News and Ideas from around the Anglican World

   about us    

   contact us   

   subscriptions

     HOME

     InternationalNews 

 

                                ARCHIVE 

  

___________________________________________________________________

  

April 2008

 

  

GAFCON UPDATE


Jordon, Jerusalem for Gafcon: Conference rearranged

 

By GEORGE CONGER

 

The Gafcon organizing committee, which is arranging an alternative to the Anglican Lambeth Conference, has announced that the dates and venue of the Jerusalem conference have been changed.

 Photo: TEC

Following consultations with the Bishop in Jerusalem, the Rt Rev Suheil Dawani (right), the conference will now be broken into two parts: a consultation for church leaders in Jordan from June 18-22 and a pilgrimage to Jerusalem from June 22-29.

 

"We are very grateful for the feedback that we have received on the many complex issues that confront us,” the Archbishop of Sydney, Dr Peter Jensen, said on Feb 19.

 

"The emphasis of our time together will be our future in the Anglican Communion and the reformation and renewal of our common life rooted in the Holy Scriptures and our common faith in Jesus Christ,” he said.

 

On Feb. 16 the Bishop in Jerusalem, the Rt Rev Suheil Dawani, urged Dr Jensen to reconsider holding Gafcon in Jerusalem. "We are dealing with many different issues and we have other priorities," he said, on “the Communion level, the interfaith level, as well as on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict."

 

The first week of the meeting will consist of a smaller, invitation-only gathering of the conference leadership, its theological resource group, those bishops serving in majority Islamic settings and other key leaders. “The Jerusalem pilgrimage will focus on worship, prayer, discussions and Bible Study, shaped by the context of the Holy Land,” the announcement said.

 

By separating the conference’s political and spiritual components into distinctive components, the Gafcon organizers hope to assuage Bishop Suheil’s fears of dire political consequences for his community, while honouring the Nigerian wish to meet in Jerusalem. Meeting in Israel for a ‘pilgrimage’ and in Jordan for a ‘consultation’ accomplishes this aim, they believe. --Church of England Newspaper   

 

 

 

     TAPintoCanada

     EdibleThoughts

     TAPintotheWord

     OntheFrontline

     EditorialTAP

     theTAPinterview

     Bookreviews  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Copyright The Anglican Planet © 2008