JERUSALEM (ANS)—Conservative Anglicans meeting in Jerusalem will create a global network to combat modern trends in the Church like the ordination of gay clergy.
According to the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC), the group has also decided to break its relationship with the liberal wings of the US and Canadian Churches.
The BBC says the group will operate independently of the Archbishop of Canterbury, but will stay inside the Anglican Communion.
The group of conservative Anglican traditionalists say they are fighting a "false Gospel" and the rift in the Church cannot be patched up.
The BBC reports that after five years of trying unsuccessfully to get the American church expelled for its ordination of an openly gay bishop and blessing of same-sex relationships in church, the traditionalists say the international alliance will emphasize a more orthodox reading of the Bible.
The plan was expected to be adopted today (June 29), the final day of the Global Anglican Future Conference (Gafcon), where some 1,100 traditionalists—many from developing countries—have been meeting in Jerusalem.
The group said it would stay inside the Anglican Communion, but with its own statement of theology and council of archbishops, the BBC reported.
"A major realignment has occurred and will continue to unfold," the group said in an official statement.
BBC religious affairs correspondent Robert Pigott says the existence of a separate shadow Communion is likely to have a profound impact on Anglican churches all over the world — providing disgruntled traditionalists with a powerful network of allies overseas.
He says the move underlines the alliance’s independence from the Archbishop of Canterbury, Rowan Williams, and makes clear that it will no longer recognize Dr Williams’ traditional role as the leader of the world’s Anglicans.
The BBC says conservatives at the Jerusalem event repeatedly criticized Dr Williams for failing to fully discipline the US Episcopal Church.
Its correspondent says long-standing divisions over how Anglicans should interpret the Bible have been widening steadily ever since the Episcopal Church consecrated the first openly gay bishop, Gene Robinson of New Hampshire, in 2003.