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Statement of Bishop Mouneer (13 March 2013)

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Justin Welby, Mouneer Anis

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Page 1: Statement of Bishop Mouneer (13 March 2013)

القدس والشرق األوسط نجلیكانیةاأل / سقفیةالكنیسة األ قليمإ

The Episcopal / Anglican Province of Jerusalem and the Middle East

بمصر وشمال افريقيا والقرن االفريقىنجلیكانیة األ / سقفیةالكنیسة األ بروشية أ

The Episcopal / Anglican Diocese of Egypt with North Africa and the Horn of Africa

____________________________________________________________________________

Bishop: The Most Rev. Dr. Mouneer Hanna Anis المطران د. منير حنا أنيس/

Address: 5 Michel Lutfallah Street, P.O. Box 87 5 .ش ميشيل لطف هللا

Zamalek, 11211, Cairo, Egypt مصر 11211الزمالك القاهرة Tel.: +20 2 27380821/3/9

Email: [email protected]

Challenges facing the new Archbishop of Canterbury

Millions of people in the Anglican Communion are focusing at this time on the Enthronement

of the new Archbishop of Canterbury, Justin Welby. For us, Canterbury is of great historical

significance because it was the starting point of Anglicanism.

I am among many who appreciated the contribution of Archbishop Rowan Williams, the

former Archbishop of Canterbury, during the last ten years. I am also sure that he will

continue to contribute through his new post as a Master of Magdalene College, Cambridge.

It is our duty now to pray for Archbishop Justin as he is about to carry a heavy responsibility

for the years to come and without God’s strength and grace it will be difficult, and even

impossible, to cope with all of these responsibilities.

One of his responsibilities is towards the Anglican Communion which is currently suffering

from impaired and broken relationships. Archbishop Justin will definitely need to accurately

diagnose the reasons for these divisions in order to come up with the correct treatment. One

of the first challenges he will face is to understand how the nature of the Anglican

Communion has changed in the last decades. Statistics show that there are now more

Anglicans in the “South” than in the “North.” There are also big theological gaps between

the “South” and the “North.” The understanding of this new nature should help the new

Archbishop to use a more collegial and participatory approach, rather than a central approach,

when dealing with matters of the Communion.

In regard to the theological gap, it is indeed important that the church learn how to be

relevant to the modern society where we live, but without adopting the values of the society

that clearly contradict Scripture, our tradition and reason. Part of our DNA as Anglicans is a

desire for unity and ecumenism. For this reason, we should not act in a way that widens the

gap between us and our ecumenical partners.

With ever-increasing pressure from the society, the church needs not to be politically correct

at the expense of the truth. The church resisted this from the early centuries and preferred to

be faithful to the Gospel, even if this led to persecution and martyrdom. We are called to be

“salt” and “light.” In other words, we are called to be distinctive. The modern societies of

the “West” or “North” are pushing many issues, including same-sex marriages and civil

partnerships. Should the church yield to the pressure of these societies and compromise the

truth? I personally think that these issues are superficial symptoms of a much deeper illness

which attempts to shake the foundation of our faith. This illness puts into question the

essentials of faith like the crucifixion, the resurrection, and the doctrine of salvation. It

ignores the primacy of Scripture and 2,000 years of church tradition. It is a spirit of

Page 2: Statement of Bishop Mouneer (13 March 2013)

individualism and cultural pride that ignores the fact that the whole truth is revealed to the

whole church.

In both the theological and numerical differences, we need to affirm our interdependence as

Anglican churches. What affects all should be decided by all. There is a great need to

recover the conciliar nature of the Anglican Communion that is practiced through the

Lambeth Conferences and the Primates Meetings. Losing our conciliar ethos will lead to

disunity as churches take uncoordinated, independent and unilateral decisions. I here

remember what Cardinal Ivan Dias said to us in his address to the Lambeth 2008 conference,

“when we live myopically in the fleeting present, oblivious of our past heritage and apostolic

traditions, we could well be suffering from spiritual Alzheimer's" and "when we behave in a

disorderly manner, going whimsically our own way, without any coordination with the head

or the other members of our community, it could be ecclesial Parkinson's."

Our Anglican Communion is a real gift from God and we long to see it united and playing its

important and unique role within the one, holy, catholic and apostolic church.

+ Mouneer Egypt+ Mouneer Egypt+ Mouneer Egypt+ Mouneer Egypt

The Most Rev. Dr. Mouneer Hanna Anis Bishop of the Episcopal / Anglican Diocese of Egypt

with North Africa and the Horn of Africa