Living Church: Anglican Leaders Gather for Mideast Conference

“I’m not hearing anything about breaking up the Anglican Communion, or anything of the sort,” Bishop Martyn Minns told The Living Church. Bishop Minns, formerly rector of Truro Episcopal Church in Fairfax, Va., is the founding Missionary Bishop of the Convocation of Anglicans in North America (CANA), an outreach of the Anglican Church of Nigeria.

“We are not focusing all of our attention on human sexuality,” he added. “The workshops are designed to get us moving forward with emphasis on evangelism, church planting, the Bible, family and marriage, and also on developing a better understanding of our Anglican identity.”

Bishop Minns said a booklet titled “The Way, The Truth and the Life: Theological Resources for a Pilgrimage to a Global Anglican Future,” released by GAFCON organizers at a press conference June 19, has been mischaracterized in some reports as conference planners’ declaration of independence from the Anglican Communion. He noted that the booklet is a historical summary of the recent past, and does not contain specific recommendations for the future.

“The purpose of the conference is not to call people away from either the Lambeth Conference or the Anglican Communion,” he said. “Certain things of monumental importance have changed about Anglicanism within the past 10 years. Those things have irreversibly reshaped the landscape. We must get together and work out what to do about our future in light of the facts that have occurred.”

Read it all.

Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, GAFCON I 2008, Global South Churches & Primates

2 comments on “Living Church: Anglican Leaders Gather for Mideast Conference

  1. Marie Blocher says:

    And since ABC has decided that it won’t happen at the Lambeth Campsite, it has to be done elsewhere.

    Marie Blocher

  2. Cennydd says:

    I am sure that at least some of the Global South bishops and primates attending Lambeth will attempt to bring attention to our concerns, but what good this might do is, of course, debatable. I am also sure that Schori and Company will undoubtedly use their influence to have the Global South’s efforts quashed.