Statement by the Church of Uganda Provincial Assembly Standing Committee on Lambeth 2008

(Church of Uganada News)

Church of the Province of Uganda
Statement by the Provincial Assembly Standing Committee on Lambeth Conference 2008

1. The Lambeth Conference is a gathering that brings together the Bishops of the Anglican Communion from all 38 Provinces of the Communion at the invitation of the Archbishop of Canterbury. The conference is usually held every ten years. It provides Bishops with an opportunity for “worship, study, and conversation,” discussing and making resolutions that affect the Anglican Communion.

2. At the 1998 Lambeth Conference under Resolution 1.10 the Bishops overwhelmingly passed a resolution that rejects “homosexual practice as incompatible with Scripture.” The conference also rejected the blessing of same-sex unions.

3. In 2003, in flagrant disregard of this resolution of the 1998 Lambeth Conference, the Episcopal Church in the United States of America (TEC) elected as Bishop Gene Robinson, a divorced man living in an active homosexual relationship. The Primates, who are the Archbishops of all the 38 Provinces of the Anglican Communion, met shortly after that and warned the Episcopal Church not to proceed with the consecration of a practicing homosexual as a Bishop. They warned that, if they proceeded with the consecration, their action would “tear the fabric of the Anglican Communion at its deepest level.” Less than a month later, the Presiding Bishop of the Episcopal Church presided over the consecration of Gene Robinson. This action has divided the Anglican Communion in a profound way.

4. The Primates of the Communion have asked the American Church to halt further consecrations of practicing homosexuals and ceremonies for the blessing of same-sex unions. Regretfully, TEC has continued to bless same-sex unions, in ceremonies that were presided over, among others, by two Bishops.

5. The Council of Anglican Provinces of Africa (CAPA) produced a statement entitled The Road to Lambeth that calls for this crisis to be resolved before the next Lambeth Conference is convened. The House of Bishops of the Church of Uganda endorsed this position at their meeting in December 2006. Since this crisis has not yet been resolved, the Bishops of the Church of Uganda have resolved that they will not be participating in the Lambeth Conference to be held in July 2008 in Canterbury, England, a position that the Provincial Assembly Standing Committee strongly endorses. This decision has been made to protest the invitations extended by the Archbishop of Canterbury, The Most Rev. and Rt. Hon. Rowan Williams, to TEC Bishops whose stand and unrepentant actions created the current crisis of identity and authority in the Anglican Communion.

6. The Church of Uganda, by this decision, wishes to reaffirm our commitment to the resolutions of the 2006 Provincial Assembly and Resolution 1.10 of the 1998 Lambeth Conference, which, in substance, denounced homosexual practice and called upon the Church to remain faithful to the Holy Scriptures.

7. Consultations are going on at different levels on how to deal with this crisis, which, among others, include planning for a meeting of Biblically orthodox Anglican Bishops, clergy, and laity to be held in Jerusalem in June 2008. We request the Church to continue in prayer as efforts are being made to find a lasting solution to this crisis. Further developments regarding this matter will be communicated to the Christians in due course.

Issued in Kampala this 12th day of February 2008

The Most Rev. Henry Luke Orombi
ARCHBISHOP OF CHURCH OF UGANDA.

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, Anglican Provinces, Church of Uganda, Lambeth 2008

8 comments on “Statement by the Church of Uganda Provincial Assembly Standing Committee on Lambeth 2008

  1. robroy says:

    The Anglican Communion is suffering because too many people are mitigating the consequences of the actions of others. True Christian leaders like ABp Orombi are saying enough. There will be consequences even for the ABC’s actions. If Rowan Williams does not want to uphold the will of the communion but rather subverted it by inviting those that arrogantly defied the overwhelming approved Lambeth 1.10, then this is the consequence.

    There simply must be consequences.

  2. seitz says:

    Good for Uganda! Let’s hope this affects the invitation to Lambeth.

  3. Grandmother says:

    Isn’t it strange, I (poor peon that I am) understood every word, and know exactly what ++Ormobi means.

    Welcome clarity.

    Gloria in SC

  4. AnglicanFirst says:

    Bishop Orombi has presented the situation facing the Anglican Communion in ‘clear language.’

    There have been many such statements by true leaders of “the Faith once given” over the recent past.

    And just as Jeremiah was ignored, the orthodox Anglican leadership is being ignored within the Anglican Communion.

    And just as Jeremiah prophesied, the ‘wedge’ thrust into the Anglican Communion by the secular-progressive-revisionists will bear its bitter fruit within the Anglican Communion just as the corrupt indifference of those to whom Jeremiah prophesied resulted in the fall of Jerusalem.

    As a student of history, which really means that I am a student of human behavior on a large-scale and over a long period of time, what ECUSA’s radicals are doing is nothing but a repetition of historical and biblical human folly.

  5. episcoanglican says:

    “Let’s hope this affects the invitation [of _______________ ] to Lambeth”?
    I assume you mean TEC? Is there a snowball’s chance of it being affected?

  6. Brian from T19 says:

    The Council of Anglican Provinces of Africa (CAPA) produced a statement entitled The Road to Lambeth that calls for this crisis to be resolved before the next Lambeth Conference is convened. The House of Bishops of the Church of Uganda endorsed this position at their meeting in December 2006. Since this crisis has not yet been resolved, the Bishops of the Church of Uganda have resolved that they will not be participating in the Lambeth Conference to be held in July 2008 in Canterbury, England, a position that the Provincial Assembly Standing Committee strongly endorses. This decision has been made to protest the invitations extended by the Archbishop of Canterbury, The Most Rev. and Rt. Hon. Rowan Williams, to TEC Bishops whose stand and unrepentant actions created the current crisis of identity and authority in the Anglican Communion.

    Good for ++Orombi! This shows (as most of us already knew) that he is a man of his word. Let’s see if the other Provinces live up to their word. It’s my guess that some are more interested in power than principle.

  7. dwstroudmd+ says:

    BfT19, Like ECUSA/TEC and ACCanada have repeatedly demonstrated?

  8. Barry says:

    Orthodoxy will prevail for it is of God. True faith has been passed to us from the Apostles, the church Fathers and through councils properly discerning scripture and doctrine. TEC & AC Cananda are now the ‘country clubbers’ of religious theology. Pray that these misguided souls may find their way back on the narrow road.

    Peace,
    Barry