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Anglican Communion stays united against immorality
Conservative Anglican leaders on Sunday pledged to stay in the worldwide Anglican Communion but form a council of bishops to provide an alternative to churches they say are preaching a "false gospel" of sexual immorality.
Occupied Jerusalem: Conservative Anglican leaders on Sunday pledged to stay in the worldwide Anglican Communion but form a council of bishops to provide an alternative to churches they say are preaching a "false gospel" of sexual immorality.
The Global Anglican Future Conference (Gafcon) said member churches would continue sponsoring breakaway conservative parishes in liberal western member countries and called for a separate conservative province in North America.
It also said in a final declaration that Anglicanism - the third largest group of Christians after Roman Catholics and Orthodox - was not "determined necessarily through recognition by the Archbishop of Canterbury" Rowan Williams.
"We cherish our Anglican heritage and the Anglican Communion and have no intention of departing from it," it said after a week of talks in Occupied Jerusalem among 1,148 participants, including 291 bishops, claiming to represent 35 million Anglicans.
"We grieve for the spiritual decline in the most economically developed nations, where the forces of militant secularism and pluralism are eating away the fabric of society and churches are compromised and enfeebled in their witness," it said in a final statement.
The conservatives, a coalition mainly of African Anglican churches and orthodox United States Episcopalians, has hinted it might break from the 77-million-strong Communion since the Episcopal Church consecrated an openly gay bishop in 2003.
But Gafcon, called one month ahead of the 10-yearly Lambeth Conference of bishops from the Communion, did not in the end develop into a full alternative and participants, despite some strong initial rhetoric, did not opt for a schism.
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