Time For You To Get Out Of The ACNA
Monday, June 14, 2021 at 04:36PM
Embryo Parson in "Three Streams" Anglicanism, ACNA, Anglican Follies, Anglican Realignment, Anglo-Catholicism, Continuing Anglicanism, Critical Race Theory, Evangelicalism, Illegal Immigration, Liberal-leftism, Neo-Anglicanism, REC, The Problem of Anglican Identity, Traditional Anglicanism
Time for you Anglo-Catholics in ACNA to get out of there and into the Continuum. You Reformed in ACNA too, for that matter.
From Fr. Lawrence Jones, an REC priest:

"So according to this article (https://anglicanchurch.net/staff-transitions/) it appears that the ACNA is officially claiming the Every Tribe and Nation Initiative and the Director of the Anglican Multiethnic Network as parts of the ACNA.

Yet, the person who is the assistant director of the Director of the Anglican Multiethnic Network, Johana-Marie Williams, posts as her reason for her personal blog:

'The goal of this blog is two-fold:

1. To show how who Jesus is answers womanist, posthumanist, and afro-pessimist ontological concerns.

2. To show how a deeper commitment to Jesus Christ, the Bible, and the Church can (and should) legitimately lead to a deeper commitment to fighting the capitalist-imperialist-racist-hetero-patriarchy.'
This should give one serious pause."
_____________________________________
Her bio at the "AMEN" page:

"Johana-Marie Williams Assistant Director

Johana-Marie Williams is a writer, artist, and historian focusing on Black women's health and religio-spiritual experiences and is passionate about reaching the lost through a transformed Church. As one of five children to Black Southern pastors who integrated high schools, universities, and churches, Johana-Marie firmly believes that the best apologetic to those who are already familiar with the Church and have been hurt by it is a visceral example of racial justice, multi-ethnicity, and fullness of life offered by the Gospel. This interest is expressed in a congregational context through her involvement in prayer ministry and conversations around multi-ethnicity at Incarnation Tallahassee. Her current projects included papers on the history of Black midwives in Florida and on the intellectual history post/transhumanism among Black women writers in speculative fiction."
Article originally appeared on theoldjamestownchurch (http://www.oldjamestownchurch.com/).
See website for complete article licensing information.