Ask an Anglican/Episcopalian

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A question for fellow Anglicans:

Assuming (a) that we hope and work for the visible unity of Christ’s Church on Earth, and (b) that we are not crypto-Papists (to use an old and not inoffensive term!):

What would the Bishop of Rome’s role be in a reunified Latin (or indeed universal) Christendom? What is his future in a reformed and catholic Church of the West? How would Anglican ecclesiology need to change/develop/reform/be restored to accommodate this?

N.
Beats me. Let me know how it all plays out.

GKC
 
And I agree. What you have stated here is the inevitable result of Luther and Henry VIII nullifying the authority of the pope for themselves and the millions who followed them over the cliff. That’s the tragedy I referred to.
Thank you for clarifying your position.

GKC
 
GKC,

Thoughts on Bishop Curry from NC? I’m sure you do not agree with his stance on social issues but what of his teaching the Gospel and style of preaching?
 
GKC,

Thoughts on Bishop Curry from NC? I’m sure you do not agree with his stance on social issues but what of his teaching the Gospel and style of preaching?
I know nothing of Bishop Curry. What you suggest likely means I would not care to learn more. I got enough social-issue wobbly prelates in the local area.

And, in truth, while I track the legal issues a little, I have zero interest in what might happen in TEC. Its fate is (IMO, flawed as it may be) what I said above.

GKC
 
Is TEC formally a province of the Anglican Communion as there is no metropolitan (though I heard your PB wanted to be Archbishop Katherine :))? In the Catholic church, a province, by definition, has a metropolitan.

Was there ever a metropolitan in TEC (or PECUSA)? Why none today? Does this mean ecclesiology in TEC differs from the rest of the Anglican Communion.
Perhaps I could add that the Anglican Communion may have an irregular use of the word “province” since each of the independent churches is a province of the Communion, but each may contain a number of provinces in the sense of groups of dioceses. Thus (or perhaps not quite thus but at least similarly) the CofE may be considered a province of the Communion and it is also two provinces of the Western church.
 
Perhaps I could add that the Anglican Communion may have an irregular use of the word “province” since each of the independent churches is a province of the Communion, but each may contain a number of provinces in the sense of groups of dioceses. Thus (or perhaps not quite thus but at least similarly) the CofE may be considered a province of the Communion and it is also two provinces of the Western church.
Useful clarification.

GKC
 
TEC is formally a member of the Anglican Communion. The gracious Katherine is, via a stealth mode of operation, expanding the scope of the office of the PB far beyond its original and customary realm. TEC has historically been an hierarchical Church, up to the dioceses level only; a free association of independent dioceses, ab initio, pre-dating the existence of TEC, whose association was what the form of TEC was.The PB was originally merely the eldest bishop, and the office was conceived as an administrative one. While that role expanded, over the years, the latest moves, which makes it, in effect, a form of archbishopric, relates to the current troubles. The claims that TEC is and has been a formal hierarchy, with the PB at the peak of a pyramid of authority, figured in many of the legal cases that TEC has expended around $26 million on, to retain the property of those parishes/dioceses that leave, without regard to who holds formal title to same. The latest court case, in Illinois, is not going well for TEC on this point, as it did not in the case of the diocese of SC. All too often, it did prevail.

There has never been a metropolitan in the TEC, To that extent, TEC’s ecclesiology and polity differ from others in the Communion. But the current regime seeks to change that. Not for nothing does the gracious Katherine sport that metropolitan crozier. Or point out that TEC has a visible presence in 16 countries. Hardly the fiefdom of a mere PB, in New York, that realm.

GKC
I understand why there may be a limited amount of love for Bishop Katherine, and I suppose I see why there would have been shakes of the head over deciding the PB should be also the Primate, but if that continues as you predict and the PB’s role becomes that of metropolitan (the National Cathedral, presumably) and even Archbishop … I understand that would be a change from the way TEC came about, but what would be wrong with it? Why would a traditional Anglican not like a hierarchy that was constructed in a traditional Anglican way?
 
🙂

The RCC has had its fair share of shaddy Popes in the past and they have emerged from it. I pray we do the same. 😉

They are in sight…just hard to see right now.
I suggest we differ on a number of definitions here. For one, I do not see the gracious Katherine as the problem. She is the face of the problem, currently. She will be succeeded

GKC
 
I suggest we differ on a number of definitions here. For one, I do not see the gracious Katherine as the problem. She is the face of the problem, currently. She will be succeeded

GKC
I’m sure we do…we have to maintain the “motley crew” lol
 
I understand why there may be a limited amount of love for Bishop Katherine, and I suppose I see why there would have been shakes of the head over deciding the PB should be also the Primate, but if that continues as you predict and the PB’s role becomes that of metropolitan (the National Cathedral, presumably) and even Archbishop … I understand that would be a change from the way TEC came about, but what would be wrong with it? Why would a traditional Anglican not like a hierarchy that was constructed in a traditional Anglican way?
I am a traditional Anglican, who favors a traditional American Anglican ecclesiastical polity. Harms no one, and protected the Church from dangers no one really expected.

But, for all of me, they may structure themselves as they (or their remnants) prefer.

GKC
 
I am a traditional Anglican, who favors a traditional American Anglican ecclesiastical polity. Harms no one, and protected the Church from dangers no one really expected.

But, for all of me, they may structure themselves as they (or their remnants) prefer.

GKC
Yep, OK
 
Useful clarification.

GKC
I wonder if this tempers the primatial office in the CofE. Canterbury is number one, but has to work with York on matters which affect the national church as a whole.
 
I wonder if this tempers the primatial office in the CofE. Canterbury is number one, but has to work with York on matters which affect the national church as a whole.
If one considers it, without regard for the additional miter worn by Cantuar as head of the Communion, it seems a reasonable assumption.

GKC
 
No kidding, Edwin. Thanks for clearing that up.

Shori is the presiding ‘bishop’ of TEC. She was elected to that position and it is she who is the globally recognized head of ‘TEC’ and its pilot into apostasy. She may not own it, but she has a firm grip on the tiller.
Actually, the last three – and four out of the last five – Presiding Bishops have been problematic. It goes far beyond the current Presiding Oceanographer.
 
Actually, the last three – and four out of the last five – Presiding Bishops have been problematic. It goes far beyond the current Presiding Oceanographer.
It does, at that. But she certainly puts a…distinctive, perhaps, face on it.

GKC
 
There have, of course, been times where Anglican and RC martyrs have died for the Gospel together, e.g. in Uganda.
An extremely valid and valuable point, which all should acknowledge.

My criticisms of heterodoxy in 1st World Anglicanism (personally witnessed and experienced) are enormously mitigated in the faith and commitment in much of 3rd World Anglicanism (also personally witnessed and experienced.)
 
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