyone, let alone TEC. I cannot sustain my lack of charity.

Enjoy your times in Fontainebleau for the C. of E. Can’t be very fertile ground for ACNA. Agape!
Christ is risen, Alleluia!

Kate
Kate
8 years ago

“Kenneth, Jesus and I also have a great relationship too” There have been a couple of comments like this and I am interested in understanding how one knows if one has a “great relationship with Jesus”? Personally I would say I have direct experience of God and of the Spirit but my relationship with Jesus is based on faith, not experience. Secondly, I couldn’t begin to guess whether even God thinks I have a good relationship with Him. We love each other, but a good relationship suggests more than that. If others here know they have a good relationship with… Read more »

cseitz
cseitz
8 years ago

“I cannot sustain my lack of charity.”

Thank God that is over.

cseitz
cseitz
8 years ago

Mr Smith: you have consistently misunderstood that ACI’s work isn’t related to TEC as such, even when I have just gone to pains to explain its character beyond single provinces! Your acknowledgment of a lack of charity is appreciated for its honesty. I hope that wasn’t also confused. TEC has become a new entity according to the desires of the present generation. Soon it will have a new kind of BCP. It has developed a GC polity wherein Bishops can be constrained, even as it has been noted that the GC is itself deeply in need of reform. It has… Read more »

Father Ron Smith
8 years ago

cseitz: from me: Pax vobiscum

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