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More at stake: How sexual politics in the Episcopal Church affects churches in Africa
WORLD ^ | March 28, 2009 | Faith J.H. McDonnell

Posted on 03/13/2009 11:54:52 AM PDT by Caleb1411

A Sudanese priest recently had an eye-opening introduction to the U.S. Episcopal Church. John, a clergyman from the Episcopal Church of Sudan, sent an inquiry to the "justice missioner" on the website of the Diocese of Newark. The justice missioner responded to John's email and informed him that her focus was advocacy for people with disabilities, people of color, and the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and intersex community.

Although fluent in English, John found this language incomprehensible. He knew Americans talked openly about homosexuality, but he was bewildered by the terms "transgender" and "intersex." John asked the justice missioner if she prayed for healing of individuals with these disorders. She informed him that they didn't need healing, only "full inclusion" in the church. John told her he was sorry that the diocese was leaving people in sexual brokenness. He urged her to bring them to transformation in the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ. With that, he never heard from the justice missioner again.

John is a former "Lost Boy," one of some 33,000 southern Sudanese children who fled attacks by government-sponsored militias during Sudan's more than two decades of civil war. He survived a three-year trek from Sudan to Ethiopia to Kakuma Refugee Camp in Kenya. Now he is the pastor of over 1,000 refugees at Kakuma.

John assumed that a church justice office would focus on human-rights issues like genocide in Sudan, religious persecution, poverty, hunger, and human trafficking. What he did not know was that in the U.S. Episcopal Church, affirming one's sexual orientation is as much a justice and human-rights issue as genocide.

"There is rather more at stake here than the issue of sexual politics," writes Andrew Proud, Area Bishop of Ethiopia and the Horn of Africa, in an article on the Anglican crisis for Trinity Journal for Theology and Mission. In fact, one church's human-rights issue is creating another church's human-rights crisis. By pushing sexual politics, Episcopal church leaders are compromising the churches' witness abroad, exposing Christian brothers and sisters to violence, and unwittingly aiding and abetting the Islamization of Africa and elsewhere.

At the Episcopal Church's 2003 General Convention where deputies and bishops voted to approve the election of openly gay Gene Robinson as Bishop of New Hampshire, Josiah Idowu-Fearon, then Bishop of Kaduna, Nigeria, warned that departing from biblical teaching would hurt the churches' witness. Islamists had slaughtered thousands of Christians in Idowu-Fearon's diocese, and Christians in Nigeria are willing to die for their faith, he said. But to be undermined by Western abandonment of biblical authority is a crushing blow.

Idowu-Fearon tried gently to exhort the church to "put off the old self," and "put on the new self, created to be like God in true righteousness and holiness." The Anglican Communion family takes the U.S. Episcopal Church very seriously, he said, quoting the old adage, "When America sneezes, the whole world catches a cold." But his words angered some convention attendees: "Why these thinly veiled words of intolerance and exclusion at the largest gathering of Convention?" said one.

U.S. church leaders hoped that with time and never-ending "dialogue" they would wear down the resistance to their departure from orthodoxy. They are mistaken. As Daniel Deng Bul, Archbishop of Sudan, said: "We reject homosexual practice as contrary to biblical teaching and can accept no place for it within ECS (the Episcopal Church of Sudan)." Deng Bul said Christians in Sudan "are called infidels by the Islamic world when they hear our brothers and sisters from the Christian world talking about same-sex [relationships] to be blessed." When Muslims link the churches in Sudan with the churches that have left biblical teaching on homosexuality, this gives them a way to say that Christians are evil: "It will give them the upper hand to kill our people," the archbishop warned.

Those in the Anglican Communion who make sexuality a justice issue claim that "salvation does not come about through change in individual lives, but through the ending of unjust structures and attitudes within society," said Andrew Proud. Ironically, it is Christians in the Islamic world—those most vulnerable to unjust structures and attitudes—who provide the most powerful witness to refute that claim.

—Faith J.H. McDonnell is the Director of Religious Liberty Programs at the Institute on Religion and Democracy (www.theird.org)


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial
KEYWORDS: africa; africanchristians; anglican; antichristian; deceiver; ecusa; episcopal; homosexualagenda; religiousleft; sexpositiveagenda

1 posted on 03/13/2009 11:54:52 AM PDT by Caleb1411
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To: rhema; wagglebee; LiteKeeper

2 posted on 03/13/2009 11:56:26 AM PDT by Caleb1411 ("These are the days when the Christian is expected to praise every creed except his own." G. K. C)
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To: sionnsar; Huber

ping


3 posted on 03/13/2009 12:00:47 PM PDT by rabscuttle385 ("If this be treason, then make the most of it!" —Patrick Henry)
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To: Caleb1411; sionnsar; NYer; Petronski

this is a known fact — when gay practise is accepted by western groups, the churchs in Africa suffer at the hands of Muslims. Send Gene Robinson to minister in Saudi Arabia.


4 posted on 03/13/2009 12:01:08 PM PDT by Cronos (Ceterum censeo, Mecca et Medina delenda est)
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To: Caleb1411

The Episcopol Church in the U.S. and England has been Sunday School for Agnostics for decades. Of course, a church started by Henry the VIII is a church from Hell, no offense to traditional Episcopalians.


5 posted on 03/13/2009 12:03:31 PM PDT by Professor_Leonide (I said to the young man who showed me a photo, "Who can ever be sure what is behind a mask?")
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To: Caleb1411

It seems to me that academia has been elevated by the Episcopal church going back a long way. Those who put the homosexual agenda on a pedestal seem to think it’s just the “academic” thing to do.


6 posted on 03/13/2009 12:12:16 PM PDT by Twinkie (Obama is NOT Reagan !)
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To: Twinkie
The Epliscopal Church needs to wither and die. Then it can be reborn...

Salvation does comes about through change in individual lives, not through the ending of unjust structures and attitudes within society.

7 posted on 03/13/2009 12:16:28 PM PDT by x_plus_one ("Salvation comes about though change in individual lives, not through the ending of unjust society")
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To: Caleb1411

I am sad to say it, but Christians in developing countries should not look to the US for Christian exemplars.


8 posted on 03/13/2009 12:24:53 PM PDT by iowamark (certified by Michael Steele as "ugly and incendiary")
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To: Caleb1411

My experience with the ELCA Minister from Leesburg, VA to the Holy Land was similar, not about sexual deviancy, but he was anti-Semetic in the extreme. When Israel turned over the Gaza to the Palis and they trashed the place, this dickhead blamed it all on the Jews! That was published in the church newsletter and the same week I read it, I left the ELCA for the LCMS.


9 posted on 03/13/2009 12:36:28 PM PDT by Redleg Duke ("Sarah Palin...Unleashing the Fury of the Castrated Left!")
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To: Professor_Leonide

That is why there is an Anglican church in the US. We are getting a lot of folks who are leaving the Episcopal church for the more traditional Anglican Church. Look up APA.


10 posted on 03/13/2009 12:45:16 PM PDT by sleepwalker (Palin 2012)
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To: ahadams2; bastantebueno55; Needham; sc70; jpr_fire2gold; Tennessee Nana; QBFimi; Tailback; ...
Thanks to rabscuttle385 for the ping.

Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting Traditional Anglican ping, continued in memory of its founder Arlin Adams.

FReepmail Huber or sionnsar if you want on or off this low-volume ping list.
This list is pinged by Huber and sionnsar.

Resource for Traditional Anglicans: http://trad-anglican.faithweb.com
Humor: The Anglican Blue

Speak the truth in love. Eph 4:15

11 posted on 03/13/2009 2:13:41 PM PDT by sionnsar (Iran Azadi | 5yst3m 0wn3d - it's N0t Y0ur5 (SONY) | "Tax the rich" fails if the rich won't play)
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To: Professor_Leonide

“...a church started by Henry the VIII ...”

you do know that the Church of England returned to Rome after Henry died. Then a few more bishops were burned at the stake or heads separated from their body, they then saw the light and cut the Roman cord once again.

Worship changed from Latin to English, a Book of Common Prayer published in the vernacular, and the King James Bible followed. Some in England at the time believed the church was affirmed by God when an invasion force, the Spanish Armada, intent on returning Rome to England, was destroyed by Divine intervention. Pretty neat stuff.


12 posted on 03/13/2009 2:56:58 PM PDT by elpadre (nation)
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To: Twinkie
Those who put the homosexual agenda on a pedestal seem to think it’s just the “academic” thing to do.

Nothing "academic" about it. This an attempt to advance the Marxist project by destroying the church from within. It is toxic and malicious.

And antiChristian.

13 posted on 03/13/2009 4:43:08 PM PDT by hinckley buzzard
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To: hinckley buzzard

I guess that over the years, what little exposure I’ve had to the EC hierarchy has led me to think that whole dynamic holds higher education in an almost iconic position and tend to look down to some degree on people who don’t have university degrees and positions.


14 posted on 03/14/2009 3:34:34 AM PDT by Twinkie (Obama is NOT Reagan !)
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