by Anglican Church in North America
This week, Archbishop Foley Beach, at the invitation of Patriarch Kirill of Russia, led a delegation from the Anglican Church in North America to Moscow for formal ecumenical meetings with the Russian Orthodox Church.
The delegation made a pilgrimage to the monastery of the Holy Trinity and St. Sergius on Monday, August 24th before beginning meetings with Metropolitan Hilarion ,
chairman of the Department for External Church Relations on Tuesday,
August 25th. Later in the day, the conversations continued when the
delegation was officially received by Patriarch Kirill at his
residence.
Patriarch Kirill gave thanks for the Anglican Church in North
America’s courageous witness in the midst of the dual challenges of an
increasingly secular western culture, and an environment of religious
compromise:
“Your church went through a very difficult period of its history, and the faithful took courage and had the ability to respond to a great temptation. There are two models of the behavior of the Church and of Christians. One involves obedience to the secular power and the powerful forces that have an impact on social development. The other model involves the ability to speak the truth and to remain faithful to the Christian message.”
During the communist era, the Russian Orthodox Church suffered
decades of severe persecution. This week the Anglican delegation saw a
transformed religious landscape in which Christian symbols now dominate
Red Square and Moscow, and new churches are being planted across the
country (on average 1,000 per year for the last 27 years).
Both the Russian Orthodox Church and the Anglican Church in North
America expressed a desire to see the growth and deepening of
relationships between Orthodoxy and faithful, global Anglicanism.
Archbishop Beach delivered a letter of greeting from Archbishop
Wabukala, the Archbishop and Primate of Kenya, and Chairman of the
Global Fellowship of Confessing Anglicans (GAFCON).
As the realignment of Anglicanism continues to unfold, Archbishop
Beach gave thanks for the common ground that the faithful of both
churches are finding on the practical moral issues that confront our
societies:
“Globalization has increased the effect that we have on one another, and at a time when the family is being threatened by forces that would seek to redefine marriage, normalize sexual compromise, and fund the slaughter of unborn children, it is an encouragement to have a strong and unwavering partner in the Russian Orthodox Church on these issues.”
The relationship between Anglicans and Orthodoxy has a rich history
dating back to the English Reformation where the recovery of the
biblical Gospel was accompanied by a recognition of the common Patristic
heritage the two churches share. Cranmer incorporated an Eastern
Orthodox prayer, called the epiclesis, into his 1549 edition of the Book
of Common Prayer, which eventually made its way into the American
prayer book. The mutual affection between Anglicans and Russian
Orthodoxy has had a variety of expressions over the centuries, from Bishop Grafton and Patriarch Tikhon to Archbishop Ramsey and Patriarch Alexei.
The armed conflicts of the 20th century and the liberal theological
innovations of some Anglicans in the early 21st century have hindered
the relationship between the churches, but this meeting constituted an
important step toward a new era of ecumenism between Anglicanism and
Russian Orthodoxy.
The delegation from the Anglican Church in North America was headed
by Archbishop Foley Beach, Bishop Ray Sutton (Dean of Ecumenical
Affairs), Bishop Kevin Allen (Chair of the North American Anglican –
Orthodox dialogue), Bishop Keith Ackerman, Dr. Moheb Ghali, and The Rev.
Canon Andrew Gross.
They were also joined by Fr. Chad Hatfield, Chancellor of St.
Vladimir’s Seminary in New York and a member of the North American
Anglican-Orthodox dialogue.
In addition to the official meeting, the delegation visited the
Donskoy Monastery, the Church of St. Catherine, St. Basil’s Cathedral,
and worshiped at the church of The Joy of All Who Sorrow.
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