Monday, August 03, 2009

THE AC-NA FUNDAMENTAL DECLARATIONS: The Historic Episcopate

By Robin G. Jordan

Over the past eight months number of people have hazarded what the third declaration (FD3) in Article I of the AC-NA means or does not mean. The latest has been Bishop Glenn Davies, a regional bishop of the Diocese of Sydney (see “Explaining the Episcopate” on the Internet at: http://www.sydneyanglicans.net/news/communion/explaining_the_episcopate/ ) However, the AC-NA has not produced an official explanation of what that declaration means. The AC-NA leadership seems to be reluctant to go on record as to how they themselves interpret the declaration and to issue a clear position statement to that effect.

The third declaration (FD3) in Article I of the AC-NA constitution has been a cause of contention since the adoption of the provisional constitution on December 5, 2008. Whether the Common Cause/Anglican Church Network Round Table that drafted the original third declaration (FD3) as a part of the Common Cause Theological Statement intended that the declaration should interpreted more broadly, as some have claimed, than a narrow Catholic sense which a plain reading of the declaration suggests, has not been established. Neither has it been established that the AC-NA leadership intends the declaration to be read that way.

In the course of the Internet debate over the doctrinal provisions of the AC-NA constitution, which preceded the inaugural Provincial Assembly on June 22-24, 2009, Philip Ashey, secretary and chaplain of the Common Cause Governance Task Force, stated that the Chicago-Lambeth Quadrilateral that the Protestant Episcopal Church’s House of Bishops adopted in 1886 was not inconsistent with the third declaration. Judicatories, or dioceses, wishing to use the Chicago-Lambeth Quadrilateral could substitute it for the third declaration in their constitutions and canons. At its 1886 meeting in Chicago the House of Bishops was dominated by Anglo-Catholic bishops. Anglo-Catholicism was at that time in the ascendancy in the Protestant Episcopal Church. The bishops adopted a much more Anglo-Catholic statement than William Huntington Reed’s original proposal. Reed himself was an Anglo-Catholic who was highly critical of the Thirty-Nine Articles.

Clarification of the meaning of the third declaration was subsequently requested from the Governance Task Force. The Rev. Ashey’s response was, “We do recognize that there are questions and have done, and are doing, our best to try and address them in a reasonable way. This thread may not be the best way, but please be assured that we are working on it.”

When the Governance Task Force produced its document, “An Overview of the Work of the Governance Task Force on the Constitution and Canons of the Anglican Church in North America,” it contained only one reference to the third declaration (FD3) and offered no clarification of its meaning. Indeed it appeared to dodge the issue.

At the Provincial Council meeting on June 21, 2009 CANA Bishop Martyn Mimms drew to the attention of the Council the concerns of CANA members regarding the wording of the third declaration. The response of Anglo-Catholic council members to these concerns was not to dispute the claim that the language of the declaration was “too Catholic.” Rather they countered with the complaint that the language of the other declarations was “too evangelical.” The Provincial Council might have issued a clarification of the third declaration (FD 3) but they did not.

AC-NA Canon III.5.1 and 3 and Canon III.8.2 support the reading of the third declaration (FD3) in a narrow Catholic sense. Sections 1 and 3 of Canon III.5 both contain references to “the Historic Succession.” As this term is used in these sections, it means an unbroken personal succession of bishops, traceable to the community of apostles and through which the Holy Spirit is transmitted by the laying on of hands of the consecrating bishops who stand in that succession and who have received the Holy Spirit in that manner. With the imposition of hands is given the authority and the special grace understood in a Catholic sense to confer the sacraments of Ordination and Confirmation. The same term is commonly used in the constitutions and/or canons of Anglican entities with an Anglo-Catholic doctrine of apostolic succession, sacraments, and ordination. In the constitutions and/or canons that take a more comprehensive view of episcopal ordination, different language is used. For example, Article VI.2(b) of the constitution of the Anglican Church of Kenya states, “…no person shall be accounted or taken to be a lawful Bishop, Priest or Deacon in this Church…except that such person…has already had Episcopal consecration or ordination, the validity of which has been approved by the Provincial Synod….” Canon C1.1 of the Church of England states, “and no man shall be accounted priest, or deacon in the Church of England…except he … has had formerly episcopal consecration or ordination in some Church whose orders are recognized and accepted by the Church of England.”

Canon III.8.2 contains the following sentence. “By the tradition of Christ’s One, Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church, Bishops are...successors of the Apostles through the grace of the Holy Spirit given to them.” In Freed to Serve Michael Green identifies five views of apostolic succession. The first view is there are and can be no successors to the apostles. The second view is that the apostles’ successors are those who adhere to their doctrine. The English Reformers held this view of apostolic succession. It is also the view of the Elizabethan Settlement and of classical evangelical Anglicanism. The third view is that since the apostles’ time there has been a succession of men who have served as guardians of the apostolic deposit. The fourth view is that there is a succession to the apostles in their role as peripatetic supervisors of the Church. The fifth view Green notes is the most controversial. He goes on to write,

“This view claims that the apostles ordained bishops to succeed them, and that the historic episcopate stretching back in unbroken succession to the apostles, is nothing short of essential to the church. Without such ordination it is impossible to exercise a ‘valid ministry” or celebrate a ‘valid’ sacrament.’

The same view postulates a grace of orders that is transmitted manually by the imposition of hands. It is the view reflected in Canon III.8.5. It did not come to the fore in Anglican circles until John Henry Newman’s first Tract for the Times, 'Thoughts on the Ministerial Commission, respectfully addressed to the Clergy,' during the early days of the Oxford Movement.

Green contends that this view of apostolic succession is not Biblical, theologically sound, historically demonstrable, or Anglican doctrine and offers evidence in support of his contentions. Whether Green is right is not at issue here. What matters, for our purposes, is that Canon III.8.2 embodies this doctrine, and in doing so, like Canon III.5. 1 and 3 supports the reading of the third declaration (FD3) in Article I of the AC-NA constitution in a narrow Catholic sense. Canon III.5. 1 and 3 and Canon III.5.1 and 3, like the third declaration (FD3) represent unnecessarily partisan doctrinal views over which Anglicans historically have been and continue to be divided.

The AC-NA does not really need a statement of any kind about the ‘historic episcopate’ in its constitution beyond a straightforward affirmation of Resolution 11 of the Lambeth Conference of 1888. In the latter the third Lambeth Conference opined:

“…the following Articles supply a basis on which approach may be by God's blessing made towards Home Reunion:
(a) The Holy Scriptures of the Old and New Testaments, as "containing all things necessary to salvation," and as being the rule and ultimate standard of faith.
(b) The Apostles' Creed, as the Baptismal Symbol; and the Nicene Creed, as the sufficient statement of the Christian faith.
(c) The two Sacraments ordained by Christ Himself — Baptism and the Supper of the Lord — ministered with unfailing use of Christ's Words of Institution, and of the elements ordained by Him.
(d) The Historic Episcopate, locally adapted in the methods of its administration to the varying needs of the nations and peoples called of God into the Unity of His Church.”

Of the constitutions of the Anglican provinces that I have studied to date, only one document—the constitution of the Anglican Church of Kenya contains even that. The other constitutions say nothing about the ‘historic episcopate’ altogether. They are content to affirm the ministries of deacon, priest, and bishop or the ‘apostolic orders.’ (See my article, “Fundamental Declarations Compared,” at http://anglicansablaze.blogspot.com/search?q=Fundamental+Declarations+Compared) The AC-NA constitution is unusual in its articulation of a position on the ‘historic episcopate.’

If the AC-NA Provincial Council is committed to building a genuinely comprehensive Anglican province in North America, which truly enfolds all three orthodox theological streams in Anglicanism, it should at a minimum drop the third declaration in Article I from the AC-NA constitution and replace the partisan doctrinal language of Canon III.5.1 and 3 and Canon III.8.2 with neutral language.

10 comments:

Hudson said...

An excellent and timely appraisal.

Andrew said...

Are we still stuck on this business of 3 streams of theology? How long will it take to corporately realize that the disintegration of ACNA is inevitable, given the immiscible nature of its component elements? Before we had a common enemy and a historical tradition. This promises to be the splintering of the continuing world played over again by those who did not learn the first time. The present blog post is a rather wordy recognition of one tiny aspect of the problem.

Reformation said...

Thanks Robin. Aaytch and Andrew offer good thoughts. I liked the use of the word, "immiscible," vis a vis the colliding viewpoints.

My thoughts are going in this direction.http://reformationanglicanism.blogspot.com/2009/08/part-two-english-reformer-dr-william.html

When I awoke this morning, after a troubling dream, I thought, "How, pray tell, does the ACNA invite Rick Warren and an OCA Metropolitan to its preliminary gathering in Bedford?" A Metropolitan who deigns to lecture us on the Reformation?

Oh well, are there any Bishops in the US to whom we should lend an ear? Do we not have the great classics that tower above these moderns...classics that speak afresh and anew? Classics that should inform the current trajectory?

And Robin, what else would you expect from Anglo-Romanists like Iker and Ackerman? They will protect themselves given their continuing continuity with themselves from beginning to end.

God, history and logic are inexorable and the results will be ineluctable.

Cheers,
Phil

Reformation said...

Robin and others, unless I can be shown otherwise, the first seventy-five years after Cranmer's death was regnantly Calvinistic. William Laud introduced a paradigm shift to Arminianism. Anglo-Romanism has simply discounted the English Reformation. I am still stunned and, yet, quite humoured by the invitation to Metropolitan Jonah with his grand speech on the Reformation THIS is/was the ACNA. No sense. No critique from public leaders. Nothing from Southern Cone, nada. Again, is there a modern ACNA Bishop to whom we dare lend an ear? Thank God for the classics like the first several Archbishops after Cranmer.

Andrew, yes, the three-streamers are whistling in the dark.

Hudson said...

To me, the invitation extended to the media craving and uber relativist Rick Warren was even worse.

I took the invitations to Warren & Jonah as part of a crass effort to broaden the tent... actually to give the impression that the tent was broad at a time when TEC's ecumenical tent was (and still is) looking small and shaky. The concept of ACNA as a federation non-TEC Anglican movements is not a particularly strong one. Its only hope for survival is that its members might relinquish their distinctives for the sake of a more cohesive body. Robin's efforts with the constitution are therefore crucial. There already seems to be some recognition within ACNA that the Romish language concerning ecclesiology was unnecessary.

A return to the classic Prayer Book (1662 or equivalent) is also crucial. I think they realize that to claim the authority of Cranmer and then to use the 1979 BCP is hypocritical. I am hopeful for this return, and I disagree with P. Toon who thought that the way to 1662 is via 1928. If any change can be enforced, then it may as well go all the way.

Reformation said...

Aaytch:

I cannot see anything with which to differ. Your instincts and thoughts appear to be spot-on.

The "crass" effort at the large tent reflects the theological vacuity of the ACNA leaders. Anglicanism was/should be a Reformation Church. In my estimation, the Metropolitan was a nod to the AC's like Iker and Ackerman.

This movement may be leadership-driven more than anything from the ground-up. Anyone who has read much cannot fit Jonah's offensive comments into a Reformation church.

Anyone who as read much Reformation theology will not be running to Rick Warren for theological insights.

It is a "crass" effort and expression of a wide tent approach. It also reflects very poorly on the organizers and leaders of the new movement...as a movement a mile wide and an inch deep, theologically.

Bob Duncan's speech was not suffused with any theological depth.

Hudson said...

I am more optimistic about Bob Duncan. In his speeches over the past few years, he has acknowledged that our brand of Christianity is a mile wide and an inch deep. He has also said that choices must be made in the long run, that compromise is not a wise objective.

Andrew said...

Hello fellows,

I am glad to see that we are in such good agreement, but in the spirit of full disclosure I should say that I come at the issue from the Anglo-Catholic side, not the Anglo-Calvinist. Truly, the only thing about the whole affair that I could get excited about was Metropolitan Jonah's address.

That said, I do think that the ACNA has some purpose for the time being, in that is the last train out of TEC, and there is an argument to be made about safely in numbers against lawsuits.

My hope for the future is for the Forward in Faith crowd to find a way to thrive under the auspices of Rome, and the protestants to do what protestants do - either splinter or do some soul searching and convert. I don't think most folks involved see things this way, but I think they will eventually.

However, those things are taking time, so the man-made ACNA is a fair transient solution. I find this a helpful way of looking at the situation, and considering we are in such agreement, hope you will too.

In the meantime, please God, let's have no more talk about the `three streams of theology'. Why not a dozen?

Reformation said...

Dear Andrew:

I indeed respect the consistency of the AC-side in recognizing in inherent incompatibility with the Protestant and Reformed side. I can handle direct and honest commentary.

I find the mish-mash to be mush and inconsistency. I've begun to call it Manglicanism.

If three, why not twevle? Good point.

Philip

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