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Book spot : Sydney Anglicanism: An Apology by Michael Jensen

The Sydney Anglicans are, nationally and internationally, among the most influential and despised group of Anglicans in the world.

Michael P. Jensen
Sydney Anglicanism: An Apology
Eugene, or : Wipf & Stock
Available from Amazon.com (USA) – $9.99 on Kindle

Here’s the blurb:
“Sydney’s evangelical Anglicans have been the focus of a great deal of controversy and criticism in the Anglican world. Their blend of conservatism towards doctrine and radicalism towards the institutional church has made them something of an enigma to other Anglicans. But what makes them really tick? Michael Jensen provides a unique insider’s view into the convictional world of Sydney Anglicanism. He responds to a number of the common misunderstandings about Sydney Anglicanism and challenges Sydney Anglicans to see themselves as making a positive contribution to the wider church and to the city they inhabit.”

The Sydney Anglicans are, nationally and internationally, among the most influential and despised group of Anglicans in the world. I’ve seen TV documentaries about them, read scathing critiques about them on-line and in print, and even be privy to several in-house debates that they have with each other! In this book, Dr. Michael P. Jensen, lecturer in doctrine at Moore Theological College and son of the out-going Archbishop of Sydney Peter Jensen, gives us a view from one who has grown up and works in the very epicenter of Sydney Anglicanism. He attempts to give an accurate depiction of Sydney Anglicans (SA), away from the pro-SA propaganda that the Anglo-Catholic Liberals are about to over run the Emerald City, and away from the vehement rhetoric of Anglo-Catholic Liberals who caricature them as raving fundies who hate women and gays. Jensen’s book has two parts: SAs in relation to the Bible and the Church.

In part one, Jensen attempts to dispel the rumour that SAs are fundamentalists. He notes that “‘Fundamentalist’ is a playground bully among words” (13) He observes that SAs do not generally believe things normally attributed to fundamentalists like six day creation, pre-millennial eschatology, and right-wing approaches to politics. Simply believing in the primacy of scripture as SAs do does not make one a fundamentalist, but it is a good way of immunizing against fundamentalism. Jensen further points out that SAs have been at the forefront of a resurgent biblical theology movement in evangelicalism, led principally by Donald Robinson and Graham Goldsworthy. This is a particular Reformed emphasis, reading the OT and NT as a unity. In fact, Jensen states that, “The strong critiques of some aspects of [N.T.] Wright’s work offered by some Sydney Anglican scholars masks the great similarities between the approaches they share as a matter of fact” (39). On propositional revelation, Jensen discusses Broughton Knox’s infamous article on the topic that appeared in a 1960 issue of Reformed Theological Review. He claims that Knox’s views have been partly misunderstood and the notion of propositional truth simply means that God speaks the truth. Of course, that does not mean that revelation cannot be personal at the same time, something argued persuasively by Jensen’s father Peter Jensen in his book The Revelation of God. It is this doctrine of scripture as revelation that has also led to the centrality of preaching in SA circles.

In part two, Jensen draws attention to the ecclesiology of Robinson and Knox, two influential SA figures. For Robinson, ekklesia meant chiefly the local church and it was more of a verbal idea, i.e., churching. The upshot is that there was very little concern for a universal or institutional church. Jensen proceeds to offer a well directed critique of this the Robinson-Knox view asserting that it wrongly denies that the NT has any notion of the church as universal, there is a lack of attention given to the earthly and heavenly aspects of church, and it lacks a concerted engagement with the doctrine of the Holy Spirit. The best chapter is chapter seven on “Are Sydney Anglicans Actually Anglicans?” The Anglo-Catholic Liberalism of most of the West, where Anglicanism has either minimal or no ideational content, sees unity in a shared liturgy, not in doctrine. The problem obviously is that the 39 Articles and the writings of Cranmer and Hooker demonstrate that the Anglican Church was a Reformed Church. Modern evangelicalism, far from being a betrayal of the Anglican way, is really an attempt to recapture the Reformed nature of Anglicanism. The big issues that SAs are known for is the opposition to women in the priesthood and episcopacy. Jensen details the various diocesan discussions of the matter including the late 1990′s and early 2000′s where a trinitarian model of Jesus as equal in being but subordinated in role to the Father was used to justify a view of women as equal in being but subordinated in role to men. He notes that a tactical mistake made by the SA committee was to use the word “subordinationism” since it did run the gauntlet of sounding Arian. Jensen thankfully endorses the view of Bird and Shillaker that it is better to think of the son’s eternal and obedient self-distinction from the Father. At the end of the chapter, Jensen believes that SAs need to do three things about gender:  To better define what is meant by authority, freedom and obedience; to decry sexism where it exists; and to develop a notion of ministry which includes partnership between men and women. Jensen notes too that the SAs have shown more restraint on the issue of Lay Presidency in the eucharist than what Anglo-Catholic Liberal churches elsewhere have shown on the ordination of actively gay men and women to the episcopacy. The final chapter about the Anglican Church League takes us behind the veil into the machinations of the primary conservative lobbyist group in the SAs itself.

Jensen’s book is worth reading because it addresses one of the most controversial diocese in worldwide Anglicanism. Jensen’s book is valuable as an insider’s perspective that gives clarity beyond hostile caricatures, it provides a historical explanation and theological defence as to why SAs believe and act as they do, but it also includes some healthy in-house critiques and recommendations as to how SAs can avoid being overly sectarian and contribute to both world Anglicanism and international evangelicalism.

Michael Jensen’s Sydney Anglicans: An Apology has prompted some more reviews by insiders and outsiders.

Arthur Davis, a missionary in Tanzania, reviews it over at Jesus Creed.

Sydney Anglicanism’s shrillest detractors don’t seem to be conversant with real live Sydney Anglicans. For the non-Sydney, non-Anglican reader, the great value of An Apology is in hearing a Sydney Anglican respond to criticisms in his own terms. There are of course questions to be asked of Sydney Anglicans, but if these are to be of any use, they need to be connected with a Sydney Anglican voice. This is exactly what An Apology provides: an authentic and fruitful starting place for conversation.
More at; http://www.patheos.com/blogs/jesuscreed/2013/03/16/sydney-anglicans-an-insiders-view/

Tony Payne also rips into it over at the The Briefing for being insufficiently Chappological.

Michael meets his opponents on the ground of their choosing—their unhappiness with Sydney’s supposed puritanism and fundamentalism; their distaste for how ‘un-Anglican’ Sydney is compared with the practice of most other Australian Anglicans; their abhorrence of our doctrine of church, our opposition to women’s ordination, or our advocacy of lay administration. This locates the discussion within a world view where the truly significant questions revolve around church structure and order, the sacraments, the debates of academic theology, the search for social justice for the oppressed (women, gays), the quest to influence society for the better, and the maintenance and reform of Anglican liturgy and tradition. But these issues are of less (and in some cases very little) significance for Sydney Anglicanism, because our worldview rests on different foundations. The abiding and central issue for us remains the gospel of Christ, including the repentance and faith that it calls forth and the disciple-making urgency that it motivates.

More at: http://matthiasmedia.com/briefing/2013/03/chappo-and-the-magic-potion/