Anglican Church in North America, Anglican church formed in 2009 in Bedford, Texas. Its founders were theological traditionalists who had seceded from the Episcopal Church in the United States of America (ECUSA) and the Anglican Church of Canada.
Beginning in the 1990s, disputes about the validity within Anglican theology of ordaining women (particularly as bishops) and homosexuals fueled tension between conservatives and liberals in the Anglican Communion, the global association of Anglican churches. These disputes became especially heated among congregations of the ECUSA after the election of V. Gene Robinson, an openly gay man, as the bishop of New Hampshire in 2003. Anglican churches subsequently were pressed from both theological liberals and traditionalists at home and abroad over whether or not they would bless same-sex unions (this decision was largely left up to the individual bishop of a diocese). Soon after Robinson’s installation, conservatives in the denomination began to consider secession, and by 2008 the dioceses of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania; Quincy, Illinois; Fort Worth, Texas; and San Joaquin, California, as well as several individual parishes, had left the ECUSA. Dissenting congregations from the Anglican Church of Canada were represented by the Anglican Network in Canada.
In 2004 the Anglican Network joined several other conservative organizations to form the Common Cause Partnership, providing a united theological response to liberalizing trends within Anglicanism in the U.S. and Canada. Other prominent members of the partnership were the American Anglican Council, the Reformed Episcopal Church, and Forward in Faith North America. These groups met in Wheaton, Illinois, in December 2008 to affirm the Jerusalem Declaration, a document created earlier that year to emphasize the need for orthodoxy and discipline within Anglicanism. They also proposed a draft constitution and a set of canons for a new Anglican Church in North America (ACNA), both of which were ratified at the church’s founding conference in Bedford on June 22, 2009. Robert William Duncan, a vocal conservative and former Episcopal bishop of the Pittsburgh diocese, was named the new denomination’s first archbishop. Several observers from across the Anglican Communion attended the meeting, including a representative of Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams, the Anglican Communion’s titular head.
At its founding the ACNA comprised approximately 100,000 members, 800 clergy, and 30 bishops. Its new constitution allowed for the ordination of women as priests but not as bishops. It also called for strict adherence to an orthodox Anglican theology based on the traditional doctrinal statement of Anglicanism, the Thirty-nine Articles of Religion of 1571, stipulating that they be “taken in their literal and grammatical sense.” The church took a conservative stance on the issue of homosexuality, specifically rejecting both same-sex unions and the ordination of homosexuals. Although several Anglican churches in Africa and South America declared themselves in full communion with the ACNA, the church was not immediately recognized as a member of the Anglican Communion because of the status of the ECUSA and the Anglican Church in Canada as the established provinces in their respective countries.