This is the title of an article that may be downloaded from the Christian Challenge from a recent conference about the Affirmation of St. Louis that a couple of jurisdictions participated in. While there are several articles from this conference that are worth downloading and reading, I thought that this was the best. Fr. Warren Tanghe, SSC (chaplain of All Saints' Convent - Catonsville, MD) exhorts orthodox Anglican parishes in various regions to enter into grassroots partnerships to foment a sort of "bottom-up" organic unity, rather than legislating a top-down merger, as those have been prone to fail in the past. Bp. Paul Hewitt, SSC of the Diocese of the Holy Cross has a response which includes nine suggestions for concrete action. Many of these steps are being taken right now, which is surely positive. It is a good article that is well worth reading, and may give each of us ideas as to what we can do in our part of the country to promote unity amongst orthodox Anglicans.
Jurisdictional chaos is a sad reality within the Church. It is not only continuing Anglicans that have the problem. Roman Catholics have overlapping jurisdiction, as do the Orthodox. And their jurisdictions overlap with each others' and ours! So don't let anyone tell you that it's just us. I think that the problem of multiplying jurisdictions within the continuing movement, though, comes in part from a defective understanding of the sacrament of Holy Orders, which is viewed more so as something that an individual possesses rather than something that belongs to the Church. We have ultimately, I believe, Rome to thank for this. Their ridiculous condemnation of Anglican Orders, as many scholars have pointed out, has made some Anglicans think of orders as something that is limited to a pedigree, while other important items, such as orthodoxy and "communio", are conveniently left out of the equation. If holy orders is limited to a lineage, then any "bishop" can go start his own "apostolic" jurisdiction whenever he feels like it. In the end, such practice actually undermines the historic Catholic position on Holy Orders and Apostolic Succession, and destroys the unity of the Church.