After decades of fierce controversies over sexuality and theology in the Anglican Communion, some leaders of a conservative coalition say it's time to make a final break from what has long been one of the world's largest Protestant church families.
That would make a slow-growing Anglican schism complete — if it happens.
But how many church provinces go along with the rupture remains to be seen. Some of the communion's largest and fastest-growing churches in Africa belong to the conservative group that announced the break — known as the Global Anglican Future Conference, or Gafcon. But several member churches have been silent on the plan, weeks after it was announced.
Gafcon's announcement came shortly after the October appointment of Bishop Sarah Mullally as the first woman to be archbishop of Canterbury, the Anglican Communion's symbolic spiritual leader. Many in England and other Western countries hailed this as a historic breaking of a stained-glass ceiling.
But leaders of Gafcon criticized the appointment, as did some other bishops. Some said only men should be bishops, but their bigger criticism was her support for some LGBTQ+-inclusive policies — the key fault line in the communion.
Within days of Mullally's appointment, Gafcon issued another declaration. It completely rejected the Anglican Communion as it has been structured historically. That structure has included a set of governing and advisory bodies and recognition of the archbishop of Canterbury as a symbolic ''first among equals" among leaders of self-governing national churches, known as provinces. Since provinces are self-governing, the archbishop's authority is highly limited.
The ''future has arrived,'' said Gafcon's chairman, Archbishop Laurent Mbanda of Rwanda, in its October statement. ''We declare that the Anglican Communion will be reordered.'' His statement decried churches it said had violated a 1998 statement by the communion's bishops, opposing same-sex unions and describing ''homosexual practice as incompatible with Scripture.''
Gafcon proclaimed what it calls a restructured ''Global Anglican Communion.'' It would be overseen by a new council of top national bishops, or primates. Whoever is elected chairman would be ''first among equals.''