[faithandlife] GLOBAL SOUTH CALLS FOR DELAY OF LAMBETH

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From: charles scott <crscottblu@...>
Date: Sat, 10 Nov 2007 15:28:14 -0800 (PST)
LONDON: Anglican leader offers haven to US
conservatives

By Jonathan Petre, Religion Correspondent 
The Telegraph 
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2007/11/08/nsplit108.xml

11/8/2007

The worldwide Anglican Church suffered a dramatic new
split last night when a leading conservative
archbishop approved plans to adopt breakaway American
dioceses, the Daily Telegraph has learned.

Archbishop Gregory Venables is to allow conservative
dioceses that are defecting from the pro-gay American
branch of Anglicanism to affiliate with his South
American province thousands of miles away.

The unprecedented realignment will rock the 70
million-strong worldwide Church and escalate the
bitter civil war over gay clergy that is tearing it
apart.

It will also dismay the Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr
Rowan Williams, who is struggling to avert a formal
schism.

Dr Williams is certain come under huge pressure to
denounce what liberals will regard as an illicit
"parallel" province.

But if he does he will risk the wrath of the powerful
coalition of conservative Global South primates from
Africa and Asia who are backing the initiative.

He is already facing threats of a conservative boycott
of next year's showcase Lambeth Conference in
Canterbury if he fails to discipline the liberal
Americans over their pro-gay policies.

Global South leaders yesterday stepped up pressure on
Dr Williams to postpone the conference, the ten-yearly
gathering of Anglican bishops from across the globe,
until the row has been resolved.

The crisis could deepen even further if the Diocese of
Chicago elects a lesbian cathedral dean to be its next
bishop at the weekend.

Archbishop Venables said that the Americans were to
blame for triggering the crisis by consecrating
Anglicanism's first openly gay bishop in 2003 in
defiance of official Church policy.

The British-born Archbishop, who is the Primate of the
Province of the Southern Cone, told the Telegraph:
"This is a pivotal moment in the history of the
Anglican Communion.

"The new realignment demonstrates the depths of the
divisions that already exist. "

Dr Williams appears to want to keep the Communion
together at all costs, but Gospel truth should never
be sacrificed for structural unity.

"Conservatives in America and elsewhere cannot wait in
limbo any longer. They need a safe haven now."

Archbishop Venables unveiled the decision of his
bishops and other leaders after the plans were
overwhelmingly approved by his provincial synod during
a meeting in Chile last night.

A handful of conservative American dioceses are
already in the process of opting out of the Episcopal
Church by voting in their diocesan synods to alter
their constitutions.

Up to five are expected to become part of the Southern
Cone, which covers most of South America except
Brazil, over the next six months or so.

The diocese of San Joaquin in California, which is due
to take its final vote in December, is poised to leap
first, while Pittsburgh, headed by Bishop Bob Duncan,
will have to wait until the middle of next year.

Until now, only parishes have left the American
Episcopal Church and affiliated with overseas
provinces in Africa, often amid protracted and
expensive legal battles over property.

But for the first time, there will be rival dioceses,
each claiming to be authentically Anglican, operating
in parallel within the same geographical boundaries.

Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori, the
liberal leader of the American Episcopal Church,
warned Bishop Duncan last week that he will face
costly legal battles if he defects, but he replied:
"Here I stand. I can do no other."

In a letter sent last night, 46 conservative members
of the Church of England's General Synod pledged their
support. A number of traditionalist parishes in Canada
are also likely to affiliate with the Southern Cone
province in protest at plans by liberal dioceses to
introduce same-sex blessings.

END