By Robin G. Jordan
The constitution and canons of the Anglican Church in North
America contain a number of provisions that were clearly designed to give a special
interest group a clear advantage in the denomination.
The Fundamental
Declarations. The fundamental declarations set out the doctrinal criteria
for participation in the Anglican Church in North America. Congregations and
clergy wishing to participate in the Anglican Church in North America must
accept the doctrinal positions laid out in the fundamental declarations.
Among these doctrinal positions is that the office of bishop
is essential to the very essence of the life of the Church. The 1662 Book of
Common Prayer is one of a number of doctrinal standards of the denomination and
is one of a number of books that form its worship standard. It is not a major
formulary for the Anglican Church in North America as it is for historic
Anglicanism. The Thirty-Nine Articles reflects the theological disputes of the
past and the Anglican Church has moved on since then. It embodies only some
convictions of modern-day Anglicans.
These doctrinal positions eliminate from participation in
the Anglican Church in North America Anglicans who hold that the office of
bishop, while it may benefit the life of the Church, is not necessary for the
Church’s existence. As the late Peter Toon pointed out in his critique of the
Common Cause Theological Statement from which the fundamental declarations are
taken, Anglicans who hold the bene esse
position form a very large segment of the global Anglican Church. They also
exclude Anglicans who recognize the Thirty-Nine Articles and 1662 Prayer Book
as the longstanding, authoritative doctrinal and worship standard for
Anglicans.
Anglicans in these two groups may participate in the
Anglican Church in North America but they must leave their convictions at the
door.
The Provincial
Council. Under the provisions of the constitution and canons of the
Anglican Church in North America the Provincial Council is supposed to be the
governing body of the denomination. The council consists of a bishop, a clergy
representative, and two lay representatives from each diocese of the Anglican
Church in North America. The manner of their appointment is determined by the
diocese and does not exclude the ordinary of the diocese appointing its
delegation to the Provincial Council.
The term of office for council members is five years and no
council member may serve more than two terms of office. Since the Anglican
Church in North America has no mandatory retirement age for its bishops and the
ordinary of a diocese may be the only bishop in the diocese, the term limits
for council members does not make sense. While the canons do not specifically
make provision for their permanent membership in the Provincial Council, it is
difficult to see how the council would operate if the bishops were not
permanent members.
The Provincial Council may co-opt six additional members and
the members of the Executive Committee are ex officio council members with
voting privileges.
Even if the clergy representative and lay representatives of
a diocese elected by its diocesan synod or its equivalent of a diocesan synod,
the ordinary of the diocese can be expected to exercise considerable influence
over the choice of these representatives.
The composition of the Provincial Council, the terms of
office of its members, the unstated permanent membership of the diocesan bishop
in the council, and the influence diocesan bishops can be expected to exercise
over the choice of a diocese’s delegation to the council make it a body which
is likely to reflect the views of the group of bishops occupying the place of
power in the College of Bishops, to maintain the status quo, and not to
introduce any significant or sweeping changes.
While the canons do not prescribe this procedure, proposals
for changes to the constitution and canons originate in the Governance Task
Force—a team of purported specialists who are responsible for drafting new
legislation of this kind. Whatever it drafts is scrutinized by the College of
Bishops and changes made before the legislation is presented to the Provincial
Council for approval. This process gives the group of bishops occupying the
place of power in the College of Bishop considerable input into and control
over what legislation is presented to the council.
As I have pointed out in a number of previous articles, the
College of Bishops has encroached upon the role of the Provincial Council in a
number of key areas. They include faith and order, worship, and ordination
standards. They have taken over a large part of the council’s role in these
areas.
The Anglican Church in North America has a larger, more representative
Provincial Assembly. The assembly has a negligible role in the governance of
the denomination. Except for ratification of changes to the constitution and
canons, it is nothing more than a glorified pep rally. To date its business
meetings have been very brief. It has rubber-stamped whatever was presented to
it, giving the appearance of wider acceptance to the decisions of the
Provincial Council.
The College of
Bishops. The constitution and canons of the Anglican Church in North
America make provision for two methods of selecting bishops for its dioceses.
The first method is election by the diocese and confirmation of the election by
the episcopal college. The second method is nomination by the diocese and appointment
by the episcopal college. The canons mandate the second method for new dioceses
and recommend it to dioceses that elect their bishops. The guidelines for the
recognition of new dioceses make no mention of the first method.
The second method, the method favored by the canons and
imposed on new dioceses, makes it far easier for the group of bishops occupying
the place of power in the College of Bishops to determine who becomes a member
of the episcopal college. Dioceses must in nominating candidates consider their
acceptability to this group of bishops before the best interests of the
diocese. This method of selecting bishops enables the group of bishops occupying
the place of power in the College of Bishops to stack the episcopal college in
a way that favors their own special interests. It ultimately robs the diocese
of its autonomy since it is not free to choose a new bishop who will serve its
best interests. It also enables a particular school of thought to entrench
itself in the College of Bishops and to exclude from the episcopal college
those who disagree with its views.
Any movement to introduce significant reforms in the
Anglican Church in North America, to replace its existing constitution and
canons with more equitable governing documents, can expect to encounter opposition
from those wed to the status quo, from
those benefiting from the advantage that it gives to their special interests.
As can be seen from this overview, it would have to negotiate a number of
hurdles designed to prevent the loss of that advantage.
Since a reform movement is not likely to make much headway
in the face of such obstacles, it needs to make an end run rather than try to
break through the defensive line that these obstacles set up. What is the game
changer is that the College of Bishops has repeatedly overstepped the bounds
set by the Anglican Church in North America’s governing documents. By refusing to
follow the rules of the game, it has freed a reform movement to ignore the
rules too. It is not conscious-bound to accede to the dictates of those in
positions of authority in the Anglican Church in North America. They have no
authority beyond that which a reform movement is willing to give to them.
Unless they themselves are a part of the reform movement, their authority is
non-existent.
There is nothing new or innovative about the view that I
propounding. Clergy and congregations took a similar view of those in authority
in the Episcopal Church with whom they were involved in theological disputes,
prompting the formation of organizations like the Anglican Communion Network
and the Anglican Mission in America. The sixteenth century Reformers also took
a similar view in relation to the Roman Catholic Church. Any movement for the
reformation of the Church eventually will reach this conclusion. In the case of
the bishops of the Anglican Church in North America, they have abnegated their
role as church leaders by seeking to create an Anglican Church not ruled by the
Holy Scriptures and the Anglican formularies as well as by failing to abide by the
provisions of their own denomination’s governing documents. They have shown
themselves to be unworthy of deference.
Those wishing to institute significant reforms in the
Anglican Church in North America need to seize the initiative and take matters
into their own hands, banding together and implementing needed reforms in their
own part of the denomination. This would involve the formation of second
orthodox Anglican province, one that is fully committed to the fulfillment of
the Great Commission and to the authority of the Bible and the Anglican
formularies with its own rites and services, catechism, bishops, and synodical
form of government. Realistically it is, at the present time, the only way
forward.
ACNA still choosing to ignore the "living text"
ReplyDeletehttp://alivingtext.com/blog/2015/06/28/acna-task-force-on-holy-orders-update-june-2015/
Thanks, Hugh, for drawing my attention to the article.
ReplyDeleteYou're more than welcome, my dear brother.
ReplyDeleteIt seems that most over @ ACNA are living in the late 1970s, as confused as their PECUSA predecessors.
No one -I repeat no one- in ACNA believes in male-only clergy. To a [wo]man, they all believe it is perfectly acceptable. They ought to drop their sham debates.
It's reminiscent of their whinging back in the 1990s over "gay" clergy. There too, they dragged their heels until the laity -fed up with their inaction and cowardice- forced them to act. But today, there is no such strength in ACNA - she was born in mediocrity and compromise.
This day is a day of trouble, and of rebuke, and of blasphemy: for the children are come to the birth, and there is not strength to bring forth. {Isaiah 37:3}
The Tosk Farce has no Scriptural mandate on the subject?
ReplyDeleteMaybe #9, but still, nary a text of sacred Scripture...
1. What is the nature, historicity, function and importance of apostolic succession?
2. What happens at the Eucharist?
3. What is the significance of the celebrant at Holy Communion?
4. What happens at ordination?
5. What is the significance of the incarnation for the priesthood? Ordained ministry?
6. How the differences between male and female affect leadership ability?
7. Is leadership more office or charism?
8. Does order pertain to the gospel?
9. In what way is order/authority received from Christ? Is there a role for the church?
10. Can orthodoxy be preserved without order/structure?
11. How important is historic continuity?
12. What is our accountability to catholicity, and where is catholicity located?