The Anglican Communion Is Dead, Says Andrew Brown

The Anglican Communion Is Dead, Says Andrew Brown October 30, 2013

Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby during his brief visit Kenya – but he was not officially present for Gafcon. Photograph: Dai Kurokawa/EPA

Andrew Brown, an incisive observer of the Anglican church, has a biting column about what’s happening in Anglicanism. Read it:

What, you gave a schism and nobody came? When six people hold a press briefing and three journalists attend, you know the story is over, and on Tuesday morning that is what happened when the evangelical wing of the Church of England announced – yet again – its plans to rebel against any open accommodation with gay people.

Andrew Brown

There were two retired bishops. There were three vicars and one of their wives. They talked to three journalists for an hour about their experiences at a conference of conservative Anglicans, called Gafcon, which met in Nairobi last week. This was set up as a protest against the reluctance of the official Anglican Communion to expel the Americans (who pay for it) as a punishment for their enthusiasm for openly gay clergy.

Once upon a time, this would have been a story. We heard threats to withhold money from the central bodies of the Church of England, threats to ignore the authority of other bishops, threats of defections to their grouping from the mainstream of opinion here. All these things will no doubt happen, as they have been happening in a small way for the past 20 years. What’s new is that no one any longer cares. The split has happened, and it turns out not to matter at all.

This is in part because the movement of public opinion on sexuality has completely overwhelmed that of church politicians…

Read the rest.


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