Church of the Word
COMMON CAUSE PARTNERSHIP - A MORE COHERENT WHOLE


Bedford, TX: New Structure Sought for Orthodox Episcopalians
New Federation will go head to head with liberal run Episcopal Church

News Analysis

By David W. Virtue
www.virtueonline.org
8/2/2007

The Common Cause Partnership, a coalition of ten orthodox Episcopal and Anglican groups in the U.S. and Canada including the Anglican Communion Network, is planning a formal federation.

Delegates to the Network's Annual Council held this week at St. Vincent's Cathedral in Bedford, a suburb of Fort Worth, Texas, voted unanimously to ratify the Federation Articles of the Common Cause Partnership (CCP) that may ultimately put it on a collision course with the House of Bishops of the Episcopal Church that meets in September in New Orleans. The Common Cause Partnership, through its Convener Bishop Robert Duncan, has called the first ever meeting of a Council of Common Cause Bishops, set to convene in Pittsburgh immediately following the TEC House of Bishops meeting in Newo Orleans in September.

Describing the federation Articles, mid-Atlantic Network Dean and Bishop-elect John Guernsey said, they are "a step forward for Common Cause that allows the constituent partners to retain their [current]identity and autonomy while forming a more coherent and accountable structure. None of the groups disappear and none of the groups stop their gospel mission... Yet we are forming a more coherent whole."

The Jurisdictions and Ministries of the ten Common Cause Partners included are: the American Anglican Council (AAC); the Anglican Communion Network (ACN); the Anglican Mission in the Americas (AMiA); the Anglican Network in Canada (ANiC); The Anglican Coalition in Canada (ACiC), the Anglican Province of America (APA); the Convocation of Anglicans in North America (CANA); the Anglican Essentials Federation (AEF); Forward in Faith, North America (FIF/NA); and the Reformed Episcopal Church (REC).

Each of the ten groups that make up Common Cause must ratify the Federation articles.

"What is needed is a completely new structure. Lambeth is failing, Canterbury is failing, the Anglican Consultative Council is prejudiced in a Western way and the primates are sadly divided north and south," said Bishop Robert Duncan, ACN moderator and convener of Common Cause.

Among other actions taken were:

Highlights from the CCP Articles of Federation include:

[Arguing how all this might be observed by The Episcopal Church (TEC), Bishop James M. Adams (Western Kansas) was clear about how much influence the Network bishops have had: "We suffer under the delusion that we have any influence in The Episcopal Church. The action of General Convention 2006 sealed it - we have no influence whatsoever. They don't listen to a word we say."

Referencing the Episcopal Church he said: "What to do? Well, when your growth rate is static if not shrinking, one looks for ways to grow. One way is to ally with other like-minded little groups who share your obsession with "purity" and "clean hands."]

Katie Sherrod, Ft. Worth Diocese's token liberal voice cynically observed, "so now they've formed yet another 'orthodox' entity, whose purpose is to "build toward that new ecclesiastical structure" that will one day supplant The Episcopal Church [and one assumes the Anglican Church of Canada] as the official Anglican presence in North America."

"What is needed is a completely new structure. Lambeth is failing, Canterbury is failing, the Anglican Consultative Council is prejudiced in a Western way and the primates are sadly divided north and south. We'll leave and they can take the stuff with them to hell, because that is where they will take it. This is Good Friday and we have to face it," said Bishop Robert Duncan, ACN moderator and convener of Common Cause.

Clearly momentum is building. If these Network and Common Cause bishops and numerous Global South bishops and archbishops decide not to go to Lambeth and form an "alternate Lambeth" we will have a de facto if not de jure schism in the Anglican Communion.

The chasm between the Network and TEC is clearly unbridgeable. There are few "safe" dioceses any more. Even dioceses with overwhelming orthodox majorities can be subject to litigation by minority liberals. To all intents and purposes orthodoxy is finished in the post-modern Episcopal Church.

END


This article comes from VirtueOnline
http://www.virtueonline.org/portal

The URL for this story is:
http://www.virtueonline.org/portal/modules/news/article.php?storyid=6453




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