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NAIROBI (AANA) September 23 - The Archbishop of The Church of Nigeria, Most Rev Peter J. Akinola, has written a strong-worded letter to his southern Africa counterpart, Archbishop Winston Njongonkulu Ndungane of Cape Town, South Africa, expressing deep criticism over the stand taken by Ndungane on the controversial issue of gay ordination within the Anglican Church. Responding to Ndungane's recent sentiments published in a leading Ndungane had indicated in an interview that African clergymen, including Akinola, who were expressing opposition to gay ordination were arrogant, intolerant and hypocritical. Below is the full text of Archbishop Akinola's letter to Ndungane, A MESSAGE TO ARCHBISHOP NDUNGANE "My attention has just been drawn to a publication by a religious Your criticism is based on some unfortunate presuppositions. And coming at this time, it appears like an attempt to cause a possible diversion of focus amongst African and Global South Church leaders. But thank God these leaders have come of age, they are no longer to be pulled by the nose nor taken for granted. We are poised, using every gift of God available to us to defend orthodoxy, the integrity of the Church, and banish the erroneous teachings you plan to impose on us. The criticism 1. How correct are you dear brother archbishop Ndungane in judging the cloud of witnesses to biblical truth through the ages whose stand on biblical ethics is only being upheld by those of us who are now branded as arrogant and intolerant? Is there anything in our pronouncements that constitutes a departure from the standard of morality held out in the Bible? Isn't it a paradox that the Archbishop of Southern Africa sees no 2. How can you forget so soon the alert we sounded at the Anglican Consultative Council (ACC) in Hong Kong barely a year ago? It is worth repeating here: "While I appreciate that the New Westminster diocese and the Church of Canada may not be, in numerical terms, especially large ecclesia bodies, we value them as dearly as we value all our partner Provinces. We have a growing fear for the sense of loss which sustained departure by them from our common path and mind must risk. We urge and pray that reflection will lead to reconsideration. It is hard indeed to see any action, which threatens our Communion to be justified as a 'local mission priority'" 3. Brother Ndungane, you got it all wrong. What you cited as top We place a high priority on caring. For sure, the Archbishop has not forgotten that 'man shall not live by bread alone but by every word that proceeds from God' (Dt. 8:3; Matt. 4:4; Lk. 4:4). Peace, hunger, sharia and HIV/AIDS are indeed major life and death issues, albeit, they are at the physical level. Unfaithfulness to Scripture is a more major life and death issue because it is spiritual. What shall it profit a man to feed well and live long here on earth only to lose his soul in hell? What then is the Church here for? 4. On the question of integrity of ECUSA's decision, again we ask, One suspects in your unguarded and scathing criticism a resurgence of a hitherto latent feeling of hurt since the Lambeth Conference Committee on human sexuality you chaired was overwhelmingly overruled by the so-called hard-liners who are not willing to compromise the precious heritage of scriptural truth. 5. The accusation of hypocrisy does not recognise the inherent 6. The unwarranted accusation that Africans do not know much about their sexuality portends a talking-down of Africans-a gnostic tendency that is capable of weakening the resolve of the African church leaders to be God's prophets in times like this. The biblical prophets resisted it and so must their contemporary counterparts. I ask you dear brother to face issues and not fall into the temptation
of "casting stones". Apparently you do not know everything I
have said and done on every issue concerning Nigeria. That you have not
heard any fuss from me in the foreign media about certain issues does
not mean the Church which by the grace of God I lead is doing nothing.
For instance, I deliberately included Zamfara State in the itinerary of
the immediate Conclusion May I say as I conclude that your comments reveal a palpable failure to grasp the nature of the issues at stake. Your criticism is so burdened with such sad and most unfortunate presuppositions that [you] see our stand from the point of arrogance and intolerance rather than a strong will to defend the 'faith that was once delivered to the saints.' When you accuse us of arrogance and intolerance, be courageous enough to direct the searchlight at yourself and those for whom you spoke. What is at stake has to do not just with the identity of the Church The Most Rev Peter J Akinola |
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