from Anglican Futures
Last week the most important Anglican conference that you have probably never heard of took place in Plano, Texas. G25 was a mini-conference organised by Gafcon, a movement which begin in 2008, when the Global Anglican Conference (Gafcon) was organised in Jersusalem.
In 2008, over 1,000 archbishops, bishops, clergy and lay people gathered to discuss the future for faithful Anglicans in a Communion in crisis. A crisis caused by those Gafcon describe as having “led the flock of Christ astray, diluted the authority of Scripture and distorted the gospel, endangering many souls.”
Archbishop Akinola, one of its founding members, described the original conference as representing “a new dawn, a new beginning”, a means of, “gathering authentic Anglicans”, to, “reform”, “renew” and “reorder” the Anglican Communion. The Communique from the G25 mini-conference acknowledges that some have, however, considered Gafcon to be more controversial, “a sectarian and schismatic movement that has sought to undermine the unity of the Anglican Communion”.
The focus of G25 was to equip the next generation, so Gafcon took time to revisit the history. There was archive footage from the first conference, a video presentation from Archbishop Peter Jensen (the first General Secretary), and a panel discussion from those who were in the room (room 1614 to be precise) when the idea for a global gathering was first suggested.
The warmth of relationship and mutual respect was evident as the panel shared their memories. Bishop Don Harvey described the moment of clarity that came when the decision to meet in Jerualsem was agreed, as, “…the Holy Spirit directly at work.” For Bishop Martin Minns, it was the madness of trying to organise a global Christian conference in Jerusalem in just over six months that stood out. He recalled buying a nine foot cross from a shop on the Via Dolorosa, and transporting it across the city in the back of a taxi to the Orthodox Jewish hotel where the conference was taking place.
