Updated 12:47 pm.EST, Sun November 22, 2009

Church|Thu, Aug. 02 2007 04:50 PM EDT

Anglican Splits from Conservative Group Over 'Sweeping' Judgments

By Lillian Kwon|Christian Post Reporter

A conservative Anglican resigned from a group of dissidents saying its head has made judgments regarding divisions in the Anglican Communion that are "far too sweeping."

The Rev. Dr. Ephraim Radner, one of the founders of the Anglican Communion Network, announced with deep disappointment his resignation earlier this week in disagreement with recent statements by network moderator the Rt. Rev. Robert Duncan that "contradict my sense of calling within this part of Christ's Body, the Anglican Communion."

"Bishop Duncan has now declared the See of Canterbury and the Lambeth Conference – two of the four Instruments of Communion within our tradition – to be 'lost.' He has said that God is 'doing a new thing' in allowing these elements to founder and be let go," stated Radner.

"I find this judgment to be dangerously precipitous and unfair under circumstances when current, faithful, and hard work is being done by many to bolster these Instruments as servants of our common life in Christ."

Duncan, also bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Pittsburgh, recently came out of the Anglican Communion Network Annual Council meeting in Bedford, Texas, where he expressed little hope that The Episcopal Church – U.S. branch of Anglicanism – will turn around from its departure from Christian orthodoxy and Anglican tradition.

He told over 80 Anglican traditionalists that "the American province is lost and something will have to replace it."

He further expressed disappointment that the Archbishop of Canterbury, the Most Rev. Dr. Rowan Williams, has not backed the network as he had hoped.

"Never, ever has he spoken publicly in defense of the orthodox in the United States,” said Duncan, adding that "the cost is his office."

"To lose that historic office is a cost of such magnitude that God must be doing a new thing,” he said.

Such a declaration that the key instruments of the Anglican Communion are "lost" implies that the entire communion is lost, Radner noted.

"The judgment is far too sweeping."

Radner believes the actions the Anglican Communion Network is undertaking are in the direction of breaking up the global body.

Duncan and a group of Common Cause Partners, consisting of those discontent with The Episcopal Church and those who have split, plan to step up their partnership and form a separate Anglican structure called the "Anglican Union" in the United States. A meeting is set for September to discuss the plan.

"In founding his new church ... he (Duncan) is, I fear, not working for the healing of our broken Body, but repeating the mistakes of Christians in the past, whose zeal has not only brought suffering to themselves, but has wounded the Church of Christ," Radner stated.

Radner had helped found the Anglican Communion Network, which currently claims over 900 parishes and over 2,200 clergy, in 2004 with hopes of it serving as an instrument of renewal and of building up when divisions in The Episcopal Church deepened in 2003 with the consecration of an openly gay bishop.

Although opposed to the recent actions of The Episcopal Church, Radner doesn't support conservatives leaving the denomination. Fragmenting The Episcopal Church "does little to promote the Gospel's compelling witness even if done for the sake of a clear truth," he said in an earlier interview with VirtueOnline, a voice for global orthodox Anglicanism. Radner supports discipline rather than schism within the church. Continue »

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  • Thu Aug 09, 2007 4:00 am Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    When our leaders become the most biblically unfaithful, why should they think that we will follow them into apostacy? The liberal side apparently views the current issue as a unity issue -- how do we maintain it regardless of the cost to biblical faithfulness. The other side sees it as an obedience issue -- what does the Bible require and are we being faithful to our calling. When the laity becomes significantly more faithful to God's word than its ministers, any denomination will experience breakdown.

  • Fri Aug 03, 2007 6:04 am Agree: 1   Disagree: 0

    The TEC is proud enough to have accomplished its devilish mission. But in any case the Anglicans of all color were long due for judging themselves (as the church is supposed to do, says the Bible) because of Canterbury''s compromises (with the Roman church, e.g.).

  • Thu Aug 02, 2007 6:49 pm Agree: 4   Disagree: 0

    i do not believe the anglican comunion is broken just the TEC. since 2003 i have stopped calling myself an episcopalian, I now consider myself to be a Christain of the anglican denomination. I belong to a diocese that has rejected the authority of the new TEC primate because of her liberal stance. and I am very proud of my Bishop for doing so. I am disapointed in the archbishop of Cantebury for not showing us more support. I am tired of the argument of over homosexuality. it is wrong and should have never come to this, we have better things to do as Christians. This is a free country and they can live thier lives any way they wish but do not push your secular politically correct agenda onto other people and do not expect me and the rest of the world to except it as OK. The TEC has lost far more members than they have gained by this and I think now they are just to proud to admit thier mistake and repent.

  • Thu Aug 02, 2007 6:46 pm Agree: 2   Disagree: 1

    I do not agree with Mr Duncan we should try everything possible to stay in the Anglican communion But the TEC in its current state has to go. they(the Conservative Bishops) should not boycott the lambeth conference but show up as the Christian Soldiers I know they are. invited or not, to protest the actions of the TEC.

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