S
Syele
Guest
Today I am visiting an Anglican Church.
Can anyone tell me the difference between Anglican and Episcopal?
Can anyone tell me the difference between Anglican and Episcopal?
Depends on what sense the terms are used. Most generally, episcopal only refers to a church polity; it’s governed by bishops (episcopi) but I will assume that you are not thinking of that.Today I am visiting an Anglican Church.
Can anyone tell me the difference between Anglican and Episcopal?
Yes, if what I’m referring to is what you are looking at. It’s doctrinal differences that caused the split from the Episcopal Church.So there are no Doctrinal differences?
Unsure what the question is. Can you try again?Wouldn’t it matter if you were high Episcopal vs. Low? And if you were looking at a high Anglican vs. low?
Aren’t some of each group, at least in America, more “catholic” than others? Aren’t some more ritual and more traditional in thought and understanding?Unsure what the question is. Can you try again?
GKC
Yes. And that is true of Anglicanism, historically, in various ways.Aren’t some of each group, at least in America, more “catholic” than others? Aren’t some more ritual and more traditional in thought and understanding?
I cannot really add to anything GKC has already stated. He is of course spot on.I have just gotten home from visiting the Church. I’m still trying to follow just who they are affiliated with. The Priest mentioned he used to be at an Episcopal Church, and their website links to this article acicanada.ca/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=177:anglican-leaders-begin-forming-new-church-in-north-america&catid=3:newsflash
Its called St. Patrick’s Anglican Church and seems very new (They are still building the building and are at a temporary location.)
Ok. That makes thing a little clearer. The groups on the page you gave the link for are the major groups beginning to coalesce around the 4 bishops who recently left the Episcopal Church, with their dioceses, corporately. This means that they are mainly the ones who are most recently leaving but not separating from the Anglican Communion, as the Continuing groups did, years before.I have just gotten home from visiting the Church. I’m still trying to follow just who they are affiliated with. The Priest mentioned he used to be at an Episcopal Church, and their website links to this article acicanada.ca/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=177:anglican-leaders-begin-forming-new-church-in-north-america&catid=3:newsflash
Its called St. Patrick’s Anglican Church and seems very new (They are still building the building and are at a temporary location.)
I endorse this post, with the exception of the dubious things said about that GKC character, who is not to be trusted.I cannot really add to anything GKC has already stated. He is of course spot on.
The various multiple more fundamentally Anglican spin offs from the Episcopal church (TEC) and the Anglican Church of Canada are coalescing into what will be a new Anglican province in North America. The parish you visited is part of that general movement. I don’t know if there is one website to represent them all yet, the various groups are all heading toward each other pretty aggressively now and eventually their individual distinctions will be less significant. This may be the website for the movement as a whole, I am not sure.
One of the most interesting and laudable aspects of this movement is that it seems to have drawn in the Reformed Episcopal church, a body that has been separated from the Anglican Communion (and Canterbury) for a very long time, well over one hundred years.
A good place to observe this ongoing process is Dr David Virtue’s website Virtueonline. Interestingly, Dr Virtue at this time seems to still be a member of an Episcopal parish.
Michael
How was Church?I have just gotten home from visiting the Church. I’m still trying to follow just who they are affiliated with. The Priest mentioned he used to be at an Episcopal Church, and their website links to this article acicanada.ca/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=177:anglican-leaders-begin-forming-new-church-in-north-america&catid=3:newsflash
Its called St. Patrick’s Anglican Church and seems very new (They are still building the building and are at a temporary location.)
I just read on the website that St. Patrick’s uses the Book of Common Prayer from 1928. My Episcopal Church that I attend uses the BCP 1978.Thanks for the loads of info! looks like I have some studying to do. Especially thanks for the links so I have some good starting places.
saintpatricksamia.org is their church website.
emeraldcoast, I found nothing bad from my visit, though visiting once gives only a very limited view of things. Choosing what Church to attend is not an easy process.![]()
Possibly 1979?I just read on the website that St. Patrick’s uses the Book of Common Prayer from 1928. My Episcopal Church that I attend uses the BCP 1978.
God Bless!
Code:Originally Posted by **emeraldcoast** [forums.catholic-questions.org/images/buttons_khaki/viewpost.gif](http://forums.catholic-questions.org/showthread.php?p=4944436#post4944436) *I just read on the website that St. Patrick's uses the Book of Common Prayer from 1928. My Episcopal Church that I attend uses the BCP 1978.
God Bless!*
*The previous Episcopal Church I attended also used the 1928. *I’m not sure I’ve ever seen the 1979 one.
Syele,*The previous Episcopal Church I attended also used the 1928. *I’m not sure I’ve ever seen the 1979 one.