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NEW YORK: African Archbishops Fault Church on Gays

African Archbishops Fault Church on Gays

By RICHARD N. OSTLING
AP Religion Writer
September 8, 2005

NEW YORK (AP) - Anglican Christianity's split over homosexuality worsened Thursday as Africa's two most important archbishops joined to criticize a new Church of England policy on gays and lesbians.

Nigerian Archbishop Peter Akinola and Ugandan Archbishop Henry Luke Orombi each assailed a July 25 announcement from England's bishops that said gay priests who register same-sex partnerships under a new civil law will remain in good standing so long as they promise to remain celibate. The English bishops also said that lay Anglicans who register civil unions will not be denied the sacraments.

"If England adopts a new faith, alien to what has been handed to us together, they will walk apart. Simple as that," Akinola said at a Thursday news conference where he reaffirmed his stand on gay issues.

Last month, he accused Anglicanism's mother church of an "outrageous" departure from biblical teaching that is "totally unworkable (and) invites deception and ridicule."

He further suggested that world Anglicanism must now discipline the Church of England along similar lines that Anglican bodies worldwide have taken against liberal actions by the U.S. and Canadian churches.

Orombi said that Akinola "speaks for all of us" who lead the self-governing Anglican branches in Africa. "We see a different direction taking place" in England, Orombi said, and "we can only pray and hope they do not walk away."

The churches led by Akinola and Orombi combined have 26 million members, a third of the world's Anglicans and equal to the Church of England membership. The continent of Africa, whose Anglican council is chaired by Akinola, is home to half of world Anglicans.

Discussion of the Anglican split is expected at Nigeria's national synod starting Saturday, a meeting of Africa's primates - or church leaders - in Tanzania Sept. 19-22 and a special international conference for conservative Anglicans in Cairo, Egypt, beginning Oct. 25.

The Nigerian and Ugandan churches have broken ties with the U.S. Episcopal Church over its 2003 consecration of a gay bishop living with a partner and its toleration of same-sex blessing ceremonies. Same-sex rites are also at issue between Africans and the Anglican Church of Canada.

In a 1998 vote, 82 percent of the world's Anglican bishops opposed homosexual relationships on biblical grounds.

The two archbishops were in New York to receive awards from the online magazine Kairos Journal for "their bold and consistent stand" against the U.S. and Canadian changes. Honored with them were Presiding Bishop Gregory Venables of southern South America and Archbishop Datuk Yong Ping Chung of South East Asia.

The magazine's publisher, retired American Standard Companies president Emmanuel Kampouris, said he hoped the awards would encourage Anglicans and others "fighting for orthodoxy."

None of the visitors are meeting with Presiding Bishop Frank Griswold, head of the New York-based Episcopal Church. They chuckled when asked about a meeting.

END

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