GAFCON leaders say ‘eyes are on Abuja’ as movement moves to reorder Anglican Communion

 — Dec. 18, 202518 déc. 2025

GAFCON, a conservative Anglican movement that claims to represent the majority of Anglicans worldwide, particularly in the Global South, is moving toward a formal reordering of global Anglican leadership following its October renunciation of the Archbishop of Canterbury’s authority.

On Oct. 16, in a declaration known as the “Martyr’s Day Statement,” GAFCON leaders formally rejected the authority of Dame Sarah Mullally, the first female Archbishop of Canterbury, after she voiced support for same-sex blessings. The statement marked a decisive break with Canterbury-aligned structures and set the stage for what GAFCON leaders describe as a new phase in the life of the Anglican Communion.

The group has voiced growing concern about what it sees as the mainstream Communion’s departure from biblical teaching, citing recent controversies, including the appointment of the Rt. Rev. Cherry Vann, a practising lesbian, as Archbishop of Wales.

The Most Revd Dr. Laurent Mbanda, chairman of the GAFCON Primates Council, confirmed that invitations have been sent to 500 delegates for the first official meeting of what GAFCON is calling the Global Anglican Communion since the Oct. 16 statement — although 50 bishops have requested financial assistance to attend.

“As primates, we have issued this solemn summons because this is a vital moment of counsel, unity, and shared conviction for our Global Anglican Communion,” Mbanda said.

“Now that the future has arrived, we must come together to discern the path ahead.”

“I can say that the G26 Bishops’ Assembly in Abuja in March will be where there is clarity about the future of the Global Anglican Communion,” a GAFCON spokesperson told Christian Daily International.

The spokesperson also referred to an AnglicanTV Ministries’ interview, “GAFCON to Re-Order Communion” on YouTube on Dec. 11, when presenter Kevin Kallsen interviewed GAFCON General Secretary Bishop Paul Donison about the future of the Anglican movement.

Kallsen asked the bishop where GAFCON “will be” in five to 10 years, and in response, Donison said that “After Abuja, we’ll know more,” adding that “eyes are on Abuja to see how this reordering takes shape.”

“But I believe we’ll be doing what Anglicans have always done—rooted in tradition, expanding globally. I also believe the global church will increasingly help renew the Western church,” said Donison.

The bishop also said that the announcement by GAFCON renouncing the authority of the Archbishop of Canterbury in October had been met with a “resounding alleluia” by Anglicans globally, especially in the Majority World.

“Praise God that we are finally reordering the Communion in a true global sense,” he said.

“In the Western churches, even among those very GAFCON-friendly, there have been good questions, especially from those still contending within Canterbury-aligned structures.”

The Archbishop of Canterbury, the Lambeth Conference, the Anglican Consultative Council, and the Primates’ Meeting are not essential to Anglican identity, according to the bishop.

“They are modern innovations,” he said in the interview. “Lambeth dates to 1867, the ACC to 1971, and the Primates’ Meeting to 1979. They were attempts to hold unity together, but they failed.

“Instead, leadership must be located in the global church. In Abuja, the primates who affirm the Jerusalem Declaration will together form a new council of primates and elect a chairman, a primus inter pares, first among equals. Leadership is shifting globally because Christianity itself has shifted globally.”

Donison said there had been “no desire for repentance” within the revisionist structures of the Anglican Consultative Council or Canterbury. 

“There has been no desire for repentance within those revisionist structures. If repentance had happened, that would have been the future. Since it hasn’t, the future is reordering. We are still praying for repentance, but we are moving forward.

“For 17 years, we’ve said don’t look to Canterbury to determine if you’re Anglican. What’s different now is that we’re saying look here instead. The locus of leadership has moved. Stop asking whether Canterbury will turn around. Let’s move forward and get on with mission.”

Kallsen pointed out that GAFCON had been described as the missional not political arm of the Anglican movement.

“That was accurate at the time,” responded Donison. “But GAFCON has done more structural work than any other body in global Anglicanism. We’ve established new provinces, consecrated new bishops, and created dioceses in England, Australia, New Zealand, Europe, and among Muslim-background believers. We love mission, but we’ve also become structural and ecclesial because GAFCON actually does things.

“This is not a new communion. We are the ongoing Anglican Communion, now reordered to reflect its global reality. We are the supermajority. The fear is being labelled schismatic, but reformers have always been called schismatics. This is not schism; it is reordering under global leadership.”

Furthermore, the bishop acknowledged “pushback” by the GAFCON decision and that it is the “job” of the Anglican Communion Office to “say we’re illegitimate.”

“But Anglican identity has never depended on Canterbury,” he added, “That claim is ahistorical.

“GAFCON stands for the Global Fellowship of Confessing Anglicans. We confess together and therefore walk together. There is diversity on secondary issues, but not on first-order doctrinal issues. Endless dialogue without doctrinal clarity only preserves English dominance, and the world has changed.”

Posted: Dec. 18, 2025 • Permanent link: ecumenism.net/?p=14730
Categories: NewsIn this article: Anglican, GAFCON, Sarah Mullally
Transmis : 18 déc. 2025 • Lien permanente : ecumenism.net/?p=14730
Catégorie : NewsDans cet article : Anglican, GAFCON, Sarah Mullally


<a href='https://meorome.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/02/wbiog-text-en.pdf' target='_blank'>We Believe in One God: 60 years of Methodists and Catholics walking together</a>, the 2025 report of the Methodist-Roman Catholic International Commission (MERCIC)

Methodist-Catholic Dialogue Commission publishes new document ‘We Believe in One God’

 — Dec. 10, 202510 déc. 2025

‘We believe in One God’ is the title of a new publication by the Catholic Church and the World Methodist Council, detailing progress made over the past six decades towards full visible unity between the two Christian world communions.

Printed by the Vatican Publishing House as part of an ecumenical series, the volume draws together the results of 11 reports produced by the Methodist-Roman Catholic International Commission (MERCIC) since their formal dialogue began back in 1967. These reports, named after the cities in which they were presented to the World Methodist Conference, explore topics such as baptism, holiness, Scripture and tradition, Eucharist, nature and mission of the church and the call to visible communion.
… Read more » … lire la suite »

Pope Leo XIV and Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I, the spiritual leader of the world's Eastern Orthodox Christians, attend the Doxology at the Patriarchal Church of Saint George, in Istanbul, Türkiye

Pope Leo XIV and Patriarch Bartholomew sign document urging progress on Christian unity

 — Nov. 29, 202529 nov. 2025

Pope Leo XIV and Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew of Constantinople met at the patriarchal seat in the ancient Phanar quarter on Saturday (Nov. 29) to sign a joint declaration affirming their commitment to achieving communion between the two churches.

“We continue to walk with firm determination on the path of dialogue, in love and truth, towards the hoped-for restoration of full communion between our sister Churches,” the declaration read.
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Pope Leo XIV and Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew lead a prayer service near the archaeological excavations of the ancient Basilica of St. Neophytos in Iznik, Türkiye

Where Christians forged a common creed, Pope Leo calls to end ‘scandal of divisions’

 — Nov. 28, 202528 nov. 2025

Seventeen centuries after bishops from East and West convened in Nicaea to craft the creed that defined Christianity, Pope Leo XIV returned to the ancient site with an appeal to “overcome the scandal of the divisions” that continue to fracture Christians today.

Marking the 1,700th anniversary of the Council of Nicaea — the centrepiece of his trip to Türkiye and Lebanon — the pope called on Christians the world over “to nurture the desire for unity for which the Lord Jesus prayed and gave his life.”

On his second day in Türkiye, he prayed alongside Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew, the spiritual leader of the world’s 300 million Orthodox Christians, on the shore of Lake Iznik — where the council that established a common creed for Christians convened 1,700 years ago.
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Christian leaders gathered at the site of the First Council of Nicaea in modern-day Iznik, Türkiye

Religious leaders bear living witness to faith expressed at Nicaea 1700 years ago

 — Nov. 28, 202528 nov. 2025

In an historic commemoration of the 1700th anniversary of the First Ecumenical Council, faith leaders gathered in Nicaea—modern-day Iznik, Türkiye – on 28 November to mark the 1700th anniversary of the First Ecumenical Council in the history of the church.

World Council of Churches (WCC) general secretary Rev. Prof. Dr Jerry Pillay joined His All Holiness Patriarch Bartholomew and Pope Leo XIV for an ecumenical prayer service.
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For unity and peace in Nicaea

 — Nov. 27, 202527 nov. 2025

At the heart of Pope Leo XIV’s journey to Türkiye this weekend will be a pilgrimage to Iznik, a small city about 140 km south of Istanbul. Iznik is better known to Church history by its Greek name, Nicaea. That’s where, 1700 years ago, the First Ecumenical Council was held. This Friday, Pope Leo is gathering with Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I and other Christian leaders for an ecumenical prayer service to celebrate the landmark anniversary.
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The fourth session of the current series of Informal Conversations between the Salvation Army and the Catholic Church took place at Casa La Salle, Rome

Fourth Session of Salvation Army-Roman Catholic Informal Conversations

 — Nov. 27, 202527 nov. 2025

The fourth session of the current series of Informal Conversations between the Salvation Army and the Catholic Church took place at Casa La Salle, Rome, from 21 to 24 November 2025. Following the first set of conversations from 2007 to 2012, the general theme for the current series of conversations is Discipleship for Mission. The previous meeting in the current series took place at Sunbury Court near London in November 2024.
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People participate in the annual Good Friday Way of the Cross procession through the streets of Montreal, Quebec

Quebec to strengthen secularism law

 — Nov. 25, 202525 nov. 2025

The Quebec government will be expanding its secularism rules across public institutions in a new bill that is expected to be tabled Thursday.

Various media outlets in the province confirmed the contents of the new bill, which includes a ban on prayer rooms in universities and CEGEPs, restricting the offering of religious-based meals and banning religious symbols in communications by public institutions.
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Pope Leo XIV meets with leaders of the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops and gives the conference 62 artifacts that will be returned to Indigenous communities in Canada. With the pope, from the left, are: Father Jean Vézina, general secretary of the CCCB; Bishop Pierre Goudreault of Sainte-Anne-de-la-Pocatière, Québec, CCCB president; and Archbishop Richard Smith of Vancouver, a member of the Canadian Catholic Indigenous Council

Return of Indigenous artifacts is milestone in reconciliation journey, Canadian bishops say

 — Nov. 25, 202525 nov. 2025

The return of 62 Indigenous artifacts to the Canadian bishops, held at the Vatican for more than 100 years, is “a milestone in the long journey of reconciliation and healing,” said Archbishop Richard Smith of Vancouver.

In an interview with America Magazine, the archbishop underlined that the repatriation occurred during the Jubilee of Hope.
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Pope Leo XIV blesses a newlywed couple

Marriage an exclusive union requiring ‘tender care,’ Vatican says

 — Nov. 25, 202525 nov. 2025

The foundation of sacramental marriage is the unity of the spouses, a bond so intense and grace-filled that it is exclusive and indissoluble, said a document from the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith.

The document, “‘Una Caro’ (One Flesh): In Praise of Monogamy. Doctrinal Note on the Value of Marriage as an Exclusive Union and Mutual Belonging,” was released today […] by the Vatican. Pope Leo XIV approved its contents Nov. 21 and authorized its publication.
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Pope Leo XIV blesses a newlywed couple

Vatican issues sweeping defense of traditional marriage, pushing back on polygamy

 — Nov. 25, 202525 nov. 2025

Responding to recent questions raised by African bishops concerned about the practice of polygamy, the Vatican issued a sweeping defence of monogamy Tuesday, Nov. 25.

The 40-page doctrinal note “Una Caro (One Flesh): In Praise of Monogamy: Doctrinal Note on the Value of Marriage as an Exclusive Union and Mutual Belonging,” was issued […] by the Vatican’s Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith. It offers a far-reaching theological, biblical, and cultural reflection on the Catholic Church’s teaching that marriage is a “unique and exclusive” union between one man and one woman.
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