Nigerian Church New Constitution Redefines Relationship with Canterbury

The Anglican Church in Nigeria, in its new carefully reworded constitution, has redefined its relationship to other Anglican Churches and deleted former reference to Canterbury as the “mother” of the Anglican Communion.
|PIC1|
The Church in Nigeria was previously in ‘communion with the See of Canterbury’, now replaced with a new definition of the Nigerian Church as being in communion with all Anglican Churches, Dioceses and Provinces that hold and maintain the “historic faith, doctrine, sacrament and discipline of the one Holy, Catholic, and Apostolic Church”.

The possibility of communion with the pro-gay Churches of the US and Canada, and the UK under the new definition looks increasingly unlikely.

The new constitution has also introduced a change which allows missionaries from the Nigerian Church to create Anglican Convocations and Chaplaincies outside Nigeria.

The new change follows the new missionary campaign to double its 17.5 million members by 2007, started by the Anglican Church in Nigeria’s Primate, Archbishop Peter Akinola.

The Anglican Church in Nigeria recently set up a new Convocation in America to set about creating a new network of Anglican chaplaincies across the US for like-minded Anglicans opposed to the consecration of Gene Robinson, a gay, as Bishop of New Hampshire, as well as the recent House of Bishops statement released by the Church of England.
|QUOTE|
According to The Times, one US insider said the decision to omit reference to Canterbury was cause for relief not despair: This is the most serious development so far, but the reaction here is straightforward. It is one of relief. The one thing that defines us is being in communion with the See of Canterbury. There is nothing else.

“We are not a confessional church. We are relieved because we cannot have the threat of a breach being held over us forever. It is as if the divorce has come through.”

Canon John Rees, a leading canon lawyer and provincial registrar for the Canterbury Province, pointed out that the Church in Nigeria was not the first to delete reference to Canterbury in its constitution and that it would, therefore, not cause a problem, reported The Times.
|TOP|
He said: “I do not see a difficulty. It does not seem to me to change the legal position at all. There is nothing in what they have done that suggests to me that a clergyman from Nigeria would no longer be able to come and function in the Church of England in the same way that they might have done the day before yesterday. And this is an example of what communion means.”

The break with the Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr Rowan Williams, is the latest development in the ongoing dispute in the Anglican Communion over homosexuals and comes just weeks before next month’s meeting of conservative Anglicans in Alexandria, Egypt.

Dr Williams, who has been invited to attend the meeting, is himself a liberal, despite publicly siding with the conservatives in a bid to maintain unity.

Speculation is widespread that the “global south” may put into motion the first steps toward a formal schism within the Anglican Communion.
related articles
Rival Anglican Church to be Founded by Fed-Up Africans

Rival Anglican Church to be Founded by Fed-Up Africans

Akinola Denies Anglican Split on Agenda at Forthcoming Meeting

Akinola Denies Anglican Split on Agenda at Forthcoming Meeting

African Anglicans Redefine Relationship with Communion

African Anglicans Redefine Relationship with Communion

News
US warns UK over free speech, citing pro-lifer's prosecution
US warns UK over free speech, citing pro-lifer's prosecution

The US state department has issued a statement saying it is "concerned about freedom of expression in the United Kingdom" and that it is "monitoring" the case of a pro-life woman prosecuted for holding a sign offering help within an abortion clinic "buffer zone". 

School facing backlash over Easter cancelation says it will celebrate, just not at church
School facing backlash over Easter cancelation says it will celebrate, just not at church

A primary school in the United Kingdom that faced criticism for cancelling its traditional Easter bonnet parade and church service, has announced plans to continue celebrating Easter but not at a local church in order to ensure “inclusivity.”

Christians respond after devastating Myanmar earthquake
Christians respond after devastating Myanmar earthquake

Christian humanitarian organisations are mobilising quickly to provide relief following a catastrophic 7.7-magnitude earthquake that struck central Myanmar and parts of Thailand on Friday. 

Mel Gibson’s ‘The Resurrection of the Christ’ to begin filming in Italy this August
Mel Gibson’s ‘The Resurrection of the Christ’ to begin filming in Italy this August

Mel Gibson is set to return to the director’s chair for The Resurrection of the Christ, the long-awaited sequel to The Passion of the Christ.