Randy2:
I have not heard of this. So far its been a rare few Episcopal/Anglican parishes that have come into communion under the AS. nly 8 or so in decades in the US.
You seem to be talking about a bishop coming in with followers. I assume that means multiple parishes.
Can you give more details or direct me to a website where ZI can read more about this?
Hello Randy2
Here is all I know :
Anglican rebel looks for Vatican pact
By Tom Richardson
The Australian
4/26/2005
WHEN the newly installed Pope Benedict XVI presaged ecumenical unity
with carefully directed nods to other religious faiths, Archbishop John
Hepworth realised that a long journey may soon be over.
The global primate of the Traditional Anglican Communion, a conservative
offshoot of the US Episcopal Church boasting a 400,000-strong
congregation, left the Catholic faith more than 35 years ago. But
Archbishop Hepworth has fostered ties with Rome, and with the new Pope,
that could see his Anglican splinter group fulfil its vision “to be an
Anglican Church in communion with the Bishop of Rome”.
“We see ourselves as essentially Anglicans searching for ways to
practise unity with the Holy See,” Archbishop Hepworth told The
Australian yesterday.
But Rome’s embrace of the TAC, which has sought unity with the Holy See
for a decade, could drive a wedge between liberal and conservative
elements of the Anglican Church.
Surprisingly for a church whose congregation is found largely in the
Third World and is mostly non-English speaking, Archbishop Hepworth
oversees this global communion from his small office in the Adelaide
Hills.
The church was founded almost three decades ago in protest against the
proposed ordination of women, and has flourished in southern and central
Africa, India, Pakistan, north and central America, New Zealand and
Japan. Its message has also resonated in Australia, where Archbishop
Hepworth says “no provision has been made for people who had a different
conscience”.
Archbishop Hepworth met Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, now Pope Benedict, on
several occasions in the past decade to discuss a “full and organic
unity” between the two churches.
If this unity is achieved, it will be a significant step forward in the
life of the TAC.
“In practice, it means the Anglican Communion will be accepted as a
distinct form of liturgy within the church,” Archbishop Hepworth said.
Archbishop Hepworth, ordained a Roman Catholic priest, was “found” by
the TAC when then Anglican archbishop of Adelaide Ian George refused to
grant him a licence for the priesthood “unless I was prepared to
advocate the ordination of women”.
“I didn’t find them, they found me … to a great extent our communion
came into existence in order to accommodate families thrown out of the
Anglican Church.”
He travels around the world “roughly once every six to eight weeks”, to
“make sure we’re a single group keeping on message”. “Obviously Rome is
now part of that round-the-world agenda,” he said.
END