Anglican divisions deepen as rebel clerics pick rival to first female leader
Anglican divisions deepen as rebel clerics pick rival to first female leader 6 hours ago Lebo DisekoGlobal Religion correspondent, Lagos Clergy from a conservative grouping of the Anglican Church are meeting this week in Nigeria's capital Abuja to choose a rival to the first female Archbishop of Canterbury.
Many conservative Christians believe that only men should be consecrated as bishops.
Some of the hymns and liturgy were the same as those sung by Anglicans around the world, but there were also differences, like the upbeat worship music that had the congregation dancing in the pews. Some congregants, like Bunmi Odukoya, were supportive of the appointment. "The work of God is an individual thing. If you're called - you can be a man, you can be a woman - you need to fulfill the calling of the Lord," he told the BBC. Others, like Uche Nweke, strongly disagreed: "I don't think it's Christian. When you look at the Bible and the apostles, there was no woman in there, so a woman being the head of the Anglican church in England, I don't think it's going to go well. "
At its four-day meeting due to start in Abuja on Tuesday, Gafcon, which describes itself as a global movement of "authentic Anglicans, guarding God's gospel", plans to elect its own "first among equals", just weeks ahead of Archbishop Mullaly's installation at Canterbury Cathedral. The move threatens to turn divisions within the global church into a full-on split.
"This is a set of leaders, all male, going to a conference in Africa to assert [an] identity which no longer satisfies many Anglican churches - that is an all-male episcopate calling the shots. "
The group says it speaks for the majority of the world's Anglicans, although that is contested.
For example, the Anglican Church of Southern Africa, and Kenya's first female bishop Emily Onyango, both celebrated Sarah Mullally's appointment.
In October last year, Gafcon resolved to "reorder the Anglican Communion", refusing to take part in meetings convened by the Archbishop of Canterbury, and encouraging members to cut remaining ties with the Church of England.
The group said it had not left.
Instead it claimed that it was the true Anglican Communion.
The Anglican Communion is made up of 42 provinces in 165 countries around the world.
Each has its own system of governance, but they share heritage, and ways of worshipping. "We see ourselves as a family of autonomous, yet interdependent churches," Bishop Anthony Poggo, Secretary General of the Anglican Communion, told the BBC.
According to Bishop Poggo, any church or province that wants to leave the Communion ought to follow the process by which they joined, but in reverse. "We need to go through our existing processes, namely, a standing committee, or the synods that we have in each of the provinces, rather than doing it outside of these processes. "
So what happens when one part of the family refuses to do so, but behaves as if it has left?
"There is not much you can do," concedes Bishop Poggo, adding: "It saddens us. "
But there are still some who value the connection with Canterbury.
"If we continue in this trend we'll have grudges, unsettled issues between us. So how do we even make it to heaven?" You may also be interested in: Go to BBCAfrica. com for more news from the African continent
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