Overseas Prelates Lead 200 to 250 Congregations
By Alan Cooperman
Washington Post Staff Writer
Sunday, June 17, 2007
The Anglican archbishop of Rwanda was first, then his counterpart in
Nigeria. Now Kenya's Anglican archbishop is taking a group of U.S. churches
under his authority, and Uganda's archbishop may be next.
African and, to a lesser extent, Southeast Asian and Latin American prelates
are racing to appoint American bishops and to assume jurisdiction over
congregations that are leaving the Episcopal Church, particularly since its
consecration of a gay bishop in New Hampshire in 2003.
So far, the heads, or primates, of Anglican provinces overseas have taken
under their wings 200 to 250 of the more than 7,000 congregations in the
Episcopal Church, the U.S. branch of Anglicanism. Among their gains are some
large and wealthy congregations -- including several in Northern Virginia --
that bring international prestige and a steady stream of donations.
The foreign influx is a consequence of the rift in the 2.3 million-member
U.S. church, and explanations of what it's really all about depend on what
side of that divide you're on, said the Rev. Ian T. Douglas, a professor of
world mission and global Christianity at the Episcopal Divinity School in
Cambridge, Mass.
"It can either be read as the next step in a grand plan to replace the
Episcopal Church, or it can be read as a splintering of the conservatives
and a competition for who is going to be the real leader of disaffected U.S.
congregations," he said.
Bishop Martyn Minns, former rector of Truro Church in Fairfax City, who left
the Episcopal Church and was installed last month as a Nigerian bishop,
denied that the African prelates are competing for leadership, prestige or
donations. He said they are working together to help Americans who want to
remain faithful to the church's traditional teachings.
"There's lots of work for all of us," he said. "This is not just one
province sticking its nose in. It's the Global South collectively saying
'We've got to do something' because of the crisis in the U.S. church."
But a spokesman for the Episcopal Diocese of Washington, James Naughton,
said the proliferation of "offshore" churches "makes it clear how difficult
it is going to be for the conservatives to unite, because each of these
primates wants a piece of the action, and none is willing to subjugate
himself to another."
Rwanda's Archbishop Emmanuel Kolini and the archbishop of Southeast Asia,
Moses Tay, were the first to establish a missionary branch in the United
States. In 2000, they jointly consecrated two former Episcopal priests as
bishops and formed the Anglican Mission in the Americas, or AMIA. It has
grown at the rate of one church every three weeks and now numbers about 120
congregations, with five bishops.
Nigerian Archbishop Peter Akinola followed suit last year, forming the
Convocation of Anglicans in North America, or CANA. It is led by Minns and
has about 40 congregations in 13 states.
Last week, Kenya's Archbishop Benjamin Nzimbi announced plans to consecrate
a former Episcopal priest in Texas, Bill Atwood, as a suffragan, or
assistant, bishop of his Nairobi diocese. Atwood said in a telephone
interview that after the Aug. 30 installation ceremony in Kenya he will look
after about 35 U.S. churches.
In addition, three other foreign archbishops -- Henry Orombi of Uganda,
Drexel Gomes of the West Indies and Greg Venables of the Southern Cone (a
region that includes Argentina and Bolivia -- have taken small numbers of
U.S. congregations under their auspices. Orombi is "very seriously and
prayerfully" considering appointing an American bishop and setting up a
missionary church in the United States, said AMIA Bishop Chuck Murphy.
Murphy recalled that when the AMIA was formed seven years ago, it came under
strong criticism from Atwood, among others.
"Bill Atwood has always been a strong advocate for what was called an
'inside' strategy -- to work within the system of the Episcopal Church and
within the Anglican Communion's existing structures," he said. "It is now
clear to virtually everyone that the 'outside' strategy of having clergy and
bishops canonically resident offshore -- that is no longer scandalous and
irregular, it is now the right way forward."
Atwood responded that "any strategic differences have just been overwhelmed
by the state of things in the Episcopal Church and the need to move forward
together."
The difference a foreign bishop makes can vary. Some former Episcopalians
describe it as an important but largely symbolic connection with a primate
who shares their orthodox beliefs. "Fundamentally, we're worshiping the same
way we've always worshiped. It's the Episcopal Church that has embarked on a
new path," said Warren Thrasher, a longtime parishioner at Truro Church.
But Atwood said it is often more tangible. He noted that some congregations
under Nzimbi's care have adopted the Kenyan version of the Anglican Book of
Common Prayer. He said many ex-Episcopal congregations have been forced to
give up their buildings and need help finding new properties.
"Many of the congregations have developed authentic relations with bishops
overseas, and those links are very important to them," he said.
At the same time, the foreign archbishops and their newly minted American
bishops are courting the wrath of the archbishop of Canterbury. The leader
of the Anglican Communion, the 75 million-member family of churches
descended from the Church of England, registered his disapproval of Minns's
installation last month by announcing that he will not invite the CANA
leader to a global meeting of all Anglican bishops next year.
Minns said he was "not surprised." He said a steady erosion of traditional
Christian teachings in the United States and Europe, combined with the
explosive growth of former missionary churches in developing countries, has
flipped the historic pattern of missionary activity.
"And frankly," he said, "the old institutional structures are having trouble
coming to grips with those realities."
No comments:
Post a Comment