Anglican Head to Hold Confidential Meeting with Conservative Church Leaders
Archbishop of Canterbury Dr Rowan Williams is to discuss a formal split in the worldwide Anglican Communion with conservative Anglican leaders in a confidential meeting scheduled for later this month.
The outspoken archbishop Peter Akinola, Primate of Nigeria, will be among the group of conservative archbishops who will meet Williams at Lambeth Palace to consider the creation of a parallel body for conservatives in America, reported The Telegraph.
The latest development in the crisis over homosexuality in the Anglican Communion follows the release of the Kigali communiqué by Global South leaders in Africa last month.
The communiqué proposed a separate ecclesiastical structure" to accommodate opponents of the pro-homosexuality leadership of the Episcopal Church in the U.S.
Seven dioceses and scores of parishes in the U.S. Episcopal Church have rejected their liberal leadership and sought oversight from sympathetic archbishops abroad.
Under the Global South proposals, American conservatives would switch their allegiances from their Presiding Bishop-Elect, the Rt Rev Katharine Jefferts Schori, to a leader from the Global South.
Williams has become increasingly sympathetic with conservative Anglicans as the Episcopal Church continues unapologetically on its liberal path to the dismay of most of the Anglican Communion which continues to reject homosexuality as incompatible with Scripture. The Episcopal Church is the U.S. representative body of the Anglican Communion.
Episcopalians almost brought the worldwide Anglican Communion to the point of schism after they consecrated its first actively homosexual bishop in 2003.
Williams is keen to find a compromise between liberals and conservatives in the worldwide church body before next Februarys gathering of all the primates.
If he fails to find such a compromise, conservatives are likely to insist that the Archbishop of Canterbury initiate a formal split a move sure to spark fury among liberals who will perceive the move as one designed to force them out of the church body.