ACNS - 4895 Weekly Review 18-24 June, 2011

From Worldwide Faith News <wfn@igc.org>
Date Sat, 25 Jun 2011 16:24:58 -0700

Posted On : June 25, 2011 10:10 PM | Posted By : Admin ACO

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A weekly roundup of Anglican Communion news plus
opinion, reviews, photos, profiles and other
things of interest from across the Anglican/Episcopal world.
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This edition includes...

·         This week's Anglican Communion news
·         Anglican Life - New Zealand's Holy Trinity Avonside deconsecrat ed
·         Anglican Life - Amid war, Kadugli
bishop looks to Christ for encouragement
·         Anglican Life - Anglican Alliance gives
cautious welcome to G20 food pledges
·         Anglican Life - Two party system, the
panacea to wastes and wanton killings in Nigeria
·         Anglican Life - Children?s care worker joins the Church in Wa les
·         Video - Report on the Ugandan martyr's commemoration
·         Comment - Living life to the full, in Wales and Congo
·         CD shelf - Hope is our song: Hymns,
songs and carols from Aotearoa New Zealand
·         The coming week's Anglican Cycle of Prayer.

__________________________
ANGLICAN NEWS
·
<http://www.anglicancommunion.org/acns/news.cfm/2011/6/25/ACNS4888>Global
- Anglican consultation: "Our churches can be places of safety and healing"
·
<http://www.anglicancommunion.org/acns/news.cfm/2011/6/24/ACNS4893>Kenya
- Archbishop of Canterbury?s Visit to Kibera, Nairobi
·
<http://www.anglicancommunion.org/acns/digest/index.cfm/2011/6/24/New-USPG- 
Chief-Executive-champions-capacity-building-in-world-church>Global
- New USPG Chief Executive champions capacity building in world church
·
<http://www.anglicancommunion.org/acns/digest/index.cfm/2011/6/23/400m-gold 
-medallist-reads-Olympic-prayer-400-days-ahead-of-2012-Games>England
- 400m gold medallist reads Olympic prayer 400 days ahead of 2012 Games
·
<http://www.anglicancommunion.org/acns/news.cfm/2011/6/23/ACNS4887>Zimbabwe
- Zimbabwe Anglicans not allowed to celebrate at African saint?s shrine.
·
<http://www.anglicancommunion.org/acns/digest/index.cfm/2011/6/22/Pastors-S 
hould-Use--Not-Ignore--IT-Anglican-Priest>South
East Asia - Pastors should use, not ignore, IT - Anglican priest
·
<http://www.anglicancommunion.org/acns/digest/index.cfm/2011/6/22/Faith-in- 
Education--joint-report-highlights-contribution-of-church-schools>Wales
- Faith in Education - joint report highlights contribution of church schoo ls
·
<http://acen.anglicancommunion.org/news/index.cfm/2011/6/22/UN-environment- 
agency-sees-work-with-faith-groups-African-cleric-says>South
Africa - U.N. environment agency sees work with
faith groups, African cleric says
·
<http://www.anglicancommunion.org/acns/news.cfm/2011/6/22/ACNS4885>Kenya
- Archbishop of Canterbury in Kenya: faith is about 'making a difference'
·
<http://www.anglicancommunion.org/acns/news.cfm/2011/6/22/ACNS4886>USA
- Episcopal Church Primate calls for action on food
·
<http://www.anglicancommunion.org/acns/news.cfm/2011/6/21/ACNS4892>Kenya
- Archbishop of Canterbury: "sustainable development for a 'new creation'"
·
<http://www.anglicancommunion.org/acns/news.cfm/2011/6/21/ACNS4883>Sudan
- Bishop calls for Churchwide day of prayer,
fasting for an end to Sudan violence
·
<http://www.anglicancommunion.org/acns/news.cfm/2011/6/21/ACNS4884>Mission
- Church growth and evangelism challenge: Does
your church initiative pass the Ten Tests?
·
<http://www.anglicancommunion.org/acns/news.cfm/2011/6/21/ACNS4885>Middle
East - Bishop of Egypt calls on Christians to
lobby for 'spiritual democracy' in the Middle East
·
<http://www.anglicancommunion.org/acns/news.cfm/2011/6/20/ACNS4891>Kenya
- Archbishop of Canterbury dedicates site of
first Anglican University in Kenya
·
<http://www.anglicancommunion.org/acns/news.cfm/2011/6/19/ACNS4890>Kenya
- Archbishop's sermon to celebrate the 50th
anniversary of Nakuru Diocese, Kenya
·
<http://www.anglicancommunion.org/acns/news.cfm/2011/6/19/ACNS4882>Anglican
Alliance - Anglican leaders press G20 ministers over food crisis
____________________________
ANGLICAN LIFE

Holy Trinity Avonside deconsecrated

One of Christchurch's oldest churches has been
deconsecrated after being badly damaged in the
earthquakes. The Church of the Holy Trinity in
Avonside was designed by Benjamin Mountfort and
was consecrated in 1857. It was deconsecrated by
Anglican Bishop Victoria Matthews yesterday before planned demolition.
Church committee member Tony Humphreys said he
had a "soft spot" for it. "I got married in this
church ... It is very meaningful for me. It is
very sad to see it go," he said. "I was looking
at my wedding photos the other day. It looked beautiful."
Mr Humphreys said the church had connections with
early Christchurch. William Rolleston, Mountfort
and Julius von Haast are buried in its cemetery.
The building is in the orange zone, on land
identified by the Government as requiring more
research to see whether it can be economically
repaired. Mr Humphreys said any new church would be of modern design.
"We are not going to go for a rebuild. We are
going for a more modern place with meeting rooms,
offices and a lot more flexibility. It will be much more modern," he said.
For Beryl Dineen, 68, yesterday's ceremony was a "very sentimental moment".
She had been a regular at the church since her
family moved to Christchurch in 1945, and was
confirmed there in 1955 and married there in
1967. "We always go to the church on our wedding
anniversary," she said. Two of her three sisters
were married there, while brother Earl Stick, who
died in the February quake, was a server and helped with repair work.
"My parents loved that church because it reminded
them of England," she said. "Hopefully there'll
be something beautiful come out of that space."
**************
Amid war, Kadugli bishop finds encouragement in
Jesus' words: 'I will be with you always'
By Lucy Chumbley, Episcopal News Service
On June 22, the day he had planned to return to
the Diocese of Kadugli in Southern Kordofan,
Sudan, Bishop Andudu Adam Elnail was sitting
wearily in a Washington, D.C., law firm
conference room drinking coffee from a corporate mug.
Elnail was in D.C. to meet with U.S. Special
Envoy to Sudan, Princeton N. Lyman, and other
advocacy groups to ask for their help "to stop
the war, give humanitarian aid to the people and
to bring peace and freedom to the people of the Nuba Mountains."
South Sudan is set to become an independent
nation on July 9. Southern Kordofan, an
oil-producing state in mountainous central Sudan,
will remain under northern control.
Several weeks ago, the Sudan Armed Forces from
the north began a series of bombing raids in
Southern Kordofan, targeting southern
sympathizers, and are now encamped in Kadugli,
the region's capital. SAF soldiers and the Sudan
People's Liberation Army from the south are
fighting on the ground, thousands of people have
been displaced, and the United Nations is warning
that a major SAF offensive is imminent.
On June 5-6, All Saints Cathedral in Kadugli, a
diocesan meeting hall and guesthouse (home to
eight priests, with two rooms and three shops
rented out for income) and Elnail's own home were
destroyed by fire during the incursion. Other
churches were broken into and looted.
"My chaplain escaped through the window when they
attacked my house," Elnail said. He was captured
and beaten, and is now seeking treatment in
Khartoum. "I do not know what would have happened
if I was there. I probably would have been one of the victims."
A sound system, video projector and extra beds
stored in the hall were taken during looting,
along with three motorbikes, including one
belonging to Elnail. "That was my means for
transport, because the diocese has not yet got a car," he said.
By chance, Elnail had travelled to the United
States for medical treatment before the attacks
came. "I'm not saying I'm lucky," he said. "But
at least I'm here now." Likewise his wife,
Jaleela, and their children Elias, 16, Evans, 10,
Elphas, 8, Grace, 6, and Enoch, 3, are safely in
Uganda, where Jaleela is studying at the
Christian University. But Elnail's sister, Siham,
who is in his care, fled from Kadugli and is now missing.
"We have been asking [where she is] but nobody can tell me," he said.
To read more click
<http://www.anglicancommunion.org/acns/news.cfm/2011/6/25/ACNS4895>here
**********************
Anglican development group gives cautious welcome to G20 food pledges
By Jonathan Luxmoore, ENI
Warsaw, 23 June--An Anglican expert has welcomed
an action plan by agriculture ministers from the
Group of 20 Finance Ministers and Central Bank
Governors (G20) to combat growing volatility in international food prices.
However, Sally Keeble, director of the
London-based Anglican Alliance for Development,
Relief and Advocacy, warned that recent church
demands were "just a warm-up" to what could be
expected in the run-up to the G20 summit in
November. "Although there's still a long way to
go, it's very important that food security is now
high on the political agenda," she said.
"There's great anxiety about what's happening to
food prices and the number of people going hungry
as a result. It's been identified by Anglican
leaders, particularly in Africa, as the top priority for church advocacy wo rk."
"There are strong vested agricultural interests
in the developed world, and there will be a major
tussle to ensure these take second place after
the need to produce and distribute enough food
for the developing world," said Keeble, whose
organization began work this January following an
initiative at the 2008 Lambeth Conference of Anglican Communion bishops.
World food prices hit a record high in early
2011, provoking fears of food riots in the
developing world, where 925 million people are
estimated to go hungry. There have been calls for
a substantial increase in agricultural production
to feed a world population forecast to be 9.1 billion by 2050.
In an action plan, the G20 agricultural ministers
said they would encourage analyses of the
relationship between biofuels production and food
availability, and give "special attention to
smallholders, especially women" in developing countries.
Letters urging steps to reduce food prices and
control speculation in commodity trading were
sent to ministers before the G20 meeting by the
Anglican primates in Australia and Canada, as
well as by the presiding bishop of the Anglican
church of Korea, the moderator of the church of
North India, and archbishops in Capetown, South Africa and Llandaff in Wale s.
In a 21 June letter to US Agriculture Secretary
Tom Vilsack, the US Episcopal Church's presiding
bishop, Katharine Jefferts Schori, said she was
aware of budget shortfalls facing the US and
other industrialized countries, but believed
investment in food security would "strengthen the
entire global economy and ultimately lead to billions of dollars in savings ."
She added that most of the Anglican Communion's
80 million members lived in developing countries,
and said the new G20 "focus on food" was an
important recognition "that rising food prices
present a potential crisis for areas of the world
most affected by hunger and malnutrition."
"As an American, I am particularly heartened by
President Obama's Feed the Future initiative, a
recognition that food security holds an important
key in eradicating global poverty and achieving
the Millennium Development Goals."
*****************
Two party system, the panacea to wastes and wanton killings - Archbishop Ma du
By Foluso Taiwo
A Cleric has called on Nigerians to seriously
consider a two party system for Nigeria to cut
down waste and save the nation from other ugly incidents.
The Archbishop of Enugu province and Bishop of
Oji River Diocese (Anglican Communion) Most Rev
Dr Amos Madu Made this call while presenting his
charge at the 1st Session of the 5th Synod at the
Holy Trinity church, Ezeagu local Government Area of Enugu state.
He said too much is wasted on every election
year, in logistics printing, and so on for 62
political parties most of which he said are fake
in the real sense, for they exist just in name and to confuse things.
According to Archbishop Madu, God has remained
faithful in sustaining Nigeria in spite of the
corruption that has affected the nation badly.
Bishop of Diocese of Oji River who is disturbed
by what he called the deliberate continual and
senseless murder of Christians in Plateau, Bauchi
and Bornu States says that the Federal Government
must boldly intervene if it must stop.
He urged all governors, Bishops and Archbishops,
Judges, Lawyers, Activists and Human right groups
to rise up to this challenge and speak out
against the criminal act. Archbishop Madu
Congratulated the Nigerian?s President Good Luck
Jonathan for allowing God to use him in giving Nigeria credible election.
To read more click
<http://www.anglicancommunion.org/acns/news.cfm/2011/6/25/ACNS4895>here
*****************
Children?s care worker joins the Church
By Anna Morrell, Church in Wales
The former deputy manager of a children?s home
will begin a new career in church ministry this
week. Emma Rees, 31, will be ordained as a deacon
by the Archbishop of Wales at a service at
Llandaff Cathedral tomorrow (Saturday June
25).  She will then begin serving as an assistant
curate at All Saints Church, Barry.
Emma, from Treharris, began training for ministry
at St Michael?s College, Llandaff, having worked
at a children?s home in the South Wales Valleys.
She said, ?I?ve wanted to be a priest for as long
as I can remember and now I can?t wait to get
started after three years of training. I?m really
looking forward to walking into my new life and
becoming part of the community at Barry.?
Also at the service tomorrow, three deacons will
be ordained as priests. As non-stipendiary
ministers their work for the church is carried
out alongside their paid jobs. Lynda Newman, 50,
serves in Neath. From Cymmer, she is an early
years teacher at Dunvant Primary School but has
now decided to give up teaching after 27 years to
concentrate full-time on ministry. She is married
to Andrew, a firefighter, and has two daughters.
She said, ?My year as a deacon was amazing. It
started off sadly as the first funeral I did was
my father?s. However, the first wedding I?ll do
now as a priest will be my daughter?s. ?It was a
big decision to give up teaching but I feel
really blessed in having had a career I loved and
now a vocation that excites me.?
Christopher Seaton, 57, serves part-time as a
non-stipendiary minister in the parish of St
Andrews Major with Michaelston-le-Pit. He is a
self-employed engineering technician and lives in
Barry with his wife Julia. He said, ?My first
year has been an awesome experience and I?m
looking forward to extending my ministry as a priest.?
Peter Mortimer, 50,  serves in Whitchurch. He
works for the charity Care for the Family in
Taffs Well. He is married to Lois. He said, ?It
is a bit of a juggling act fitting my ministry
around my job but I?ve had a really enjoyable
year with terrific support from the parish and the adrenaline has flowed! ?
The Archbishop, Dr Barry Morgan, said, ?I am
delighted to ordain Emma, Lynda, Peter and
Christopher and to welcome them to the diocese.
They bring a wealth of experience and I am sure
their faith and commitment will inspire and
encourage the churches where they serve.?
_____________________________

VIDEO
Ugandan Martyrs commemorated
On 3 June 1886, thirty-two young men, pages of
the court of King Mwanga II of Buganda, were
burned to death at Namugongo for their refusal to
renounce Christianity. Some of the men were of
the Anglican faith and others were of the
Catholic faith. Annually, on June 03, Christians
from all parts of Uganda, East Africa and other
parts of the world congregate at Namugongo to
commemorate the lives of the Uganda Martyrs and
their dedication to their religious beliefs.
Crowds have been estimated in hundreds of thousands in some years.
Get a flavour of this important event in the life
of the Church of Uganda in this report by NTV
Uganda
<http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5BpuwJ8s1yQ>http://www.youtube.com/watch? 
v=5BpuwJ8s1yQ

_____________________________

PHOTOS

See photos of the Archbishop of Canterbury's
visit to Kenya where was hosted by the Archbishop
of Kenya at <http://bit.ly/lprP5J>http://bit.ly/lprP5J
_____________________________

COMMENT

Author Margaret Maund on a life lived to the full
Margaret Maund has lived many lives, from a nurse
in war-torn Congo to one of the first women in
Wales to be ordained as an Anglican priest. She
spoke to Claire Rees about why she?s happiest
now, as an author, sharing her stories about a life lived to the full
MUCH of what has happened to Margaret Maund has
happened, by her own admission, quite by accident.
She wasn?t meant to take a gap year to learn
French in Belgium, she wasn?t meant to travel to
Africa, and she wasn?t meant, coming from a
normal, modest Valleys family, to take on the
Anglican Church in one of the most significant moments of its history.
Things just happen to Margaret. And after years
of being encouraged to, she?s finally put her
adventure all down in an autobiography.
The story begins and concludes ? at least for now
? in Tonyrefail, where Margaret was born to
?good, lovely Christian parents?, Donald, a
deacon and Doris, a housewife and preacher.
Margaret, now 69, had a happy childhood, but her
school days were, by her own admission, ?not that special?.
She failed her 11 plus and, unimpressed with her
mother?s idea of her working in the local chemist
due to her lack of affinity with mathematics, she
passed her nursing exams aged just 15.
In the book she tells a lovely story about when
her mother took the bus to East Glamorgan
Hospital, bought herself a sandwich and a cup of
tea and watched her daughter work from a safe distance for a whole afternoo n.
?My parents were always so supportive, even if
they were shocked at what I was doing,? she recalls.
After qualifying as a nurse in 1963, Margaret
moved to Cardiff to begin midwifery training,
helping to deliver babies from ethnic families.
And although her bedroom at home was covered with
maps of Africa, as a result of her chapel
background and a calling she says she?d felt
since childhood, it was the first time she had
met a person who didn?t have her skin colour.
?It was so different from growing up in the
Rhondda and I began to realise the world was a
bigger place than I ever imagined,? she says.
"And it wasn?t as cosy as my own life had been.?
Margaret made enquiries into working in Africa
and was invited to London to meet a selection
panel from the Baptist Missionary Society. But at
the same time, rebellion had broken out in what
was then the Belgian Congo where she wanted to travel.
The first question the 23-year-old was asked was,
?Are you ready to die??, to which she answered ?Of course?.
?I honestly didn?t feel frightened,? she adds. ?I
was well aware of the risks but I wanted to help.?
She was accepted, despite her gender and single
status in the conservative ?60s, meaning she was
doubted as being suitable for the job. ?Africa
was going through a great deal of unrest, and
going to such a dangerous place at my age was a
concern for my tutors,? Margaret says. ?I was not
received with a lot of joy, let?s say. There had
been many deaths in the Congo, especially from
the US church, and there were serious difficulties going on,? she says.
?I turn up from the Rhondda Valleys and insist on
going there at a time everyone was coming out!?
But after a year learning French in Brussels to
equip her for the task, she was off to war-torn
central Africa, and nobody was going to stop her.
?I was full of a spirit of adventure ? I probably
didn?t grasp the concept of death because I was too much in love with lif e.?
Arriving there as a 24-year-old from the Valleys
was an adventure in itself, one Margaret can
recall clearly. "I?d had a very long journey and
was met by colleagues with a canoe made from a
hollowed-out tree trunk.We took an hour and a
half to cross the Congo river in pitch-black
darkness, arriving in the middle of this
impenetrable forest.Everybody goes to bed when it
gets dark as it?s safer so I expected not to see
anyone until morning. But we arrived into this
clearing lit with oil lamps and I saw this crowd
of people ? they?d gathered to welcome me.
?They were singing and clapping their hands ? I
have such a vivid memory of that moment. It will stay with me forever.?
And once there, the issue of Margaret arriving
without a husband perplexed the welcoming locals,
who would warn her not to walk alone at night as
it signalled she was looking for a mate. It was a
cultural thing that the opinion was you were
safer with a husband. The students [in Africa]
used to say, ?Your father must be a very cruel
man? to allow me to go to there. I would say he
was a beloved, gorgeous man and it was my decision, like everything else I  do!
?They would say no African man would have allowed
a young girl into something like this without a
husband and that African women were safer when in
a marriage contract. The concept did start to change, but very, very slowly .?
Margaret was one of a team of just two doctors
and two nurses with 10,000 people in their care
in what could best be described as the middle of
nowhere, braving electrical storms in planes
piloted by people who had never had a flying
lesson to reach communities spread across 15,000 miles.
?It was a very difficult three years,? she
recalls. ?Due to the civil war, people had been
moving into the forest for safety so their
diseases had regressed and leprosy was rife, as
was tuberculosis. But nobody went to bed unless they were dying.?

Read the rest of the interview in the Western
Mail newspaper
<http://www.walesonline.co.uk/showbiz-and-lifestyle/showbiz/2011/06/24/the- 
big-interview-author-margaret-maund-on-a-life-lived-to-the-full-91466-28931 
197/#ixzz1QBOVVnu2>http://bit.ly/lNzN7A
_____________________________
CD SHELF
Hope is our song: Hymns, songs and carols from Aotearoa New Zealand
Published by the New Zealand Hymnbook Trust
(Reviewed by Rosemary Dewerse in The Anglican,
The magazine of the Anglican Diocese of Auckland)
THis CD features the chamber choir, Viva Voce,
with their conductor John Rosser and Michael Bell
on the organ and piano performing a showcase of
twenty-seven hymns from the recently published
Hope is our Song, the latest hymnal from the New Zealand Hymnbook Trust.
Viva Voce is an accomplished choir and the
balance between voice, and voices and
instruments, is excellent. Careful thought has
been put into colouring the verses of each hymn
while working within the limits set by choosing
to keep faithful to the arrangements in the
hymnbook. Variety but also sensitivity to the
subject matter are provided by sometimes using
voices only, sometimes voices and instrument, with a range of dynamics.
This CD is a high-class "sampler," very useful
for church musicians or those selecting music for
services who are keen to use the latest offerings
from some of our talented New Zealand
hymn-writers, especially those as yet unfamiliar
with the hymns or unable to play the music
themselves. It is also a CD for the church music
connoisseur. It does, however, work best as music
for background listening. Only a small percentage
of the words can be clearly discerned unless you
know them already or are following them in the
hymnbook or the word booklet provided with the
CD. It is not a CD suitable for congregations to
sing along to. The Hymnbook Trust provide
"karaoke CDs" for this purpose, though not of this particular hymnbook yet.
For more visit <http://www.hymns.org.nz/>http://www.hymns.org.nz/
__________________________________
ANGLICAN CYCLE OF PRAYER
<http://www.anglicancommunion.org/acp/index.cfm>Click here for the full ACP
Friday 24-Jun-2011     The Birth of John the Baptist
Psalm: 6:1-9    Gen 3:1-7
Omu - Aran - (Province of Ibadan, Nigeria)
<http://www.anglicancommunion.org/tour/diocese.cfm?Idind=821>The
Rt Revd Philip Adeyemo
Saturday 25-Jun-2011
Psalm: 7:1-11,17    Gen 3:8-19
On the Lake - (Province of Owerri, Nigeria)
<http://www.anglicancommunion.org/tour/diocese.cfm?Idind=843>The
Rt Revd Chijioke Oti
Sunday 26-Jun-2011     Pentecost 2
Psalm: 8    Gen 3:20-24
On the Niger - (Province of the Niger, Nigeria)
<http://www.anglicancommunion.org/tour/diocese.cfm?Idind=400>The
Rt Revd Ken Okeke
Monday 27-Jun-2011
Psalm: 9:1-10    Acts 4:13-31
Ondo - (Province of Ondo, Nigeria)
<http://www.anglicancommunion.org/tour/diocese.cfm?Idind=401>The
Rt Revd George L Lasebikan
Tuesday 28-Jun-2011
Psalm: 10:1-12,16-18    Acts 4:32-37
Ontario - (Ontario, Canada)
<http://www.anglicancommunion.org/tour/diocese.cfm?Idind=88>The
Rt Revd George Bruce
Coadjutor Bishop of Ontario - (Ontario, Canada)
<http://www.anglicancommunion.org/tour/cathedral.cfm?IDNUMBER=18747>The
Rt Revd Michael D Oulton
Wednesday 29-Jun-2011
Psalm: 11:1-5,7    Gen 4:1-16
Oregon - (Province VIII, USA)
<http://www.anglicancommunion.org/tour/diocese.cfm?Idind=684>The
Rt Revd Michael Joseph Hanley
Thursday 30-Jun-2011
Psalm: 12    Gen 6:1-8
Orlu - (Province of Owerri, Nigeria)
<http://www.anglicancommunion.org/tour/diocese.cfm?Idind=402>The
Most Revd Bennett C I Okoro

__________________________________

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