Houston: Massive turnout at CANA West – All Saints Anglican Thanksgiving Service

Missionary Bishop of CANA-Diocese of the West, The Right Reverend Dr. Felix Orji anoints parishioners. This Thanksgiving Service serves as gratitude to God empowering the determination of His children in spreading the gospel and facilitating mission work enthuses the good news of Christ.
Missionary Bishop of CANA-Diocese of the West, The Right Reverend Dr. Felix Orji anoints parishioners. This Thanksgiving Service serves as gratitude to God for empowering the determination of His children in spreading the gospel, and facilitating the mission work that enthuses the good news of Christ.

By Anthony Obi Ogbo

Guardian News (Houston, TX) – Sunday Afternoon, all roads led to one direction – Renn Street in South West Houston where the Missionary Diocese of Convocation of Anglicans in North America West (CANA-West) celebrated a Welcome and Thanksgiving service of the All Saints Anglican Church (ASAC) in Southwest Houston. “We chose to do this 2 P.M. to allow worshippers from other parishes enough time to attend their various services and join us” an organizing member of the event explained.

The service jointly presided by Missionary Bishop of CANA-Diocese of the West, The Right Reverend Dr. Felix Orji and the Parish Rector, Venerable Dr. Ugochukwu Okoroafor showed a massive turnout of Christian celebrants, partaking in a traditional Anglican venerating process; inspiring God’s love and protection  of His Church, and enabling an environment consistent with the good news of Christ.

Service line up, in addition to a full house of worshippers, witnessed church frontrunners and spiritual leaders from other neighboring parishes; including priests, knights, and members of Parochial Church Council. “We are leaving now – the church is packed and they are having refreshment, but we have another event and just have to leave” a worshipper with his family told our reporter.

Procession - Parish Rector, Venerable Dr. Ugochukwu Okoroafor. The service jointly presided by Missionary Bishop of CANA-Diocese of the West, The Right Reverend Dr. Felix Orji and the Parish Rector, Venerable Dr. Ugochukwu Okoroafor showed a massive turnout of Christian celebrants, partaking in a traditional Anglican venerating process;
Procession – Parish Rector, Venerable Dr. Ugochukwu Okoroafor. The service jointly presided by Missionary Bishop of CANA-Diocese of the West, The Right Reverend Dr. Felix Orji and Venerable Dr.  Okoroafor showed a massive turnout of Christian celebrants, partaking in a traditional Anglican venerating process.

All Saints Anglican Church, the largest Anglican Church built by a Nigerian congregation in North America embodies more than a worship center, but also symbolizes determination and perseverance of Nigerians living in Houston.  This Thanksgiving Service serves as gratitude to God for empowering the determination of His children in spreading the gospel, and facilitating mission work that enthuses the good news of Christ.

CANA West, a missionary diocese of the Anglican Church in North America, is one of the four missionary dioceses of the Convocation of Anglicans in North America established in 2005. The Dioceses embodies the ACNA and the Church of Nigeria in the United States, comprising of 23 parishes in 9 American states, namely; Maryland, Wisconsin, Tennessee, Georgia, Texas, Wyoming, Colorado, New Mexico and Washington and one Canadian province, Ontario.

All Saints Anglican Church is on 13403 Renn Road, Houston, TX 77083.  For more information about church activities, please call 281-776-9989; 832-462-0261 or 281-217-1323.

CANA West welcomes Houston’s All Saints Anglican with Special Sunday Service

The service, scheduled at the Parish on 13403 Renn, Sunday, May 22 would welcome ASAC into the diocese, and feature special Thanksgiving by the Parish Rector, Venerable Dr. Ugochukwu Okoroafor.
The service, scheduled at the Parish on 13403 Renn, Sunday, May 22 would welcome ASAC into the diocese, and feature special Thanksgiving by the Parish Rector, Venerable Dr. Ugochukwu Okoroafor.

Guardian News (Houston, TX) – The Missionary Diocese of Convocation of Anglicans in North America West (CANA-West) has announced a Welcome and Thanksgiving service of the All Saints Anglican Church (ASAC) in Southwest Houston. The service, scheduled at the Parish on 13403 Renn, Sunday, May 22 would welcome ASAC into the diocese, and feature special Thanksgiving by the Parish Rector, Venerable Dr. Ugochukwu Okoroafor. Event time is 2.00 pm.

All Saints Anglican Church, the largest Anglican Church built by a Nigerian congregation in North America has been challenged with internal conflicts in recent times, but today, according to worshippers, the Parish has rebounded in good spirit to live within the realms of Anglican Tradition. The Thanksgiving Service serves as gratitude to God for shielding His Church, and empowering it to spreading the gospel and mission work in other to sustain the good news of Christ.

Missionary Bishop of CANA-Diocese of the West, The Right Reverend Dr. Felix Orji will be at this event as a special guest, as the Parish celebrates its CANA West divine initiation. CANA West, a missionary diocese of the Anglican Church in North America, is one of the four missionary dioceses of the Convocation of Anglicans in North America established in 2005. The Dioceses embodies the ACNA and the Church of Nigeria in the United States, comprising of 23 parishes in 9 American states, namely; Maryland, Wisconsin, Tennessee, Georgia, Texas, Wyoming, Colorado, New Mexico and Washington and one Canadian province, Ontario.

Missionary Bishop of CANA-Diocese of the West, The Right Reverend Dr. Felix Orji will be at this event as a special guest, as the Parish celebrates its CANA West divine initiation. CANA West, a missionary diocese of the Anglican Church in North America, is one of the four missionary dioceses of the Convocation of Anglicans in North America established in 2005.
Missionary Bishop of CANA-Diocese of the West, The Right Reverend Dr. Felix Orji will be at this event as a special guest, as the Parish celebrates its CANA West divine initiation. CANA West, a missionary diocese of the Anglican Church in North America, is one of the four missionary dioceses of the Convocation of Anglicans in North America established in 2005.

The service on Sunday is expected to draw a huge crowd from Houston and surrounding cities, according to the Parish administrators. To many worshippers, ASAC is not just a church across the street, but symbolizes significant values consistent with core Anglican foundation, constructive in building families based on scriptural truth, discipline and Nigeria’s cultural essence.  “We are glad that our community is beginning to understand that ASAC is a Church – a place of worship; the place where people come to worship God in Spirit and Truth, and nothing more” said a parishioner.  

 All Saints Anglican Church is on 13403 Renn Road, Houston, TX 77083.  For more information about church activities, please 281-776-9989.  The Thanksgiving and Welcome Service will be held at the Church facility on Renn. For information, please call the Rector directly at 832-462-0261 or Board Chairman, 281-217-1323.

Houston’s All Saints Anglican: Don’t you think The Guardian deserves an apology?

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By Anthony Obi Ogbo
By Anthony Obi Ogbo

All Saints Anglican Church, the largest Anglican Church built by a Nigerian congregation in North America has been cobwebbed with internal conflicts since 2010, costing tens of thousands in legal fees and causing the Parish to split at least twice into other factions now operating as different Anglican churches.

Today, the issues at the All Saints get worse by the hour, with different cliques and factions fighting each other to the extreme. Just a few weeks ago, the Parish was on the local TV news showing an angry faction demonstrating their concerns with the church management.

But this is really not the reason for this piece. Here is my reason for revisiting matters of the All Saints Anglican. Since August 2015 till date, calls about the present issues at the All Saints have bombarded our newsroom, with individuals asking for a media coverage of their persisting internal squabbles.

These calls were normal. For instance, International Guardian has always championed investigative stories on crucial community matters.  Furthermore, the establishment of the All Saints Anglican Church had a compelling story that resonated with the Nigerian immigrants, their struggle for identity, and their survival in a society where immigration is often a taboo topic. These were why The Guardian took the bull by the horn in its previous coverages of the All Saints.

These media coverages however attracted so much resentment by those not favored by our reports. They declared war against the newspaper and went as far as making an announcement during a church service; asking members to visit local stores and destroy every Guardian publication. Also, advertising clients were persuaded to cut off ties with the paper. But this was around 2012.

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Surprisingly today, these same individuals who vowed to destroy the Guardian (but could not) are the same folks calling our news room to again request a  coverage of their latest ordeal – exactly the same ordeal revealed by the Guardian almost four years ago.

Sounds strange, but those who actually went to the stores destroying copies of the Guardian years ago are the same folks seen on the TV demonstrating what our reports warned them about  back then.

Organizational challenges might be paramount to progress because good leadership evaluates issues and iniquities of the past as the parameter in managing the present and the future. In the apostolic fraternity however, Christians clear their guilty consciences through genuine repentance and confession to seek God’s compassionate forgiveness and salvation.

These are facts about spirituality; thus, Christian often fall from issues to issues when they conceal their transgressions with some nonchalant forgive-and-forget “let’s move on” lyrics; or when they seek resolution through a complicated court process rather than a Bible-based mediation forum or consensus. No wonder, the book of Proverbs (28:13) specifically hinted that  whoever that conceals his transgressions will not prosper, but he who confesses and forsakes them will obtain mercy.

The questions thus arise on whether the warring members of the All Saints would seek ways other than a shameful street fighting; legal wrangling; verbal and physical abuses; destructive gossips and individual unforgiving spirits to solve their internal concerns? Would these warring members settle for a spiritual retreat and kneel before the Holy Ghost for a spiritual intervention; over uncontrolled broiling anger of congregants in  a Parish that has turned the alter of God into a damaging wrestling and boxing ring?

While we all join hands and pray for this miracle, one more thing may be appropriate. I think that The Guardian deserves a little apology from the Houston All Saints community – or what do you think? I can take those calls anytime, and I’m never on long distance.

  Dr. Ogbo is the publisher of International Guardian based in Houston, Texas:  anthony@guardiannews.us

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