First of all, Anglicanism is not a philosophy. In the second place, the word “irrelevant” is generally not a wise one to use. Is anything irrelevant? I certainly don’t think the Episcopal Church and other non-African branches of the Anglican Communion are irrelevant. I don’t know what your measure for “relevance in world affairs” is, and I don’t know why any Anglican should care.
Edwin
Hi Edwin,
Relevence is indeed important. Take the United Nations. Once a fairly relevent institution, years ago its proclaimations actually held some weight and significance in world affairs. Nowdays it has degenerated into an irrelevent instititution. By that I mean that no-fly zones that it puts up are ignored by rogue nations, threats by the U.N. are laughed-at, they let genocides happen with no consequence, and they permit countries like Iran and North Korea to have possible WMD and turn the other cheek.
When it comes to church, Christianity must be a relevent force against the evils of the secular world on the global stage. We see the Catholic Church standing up to many big issues worldwide: abortion, euthanasia, stem cell research, supposed gay ‘marriage,’ divorce, the death penalty, just war concepts, etc. The Pope is an outspoken opponent of these issues and he uses his pulpit to decry them as false idols and dangerous roads to be traveled. John Paul II was a key player in the end of the Soviet Union in the 1980’s. He challenged the world morally so many times. His theology of the body challenged the world sexually and he was a constant opponent of war and human rights abuses.
The Congress of the United States is currently an irrelevent body. The Executive Branch has overwhelmed them and has single-handedly run the country while they sat and wrote blank checks for 7 years. The only group with lower approval ratings than Bush is the congress!
This is what I mean, speaking up, acting out, and fighting for right.
Benedict XVI has used his pulpit to speak out against secular humanism, homosexuality, and he has called boldly for the re-Christianization of Europe.
Now you show me when an Archbishop of Canterbury or an Anglican delegation has made any such impact in the last 100 years. They have over 77 million members in the Anglican Church but their clergy are so divergent and at odds, their leadership is so weak and divided, and their message in essence so liberal that they have all but become irrelevent in world affairs. That’s what I said. I stand by it. Anyone who has been prominent, take Bishop Desmond Tutu in the 1980’s, that guy was a hack. He has been so liberal and despite his popularity, he got nothing accomplished.
I never said that all Anglicans are individually irrelevent. Some Anglicans I’ve met are more devout than Catholics and the bishop in our area Bishop John David Schofield, is an OUTSTANDING and highly-principaled leader! I admire the heck out of him. He was a maverick to lead his entire diocese out of the decayed and corrupt TEC (The Episcopal Church in America), but as an organic body, Anglicans have done little to fight evil in the world on a global stage and make a contribution. In that regard I see the entire body as generally becoming irrelevent.
Most splinter groups in Anglicanism who have aligned with Uganda or an Asian group or CANA or the Southern Cone, etc. all feel that the Archbishop of Canterbury is a complete moron and that Anglicanism is becoming irrelevent as a body. That’s why they’re re-aligning to regain that relevence and fight for Christ.