November
16, 2006 The Anglican Archbishop of Cape Town, Njongonkulu
Ndungane, has called for a global Anglican gathering that is "much more representative
than the Lambeth Conference" to explore the current challenges facing the Anglican
Communion. "The future of our Anglican family is far
too important to be left just to Bishops, even meeting in the breadth of the Lambeth
Conference," Archbishop Ndungane said during a Roundtable – Finding the Heartlands
of Anglicanism at Trinity Theological College in Melbourne, Australia on Thursday
16 th 2006. "If we are to take the radical step of pursuing
a Covenant, I would like this process to be owned and driven by the widest possible
representation of the church." Archbishop Ndungane
warns that sidelining laity, including women and young people and parish clergy
from critical church decisions runs against the essence of "authentic, orthodox,
Anglican self-understanding." "We need a large gathering
with a flexible, open agenda that allows people from across our global family
to meet one another in informal encounters, to listen to one another, and to recognise
the marks of Christ in one another, and to get to know one another's cultures
and challenges," Archbishop Ndungane says. "In this context
we can discuss how we should live together, including whether a Covenant – and
if so, what form of Covenant – would best enhance our shared life and calling."
Archbishop Ndungane suggests that the central themes
that emerge during such a gathering could inform the Covenant Design Group, for
presentation at a special meeting of the Anglican Consultative Council. The
proposal to develop a Convenant must reflect a commitment to "enhance and strengthen
the calling of all Anglicans, throughout the whole diversity of the globe, to
faithful mission and ministry in the years – even centuries – ahead." "We
can afford to take our time over this and ensure we get it right – even ten years
is a very short time in Christian history. We must not be railroaded into a quick
fix that merely meets the concerns of one part of our constituency." Archbishop
Ndungane says that the task of the Church is not self-preservation, rather "the
building up of God's people for God's mission and ministry within God's world."
"We desire to be a Church in which abundant, God-given,
Christ-shaped, life can flourish, and this life can be shared with the world for
the building of God's kingdom. This is a task for the whole Church together."
"This is God's church, and we are in his hands. Therefore
I am optimistic about our future." Anglican Communion
News Service, London |