1971 Ugandan coup d'état
Alfred Robert Tucker
Anglican Church in Central America
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Anglican realignment
Anglicans
Apolo Kivebulaya
Archdeacon
Bible Churchmen's Missionary Society
Bishop
Bishop of Uganda
Buganda
Burundi
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Diocese
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Ecumenism
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Extra-provincial Anglican churches
Festo Kivengere
GAFCON
Henry Luke Orombi
Hong Kong Sheng Kung Hui
Idi Amin
Imperial British East Africa Company
James Hannington
Janani Jakaliya Luwum
Joseph Mukasa
Kabaka of Buganda
Kalema of Buganda
Kampala
Kitgum
Lay Reader
Leslie Wilfrid Brown
Lord's Resistance Army
Low church
Main Page
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Martyrs of Uganda
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Michael Kyomya
Moral theology
Muslims
Mutesa I of Buganda
Mwanga II of Buganda
Nippon Sei Ko Kai
Parish
Personal ordinariate
Philippine Independent Church
Priest
Province de L'Eglise Anglicane Du Congo
Pygmy
Revivalism
Roman Catholics
Rwanda
Scottish Episcopal Church
Uganda
Uganda Christian University
Union of Utrecht (Old Catholic)
World Council of Churches
Alfred Robert Tucker
Anglican Church in Central America
Anglican Church in North America
Anglican Church of Australia
Anglican Church of Burundi
Anglican Church of Canada
Anglican Church of Kenya
Anglican Church of Korea
Anglican Church of Mexico
Anglican Church of Papua New Guinea
Anglican Church of Southern Africa
Anglican Church of Tanzania
Anglican Church of the Southern Cone of America
Anglican Communion
Anglican Episcopal Church of Brazil
Anglican realignment
Anglicans
Apolo Kivebulaya
Archdeacon
Bible Churchmen's Missionary Society
Bishop
Bishop of Uganda
Buganda
Burundi
Church Missionary Society
Church in Wales
Church in the Province of the West Indies
Church of Bangladesh
Church of Ceylon
Church of England
Church of Ireland
Church of Nigeria
Church of North India
Church of Pakistan
Church of South India
Church of Uganda
Church of the Province of Central Africa
Church of the Province of Melanesia
Church of the Province of Myanmar
Church of the Province of Rwanda
Church of the Province of South East Asia
Church of the Province of West Africa
Church of the Province of the Indian Ocean
Diocese
East Africa Protectorate
Ecumenism
Episcopal Church (United States)
Episcopal Church in Jerusalem and the Middle East
Episcopal Church in the Philippines
Episcopal Church of the Sudan
Extra-provincial Anglican churches
Festo Kivengere
GAFCON
Henry Luke Orombi
Hong Kong Sheng Kung Hui
Idi Amin
Imperial British East Africa Company
James Hannington
Janani Jakaliya Luwum
Joseph Mukasa
Kabaka of Buganda
Kalema of Buganda
Kampala
Kitgum
Lay Reader
Leslie Wilfrid Brown
Lord's Resistance Army
Low church
Main Page
Malankara Mar Thoma Syrian Church
Martyrs of Uganda
Metropolitan Archbishop
Michael Kyomya
Moral theology
Muslims
Mutesa I of Buganda
Mwanga II of Buganda
Nippon Sei Ko Kai
Parish
Personal ordinariate
Philippine Independent Church
Priest
Province de L'Eglise Anglicane Du Congo
Pygmy
Revivalism
Roman Catholics
Rwanda
Scottish Episcopal Church
Uganda
Uganda Christian University
Union of Utrecht (Old Catholic)
World Council of Churches
Church of Uganda
Primate
Most Reverend Henry Luke Orombi, Metropolitan Archbishop of Kampala
Headquarters
Namirembe Hill, Kampala
Territory
Uganda
Members
8,782,821 (as of 2002)
Website
Church of Uganda web
Anglicanism Portal
The Church of the Province of Uganda (or Church of Uganda) is a member church of the Anglican Communion. Currently there are thirty-one dioceses that make up the Church of Uganda, each one headed by a Bishop.
Each diocese is divided into Archdeaconries, each headed by a Senior Priest. The Archdeaconries are further subdivided into Parishes, headed by a Parish Priest. Parishes are subdivided into sub-parishes, headed by Lay Readers. As of the 2002 Census, 8,782,821 Ugandans (35.9% of the population) consider themselves affiliated with the Church1.
The current Metropolitan Archbishop is the Bishop of Kampala, the Most Reverend Henry Luke Orombi.
Contents
1 History
1.1 Early developments (1877 - 1897)
1.2 Diocese of Uganda (1897 - 1961)
1.3 Province of Uganda, Rwanda and Burundi (1961 - 1980)
1.4 Province of Uganda (1980 - present)
2 Dioceses
3 Ecumenical relations
4 See also
5 References
6 External links
History
The primary source for this section is listed in the References section below2
Early developments (1877 - 1897)
Shergold Smith and C T Wilson of the Church Missionary Society (CMS) were the first European Anglican missionaries to Uganda when they arrived in June 1877. They along with others who arrived later were based in the court of the Kabaka of Buganda near present day Kampala.
Kabaka Mutesa I was known for his brutality and used the rivalries of the Anglicans, Roman Catholics and Muslims against each other to try to balance the influences of the powers that backed each group. His successor, Kabaka Mwanga II took a more aggressive approach by expelling missionaries and insisting Christian converts abandon their faith on pain of torture or death.
In 1885, three Anglican Ugandans were killed and the arriving Archbishop of the Province of Eastern Equatorial Africa, James Hannington, together with his party were arrested, detained and later executed at the orders of the Kabaka. Joseph Mukasa, a Roman Catholic priest and an official of the Bugandan court rebuked the deed and was arrested and beheaded. This was the precursor to the large scale persecutions and killings between 1886 - 1887 of both Anglicans and Roman Catholics. Those who were killed in that period are remembered as the Martyrs of Uganda.
This incident brought about the interference of Imperial British East Africa Company who backed a rebellion against Mwanga II by Christian and Muslim groups. Mwanga II was eventually overthrown in 1888 and was replaced by his half brother Kiwewa. Kiwewa himself was overthrown by the Muslim faction in the court and was replaced by his Muslim brother, Kalema. British forces forced Kalema to abdicate and restored the throne to Mwanga II who in 1894 acceded to Uganda's status as a British protectorate. These incidences guaranteed the long term viability of the Anglican church in Uganda.
Diocese of Uganda (1897 - 1961)
Alfred Robert Tucker was made the third bishop of Eastern Equatorial Africa in 1890 and in 1897, the diocese of Uganda was carved out and Tucker became the first Bishop of Uganda. In 1893 the first Ugandans were ordained and Buganda was established as a centre for evangelisation in the Great Lakes Area. One of the most celebrated indigenous Anglicans of that period is Apolo Kivebulaya who is also known as the Apostle to the Pygmies for his work among the Pygmy people in eastern Congo.
Anglican growth in Uganda thrived by the turn of the 20th century and among the most notable contribution of the Anglican church was in the area of education. The first elementary schools were established in the 1890s. In 1913, the Bishop Tucker Theological College was established in Mukono and this institution was eventually expanded into what is now today the Uganda Christian University3. Likewise the CMS took a lead in public health with the establishment of the Mengo Hospital in 1897.
Tucker proposed controversial measures to the Church constitution that would grant considerable power to the indigenous Anglicans in what was known as the Native Anglican Church. These radical proposals were opposed by the missionaries which resulted in a church hierarchy that was primarily expatriate until the independence of Uganda decades later. The domination of the CMS, and its later offshoot BCMS, led to a low church tradition in the Church. Revivalism was also made a hallmark of the Church with the outbreak of the East African Revival that began in Rwanda in 1936.
In the 1950s, the emergence of a generation of Ugandan Church leaders began to replace the expatriate hierarchy. Festo Kivengere, who later became the Bishop of Kigezi in 1972, travelled to Europe as an evangelist for the first time. As an international figure he was a joint founder of African Evangelistic Enterprise.
Province of Uganda, Rwanda and Burundi (1961 - 1980)
In 1961, the growth of the Church of Uganda was recognised in the Anglican Communion with the establishment of the Province of Uganda and Rwanda-Urundi (later Province of Uganda, Rwanda and Burundi). The incumbent Bishop of Uganda, Leslie Brown, was the first Metropolitan Archbishop of the Province. Brown was succeeded in 1966 by the first Ugandan Archbishop, Erica Sabiti.
Relationships between the Anglicans and Roman Catholics that have been strained since the fighting of 1892 saw a new turn with the establishment of Uganda Joint Christian Council. This has included the small Orthodox Church of Uganda.
In 1971, Idi Amin gained power in a coup d'état and was initially greeted with enthusiasm by the general population of Uganda. The brutal and corrupt nature of the regime became evident soon and with the consecration of Janani Jakaliya Luwum as the new Archbishop in 1974, the Anglican Church became more outspoken in opposition to the policies of Amin. This led to the 1977 execution of the Archbishop on Amin's orders4.
Province of Uganda (1980 - present)
The overthrowing of Amin in 1979 saw the gradual resumption of normal life in Uganda although peace remained elusive in northern Uganda with the insurgency by the Lord's Resistance Army (LRA). In 1997, Winifred Ochola, the wife of the first Bishop of Kitgum was killed by a landmine planted by the LRA. Bishop Ochola has however continued to be committed in working towards peace and reconciliation in northern Uganda5
In 1980, Rwanda and Burundi were elevated to a separate province. The Church of Uganda has been active in working towards the recovery and rehabilitation of the country. The Church of Uganda has also played an active role in promoting AIDS awareness and prevention in Uganda. As a result of these efforts and others in the country, Uganda has begun reversing the effects of AIDS on her society6.
The Church of Uganda has been active in the leadership of southern hemisphere churches who have agreed to provide pastoral oversight and support to new Anglican churches in North America in the ongoing Anglican realignment.
On September 2, 2007, the Uganda church consecrated an American bishop, John Guernsey of Virginia, to oversee many of the U.S. parishes that it supports.7 This action was opposed by the Episcopal Church (TEC), the U.S. arm of the Anglican Communion. The Anglican Church in Africa is theologically conservative and deeply opposed to what it views as departures from orthodoxy in TEC, for example the ordination of gay priests.8 In keeping with this stance, the Church of Uganda declared itself in full communion with the Anglican Church in North America, a denomination formed by American and Canadian Anglicans opposed to their national churches' actions regarding homosexuality, on June 23, 2009.9
Dioceses
The primary source for this section is referred in the References section below10
Ankole
The Rt Revd George Tibeesigwa7
Bukedi
The Rt Revd Nicodemus Engwalas-Okille
Bunyoro-Kitara
The Rt Revd Nathan Kyamanywa
Busoga
The Rt Revd Michael Kyomya
Diocese of Central Buganda
The Rt Revd Jackson Matovu
Diocese of Central Busoga
Diocese of Eastern Busoga
Kampala
The Most Revd Henry Luke Orombi
Kigezi
The Rt Revd George Katwesigye
Kinkizi
The Rt Revd John Ntegyereize
Kitgum
The Revd Benjamin Ojwang (Bishop Elect)
Kumi
The Rt Revd Thomas Edison Irigei
Lango
The Rt Revd John Charles Odurkami
Luwero
The Rt Revd Evans Mukasa Kisekka
Madi & West Nile
The Rt Revd Dr. Joel Obetia
Masindi-Kitara
The Rt Revd Stanley Ntagali
Mbale
The Rt Revd Samwiri Namakhetsa Khaemba Wabulakha
Mityana
The Rt Revd Stephen Kaziimba
Muhabura (website)
The Rt Revd Cranmer Mugisha
Mukono
The Rt Revd Elia Paul Luzinda Kizito
Namirembe (website)
The Rt Revd Samuel Balagadde Ssekkadde
Nebbi
The Rt Revd Alphonse Watho-kudi
North Karamoja
The Rt Revd James Nasak
North Kigezi
The Rt Revd Edward Muhima
North Mbale
The Rt Revd Daniel Gimadu
Northern Uganda
The Rt Revd Nelson Onono-Onweng
Ruwenzori
The Rt Revd Benezeri Kisembo
Sebei
The Rt Revd Augustine Joe Arapyona Salimo
Soroti
The Rt Revd Charles Bernard Obaikol-Ebitu
South Karamoja (Moroto)
The Rt Revd Joseph Abura
South Rwenzori (website)
The Rt Revd Jackson Nzerebende Tembo
West Ankole
The Rt Revd William Magambo
West Buganda (website)
The Rt Revd Samuel Cephas Kamya
Ecumenical relations
Like many other Anglican churches, the Anglican Church of Uganda is a member of the ecumenical World Council of Churches.11 In October 2009, the Ugandan Church's leadership reacted to the Vatican's proposed creation of personal ordinariates for disaffected traditionalist Anglicans by saying that although he welcomed ecumencial dialogue and shared moral theology with the Catholic Church, the current GAFCON structures already meet the spiritual and pastoral needs of conservative Anglicans in Africa.12
See also
Martyrs of Uganda
Bishop of Uganda
Anglican realignment
References
^ 2002 Uganda Population and Housing Census, Bureau of Statistics (PDF)
^ History of the Church of Uganda
^ About Uganda Christian University
^ "Not even an archbishop was spared", Weekly Observer, February 16, 2006
^ Unight Board of Directors
^ UN : Africa Recovery : Uganda beating back AIDS
^ a b Church of Uganda Consecrates Two Bishops
^ BBC NEWS, Uganda church anoints US bishop
^ Church of Uganda. "Church of Uganda Declares itself in Full Communion with Anglican Church in North America". Anglican Church in North America. http://www.acnaassembly.org/index2.php/acna/page/109. Retrieved 2009-09-11.
^ Anglican Communion : Church of Uganda
^ http://www.oikoumene.org/?id=3587 World Council of Churches
^ A Pastoral Exhortation to the Faithful in the Anglican Communion
External links
Church of Uganda
Anglican Communion Office website
Article by Archbishop Orombi outlining his view of Anglicanism (Registration required)
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Churches in full communion: Malankara Mar Thoma Syrian Church · Union of Utrecht of the Old Catholic Churches · Philippine Independent Church
Churches candidate to full communion: Anglican Church in North America
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