Posted on 06/17/2005 7:47:31 AM PDT by sionnsar
An African evangelical has been named the new Archbishop of York. According to the BBC, "The Bishop of Birmingham, the Rt Rev John Sentamu, has become the Church of England's first black archbishop. The Ugandan-born cleric takes over as Archbishop of York from Dr David Hope who quit in February to become a parish priest in Ilkley, West Yorkshire. Bishop Sentamu said his appointment to the second-highest post in the Church of England was "an exciting prospect."The BBC's Profile of the Rt Rev John Sentamu is worth having a look at. The full BBC account may be found here.
We are jubilant at the news of our fellow countrymans appointment as the next Archbishop of York, and are grateful to the Queen, the Prime Minister, and the Church of England for recognizing the emerging force of the Christian Church in the Global South.
John Sentamu, a fellow Ugandan, was originally a judge in the High Court of Uganda. In 1974 when he refused to bow to pressure to deliver a not guilty verdict to one of Idi Amins cousins, he was forced to go into exile. Like the Biblical Patriarch Joseph, what was meant for evil, God has now used for good.
We offer Archbishop Sentamu our heartiest congratulations. He is a product of the East African Revival Movement. May God use him to revive the wider Church of Jesus Christ, and may he stand true to the witness of the Ugandan Martyrs who we commemorate in Uganda with affection.
The honour of this high calling carries with it an equally high responsibility to proclaim the unchanging gospel in a changing world, to offer the hope of transformation through a relationship with Jesus Christ to a generation of spiritual seekers, and to work alongside the Archbishop of Canterbury to provide steady leadership to guard the historic faith of the Anglican Communion. We pledge Archbishop Sentamu our sincerest prayers.
The Most Rev. Henry Luke Orombi
ARCHBISHOP OF CHURCH OF UGANDA
The Rt Revd John Sentamu appointed Archbishop of York
The Confessing Reader, 6/17/2005
Hallelujah!
This was the first word out of George Piwang-Jalobos mouth when I telephoned him with the news earlier today, that Bishop John Sentamu has been appointed Archbishop of York. (George, who is completing his doctoral studies at Duke Divinity School, is a tireless worker in the Lords vineyard, a powerful preacher and evangelist, a leader in the movement for reconciliation and peace in the northern Uganda conflict, and brother to Archbishop Henry Orombi.)
Anglicans everywhere should rejoice in the newly-announced appointment of the Rt Revd Dr John Sentamu, Bishop of Birmingham, to become Archbishop of York and Primate of England. Bishop Sentamu is a Ugandan expatriate who fled the country after his criticim of the regime of the dictator Idi Amin made him a marked man. As noted by the Most Revd Dr Rowan Williams, Archbishop of Canterbury and Primate of All England, Bishop Sentamu
has always combined a passion for sharing the gospel with a keen sense of the problems and challenges of our society, particularly where racism is concerned. His ministry in London and Birmingham has been praised by Christians of all backgrounds. He is a caring pastor and an exciting communicator.
In addition to these strengths, Bishop Sentamu brings his experience as a Ugandan Christian and protogé of archbishop-martyr Janani Luwum. As noted by the Rt Revd Richard Frith, Bishop of Hull, in welcoming the appointment on behalf of the Diocese of York,
The Bishop for Birmingham is known as a man of energy and passion for the Gospel of Jesus Christ - a thinker, campaigner and teacher - but above all a man of prayer and someone who lights up the Word of God for the world around him His wide experience of life and the Church from Africa to Birmingham has shown him to be adaptable and versatile, and ready to engage with people of all backgrounds and ways of life. He challenges boundaries and fixed ideas about the world, the Church and the Christian Gospel -
Bishop Hull also believes that the plainspoken folk of Yorkshire will find (Arch)Bishop Sentamu congenial to their own temperament: Bishop John is known in Birmingham and London for plain speaking, and that will go down very well in the Diocese of York.
This appointment is good for the Diocese and Province of York, for the Church of England, for the Church in Africa and the Global South, and for the Anglican Communion generally. The Most Revd Henry Orombi, Archbishop of Uganda, welcomed the appointment in a statement earlier today:
We are jubilant at the news of our fellow countrymans appointment as the next Archbishop of York, and are grateful to the Queen, the Prime Minister, and the Church of England for recognizing the emerging force of the Christian Church in the Global South.
John Sentamu, a fellow Ugandan, was originally a judge in the High Court of Uganda. In 1974 when he refused to bow to pressure to deliver a not guilty verdict to one of Idi Amins cousins, he was forced to go into exile. Like the Biblical Patriarch Joseph, what was meant for evil, God has now used for good.
We offer Archbishop Sentamu our heartiest congratulations. He is a product of the East African Revival Movement. May God use him to revive the wider Church of Jesus Christ, and may he stand true to the witness of the Ugandan Martyrs who we commemorate in Uganda with affection.
The honour of this high calling carries with it an equally high responsibility to proclaim the unchanging gospel in a changing world, to offer the hope of transformation through a relationship with Jesus Christ to a generation of spiritual seekers, and to work alongside the Archbishop of Canterbury to provide steady leadership to guard the historic faith of the Anglican Communion. We pledge Archbishop Sentamu our sincerest prayers.
Bishop Sentamus appointment may give new vigor to questions about the appointment of the Archbishop of Canterbury, with renewed calls for +Cantuar to be elected by the Communion, not appointed by the Crown. I also cannot help but think that Bishop Sentamus appointment will be good for confessing Anglicanism the world round, and for an understanding throughout the Churches of the power of the gospel to change lives and to challenge the unrighteousness and injustice of human societies.
Praise God that the East African Revival of the mid-20th century continues to bear fruit for the good of the Church, and Deo gratias! for the continued fruitfulness of the witness unto death of Archbishop Janani Luwum. Truly the blood of the martyrs is the seed of the Church.
I am also reminded that, as with Joseph, sold by his brothers into exile and slavery in Egypt, God in his providence is continuing to bring good out of the exile into which many Ugandans were forced during the despotic and violently antichristian regime of Idi Amin.
Thanks to Kendall Harmon for bringing us news of the appointment early on.
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Almighty God, the giver of every good gift: Look graciously upon your Church, and upon your servant John, chosen Archbishop of your Church in York. Grant him your grace boldly to proclaim the Gospel of Jesus Christ, enlightening the minds and stirring up the conscience of your people. Pour out upon him the power of your Spirit, that he may faithfully guard the faith, unity, and discipline of your Church. Make him a faithful pastor, who will care for your people and equip them for their ministries; through Jesus Christ our Lord, the Shepherd and Bishop of our souls. Amen.
He must have had a, shall we say, "interesting" time at Duke Divinity School..
Amen and AMEN!
I thought you would like that!!
Aye,in the same way that clergy from the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Tanzania have an "interesting" time at the Lutheran Theological Seminary at Gettysburg (LTSG). This Master of Sacred Theology students end up truly becoming missionaries to the LTSG community.
Is Rev. Sentamu fairly orthodox, or does he fall into the Griswoldian camp?
From what I have seen he seems pretty orthodox. Certainly not LGBT (or whatever it is) friendly -- you should see the wails from that camp!
The C of E has been brought so low that they have to import Missionaries from Africa. Its a topsy turvy world.
This one looks like a good catch however.
It's perhaps telling that the former missionary field is now the main supply of missionaries, and the former supply of missionaries now a mission field. Think of AMiA...
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