By Francis X. Rocca on 6.20.03 @ 8:27AM
It cannot be pleasing to progressive Anglicans and Catholics.
Last month the Anglican diocese of New Westminster, Canada,
approved the blessing of same sex unions; and the following week a
priest performed the first such ceremony in Vancouver. This month
the Episcopal Diocese of New Hampshire elected the first openly
homosexual bishop in the worldwide Anglican communion; and a
British newspaper reported that the most recently appointed
Anglican bishop "had been in a gay relationship for
decades."
Roman Catholics who favor a more liberal policy on homosexuality
and sexuality in general can be forgiven if they draw hope from
these events as harbingers of change in their own, much larger
church. But the controversy that these changes have provoked
suggests instead that world Christianity, Catholic and Anglican
traditions included, is actually growing more conservative.
Following the authorization of same-sex unions, 13 Anglican
provinces (or national churches) declared themselves to be in
"impaired
communion" with the Diocese of Westminster. They were Nigeria,
the West Indies, the Southern Cone of South America, Central
Africa, Kenya, India, Papua New Guinea, the Philippines, Uganda,
West Africa, the Indian Ocean, Congo and Sudan. Please note, if you
haven't already, that all of these churches are in the so-called
Third World.
From this group has emerged the most prominent critic of liberal
church policy on homosexuality: the head of the Church of Nigeria.
Yesterday Archbishop Peter Ankinola told BBC radio that his church
might split with the Church of England if the latter goes ahead and
consecrates Canon Jeffrey John, a long-time gay rights activist, as
the Bishop of Reading.
"We cannot be seen to be doing things clearly outside the
boundaries allowable in the Bible," Akinola said. "This is only the
beginning. We would sever relationships with anybody, anywhere...
anyone who strays over the boundaries we are out with them. It is
as simple as that."
The Church of Nigeria has 17.5 million members, making it the
second largest Anglican province, after the Church of England
itself. Like its fellow churches in the Third World, it is growing
while branches in Europe and America shrink. According to the
religious historian Philip
Jenkins: "By mid-century the global total of Anglicans could
approach 150 million, of whom only a small minority will be white
Europeans or North Americans."
This is also the trend among other Christian denominations, as
Jenkins wrote recently in the Atlantic Monthly. Less than
25 years from now, almost 70 percent of all Christians will be in
Africa, Asia and Latin America. The percentage of Catholics on
those continents will be even higher. People in the Third World
have more babies and are more likely to raise them as Christians.
Already, the "annual [Catholic] baptism total for the Philippines
is higher than the totals for Italy, France, Spain, and Poland
combined."
Third World Christians tend to be far more conservative than
Europeans and North Americans on matters of theology and ethics.
And they are beginning to dominate their richer brethren. Asian and
African bishops were responsible, Jenkins says, for a 1998 Anglican
statement against same-sex unions and actively homosexual clergy.
Forty percent of the cardinals eligible to vote for the next pope
are from "Southern" countries, and in a few years they'll be the
majority, making it hard to imagine that John Paul II's successor
will depart from those of his policies that liberals find so
discouraging.
"The cultural gap between Christians of the North and the South
will increase rather than diminish in the coming decades,"
according to Jenkins, increasing the possibility of a schism.
Largely owing to the influence of information technology, he
thinks, "Northern communities will move to ever more decentralized
and privatized forms of faith as Southerners maintain older ideals
of community and traditional authority."
By this reasoning, the spread of the Internet could conceivably
impede or even halt the conservative trend. Once everyone in Sudan
and Papua New Guinea is online, many there might find the
alternatives to tradition impossible to resist. For now, however,
all those American and European editorialists who keep telling the
Vatican to change with the times should make sure they understand
what they're actually demanding.
topics:
Religion, Africa, Unions