By Robin G. Jordan
On Friday January 10, 2014 the ACNA College of Bishops issued a communiqué following its January meeting. The communiqué is posted on the ACNA website. What is noteworthy about the communiqué is that it reports that the College of Bishops
unanimously approved a new Catechism for trial use. The mechanisms for feedback
and refinement, we are told, are “planned over the next two years.” The communiqué
does not state how the trial use of this Catechism will be conducted, where it
will be conducted, how the churches at which the trial use of the Catechism
will be conducted will be selected, and what steps will be taken to ensure that
these churches actually represent a broad spectrum of the theological opinions
present in the Anglican Church in North America?
The communiqué also says nothing about how soon the new
Catechism will be made available to interested parties for independent study
and if and when the document will be posted on the ACNA website. If the ACNA
leadership follows the pattern that has characterized it since the formation of
the ACNA, it will take its own sweet time in making the new Catechism available
and then when it does publish the Catechism, it will do so with as much hoopla
as it can muster. The communiqué itself uses exaggerated language in referring to
the new Catechism, describing it as “wonderful.” Whoever drafted the communiqué
already appears to be trying to influence the ACNA membership’s view of the new
Catechism.
Along with ACNA constitution, canons, ordinal, and trial
services the proposed Catechism will provide additional evidence of the
theological direction in which the ACNA leadership is taking the Anglican
Church in North America. To date, the evidence points to a definite movement
away from authentic historic Anglicanism in the direction of unreformed
Catholicism.
The communiqué contained this statement, which also deserves
comment:
As we continue to develop a Prayer Book to enrich our common liturgical life, the bishops worshiped using the Province’s approved texts for Holy Communion and daily Morning and Evening Prayer. We did initial work on a first draft of liturgies for Baptism, Confirmation and Admission of Catechumens, refining them to help insure that those liturgies are accessible and reflect the richness of the historic Anglican faith and tradition. The College continues to look forward to the day when the Province will have its own Book of Common Prayer.
Nowhere does the ACNA constitution or canons authorize the
College of Bishops to develop a Prayer Book for use in Anglican Church in North
America. Nowhere do these governing documents recognize the authority to
develop liturgies for use in the province as collectively inherent in the
College of Bishops. In taking this task upon itself the College of Bishops is
usurping the authority of the Provincial Council. This goes well beyond a
difference in interpretation of the ACNA governing documents. It amounts to a
total disregard of constitutionalism and the rule of law—important safeguards
against episcopal abuse of power. Whatever liturgies the College of Bishops develops
are not binding upon the congregations and clergy of the Anglican Church in
North America unless the Provincial Council adopts a canon making their use
obligatory and the Provincial Assembly ratifies this canon.
A major source of concern for North American Anglicans who are committed to the teaching of the Bible and the doctrine of the Anglican
formularies should be the inclusion of the phrase, “…reflect the richness of
the historic Anglican faith and tradition… in this statement. Similar phrases
used in the description of the ACNA ordinal were allusions to the unreformed
Catholic doctrines and practices given expression in its services. The College
of Bishops has shown with its approval of the ACNA “theological lens,” the ACNA
ordinal, and the ACNA trial services of Morning and Evening Prayer and Holy
Communion that it cannot be relied upon to protect the Biblical and Reformation
faith of authentic historic Anglicanism.
The communiqué also contains reference to two documents that will
provide further evidence of the direction in which the ACNA leadership is taking
the Anglican Church in North America. The first reference is to the Theological Task Force on Holy Orders’ report
on hermeneutical principles. Hermeneutical principles are the principles used
in the interpretation of Scripture. They generally reflect the particular theological
leanings of those using them—Anglo-Catholic, liberal, and Reformed Evangelical,
for example. The College of Bishops approved the task force’s report and
authorized its release. How widely this report will be disseminated and if and
when it will be posted on the ACNA website is anyone’s guess. According to the communiqué,
copies of the report will be sent to the Global Fellowship of Confessing
Anglicans and the ACNA’s “ecumenical partners.”
The second
reference is to a document that is yet to be drafted:
The next phase of the work of the Task Force will identify the ecclesiological principles (i.e., principles of the nature of the Church) of ministry and orders including what the Anglican formularies say about the nature of the church, the general character of ordained ministry, the characteristics of each order, and the relationship between the ordained ministry and Christ and his Church. The Task Force has formed sub-committees which will engage scholars and scholarship from the Anglo-Catholic, Charismatic, and Evangelical traditions (“three streams”). A draft of this work will be presented to the bishops in June.
This document upon its completion should be very revealing.
Note the reference in the foregoing statement to the Anglo-Catholic,
Charismatic, and Evangelical traditions, to the “three streams.” A major source of concern for North American Anglicans
who are committed to the teaching of the Bible and the doctrine of the Anglican
formularies should be whether the “Evangelical tradition” is adequately
represented in this identification of ecclesiological principles. A number of
those who identify themselves as “evangelicals” in the Anglican Church in North
America subscribe to beliefs and practices that are not consistent with
classical Anglican evangelicalism but reflect the influence of Anglo-Catholicism
and “three streams” theology. They do not hold to historic evangelical positions
on key issues.
The communiqué goes on to report that fifty-seven Spanish-speaking
congregations have been planted as result of the Anglican 1000 initiative. It,
however, does not give their size or how long they have been existence,
critical indications of a viability of a new church plant. It contains a vague
reference to the Greenhouse Movement “catalyzing clusters of new congregations.”
The communiqué is silent about the congregations that have left the Anglican Church
in North America, which reportedly include at least three in Archbishop Duncan’s
own diocese.
What else is noteworthy about the communiqué is the tone of
the document. The College of Bishops presents itself as if it is the board of
governors of the Anglican Church in North America, making the important
decisions that affect the life and ministry of the church. Nowhere in the ACNA
constitution and canons, however, is this role assigned to the College of
Bishops. Nowhere in the ACNA governing documents is this role recognized as
inherently a role of that body. It is a serious mistake not to object to the
College of Bishops’ usurpation of the role of the ACNA official governing
bodies and not to insist that it function within constitutionally and canonically
defined limits. It only can lead to greater problems down the road.
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