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Home > 2001 > June (Web-only)Christianity Today, June (Web-only), 2001  |   |  
Leading Anglican Priest Protests by Cutting Ties With Church in Zimbabwe
White clergyman upset with appointment of bishop and with President Mugabe.



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Timothy Neill, a prominent Anglican priest in Zimbabwe and vocal critic of the Mugabe government, has announced that he is cutting all links with the Anglican church in Zimbabwe at the beginning of July.

In an interview with Ecumenical News International, Neill also called on the international community to force Zimbabwe's controversial leader, President Robert Mugabe, out of office at the end of his current term next year. "To me, this man [Robert Mugabe] is a bully, and Zimbabweans need others to help us get the bully off us," Neill said. "It's like at school, you need the help of others to deal with a bully."

He added that the country was slowly drifting towards civil war. "The trouble with that is you don't recover afterwards. It will take years," said Neill.

The 47-year-old white Zimbabwean clergyman now intends to take up other work. While remaining an Anglican, he is cutting ties with the church in his own country as a protest over the recent election of Nolbert Kunonga, a 49-year-old black priest, as Bishop of Harare. Neill, who had also been a candidate for the position, said he did not recognize Kunonga as bishop because his nomination had violated Canon Law.

"My last service will be on the 1st of July," said Neill. "I have already told the diocese's standing committee. Thereafter I will pursue human rights work or leave the country." He said he would move out of St Luke's Church in Greendale, Harare, where he has ministered to an 800-member mainly black congregation since 1985.

He said he was moving into his parents' house in Kambanji, about 10 miles outside Harare. "It's very sad," the priest said. "At my last service, I am going to cry. You can imagine leaving after 16 years at the parish."

Neill was removed as vicar-general of the church in Harare in February when the diocese's standing committee passed a vote of no confidence in him.

"Some [clergy] have said to me: 'Just accept the new bishop, it doesn't matter.' What a dreadful thing to say. Many people have been ruined for trying to work in such a system. The Bible says 'a slanderer divides friends,'" Neill said.

In December, Neill objected to the election of Kunonga to the bishop's post, claiming the procedure had contravened church laws and had been tainted by racism and slander. Neill said that the clergyman who nominated Kunonga should have been disqualified because he had circulated a letter accusing Neill of racism as the church prepared to select the new bishop.

The letter was written by Godfrey Tawonezvi, a priest at St Paul's church in Highfield, Harare, and then sent to Neill and copied to priests and deacons. It read in part: "I note with concern that you are ambitious to be the next Bishop of the Diocese of Harare. My own assessment is that such an ambition by you brings shame to the church of God."

Tawonezvi also accused Neill of perpetuating racial injustice in the diocese, and wanting to become bishop in order to continue dominating blacks.

Neill claimed that Kunonga was part of the smear campaign against him in the lead-up to the episcopal election.

Although Kunonga was not on the final list of candidates for the bishop's position, a 12-member confirmation panel—comprising two bishops and 10 clergymen—unanimously confirmed his election on March 9.

"It was all a Zanu PF thing," Neill said, referring to the political party led by President Robert Mugabe. "As far as I am concerned, there is no Anglican bishop in Harare because the post was not filled canonically."

Bishop Kunonga recently declared his full support for President Mugabe's controversial land reform programme under which the government is seizing land from white farmers and handing it over to landless black citizens. The bishop also accused Western governments of interfering in the affairs of African nations.





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