GAFCON Day 1: A second Reformation? Tony Payne

It's the Africans. Cascading down the hotel staircase in a riot of colour and noise and smiles, the bishops in vivid purple and their wives in even more gorgeous dresses, laughing and greeting each other, hugging, flowing on, in a joyful Christian river.

Of the 1200 delegates here at GAFCON, somewhere between a third and a half are from Africa. I've already met Bishop Bernard and Bishop Paul from Sudan, who gravely informed me that if I wanted to know what ministry was really like where they lived, we would have to sit, we would have to sit. Some things can't be said in small talk in a corridor. Discussing what it is like to be a Christian bishop in Sudan is clearly one of them. I'm looking forward to sitting with them.

At last night's opening session, it was the leading African Archbishop, Peter Akinola of Nigeria, who outlined the sad history that had brought global Anglicanism to an event like GAFCON. In the face of relentless revisionism, of which the consecration of the openly homosexual Gene Robinson as a bishop was but the most vivid expression, compromise or inaction is simply not an option:

We cannot succumb to this turmoil in our Communion and simply watch helplessly. We have found ourselves in a world in which Anglican leaders hold on to a form of religion but consistently deny its power. We have a situation in which some members of the Anglican family think they are so superior to all others that they are above the law, they can do whatever they please with impunity. As a Communion we have been unable to exercise discipline.

And why GAFCON? Here are some choice quotes from Peter Akinola:

GAFCON is a rescue mission. Our beloved Anglican Communion must be rescued from the manipulation of those who have denied the gospel and its power to transform and to save; those who have departed from the scripture and the faith ‘once and for all delivered to the saints’ from those who are proclaiming a new gospel, which really is no gospel at all (Gal 1). In the wisdom and strength God supplies we must rescue what is left of the Church from error of the apostates ...

We are here because we want to renew our commitment to our sacred duty to preserve and proclaim uncompromisingly the undistorted word of God written to a sinful and fragmented world. GAFCON is a meeting of ordained and lay leaders concerned about the mission of the Church and how best to carry it out and be poised to address the ever-present challenges of self-reliance, good governance, overcoming corruption and to prepare a strong and stable platform for upcoming generations ...

We are here because we know that in God's providence GAFCON will liberate and set participants (particularly Africans) free from spiritual bondage which TEC and its allies champion. Having survived the inhuman physical slavery of the 19th century, the political slavery called colonialism of the 20th century, the developing world economic enslavement, we cannot, we dare not allow ourselves and the millions we represent be kept in a religious and spiritual dungeon ...

We are here because we know that in spite of the fractures in our Communion, as orthodox Anglicans, we have a future and so we are here in the holy land to inaugurate and determine the roadmap to that future.

It was a rousing address, by turns passionate, indignant, pleading, gentle and resolute. At its close, Emmanuel Kolini (Archbishop of Rwanda) suggested that we were at the beginning of a second Reformation. If the courage, biblical conviction and fire of these Africans is anything to go by, he may well be right.

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