G
GKC
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I’ve had mine misfire, too.I’m not sure what you mean. But perhaps it doesn’t matter: my quip (“I think they prefer to be called “women”.”) wasn’t terribly funny, so …![]()
GKC
I’ve had mine misfire, too.I’m not sure what you mean. But perhaps it doesn’t matter: my quip (“I think they prefer to be called “women”.”) wasn’t terribly funny, so …![]()
:hypno:I’d say all member Churches of the Anglican Communion (official title) are Anglicans, yes.
Not all Anglicans are members of the Anglican Communion.
Not all members of the Anglican Communion are like all other members of the Anglican Communion, in all respects.
Generally speaking, if one generalizes about Anglicans, one (generally) will be wrong. Some Anglicans consider themselves protestants (vehemently). Some consider themselves protestants (quietly). Some consider themselves Catholic, in some sense, with some caveats. Some consider themselves some form of hybrid. Feel free to pick which you agree with. Some Anglicans will agree with you.
GKC
Oh, not at all! It assumes that you have more knowledge than most, and that the vast majority will never know what you don’t know. And, it assumes that you have the ability to persuade your readers that you are accurate (whether you are, or not!)That kind suggestion assumes that the knowledge I might possess is accurate, and reasonably comprehensive. I have seen a variety of opinions as to that, and I’m not always sure myself.
GKC
And that pretty much sums up my posting, too.Oh, not at all! It assumes that you have more knowledge than most, and that the vast majority will never know what you don’t know. And, it assumes that you have the ability to persuade your readers that you are accurate (whether you are, or not!)
That is interesting since I recently listened to a BBC radio program here in the UK, in which an academic said that the ‘Catholic Revival’ of the mid 19th century essentially ‘won’ against the more Protestant minded faction, and that the fruits of this ‘victory’ (his words not mine) are still seen in many English Churches today, in the manner of their services, their altars, clerical robes, the Walsingham and Marian traditions etc. His viewpoint was that while the Church of England is broad like the rest of Anglicanism, it was pretty much overall at least semantically and visually more along the Anglo-Catholic lines rather than say Reformed lines.I have no idea, but they certainly are fewer in number than in their hey-day, through the first half of the 20th century
GKC
I think roughly the same, though won would be more in the sense of surviving, than of overcoming. The Anglo-Catholic/Ritualist movements essentially achieved parity, after the ecclesiastical trials in the latter part of the 1800s, and the relative influence of the ACs/Ritualists against the more reformed evangelicals was something of a seesaw through the late middle of the 1900s. And residue of the ACs/Ritualists is still a visible face of the CoE, semantically and visually.That is interesting since I recently listened to a BBC radio program here in the UK, in which an academic said that the ‘Catholic Revival’ of the mid 19th century essentially ‘won’ against the more Protestant minded faction, and that the fruits of this ‘victory’ (his words not mine) are still seen in many English Churches today, in the manner of their services, their altars, clerical robes, the Walsingham and Marian traditions etc. His viewpoint was that while the Church of England is broad like the rest of Anglicanism, it was pretty much overall at least semantically and visually more along the Anglo-Catholic lines rather than say Reformed lines.
Also, might I ask, what kind of Anglican would you describe yourself as being?![]()
Not entirely empty. All Protestant ecclesial communities are defined by the nature and extent of their departure from Catholcism. Some, like traditional confessional Lutherans, much less, but for those contaminated by Calvanism, much more.The problem is that ‘Protestantism’ has become (or has perhaps always been) a meaningless, empty term which can mean almost anything. To say that a Lutheran and a Zwinglian are both Protestants, for instance, show how empty the term is.
If Jesus really did give Peter the responsibility to care for and feed His One Flock, and if indeed this responsibility was passed on to his successor, then all Protestants are still under the authority of the Pope. You are just rebellious subjects of the Roman Pontiff.The short answer to this after reading all the posts is, yes, we Anglicans are Protestant because we are not under the authority of the Pope or the Catholic Church. The remainder of our differences or similarities really are of no consequence to the answer.
Am I the only one who is tempted to think, “Every Protestant is a distinctive branch of Christianity”?All Protestants are a distinctive branch of Christianity.
Anglicans are Protestants, but of all Protestants they are the closest IMHO to the Roman Catholic Church. Some of their priests have been ordained by Old Catholic bishops, which might be a problem to being labelled strictly Protestant because some of the Old Catholic bishops may have valid orders. One barrier that I see with Anglicans uniting with Roman Catholics is the issue of female ordination.Sometimes I see places where it says Anglicans are not Protestants, but a distinctive branch of Christianity, but then other times I see places where it says that Anglicans are Protestants. Isn’t the full name of the Episcopal Church the Protestant Episcopal Church of America? Does that show Anglicans are Protestants? But then you will hear a lot of Anglicans disavow Protestant and refer to themselves as a distinct branch… I’m really confused…
I’m a fairly loyal reader of your posts. But having said that, I can’t help noticing that you can be pretty unecumenical at times.Not entirely empty. All Protestant ecclesial communities are defined by the nature and extent of their departure from Catholcism. ;
The OC relationship with Anglicans does not involve OC bishops ordaining Anglican priests, but joint episcopal consecrations between Anglicans and OCs/Utrecht, following the Agreement of Bonn, beginning in 1932.Anglicans are Protestants, but of all Protestants they are the closest IMHO to the Roman Catholic Church. Some of their priests have been ordained by Old Catholic bishops, which might be a problem to being labelled strictly Protestant because some of the Old Catholic bishops may have valid orders. One barrier that I see with Anglicans uniting with Roman Catholics is the issue of female ordination.
Now that sounds like a whole shelf of novels in seed form!Anne was no ways the savvy politico that Liz was. La Boleyn certainly was moved by the reformist mode. It was, after all, she who gave Tyndale’s OBEDIENCE OF A CHRISTIAN MAN to Henry, thus inspiring his whole "Christian Monarch " fetish, which underlay his justification for taking the Church in England private. But Liz was a far shrewder hand. One can hardly conceive of anything analogous to the Elizabethan Compromise coming from Anne’s pretty head.
Love historical factoids, I do. Re: Tudors, they been a hobby area for me for around 20 years. Many factoids in there. Many of them related here, over the years.
GKC
I wouldn’t be surprised to see some of it in Mantel’s BRING UP THE BODIES.Now that sounds like a whole shelf of novels in seed form!
I think the Eastern Churches would take exception to that.Protestantism isn’t an empty term simply because there is spectrum of beliefs under one umbrella. Protestantism means that you adhere to the Christian faith without being part of the Catholic Church. It really isn’t intended to define doctrine any more than that.
We are all suffering from the intrusion of Modernism.FYI, be sure to distinquish between the Church of England’s brand of Anglicanism and American Anglicanism. The latter recently had to break away from CoE because we could no longer find grounds for compromise with CoE’s increasingly unscriptural stand.
Yes, sadly. We are not what Christ intended for us.“Sadly”?
I don’t see how you can say that it does not involve priests because of the book entitled No Ordinary Fool: A Testimony To Grace.by Father John Jay Hughes, an enthusiastic defender of Anglican Orders in the twentieth century.The OC relationship with Anglicans does not involve OC bishops ordaining Anglican priests, but joint episcopal consecrations between Anglicans and OCs/Utrecht, following the Agreement of Bonn, beginning in 1932.
GKC
Yes.Are Anglicans protestants?
Perhaps I was not clear in my post. My point was that, except possibly in very isolated cases prior to 1932, after the inter-communion agreement that was reached between the OCs/Utrecht and the Anglicans in the Agreement of Bonn (1931), the question of the relationship of the OCs and PNCC to the possible validity of Anglican orders is not related to OC/PNCC bishops ordaining Anglican priests directly, but of OC/PNCC bishops jointly, with Anglican bishops, consecrating Anglican bishops; raising them to the episcopacy. This, following the logic found in Ott, p. 458, would infuse the valid/illicit episcopal lines possessed by the OC/PNCC into Anglicanism, and those bishops would further propagate their valid/illicit orders as they, in turn, consecrated/ordained other Anglican bishops/priests.I don’t see how you can say that it does not involve priests because of the book entitled No Ordinary Fool: A Testimony To Grace.by Father John Jay Hughes, an enthusiastic defender of Anglican Orders in the twentieth century.
He says that he had drawn up a document tracing the Table of Consecration of the two Episcopalian bishops who had ordained him deacon and priest respectively. This showed that both could trace their own orders, through co-consecrators, to Old Catholic and Polish National Catholic bishops acknowledged by Rome to be validly ordained. He then submitted this document to the Holy Office (now the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith), requesting a judgment about the validity of his Anglican orders.
He received a reply in French, on the letterhead Suprema Congregatio S. Officii, dated 30 October 1959 and signed “P. Paul Philippe, O.P., Commissaire du Saint-Office.” (He later became a cardinal.) The crucial paragraph stated:
“There can be no question of a simple recognition of the orders received, with subsequent permission to exercise the priesthood. The church can only require a certain period of studies, at the end of which conditional reordination would be granted; but there is no reason why this would be refused, provided the other conditions mentioned [the normal criteria for ordination] were satisfied.”