01/08/2009

New bishops for Northern Malawi and Lake Malawi dioceses



ANGLICAN-INFORMATION
‘A voice for the voiceless in the Anglican Province of Central Africa’

The Ven Francis Kaulanda (on the right of picture) and Bishop James Tengatenga of South Malawi in the Rev'd Dr. Nicholas Henderson's Church of All Saints, Ealing




Saturday 1st August:
The election took place today for a new bishop of the Diocese of North Malawi vacant since the resignation of Bishop Christopher Boyle now working as an Assistant Bishop in the Diocese of Leicester, U.K.

The elected candidate was the Rev’d Fr Leslie Mtekateka of St Timothy’s, Chitipa.

Previously, the then only candidate, the Rev’d J. Scott Wilson, SSC, formerly of the Diocese of Fort Worth in the United States had withdrawn his candidacy. His active membership of a breakaway faction from the Episcopal Church known as the Anglican Church of North America (A.C.N.A) had ensured that even if elected he could not become a bishop in the Central African Province because he does not belong to a province in communion with the Archbishop of Canterbury.

The divisions in the Anglican Communion which have so plagued North America in particular and which have insidiously damaged parts of the Anglican Communion in Africa have had their logical outworking in this manifestation of schism.

The proceedings of the electoral process for the position in Northern Malawi were marred by the unseemly haranguing of North Malawi representatives by acting Dean Albert Chama who embarrassed those present by shouting out at them angrily ‘Why are you choosing white people?’.

In Lake Malawi
, where the House of Laity have held out for four years for their elected bishop, the Rev’d Dr. Nicholas Henderson of London, U.K. the successful candidate, at elections also held today, was the Venerable Francis Kaulanda, Archdeacon of Lilongwe. The other candidates were the Rev’d Joseph Kaswanyano and the Rev’d Paul Banda.

Francis Kaulanda has been a study leave student of Dr. Henderson in London and has been Archdeacon of Lilongwe for some years. Kaulanda will now have to work hard to regain the confidence of priests and people of the Diocese of Lake Malawi given the strong feelings of injustice that have resulted from the original flawed Court of Confirmation that unfairly condemned Henderson as being ‘of unsound faith’ following his election.

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2 comments:

  1. Although the Venerable Francis Kaulanda is a safe choice and will no doubt eventually be a good Bishop, he is relatively young and inexperienced. I feel the Diocese of Lake Malawi has missed out on the opportunity to move forward under the guidance of their original choice - the Revd Dr. Nicholas Henderson. He already has the trust of clergy and laity alike and the addition of his recent doctorate would have given extra credibility to the Diocese and indeed the Province as a whole.

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  2. Hmmm, the problem for the newly 'elected' bishop of Lake Malawi is that he is always going to be the bishop who got in on the back of a stolen election.

    The original bishop-elect was never authentically dismissed and is still in people's minds extant as the real bishop.

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