Archbishop Bob Duncan (Archbishop of the Anglican Church in North America
Anglican Bishop of Pittsburgh) has announced that March 2, 2014 is World Mission Sunday of Anglican Church in North America. To see the full news, please click HERE.

Archbishop Bob Duncan (Archbishop of the Anglican Church in North America
Anglican Bishop of Pittsburgh) has announced that March 2, 2014 is World Mission Sunday of Anglican Church in North America. To see the full news, please click HERE.
Anglican Network in Canada received an urgent email from Bishop Abraham Nhial requesting our prayers for South Sudan.
Bishop Abraham Nhial tells us that there has been an attempted coup resulting in two days of fighting in Juba, the capital. Bishop Nhial reports that “we already lost 12 people, more then 130 people are wounded, many people are still missing and many people are been displaced”.
Please pray for the Church in South Sudan, for wisdom for church leaders as they seek to be peacemakers, and for the Prince of Peace to reign in that fledgling nation.
Bishop Abraham Nhial, the diocese of Aweil, was one of the guest speakers at ANiC’s regional assembly in Vancouver last April.
The second Global Anglican Future Conference, which was held between Oct 21-26, 2013 in Nairobi, was a confirmation that the churches involved in the GAFCON movement are committed to the Anglican Communion and modelling how the communion should operate in the 21st century. GAFCon II Communique & Commitment can be found online.
The audio recordings and notes are available.The photos of the events are posted here.
Bishop Stephen Leung gave his charge at the assembly. He began by noting that God is a missional God who has entrusted us with proclaiming the Good News of salvation – of new creation – through Christ Jesus. The resulting faith community is to be a fellowship of repentance, forgiveness and reconciliation through which the world can see the living Christ. “The attraction of the Church… is Christ himself reigning over the transformed community in his love.”
Noting that, by 2017, it is projected that around 20 per cent of Canada’s population will be visible minorities, and that Canada is a magnet for international students, he said “we have a huge Gospel mission field among us” which, if we are faithful to the God’s mission, could resoundingly impact the growth of the Church worldwide. To this end AMMiC is: planting Asian and multicultural churches in Canada – five in the past year; charting a path for second generation leadership in these immigrant church communities; and seeking to serve the Church outside Canada by sending short-term mission teams.
He went on to discuss churches forming in Calgary, including: a Hindi-Urdu speaking church for South Asians; a South Sudanese Dinka community; and others – potentially four or more new churches in Alberta. Toronto is also a huge multicultural mission field and AMMiC is partnering with the Anglican Greenhouse Movement in Chicago to train young lay catechists in campus ministry. Bishop Stephen said “We would like to see more church plants to different ethnic groups [in Toronto], including South Asians, Filipinos, Mandarin-speaking Chinese, Korean and Hispanic people.” In the Vancouver area, AMMiC has six church plants and parishes and a renovation of the Good Shepherd church building will include an Asian and Multicultural Ministry training centre. His vision is for more church plants on university campuses and in the suburbs to “…reach out to international students, Mandarin-speaking Chinese, South Asian, Korean and Arab ethnic groups.”
He concluded by challenging us to grow spiritually as well as numerically through conversion growth. “God calls you and me to bring the gospel of Jesus Christ to ethnic visible minority groups… Indeed, this mission is a great challenge that demands far beyond mere human effort… God will reveal his way and call out leaders in his time….”
(summarised by Marilyn Jacobson)