From texanglican (in Fort Worth):
Friday, December 05, 2008
Two weeks ago Bishop Iker had a meeting with the new head of the Orthodox Church in America, Metropolitan Jonah. Because the meeting took place at our cathedral I got to meet the Metropolitan, which was an honor. (Some of my best friends are OCA priests. Honest!)
From our diocesan website:
The leader of the Orthodox Church in North America paid a call on Bishop Jack Iker during a recent visit to the Dallas/Fort Worth area. The two met for about an hour on Tuesday, Nov. 25, at St. Vincent's Cathedral in Bedford to discuss mutual concerns and goals.
The Orthodox leader requested the meeting with Bishop Iker. Consecrated the Orthodox bishop of Fort Worth and the South on Nov. 1, Blessed Jonah was elected Metropolitan of All America and Canada in a church synod just 11 days later. The Anglican and Orthodox churches have long enjoyed close theological affinities, having similar forms of worship and common roots in the faith.
Metropolitan Jonah, who was baptized in the Episcopal Church in Chicago as an infant, commended Bishop Iker and the Diocese of Fort Worth on the mid-November decision of the Diocesan Convention to separate from the errors of the General Convention of The Episcopal Church.
On Nov. 15, Metropolitan Jonah wrote, "I deeply admire the stance you have taken and offer my support to you and to your clergy and faithful, as we must stand together to bear witness to the full integrity of the Gospel of Jesus Christ, which is the fullness of the Apostolic Tradition."
During their Nov. 25 meeting, the two shared concerns about the assaults of secularism and revisionism on orthodox Christianity in the West. The meeting ended with the two bishops expressing their mutual desire to "make this pilgrimage together, moving ever more deeply into the heart of the One Holy Catholic and Apostolic Church."
In a follow-up letter to Bishop Iker after the meeting, Metropolitan Jonah wrote: "There are multitudes of our American people who have been wounded in the 'culture wars,' which have brought long-standing essential American cultural institutions - like the Episcopal Church - to doctrinal, moral, and institutional degradation and collapse. It is my fervent hope that as the Orthodox Church in America, we can be a context of support for you and those communities with you that are seeking to realign themselves with Christians who stand fast in the Apostolic and Patristic Faith and Teaching."
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