Church secessions frustrate leadership
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Deepa Bharath
The presiding bishop of the Episcopal Church of the United States
said he was disappointed at the secession of three Southern
California churches, including one in Newport Beach, from the Diocese
of Los Angeles over the last two weeks, according to a statement
issued by him on the Episcopal Church’s website.
Presiding Bishop Frank T. Griswold on Wednesday released a
statement supporting the actions of Bishop J. Jon Bruno, of Los
Angeles, who refused to release the three churches that broke away
and aligned themselves with the Diocese of Luwero in the Anglican
Province of Uganda, Africa.
“I’m saddened by the action of clergy and members of three
congregations in the Diocese of Los Angeles, and their desire to
separate themselves from the Episcopal Church,” Griswold said.
Praveen Bunyan, rector of St. James Church in Newport Beach, said
that his church has severed all ties with the Episcopal Church. St.
James owns the church and the surrounding property, he said.
Archbishop Henry Orombi of the Church of Uganda released a
statement earlier this week saying that the churches -- St. James and
All Saints’ Church in Long Beach -- now come under the Diocese of
Luwero and that the Bishop of Los Angeles has no authority over them.
Orombi criticized the Episcopal Church for appointing Gene
Robinson, an openly gay man, as Bishop of New Hampshire, a move all
three churches that seceded oppose. But Bunyan maintains that the
main reason for the secession for St. James is not the issue of
homosexuality, but the Episcopal Church’s reluctance to accept Jesus
Christ as Lord and Savior and acknowledge the supremacy of the Bible.
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