C
colliric
Guest
oh so he’s part of the Church of England wing too is he?He’s something, all right. But not of my Church.
Back soon.
GKC
Anglicanism is so confusing sometimes…
oh so he’s part of the Church of England wing too is he?He’s something, all right. But not of my Church.
Back soon.
GKC
Still too close for me, though. Sorry.What are the other levels of hierarchy in the Anglican Church?
There is no hierarchy as such. Governance structures differ in various churches. For instance, American bishops are democratically elected, while English bishops are appointed by the Queen. In American churches, clergy are servant-leaders with mostly spiritual authority; elected councils of lay members control finances and hiring and firing of clergy.
This poster is correct. Well done.The root difference between Anglicans and Catholics (and Orthodox as well!) is really the source(s) of authority within those communions.
Try answering these questions:
From where does each communion derive its teaching authority?
How do they determine the “official” teachings of the Church, or the correct interpretation of a particular passage of scripture?
What level of accountability does each diocese or province have to the rest of the communion?
What methods of discipline exist to assure the faithful that wayward and heretical teachings are corrected, and in practice how are they used?
How does each communion explain its theological reasoning/development throughout time back to the Apostolic age? Also, how close are the beliefs of the present communion to the beliefs of the Apostles and Church Fathers?
These are some of the questions I had to work through as I saw the Episcopal Church crumble around me. I used to think I was very “middle of the road” theologically for an Episcopalian, but the more I read, the more I realized not only was I vastly more “conservative” than most 'Piskies, but I was also much more “catholic-minded” than the vast majority of conservative Anglicans!
Thanks for the patience. It’s hard to find the time to post much lately. On this issue, I wish I had saved the very first post I ever made, anywhere, to a bunch of very nice RCs, who later became friends. But they were thinking that the Archbishop of Canterbury was the Anglican analog of the Pope, and that all Anglicans burned clarified yak butter before images of the Queen. Or something. And so I posted.No, tht’s incorrect. The Archbisop of Canterbury is not the leader of the entire Anglican Church, for any intents and purposes. I’m leaving for the day, but will reply in more detail later. Trust me.
GKC
Anglicanus Catholicus
Hello again. Generally, yes. I don’t mean that the diocese doesn’t recognise the administrative and bureaucratic ties to the larger entity. But in day-to day operations, and on doctrinal matters, the diocese runs the show (just as the national jurisdiction doesn’t bow to the Archbishop of Canterbury, the local ordianry doesn’t do so to the Presiding bishop) . And there is minimal structure to control or corral it doctrinally. The Bishop of Fort worth (one of the last of the Good Guys) knows full well that he can’t ordain a female. Wrong sacaramental matter, etc; see Ordiantio Sacerdotalis). So he doesn’t. And right next door is the bishop of Dallas, who thinks he can, and tries to. And no way to settle the matter. Yes. Authority. It was not once a problem. Now it is.So, do the Episcopalians consider themselves autocephalous at the diocesan level or the parish level? How about the Anglicans?
Without knowing the particulars, yes, partially, that is likely just what happened. The small scale fracturning ot the Episcopal Church has been going on for a long time. Back about 30 years ago, a group of Anglicans split from ECUSA over liturgica,l and later female ordination issues. These are what is known as Continuing Anglicans. Many otherwise orthodox Anglicans stayed, more or less unhappily, slowlying bleeding away as their limits were reached. Recently, many Episcopalians who could handle the 1979 Prayer book, females in sacerdotal garments, and miters, and other trifles, reached their limit in the matter of the homosexual issues. Most of them didn’t become Continuing Anglicans (drat), but are seeking, in various ways, alternate episcopal oversight. This is normally found in orthodox, but not terribly Anglo-Catholic bishops in Africa. The umbrella organization is the Anglican Mission in America, to which a number of parishes have fled, under the oversight of the Bishop of Rwanda. They consider this country mission territory, and in that sense, they are right. What this group hopes, I think, is to be recognised as THE official Anglican representative of the WWAC (see post above), if and when the Communion tosses the Episcopal Church for not toeing the line on the gay issue.Last night, an Episcopal parish here in Colorado Springs changed to Anglican. What does that mean? Does that mean they rejected the authority of thei diocesan bishop and now submit to some other ordinary in England?
At long last, they found a basic they couldn’t compromise on, yes. Other Anglicans reached that point 30 years ago, and walked further and faster away.I wonder if the reason they changed was an argument “with the basics.”
Again, I thank you for a restrained and even generous statement. The issue of the OC/PNCC participation in Anglican consecrations is not always recognised There have been, as far as I know, only two *sub conditione *ordinations, and they relied as much on the demonstrated Catholicity of the two gentlemen, one the former Bishop of London), as on their lineage. But the point is valid, if you will, and to Anglicans, more basic. Since the beginning of the joint consecrations with the OCs, in 1932, and the PNCC in particular, AFAIK in 1946, the spread of the Dutch Touch has been pervasive. It is hard to find an Anglican bishop free of it. And the consequences follow, unless one takes the Orthodox view of Orders.While we don’t have all the answers, the truth is not relative. What you are demanding is basically the admission that the truth is relative in so far as disagreements with Anglicanism are concerned. The Catholic Church is not the only one in which sacraments are celebrated validly. Those denominations which have not departed from the fundamental Christian dogma, have valid baptism and therefore also marriage. Those which have valid holy orders have all sacraments valid, such as the Orthodox or Eastern Orthodox churches. The Anglicans don’t have valid sacraments because while the current rites are sufficient for ordination, the Edwardian rite was not and there is a gap in Apostolic succession. Those Anglican bishops who were ordained validly by e.g. Old Catholic bishops confer ordination validly, which is why Anglican lines are traced and sometimes conditional ordination is conferred.
Why we have to argue about such basics is that if we lie about this, what will we be true on, or true to? The accommodation of dissenting ideas is not as important as the truth is.
You understate the case. Anglicanism, at it’s simplest, isn’t.oh so he’s part of the Church of England wing too is he?
Anglicanism is so confusing sometimes…
Thank you GKC. I did some more reading and it seems the conservative pastor at Grace Church & St. Stephen’s got fed up with the liberal diocesan bishop. The vestry (?) voted and is sticking with the conservative pastor. They announced they are no longer under the authority of the liberal diocesan bishop but now fall under the Bishop of Nigeria, within CANA – The Convocation of Anglicans in North America.Thanks for your patience.
That’s another group like the AMIA. I (surprise) have troublekeeping it all straight.Thank you GKC. I did some more reading and it seems the conservative pastor at **Grace Church & St. Stephen’s**got fed up with the liberal diocesan bishop. The vestry (?) voted and is sticking with the conservatice pastor. They announced they are no longer under the authority of the liberal diocesan bishop but now fall under the Bishop of Nigeria, within CANA – The Convocation of Anglicans in North America. It seems that although Anglicans and Anglicans are so “very close” as the OP puts it, they still disagreed with regard to “the basics.”
May God help them through this trial.
Your good wishes are appreciated.anyway as a Catholic, I one day hope the Archbishop of Canterbury returns his rogue diocese and “the church of england” into direct communion with Rome, ending 400 years of sad seperation. I know it may not happen in my lifetime, but I hope they can put aside their minor differences and follow the lead of Cardinal Newman back into the universal church of Christ.
I know it would be hard for the COE to accept rejoining the one true Church, but the riff between us and the Orthodox is slowly closing in again…I hope the same occurs with us and the COE and Anglo-Catholics.