Being only moderately in touch with the world as I travel, I missed the cheering news that the annual convention of the Antiochian Orthodox Archdiocese of North America voted last week to withdraw from the National Council of Churches. As reported by Touchstone,
The action was not a temporary “suspension” of membership, but a formal withdrawal from the NCC. The clergy unanimously approved the withdrawal, followed by a unanimous vote of the lay delegates supporting the move. An announcement of the final vote was met with thunderous applause by the Convention.
Reasons given for the withdrawal include the general liberalism of the NCC, whose General Secretary, Bob Edgar, withdrew his signature from a statement defining marriage as being between a man and a woman.
Metropolitan PHILIP, head of the Antiochian Orthodox Archdiocese, was reportedly outspoken in calling for the church to withdraw from the NCC, stating that the relationship had proven fruitless.
Ancient Faith Radio later aired an interview (available as an MP3 download) with the Very Rev. Olof Scott, chairman of the Archdiocese’s Interfaith Relations Commission, discussing the reasons for disillusion with the NCC’s version of ecumenicism, which, as I have noted before, is simply a thin religious veneer over an Angry Left political agenda.
The Antiochian decision is particularly encouraging in light of the Orthodox Church in America’s failure at its recent convention to follow up on a position paper urging disassociation from the NCC. It also suggests that the NCC leadership’s strategy of keeping Orthodox jurisdictions on the rolls through flattery, official titles and empty promises to pay greater attention to spiritual issues is losing its effectiveness. It will doubtless be several years before all of the members of SCOBA leave (and I sadly predict that my own jurisdiction, the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America, will be the last), but the process is off to an excellent start.
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