New secretary general of the Anglican Communion gets Frank Griswold’s approval

That can’t be good.

From here:

Many Anglican and Episcopal leaders are celebrating the appointment of Archbishop Josiah Idowu-Fearon of the Anglican Diocese of Kaduna, Nigeria, as the next secretary general of the Anglican Communion.

“Josiah is, above all, a man of communion, a careful listener, and a respecter of the different ways in which we are called to articulate and live the good news of God in Jesus Christ,” former Presiding Bishop Frank Griswold told Episcopal News Service following the appointment.

He is ‘committed to God’s mission of reconciliation’. He isn’t, of course, because God’s reconciliation is for us to reconcile to himself through his Son. God expects us to love one another: if a fellow Christian departs from the faith once delivered, it isn’t loving for everyone to pretend nothing is wrong by institutionalising a bogus state of reconciliation.

Connecticut Bishop Ian Douglas, a member of the Standing Committee of the Anglican Communion, said he has known Idowu-Fearon for more than a decade through a variety of inter-Anglican bodies and responsibilities and finds him “committed to God’s mission of reconciliation, both between people of different faiths and between the churches of the Anglican Communion.”

One might be tempted to take comfort in the hope that Idowu-Fearon could scarcely be worse than his predecessor, Kenneth Kearon, whose facility for churning out densely packed clichés was unmatched by even the most tenaciously vacuous bishops in Western Anglicanism. Time will tell.

3 thoughts on “New secretary general of the Anglican Communion gets Frank Griswold’s approval

  1. I think that it must have been Kenneth Kearon, or one of his minions who ought to have been corrected by him, who said in the face of our Brief to the Lambeth Commission that my husband and I lived in British Colombia …

  2. According to Wikipedia, the Church of Nigeria has 14 ecclesiastical provinces, with over 18 million members. It increased the number of its dioceses and bishops from 91 in 2002 to 161 as at January 2013. One day, it will probably become the largest church in the worldwide Anglican Communion.

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