GAFCON Renames its Group, Elects Leaders
Conservative Anglican bishops seek 'principled disengagement' from Canterbury
NAIROBI, Kenya (RNS) — Weeks before the Rt. Rev. Sarah Mullally is officially installed as the first female archbishop of Canterbury, a group of conservative Anglican prelates known as GAFCON renamed their body the Global Anglican Communion and elected a set of leaders to exercise “principled disengagement” from the archbishop and the historic center of Anglicanism in England.

Leaders of numerous Anglican churches attend church service in addition to Global Anglican Communion in Nigeria, March 4, 2026. (AP Photo/Olamikan Gbemiga)
The four-day Global Anglican Future Conference meeting in Abuja, the Nigerian capital, that ended Friday (March 6) was expected to elect a rival to the Archbishop of Canterbury — its own “first among equals” among its bishops to convene and guide them. Instead, it elected Archbishop Laurent Mbanda, the Anglican primate of Rwanda, as the chairman of the newly constituted Global Anglican Council, a body consisting of primates, advisers and “guarantors.”
Archbishop Miguel Uchôa, the archbishop of the Anglican Church in Brazil, will be deputy chairman, and Bishop Paul Donison, a Canadian-born American bishop, the general secretary.
“We recognize that there is still much work to be done by the Global Anglican Council …,” said the communique issued by the group on Friday.
The meeting, dubbed the G26, had the theme, “Choose this day, whom you will serve,” a passage from the Book of Joshua in which the Israelites were challenged not to follow false gods. Leaders from the Global South, including 347 Anglican bishops and 121 lay and clerical Anglican leaders from 27 provinces, attended the meeting.
Mbanda, the GAFCON chairman, called the meeting in October to re-order the 85 million-member worldwide Anglican Communion and formally inaugurate the Global Anglican Communion.
The conservatives gathered in Abuja insisted the Global Anglican Communion is not a breakaway communion nor an alternative one. They claimed they are not schismatic either, but are working to return to a historic sense of the Anglican Communion as “a fellowship of autonomous provinces bound together by the Formularies of the Reformation,” the Communion’s foundational documents establishing its theological and liturgical identity.
“The Church of England was reformed by Thomas Cranmer, leaving the errors of the Church of Rome behind. Like Cranmer, we are reforming the Communion from within and leaving the Canterbury Instruments behind,” said the communique.
But in calling for the disengagement, the leaders want the newly constituted leadership to shun future meetings called by the archbishop of Canterbury, including the Lambeth Conference, which gathers the Anglican world’s primates every 10 years, and the meetings of the Anglican Consultative Council and its commissions. They will not be permitted to personally approve financial contributions to the council, and they are not to receive financial assistance from the compromised sources.
“A full and public disengagement from these structures is necessary,” said Mbanda in the communique, quoting the New Testament’s warnings that those who seek to lead the church astray must not be tolerated and Christians must refuse to have fellowship with those who promote false teaching.
The continued participation in Canterbury-led meetings, the group says, gives credence to the supposition that it is possible to “walk together despite deep disagreement” with those who have abandoned biblical teaching.
The statement warns that Global Anglican Communion officeholders who continue to participate in any Canterbury Instruments will not be able to continue in this role.
TO OUR READERS: The mission of MinistryWatch is to help Christian donors become more faithful stewards of the resources God has entrusted to them. Do you know of a story that will help us fulfill our mission, or do you want to give us feedback about this or any other story? If so, please email us at [email protected].


