Gay marriages won’t be recognized in Kenya, says Anglican Archbishop Ole Sapit

Nairobi, KENYA – Anglican Church of Kenya Archbishop Jackson Ole Sapit has criticized the Church of England’s decision to allow priests to preside over civil marriages of same-sex couples.

The Archbishop accused the church of England of secularizing the church by normalizing sin stating that the Anglican Church of Kenya will not recognize it’s Mother Church decision to bless same-sex marriages.

“It is ridiculous that the Church of England affirms to remain faithful to the traditional teachings of marriage yet have sanctioned the so-called prayers of love to be used in their Churches to bless unions between persons of same-sex. This is hypocritical and a blatant lie for there is only one truth and not many versions or opinions of it,” he said.

“Whereas in the Anglican church we are saddened by the departure of our mother church from the true gospel, their resolutions do not apply to us and we do not recognize any teachings that is extra- biblical or contrary to the to the teachings of the Bible,” he said.

“We affirm that the Holy Scripture is authoritative in all matters of faith and any departure from historic Formularies and the plain teachings of the scripture must be corrected.”

This comes after the church of England allowed priests to bless the civil marriages of same-sex couples in a profound shift in the church’s stance on homosexuality after a historic vote by its governing body.

Ole Sapit in a statement has warned that the Church of England will become irrelevant and lose its identity unless it Repents and return to Biblical teachings of the Bible.

“Unless the church of England preaches the gospel as inherited, it will soon be irrelevant and it will lose its identity as a church,” he said.

The church of England voted by 250 votes to 181 to back a proposal by bishops intended to end years of painful divisions and disagreement over sexuality.

The synod also agreed that the church will apologies for the harm it has caused to LGBTQ people.
It welcomed a forthcoming review of a ban on clergy entering into same-sex civil marriages and a celibacy rule for clergy in same-sex relationships.