By Robin G. Jordan
I was reading the comment thread to a blog posted on Stand Firm
in which one of the people leaving a comment made the assertion that clergy,
congregations, and individuals dissatisfied with a particular ACNA bishop could
transfer to the jurisdiction of another bishop. The proposed changes to the ACNA constitution and canons posted on the Internet barely a
week before Assembly 2014, however, suggest that the days of this option are
numbered. While clergy may continue to be able to transfer to another diocese
and individuals to another church under the jurisdiction of a different bishop,
congregations are going to find transferring to the jurisdiction of another
bishop more difficult. The view expressed in this comment does not take into
consideration changing realities in the Anglican Church in North America.
As I have noted in previous articles, a movement is
discernible in the ACNA toward the consolidation of churches into
geographically contiguous dioceses and the abolition of affinity networks. This
includes the elimination of the option of affiliating with a diocese outside
the territory (or geographic area) in which a church is located. To my
knowledge the Diocese of Quincy and the Diocese of the Gulf South have
provisions in their governing documents under which churches not within the
territorial limits of the diocese may affiliate with the diocese.
The blog itself is related to the emergence of a culture
in the Anglican Church in North America, which discourages the members of that
denomination from drawing attention to problematic developments in the
denomination or its mission partners and subjecting them to public scrutiny. The
ACNA leadership has shown a willingness to go to great lengths to control and
influence the perceptions of the ACNA members and outsiders of the
denomination.
The ACNA leadership has to my knowledge (in a separate case from the one reported in the blog) pressured one member
of the media to cease from publishing articles that it perceived as not
supportive of its vision for the denomination and enlisted another such person
to write an article supporting the denomination’s claim to be genuinely
Anglican in the face of criticism that the denomination was emerging as an
Independent Catholic Church. Since the publication of that article a growing
body of evidence has shown that this criticism was justified.
The ACNA leadership has a longstanding problem with being
open and transparent, which goes as far back as the days of the Common Cause
Partnership. The ACNA leadership has kept the denomination’s membership in the
dark about various proposals it has under consideration until it has acted on
these proposals, preventing any organized opposition to develop to the
proposals and leaving those affected by them with no choice but to accept them.
While consolidation in the Anglican Church in North America
is in its very earliest stages, it can be expected to eventually lead to the
merging of two or more dioceses by the dissolution of existing ones and
creation of a single new diocese. A number of the proposals for changes to the
ACNA canons that were unveiled in Constitution and Canons and Governance Task
Force Reports in the 2014 Provincial Meetings Journal laid the groundwork for
such consolidation.
These proposed changes to the ACNA canons included a
proposal requiring dioceses to obtain prior approval of the College of Bishops
before electing a new bishop, a proposal authorizing the Executive Committee to
develop and enforce sustainability standards for dioceses, a proposal making the recognition of a new
diocese contingent upon the recommendation of the Executive Committee, a
proposal outlining the procedure for the establishment of missionary districts,
and a proposal changing the guidelines for the recognition of new dioceses,
which discourages groups of churches from seeking recognition as a new diocese
and encourages them to seek admission to an existing diocese. The ACNA has not
yet announced on its website whether these proposals were approved by the
Provincial Council and/or ratified by the Provincial Assembly.
All these proposals give the top ACNA leaders, those in the
inner leadership circle, greater control over both existing and new dioceses in
the ACNA. I suspect that some ACNA leaders, those not in this elite group, have
not fully grasped the implications of these proposals and how they may affect
their particular diocese.
Consolidation will not enhance the ability of the ACNA
to plant more churches and to expand its population base. It will, however,
simplify the task of imposing a rigid doctrinal uniformity on the denomination.
To date the ACNA College of Bishops has endorsed a number of
documents that establish a form of unreformed Catholicism as the official
doctrine of the denomination. They include the ACNA Catechism and the ACNA
Texts for Common Prayer.
Among the reports in 2014 Provincial Meetings Journal were
three reports containing proposed rites of admission of catechumens, baptism,
and confirmation for use in the ACNA. These proposed rites are also unreformed
Catholic in doctrine.
The use of the ACNA Catechism and the ACNA Texts for Common
Prayer have not so far been mandated by canon and their use is not yet legally
binding upon ACNA clergy and congregations. A bishop may seek to enforce their
use within his jurisdiction but he does so on his own personal authority. He
does not have the weight of provincial or diocesan canon behind him.
The provisions of Canon II.2.2 do not apply the ACNA
Catechism and the language of the canon appears also rule out its application
to the ACNA Texts for Common Prayer. The canon is so worded to allow the bishop
to prohibit the use of certain rites and services but it does not authorize him
to require the use of a particular service book.
Once the ACNA leadership takes steps to enact the use of the
ACNA Catechism and the ACNA Texts for Common Prayer or its successor into canon
law, requiring their use throughout the denomination, consolidation would
facilitate the task of enforcing their use. Bishops who have reservations about
their doctrine and are hesitant to use them in their dioceses would face not
only pressure from their fellow bishops in the College of Bishops but a variety
of sanctions.
They would be faced with the very real possibility that
their diocese would be dissolved in the name of consolidation and its clergy
and congregations incorporated into a newly-created diocese. Or their diocese
would be forced to merge with another diocese and they would no longer be the
bishop with jurisdiction over the diocese.
Clergy and congregations would find themselves in a diocese
with a different culture from that of their previous diocese. They might also
find themselves under the oversight of a bishop far less tolerant than their
previous bishop.
The ACNA leadership is not known for its high regard for
constitutionalism and the rule of law. This deficit can be expected to add to the
resulting tensions within the denomination.
Congregations would no longer have the option of transferring
to a friendlier diocese. They would be faced with the tough choice of abandoning
their convictions and conforming to the official doctrine of the ACNA or
withdrawing from the denomination.
While the ACNA canons permit congregations to transfer to
another diocese or withdraw from the denomination, the ACNA constitution does
not guarantee this right to congregations. It only guarantees to dioceses and
sub-provinces the right to withdraw from the denomination (Article II.3). This
right is not extended to missionary districts.
I do not know how many congregations have actually taken
advantage of this option. The transfer of a congregation from one diocese to
another requires the permission of the bishops involved (Canon I.6.9). A congregation must consult its bishop before it may withdraw from the denomination. This provision furnishes its bishop with the opportunity to take steps to discourage its withdrawal. This provision also increases the likelihood of a split in the congregation over whether it should withdraw from the denomination.
Consolidation would eliminate overlapping jurisdictions in
the same territory (or geographic area).
It would in effect nullify the transfer provisions of Canon I.6.9. Only
in a few rare cases would a congregation be able to transfer, such as if it
moved to a different locality that was within the territorial limits of another
diocese.
Article XII of the ACNA constitution does not entirely
prohibit dioceses from holding the property of congregations in trust and
making a claim of ownership if a congregation withdraws from the denomination.
It only prohibits the denomination itself from holding property in trust and
making such a claim.
The provisions of Article VIII and Article XII of the ACNA
constitution make no mention of missionary districts and as a consequence may
be interpreted as not applying to missionary districts. Indeed the fact
missionary districts are not mentioned in the ACNA constitution raises question
as to the constitutionality of their creation. While Article V empowers the
Provincial Council to make canons ordering the common life of the denomination
in respect to the proper administration of the denomination, it is debatable
whether the creation of missionary districts falls under the provisions of this
Article.
Clergy transferring to another diocese must present to its
bishop a letter of transfer setting out their standing and character and signed
by the bishop or standing committee of the diocese or other judicatory in which
they were last canonically resident (Canon III.6.2.1) The transferring bishop
must disclose to the accepting bishop any past or existing disciplinary matter
or other impediment affecting the transferring clergy member’s ministry. (Canon
III.6.2.2). The transferring bishop can be expected to inform the accepting
bishop of any disagreements with the transferring clergy member over doctrine
or other matters.
The outward appearance of unity that ACNA leaders have
sought to maintain, in some cases at the expense of their integrity and the
biblical orthodoxy and confessional Anglicanism of clergy and congregations in
their charge, will begin to unravel. It will reveal itself for what it is—a
costly façade.
Some ACNA leaders may explain away or rationalize the
tensions resulting from the consolidation of ACNA churches into geographically
contiguous dioceses and the imposition of rigid doctrinal uniformity on the
denomination as “growing pains.” Others will seek to shift the blame from themselves
to those most upset by these changes.
The ACNA may weather this crisis. The cost, however, is
likely to be prohibitive in terms of damage to the denomination’s public image
and reduction of its population base.
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