African Anglican archbishop vows to never let the West impose a ‘godless secular culture’
The Anglican Communion is headed for another
worldwide standoff over homosexuality.
Nigerian Archbishop Josian Idowu-Fearon, the
secretary general of the global Anglican Communion, has drawn a line in the
sand, vowing that he and African faithful will never accept same-sex
"marriage" as legitimate or biblical.
The archbishop has rebuffed Western ridicule
characterizing the African Anglicans as behind the times, flatly stating that
African churches are progressive precisely because they refuse to kowtow to
liberal Western immorality but instead live according to "the will of God
in the kingdom of God, which is the real future for humanity that measures all
human progress."
Idowu-Fearon complained that the poorer
Anglican churches are being "swept aside by a campaign to change the
church’s teaching on marriage and so-called rights of equality." In an
address to the Council of Anglican Provinces in Africa, he announced, "We
will not crumble or bow the knee to a godless secular culture that despises the
Bible and what it teaches."
“The archbishop is absolutely right to
recognize the paternalism and condescension that imbues the ‘progress’ that
seeks to redefine marriage,” Father Shenan J. Boquet, a Catholic priest and
president of Human Life International (HLI),
told LifeSiteNews. “Cardinal Sarah and many other Catholic bishops in Africa
are also standing strong against this ideological colonization from the West,
as they see the rot within Western culture and love their own people too much
to remain silent as it is imported into Africa."
Archbishop Idowu-Fearon issued a call to
African Anglicans to "set the pace" for Anglicans worldwide,
steadfastly standing for traditional marriage. His call to biblical fidelity was
applauded by church leaders at the conference.
Meanwhile, in the United States, Anglicans
champion gay "marriage" and homosexuals are ordained to the Anglican
episcopacy.
Father Boquet added, "If Africans reject
'aid' from the West that comes with such destructive strings attached, and
continue to defend life and family while stopping government corruption and
developing the structures that make flourishing possible, Africa will be
leading the world before long."
The HLI president applauded Idowu-Fearon's
stand and called upon Catholics around the world to stand alongside the African
Anglicans. "Such statements as this from the Archbishop Idowu-Fearon
deserve public support and solidarity from Catholics,” he said.
David W. Virtue, president of the largest and most widely read Anglican online
news service, told LifeSiteNews that
Idowu-Fearon's stand is not without danger. "On the one hand, I applaud
Dr. Fearon for taking a stand alongside his African brothers and sisters
against Western progressivism, especially on sexuality issues. His province,
the Anglican Church of Nigeria, has taken the toughest stand on pansexuality
issues not only on the continent of Africa but in the worldwide Anglican
Communion."
"They have seen death and destruction of
Anglicans at the hands of Boko Haram because of progressive and post-modern
Western attitudes to human sexuality," Virtue said, adding, "The
Global Anglican Future Conference was formed as a counterpoint to western
Anglican acceptance of homosexuality."
The Global Anglican Future Conference began in
2008 as a seven-day meeting of conservative bishops and leaders to address the
growing divisions in the Anglican Communion.
"On the other hand, Dr. Fearon heads an
instrument of Anglican unity known as the Anglican Consultative Council (ACC),
based in London. He must represent all sides of the coin on this and other
issues, especially the American-based Episcopal Church that is responsible for
paying a large portion of the ACC budget in the UK ($400,000 a year),"
Virtue explained. "He dare not bite the hand that feeds him."
Virtue predicted that if Idowu-Fearon
maintains his bold stand, he will be persecuted. "We have not had a
backlash to this statement from either the Presiding Bishop of The Episcopal
Church or the Archbishop of the Anglican Church of Canada yet, but you can be
sure they are not happy with this statement," he said.
"The fallout has yet to occur, but if Dr.
Fearon remains true in his resolve that Africa will not compromise on this
issue and that he supports this position consistently and does not back down,
then it could be a game changer."
"Time will tell, but for the moment the
jury is still out," Virtue cautiously concluded.
A deep rift exists among Anglicans who hold to
traditional values and those who advocate for gay "marriage" and
lesbian ordination. In 1998, the Anglicans passed a resolution that
"marriage [is] between a man and a woman." The resolution clearly
stated that homosexual behavior is "incompatible with Scripture," and
concluded that same-sex marriage and ordaining gays is contrary to Anglican
teaching.
In January of this year, the Episcopal Church
in the United States was criticized and warned of "consequences"
for breaking the 1998 resolution and "marrying" homosexuals.
With such an impotent global response, the Anglican Church in Canada and
The Scottish Episcopal Church have both since come closer to legitimizing
same-sex "marriage."
The contentious issue is certain to be at the
top of the agenda during the next worldwide Anglican conference set for October
2017.