No, the "Global South" Has Not Left the Anglican Communion


Part of the DNA of Anglicanism is the autonomy of national churches. This principle led English church leaders of the 16th century to support Henry VIII when he determined that the English church should not be subject to Roman primacy. The Church of England as a whole, and the various bishops in their dioceses, had responsibility and autonomy that no other bishop--not Rome externally, not Canterbury internally--could preempt.

When the Anglican Communion later emerged as a whole family of such national churches and not just as the colonial offshoots of one, this principle was firmly upheld; the first Lambeth Conference was brought together in 1867 on the strict understanding that neither the Archbishop of Canterbury personally, nor even this group of bishops, could usurp the authority that properly belonged to the bishops in their own sphere. Primacy and collegiality were strictly limited as means of determining the mind of the Church.

It is thus odd to read the Archbishop of Rwanda, the Most Rev'd Dr Laurent Mbanda, proclaiming new arrangements for the Anglican Communion--or rather the creation of a new entity called the "Global Anglican Communion" (doubtless GAC henceforth)--on behalf of a whole set of national Churches who, as far as we can tell, have not actually made their own decisions about this.

Archbishop Mbanda has had a busy week or two. Within minutes of the announcement that Bishop Sarah Mullally was to be the next Archbishop of Canterbury, a carefully-crafted missive (obviously prepared well in advance and presumably with abundant counsel) appeared over Dr Mbanda's name decrying the appointment. The letter expressed regret over the appointment of a woman but--bearing in mind that the Gafcon constituency itself is by no means of one mind about women's leadership--leant harder on what it saw as Bishop Mullally's openness to LGBTQ+ inclusion.

Now however the news--or rather the claim--about the rearrangement of Communion relations on the part of the Gafcon primates suggests a kind of wishful-thinking, combined with forgetfulness of some essentials of Anglican polity, as noted. The communiqué, which did not seem to have benefited from quite the same care as the earlier letter about Canterbury, reports that the views expressed were those of "Gafcon Primates" but without naming those present (or indeed who else was present). It stated both that the new Global entity constituted the restoration of the "original structure as a fellowship of autonomous provinces" but (awkwardly to say the least) then clearly dismissed any respect for autonomy of provinces by declaring from on high that its members "shall not participate in meetings called by the Archbishop of Canterbury, including the ACC, and shall not make any monetary contribution to the ACC, nor receive any monetary contribution from the ACC or its networks." 

That is, Archbishop Mbanda seems to have claimed a sort of primatial authority that must have a few of his supposed allies reaching for Article XXXVII, now perhaps updated to read "the Archbishop of Rwanda hath no authority in this realm of X." Even if this new statement really represents the views of the whole Gafcon primates' group, those primates do not have the power, singly or collectively, to decree any of this for those dioceses or provinces who have participated in Gafcon meetings.

There is of course no question that many Anglicans in parts of what is unhelpfully called the "Global South" are deeply unhappy with directions taken by others on matters such as women's ordination, and more acutely around the full inclusion of LGBTQ+ people in the life of the Church. These debates have led to a breakdown of some relationships, and strain on others. The Gafcon movement has become a focus for these, but there are many Anglicans who have been trying to relate both to Gafcon programs and to the "Instruments of Communion": the Lambeth Conference, the Anglican Consultative Council, more recently (if controversially) the Primates as a group, and the Archbishop herself. 

Of these, quite a few African provinces have ordained women even as bishops. So far there have been women bishops in Kenya, South Sudan, and Angola, as well as the more Canterbury-friendly southern African dioceses of Lesotho (a bishop now going to Pretoria) and Eswatini. The Gafcon leadership is unhappy about this and is using the current situation to "double down."

Archbishop Mbanda's move thus seems to be an attempt by the forces behind Gafcon--whose real commonality lies in particular theological positions, not in the "Global South"--to use a woman's appointment to Canterbury as momentum to launch, not just a movement or program as Gafcon had been, but an actual international denominational structure. The announcement does constitute a significant step in cementing the divisions that existed already, but part of it is just stating the already-obvious.

Part of it however is vaunting ambition--and an ambition that seems to have forgotten something basic about Anglican polity, and hence seems unlikely to deliver everything it claims. It throws down the gauntlet to the relatively conservative Anglicans who have wanted to remain in communion with Canterbury as well as to deal with Gafcon, and attempts to make them choose. Some may be cowed into submitting to the new Gafcon structure, others will not. The perception of arrogance may not help. While Archbishop Mbanda also claims that his followers have not "left" the Communion because they "are" the Communion, the reality will prove more complex.

It is also important for Anglicans outside this orbit not to take the claims of the Gafcon group at face value. There is no "Global South" in the sense that caricaturists on both sides may find convenient. There are many (e.g.) African Anglican Christians who are deeply committed to ongoing relationships with those in the Church of England and elsewhere, whose views they may not always accept, but whom they know to be part of Christ's body. Whatever will be their relationship to the new GAC entity, we shall have to wait and see.

Those liberal-minded Anglicans who shrug at the latest conservative posturing also need to remember that their own positions have only become settled practice in recent decades, and to sneer at those who differ is to show a different form of forgetfulness, and arrogance. To correlate such conservatism with ethnic and national identity remains, as always, racism. It remains vital to retain and deepen our relationships, whether through the traditional "Instruments" or otherwise, and in any case to remember that Communion is God's gift, and that neither Canterbury nor Rwanda can change that. 


Comments

  1. Malcolm French7:22 pm

    One is moved to wonder how much the American right is continuing to fund this schism. The original purpose of their funding was to disrupt and marginalize the voice of the Episcopal Church in American public affairs.

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  2. Anonymous10:58 pm

    One of the challenges of inclusiveness is the allowance for these destructive forces and it being very difficult to say no it’s you Gafcon who are not Anglican

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  3. Anonymous5:53 am

    If South Sudan is part of the Global Anglican Communion, as it would seem since the South Sudanese primate and province are part of GAFCON, then couldn't they defrock the putative secretary general of the Anglican Communion, the Rt. Rev. Anthony Poggo, if he fails to recognize them as the legitimate Anglican Communion? As I understand it, the Anglican Communion entity that's legally constituted under United Kingdom law is legally distinct and separate from the Church of England. If the Poggo-led Anglican Communion recognized the Global Anglican Communion then this would be game, set, match.

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    1. Anonymous11:20 am

      No, I don't think it's true or helpful to say this would be "game, set, match." The churches that remain in communion with +++Cantuar will always be the Anglican Communion. The ACC, the Primates Meeting, and even Lambeth are modern inventions. Communion with the ABC is the ne plus ultra of communion. Those who coalesce with GAFCON may call themselves "THE Anglican Communion," but using those words does not invalidate the actual Anglican Communion's existence.

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  4. Anonymous6:59 am

    I do not know who the GAFCON Primates are, but it could include the Primate of the Anglican Church of North America (ACNA) which is not a member of the Anglican Communion.

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  5. Anonymous3:40 pm

    Lambeth 1930 made clear that the communion was determined by 2 things: upholding the faith of the one, holy, Catholic, and apostolic church, and communion with the ABC. TEC made that statement a preamble to its Constitution and Canons some time later. The BCP 1979 by including its “Historical Documents” section seemed to signal an even deeper commitment to the unbroken “deposit of of Christian Faith and Order….”
    Much of the struggle for the last fifty years has been around the breaking of those declarations. Many have decided that the former is more superior than the latter. They have struggled hard for many decades to see the ship turned, and have been scorned.
    The key Article is XIX it should now be amended to read “As the
    Church… of England has erred…”.
    The Primates seem to be reaching back behind the Articles and gentleman’s agreements of the past to earlier Catholic precedent.

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    1. Anonymous7:40 pm

      Stating the obvious here but the US version of the BCP matters not to anyone not in the TEC. Individuality and modern notions of personal liberty is the original sin of the USA.

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  6. Anonymous10:11 pm

    "Even if this new statement really represents the views of the whole Gafcon primates' group, those primates do not have the power, singly or collectively, to decree any of this for those dioceses or provinces who have participated in Gafcon meetings."

    Well, of course they do. To say "We will not allow anyone into the Chess Club anymore who does not play chess" is not claiming the power to force others into playing chess.

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    1. Anonymous8:13 am

      The point is that they’re claiming the power to stop various provinces playing chess with others too. And no, they don’t have that power.

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    2. Anonymous1:13 pm

      "You can't be a member of our club if you play chess with Timmy." Of course they can say that.

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  7. Anonymous12:15 am

    However we spin this, the whole thing has become an unnecessary mess, far removed from Jesus and his message. Who, one wonders, gains most from all this posturing and dogma-based angst?

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  8. Anonymous1:04 am

    Amongst the twelve disciples were two of very different political convictions: Matthew the tax collector and Simon the zealot. How these two ever got along is beyond me, but both received Christ’s command “to love one another “. Even if they eventually became bishops of their own dioceses, this command would still ring in their ears. John says that the ground of our fellowship is the Word (Christ) who gives life, and the apostles’ testimony to Christ, “in order that you (all) may share with us in a common life, that life which we share with the Father and his Son Jesus Christ”. The question for all Anglicans across the globe is how do we “keep the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace” in face of some tenaciously held differences of theological and ecclesiastical convictions?

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  9. Anonymous7:57 am

    There is a video that popped up on YouTube. Dominic Steele's podcast, Pastor's Heart. It features an interview with the archbishop and primate of Rwanda FROM AUSTRALIA. It turns out this communique was WRITTEN IN SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA at a hastily called meeting of the GAFCON primates. The meeting had primates in-person and online.

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    1. Anonymous8:13 am

      Call me not-at-all surprised.

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  10. Anonymous10:08 am

    “on behalf of a whole set of national Churches who, as far as we can tell, have not actually made their own decisions about this.”
    And we will be waiting to see in the next weeks how they respond. What is sinister about that?

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    1. Nothing at all, and yes we will see. However the Sydney Statement does not invite or envisage this process (except regarding constitutional changes) and declares the basic issue a fait accompli.

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