The above heading should give no satisfaction to any evangelical Christian. Some of the finest
literature in the evangelical heritage comes from gospel ministers of the Church of England, and a
considerable number of evangelicals continue to belong to that denomination today. The crisis to
which we refer has arisen from more than one direction; one major cause has been the fact that no
discipline has been exercised within the Anglican communion (led by the Archbishop of Canterbury) on
the Church of Canada and the Episcopal Church USA for their allowance of practising homosexual
clergy. This has prompted the withdrawal of some evangelicals from these sections of Anglicanism and
their realignment with the Province of the South Cone (which covers six South American countries),
whose Primate, Archbishop Gregory Venables, remains in communion with Canterbury. By this means the
disaffected — of whom Dr Jim Packer is the best known — support their claim to remain
Anglican.
Justification for this procedure requires a re-examination of what it means to be ‘Anglican’. The
historic definition has treated membership in the Church of England as adherence to the Church as by
law established in Britain, under the sovereign as ‘Supreme Governor’ and in communion with the See
of Canterbury. As the denomination spread into the Dominions, and the overseas provinces ceased to
be simply colonial attachments, the definition has been slowly modified. In June of this year,
however, a step was taken to redefine ‘Anglican’ in a fundamental manner. Some 1,200 Anglican
delegates, including Archbishops Venables (South Cone), Akinola (Nigeria), Orombi (Uganda) and
Jensen (Sydney), met at Jerusalem, and took the name ‘GAFCON’ (Global Anglican Future Conference).
The primary aim was ‘to promote the gospel as we Anglicans have received it’; this included adhering
to the name ‘Anglican’ while disowning large numbers identified with that title and perhaps even
Canterbury itself.2 The proposal that emerged was the formation of a new
structure which would stand for genuine Anglicanism, that is, for the ‘tenets of orthodoxy which
underpin our Anglican Identity’. For this purpose the Primates attending the Jerusalem gathering
were encouraged to ‘form a Council’.
Within weeks of the Jerusalem Conference the majority of the General Synod of the Church of England,
meeting in York, while not directly addressing the GAFCON proposal, determined that nothing like it
would be acceptable. At that Synod a motion that clergy be allowed to remove themselves from the
oversight of female bishops (whose existence is now in view), to be under the oversight of another
diocese, was decisively rejected. No such accommodation is to be allowed. Evangelicals, however,
were not seen as the main sufferers from this decision. It was Anglo-Catholic clergy who took the
lead in resisting the appointment of female bishops; many evangelicals voted with them, not
necessarily because they were against female bishops, but because the Anglo-Catholics represent
‘orthodox Christology and morality’ and were therefore judged worthy of support.
The alignment of evangelicals with Anglo-Catholics at York was not incidental. It is part of the
current Anglican evangelical policy and underlies the GAFCON platform. The participants at Jerusalem
did not designate themselves as ‘evangelicals’, but as ‘confessing Anglicans’. The ‘Declaration’
issued by the Conference shows why the latter term was adopted. For centuries evangelicals have
appealed to the Thirty-nine Articles as affirming the Protestantism of the Church of England,
particularly the Articles which deny the ‘Romish Doctrine of Purgatory’ (22), other ‘sacraments’
(25), ‘the sacrifices of masses’ (31), and the jurisdiction of ‘the Bishop of Rome’ (37). For
Anglo-Catholics those statements have long been the most serious barrier to any re-union with Roman
Catholicism, and if evangelicals were to enjoy their partnership there was no way that commitment to
all the Articles could be required. Consequently Anglo-Catholics were accommodated in the GAFCON
Declaration by the words, ‘We uphold the Thirty-nine Articles as containing the true doctrine’ –
‘containing’ is the escape clause that allows for choice on which of the Articles express
‘the true doctrine’. Yet simultaneously the Declaration allows no escape clause when it comes to
points Anglo-Catholics regard as necessary truths. Evangelicals have long had problems with certain
points in the Book of Common Prayer (1662), yet the Declaration says: ‘We rejoice in our Anglican
sacramental and liturgical heritage . . . we uphold the 1662 Book of Common Prayer as a true and
authoritative standard of worship.’ And there is to be no equivocation over Episcopacy: ‘We
recognise that God has called and gifted bishops, priests and deacons in historic succession to
equip all the people of God . . . We uphold the classic Anglican Ordinal as an authoritative
standard of clerical orders.’3
The GAFCON Declaration identifies liberal theology as an enemy of the gospel, but it is not the only
enemy. The historic Anglican evangelical position was to recognize danger from two directions:
secular rationalism on the one hand and false religion on the other — the unbelief of the world and
the misbelief which makes sacraments, priests, and the Pope necessary for salvation. From both
directions the authority of Scripture is attacked. In an anxiety to remain ‘Anglican’, the new
evangelical policy is one of common cause with Anglo-Catholics whose doctrinal deviation from Roman
Catholicism is minimal; the price for such co-operation is that some fundamental truths have to be
left unstated, while episcopacy is treated as though it was of first importance. This has led to the
oddity of supposing it to be necessary for clergy to be under a bishop even though his diocese is
thousands of miles distant.
Even as the GAFCON Declaration was beginning to circulate there were signs of disunity among the
participants. Dr Packer has called on Archbishop Rowan Williams of Canterbury to resign, alleging
that with regard to homosexuality he pretends to believe what he does not in fact believe; but
Archbishop Venables – the Primate to whom Packer now answers – when asked if he endorsed Packer’s
words, said he did not. Archbishop Jensen urged his bishops not to attend the Lambeth Conference
(held in July), and has said, ‘If you continue in fellowship you are endorsing the lie and are
complicit in it.’ On the other hand Archbishop Venables attended the Lambeth Conference, believing
‘there is more need for dialogue’. A still more fundamental issue facing the GAFCON movement is the
question how they can claim to be the true Anglicans while not wishing to be a breakaway from the
majority in the Anglican communion. Point 11 of the GAFCON Declaration says, ‘We recognise the
orders and jurisdiction of those Anglicans who uphold orthodox faith and practice’, but what of the
others (including the Archbishop of Canterbury)? ‘We reject the authority of those churches and
leaders who have denied the orthodox faith.’ Packer has called for the Declaration to be a litmus
test: ‘I would like to see it established as a basis for orthodoxy and missionary action. Anglican
provinces who didn’t come along with this would be in the outer circle of limited communion for not
identifying with Anglican orthodoxy.’ How can this be said, while at the same time it is repeatedly
asserted by GAFCON leaders that their proposed structure would not be, in Jensen’s words, ‘a Church
within a Church’? ‘It is not the formation of an alternative group’, Venables insists, and goes on:
‘We are not taking power over anybody, we are just bringing things together.’ The contradiction
inherent in these statements is palpable. It lays GAFCON open to such critics as the Bishop of
Durham who ask by what authority this Jerusalem grouping (an ‘unaccountable body’), has set itself
up as the custodian of orthodoxy. When asked how the existence of GAFCON’S proposed ‘Primates’
Council’ was to be justified, Jensen replied, ‘First of all they have authority because they have
been elected by their own people.’ His answer takes us to the crux of the problem. As an
evangelical, holding to Scripture, Jensen has no difficulty in appealing to the election of the
people. But when did Anglican Episcopacy ever find its warrant in ‘the people’, and where is there
any trace of such a thing in the Ordinal which the GAFCON declaration means to uphold?
It seems to us that the desire to redefine Anglicanism, and to sustain Anglo-Catholic support, has
led to an inconsistent appeal to Scripture. It was good to hear Archbishop Orombi of Uganda
asserting that the great issue was the authority of Scripture, not homosexuality, but confidence in
GAFCON is undermined by the way that authority has been inconsistently used. We regret also, that
instead of making appeal to Scripture sufficient, the GAFCON spokesmen follow the ecumenical
practice when they write, ‘We believe the Holy Spirit has led us.’4
So far we have heard no Anglican evangelicals resident in England speaking on behalf of GAFCON and
few of them appear to have been at the Jerusalem Conference. But it would be a strange new
‘Anglicanism’ that is not in communion with the Church of England and the See of Canterbury.
Further, in all the current discussions there is one momentous issue left in silence. The Bill of
Rights (1689) and the Act of Settlement (1700) secure that the British sovereign cannot be a Roman
Catholic. The repealing of this legislation may well be close and, given the current religious
climate, there can be no expectation the change will be prevented. Does that matter? Does the cause
of Christ depend on acts of Parliament? I do not raise the matter to pursue that question but rather
to point out that such a change would radically affect the meaning of ‘Church of England’. What kind
of church would it be to have a Roman Catholic as its ‘Supreme Governor’? Or could a multi-faith
sovereign – as Prince Charles has said he wishes to be – hold that position? The annulment of the
Acts of 1689 and 1700 would entail more than the removal of a religious test for the monarch. The
idea that the Church of England is ‘the national Church’ is, for many, already a fiction. A major
dismantling of what has been the established Church may well take place, and what comes out of it is
likely to have some favourable relation to the Church of Rome. The question Dr Lloyd-Jones pressed
in 1966 is the more relevant today: ‘Are evangelicals prepared to be of a Church that would include
the Church of Rome?’ Anglo-Catholics have no problem in answering that question, but it will be too
late for Anglican evangelicals to return to the position of Bishop Ryle and say: ‘I maintain that
the Established Church of England had better be disestablished, disendowed, and broken in pieces,
than re-united with the Church of Rome.’5
The current Anglican evangelical response to homosexuality (at least the only one that gets
publicity), while being faithful to Scripture on that point, is by-passing more fundamental
issues.
Notes:
1. An abbreviated version of this article was published in Evangelicals Now,
September 2008.
2. ‘While acknowledging the nature of Canterbury as an historic see, we do not
accept that Anglican identity is determined necessarily through recognition by the Archbishop of
Canterbury’ (GAFCON Final Statement). In this article I do not mean to overload the text with
references to sources. The relevant web-sites can easily be found and other quotations come from the
Church of England Newspaper (July 4, 2008) and Evangelicals Now (July and August
2008). The web-site of South Cone Province shows its Anglo-Catholic sympathies and contains the
statement, ‘The Archbishop of Canterbury is the focus of unity’.
3. Speaking of the way Tractarianism (the origin of Anglo-Catholicism in the Church
of England) assimilates with Roman Catholic belief, an evangelical leader of the 19th Century wrote:
‘The two systems proceed onwards by many of the same steps. Beginning with Tradition, they go
on to Justification by infused righteousness, the authority of the Fathers, the Catholic Church the
interpreter of Scripture, salvation by sacraments not by faith, the sacrifice of the Eucharist’ etc.
[J. Bateman, Life of Daniel Wilson, Bishop of Calcutta (John Murray: London, 1860), vol. 2,
p. 213.
4. Even worse is the way the writer of ‘GAFCON Takes Off!’ the lead article in
Evangelicals Now (August 2008), thinks there was a succession of ‘miracles’ in the Jerusalem
Conference.
5. John Charles Ryle, Charges and Addresses (repr. Edinburgh; Banner of
Truth, 1978), p. 170. ‘Reunion with Rome means the abolition of our Thirty-nine Articles’ (p.
169).
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