Some say, “yes”:
And some say, “no:
This is what the CofE director of communications (Arun Arora)is referring to:
So, no – the Episcopal Church has not been suspended from or by the Anglican Communion. The fact that the Primates’ approach is problematic regarding issues of human sexuality is another matter. But let us not imagine that these events make TEC “second class Anglicans,” let alone that they remove TEC members from the Communion in any way. They should have little impact on how members of TEC see themselves as part of a wider Communion, a community of Churches with a common history and with an extraordinary scope and richness.
And this is what George Conger is referring to:
An overwhelming majority of the Primates present voted that TEC should be excluded from all meetings which represent the Anglican Communion and that it should be suspended from internal decision-making bodies, initially for three years.
So is TEC suspended from the Anglican Communion or not? It depends on whether they really are disinvited from the meetings that Archbishop Eliud Wabukala is referring to above; we shall have to wait and see.
I don’t know about you, but the suspense is killing me.
“The fact that the Primates’ approach is problematic regarding issues of human sexuality is another matter.” That’s rich: anyone would think that the Primates as a body were going in for the public promotion of same-sex vice or something like that …
Both the TEC and the ACoC should have been expelled from the Communion but the ABC simply was following in their footsteps by worshiping “political correctness” — what a deceptive tern — rather than standing up for the Gospel. The GAFCON primates and other orthodox branches of the Communion should form their own group as the current state of the Anglican Communion is neither Anglican or Christian.