ENS: Communion process presents challenges for proposed province

Members of the 11 self-identified Anglican organizations that form the Common Cause Partnership (CCP) announced December 3 the creation of what they called an Anglican “province in formation” for those who say that the Episcopal Church and the Anglican Church of Canada promote erroneous biblical interpretation and theology, particularly in terms of the doctrine of salvation and acceptance of homosexuality.

Former Episcopal Church Diocese of Pittsburgh bishop and CCP moderator Robert Duncan, who will become the proposed province’s first archbishop and primate, told a December 3 news briefing that the movement he leads is a descendant of the Protestant Reformation of the 16th century. Both periods in history required Christians to reassert the power of revelation that some of their leaders had lost, he said.

“That, brothers and sisters, is what I would submit is happening right now in the 21st century across the whole Christian church, particularly in the West,” he told reporters. When asked, Duncan refused to claim that the announcement amounted to a schism of the Anglican Communion. Cynthia Brust, communications director for the Anglican Mission in the Americas (a member of the partnership), told reporters that the communion “has been fractured, it has been damaged, it has been in disarray, it’s been coming for a long time.”

“Rather than today being about division and breaking apart in disunity, it’s the day that the Anglican Communion began to be healed,” she said.

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Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, - Anglican: Latest News, --Proposed Formation of a new North American Province, Common Cause Partnership

One comment on “ENS: Communion process presents challenges for proposed province

  1. Dilbertnomore says:

    What God will bless, God will bless.