GAFCON 2018 – Part 1

Dear Friends,

It is no secret that the Anglican Church is in crisis. As a Global Church we are shrinking, we have abandoned our historical and theological moorings and we have little vision for what we should be doing in the world. In many ways, everyone appears to be doing what is right in their own eyes. This is an enormous problem. It is almost like the reality and authority of God has been methodologically excluded from many Anglican churches and leaders’ theology, thought and life. Churches have left God and his Word out in the cold.

It is for this reason that in the second half of June, I will be heading to Jerusalem for the Global Anglican Future Conference (GAFCON). GAFCON is an opportunity for like-minded Anglicans from across the world who believe in the authority of Scripture, the evangelistic mission of the church and the resurrection of and uniqueness of Jesus to gather, to pray, and to strategise. The GAFCON movement is a global family of authentic Anglicans standing together to retain and restore the Bible to the heart of the Anglican Communion.

Our mission is to guard the unchanging, transforming Gospel of Jesus Christ and to proclaim Him to the world. We are founded on the Bible, bound together by the Jerusalem Statement and Declaration of 2008, and led by a Primates Council, which represents the majority of the world’s Anglicans.

GAFCON works to guard and proclaim the unchanging, transforming Gospel through biblically faithful preaching and teaching which frees our churches to make disciples by clear and certain witness to Jesus Christ in all the world.

The GAFCON journey began in 2008 when moral compromise, doctrinal error and the collapse of biblical witness in parts of the Anglican communion had reached such a level that the leaders of the majority of the world’s Anglicans felt it was necessary to take a united stand for truth. A crowd of more than one thousand witnesses, including Primates, Archbishops, Bishops, clergy and lay leaders gathered in Jerusalem for the Global Anglican Future Conference (GAFCON).

The second conference, GAFCON 2013, was held in Nairobi, Kenya in 2013, at which over 1,300 delegates from 38 nations and 27 Provinces of the Anglican Communion were present. The gathering gave the Primates a mandate, through the Nairobi Communiqué and Commitment, to take forward the work of the GAFCON movement.

This year, almost 2000 will gather to encourage each other and pray for the work of authentic Anglicans around the world.

Over the next few weeks I want to share some stories about the faith and faithlessness of Anglicans from around the globe so you might be able to see the crisis clearly and pray. If you have any questions about GAFCON, please feel free to ask.

In Christ,
Nigel

How is My Heart?

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Coffee with Jesus

Jesus didn’t have a very good relationship with religious people. In fact, they hated him because he heavily critiqued their religiosity and arrogance. At one point he said to some super religious leaders:

Woe to you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! For you travel land and sea to win one proselyte, and when he is won, you make him twice as much a son of hell as yourselves. (Matt 23:15)

It’s hardly the Jesus of the Christmas carol – gentle, meek and mild, cooing quietly in a manger. But it is the Jesus of the Bible.

I have often been surprised by Jesus as I read about him. Sometimes he is passionate and urgent, at others relaxed and in no rush. One day he is sleeping in the back of a sinking boat and on what feels like the next, he is ripping his way through a marketplace overturning tables and chasing animals and people all over the place. One morning he is a firebrand preacher and the next he is kneeling on the ground next to a woman caught in adultery gently encouraging her to turn from her ways and seek forgiveness.

People often try to pigeonhole Jesus. He is a good teacher! He is a moral guide! He is a miraculous spiritual identity! But when you read the biographies of Jesus, you very quickly discover he cannot be pigeon holed. This is probably because of who he really is.

Jesus was more than just a man. His miracles, his insight into people, his capacity to read and understand what people are thinking and what they have done in their lives all point to Jesus being more than human (but not metahuman – he is no Flash)!

The Jesus we read about in the Bible is both God and man. You may not agree with what the Bible teaches about Jesus yet, but you will probably have sung about it. Immanuel means “God with us” and at Christmas when we sing carols we recognise that in Jesus, God arrived on earth to be our King and Saviour.

I know it’s hard to get your head around, but it is impossible to summarise the evidence about Jesus without actually concluding that he is both God and man.

That being the case, he is worth listening to, not just trying to please through religious activity. In the cartoon above Carl finds Jesus critiquing his non-religious arrogance. Jesus is no fan of the arrogant – religious or not. He wants more than your efforts – he wants you to know him and he wants to know you.

Email me if you want to think more about this stuff, or even if you just have a question about Jesus. I’d love to connect with you and help you connect with Jesus.

Nigel Fortescue

nigel@campbelltownanglican.org

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