differance between catholic & Episcopal church

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Why does your religion say “Roman Catholic” and yet you belong to an Episcopal Church? They couldn’t be in more different dimensions!
It does not say “Roman Catholic”, but says “Catholic” and references the Roman Church, mother of the Anglican Communion. Contrary to popular belief, the Roman Catholic Church is not the sole branch of the Catholic Church.

REA

Catholic, yet reformed. Via Media.
 
It is not fair that the argument is being made that Episcopalians and Anglicans don’t believe in the True Presence because its not the Communion’s “official doctrine.” This is true simply because there is no “official doctrine.” Never have I met an Anglican who did not believe in the True Presence. We reject the idea of one authority having the power to dictate doctrine, yet reserve certain documents of Catholic faith to keep us in the light of Truth, such as the Nicene and Apostolic Creeds.

And that article is very true in many respects. The Anglican Communion has come from the same route as the RCC and the Orthodox Churches. It recognizes Rome as her Mother Church, as “Ecclesia Anglicana” was actually the Church established in England by Roman Catholic missionary St Augustine of Canterbury. Though Henry VIII broke away from Papal Authority, the church established by Roman missionaries was not replaced, but continued by the Bishops who has been there before, reserving apostolic succession. As High Church Anglicans assert today, we are simply another branch of the One Holy Catholic Church, alongside Rome and the Eastern Churches.

We assert that we keep Catholic Theology and Faith, yet have adopted Protestant beliefs on Church polity and governance (earthly things protestant, holy things Catholic).

REA

Catholic, yet Reformed. Via Media.
Are you saying that prior to Augustine that there was no church in Britain?
 
Along with rejecting the papacy, Anglicans reject transubstantiation as taught by the Catholic Church. Also, there are various sects within Anglicanism from High Church Anglicans whose beliefs are very close to those of the Catholic Church to middle of the road parishes that may or may not be orthodox in their teaching and practice to low church parishes that more resemble Evangelical Christians in beliefs and practice.
These aren’t necessarily “sects.” The Continuing Anglicans do have a number of small jurisdictions, some of which are quite homogenous. But within the Anglican Communion there is a range of belief and practice.

Also, some of the Anglo-Catholics do accept transubstantiation. The priest in whose parish I was confirmed told me that IV Lateran is of greater authority than the 39 Articles.

Edwin
 
(To the tune of “The Church’s One Foundation”)

The Church’s One Foundation
Is The Church Pension Fund
Without Their Fine Retirements
Some More Would Cut And Run
Some Would Submit to Benedict
And Some To Antioch
But Promise Of Retirement
Shall Keep Them In The Flock!

Sad . . . but often true.

Blessings,
I honestly don’t think it’s true of my bishop. His reasons for staying have been laid out in this article. And yes, I’m aware that Bishop Steenson, on whose exposition of the anti-Donatist position Bishop Little draws, has now entered the Roman Communion!

Edwin
 
Anyone referred to as an orthodox Anglican, as found in this country, post 1978, is most likely a member of one of the Continuing Anglican Churches.
GKC,

As a matter of commonly used terminology, this is not true. The term is certainly used by many people within both TEC and ACNA. I respect your belief that the term does not appropriately apply to us, but it is certainly used.

Is your reason for denying the label “orthodox” to non-Continuers solely the acceptance of women’s ordination, or are there other reasons? We probably can’t get into the whole 79/28 BCP issue here, but if there are specific doctrinal/liturgical issues that you think make us unorthodox other than women’s ordination, could you list them?

Or is it the fact that we in TEC are in communion with people who are certainly unorthodox, and from your perspective “orthodox” cannot be applied to individuals or individual parishes/dioceses?

If women’s ordination is the only issue, then it is not true to call all those who remained in TEC after 1978 unorthodox, although it would be true to call all the dioceses presently remaining in TEC unorthodox (the non-WO dioceses are now part of ACNA–which is still not the Continuum). But if you’re combining the WO issue with the consideration mentioned in the previous paragraph, then I can see how you arrive at your stated conclusion. (In other words, all Anglicans not in the Continuum are in communion with parishes/dioceses that ordain women, even if the individual parishes/dioceses do not.) Knowing you, I am sure that you have a consistent rationale for what you said–I would just like to understand the precise parameters of your position a little better.
Any group not within the Continuum, or not a member of the Reformed Episcopal Church (which is a different sort of Anglican) is most likely marginal to any historical definition of Anglicanism.
I strongly disagree with that statement, because I weight the relevant considerations quite differently. But again, I’d like to hear more about just how you arrive at that conclusion–which issues do you consider central to a “historical definition of Anglicanism”?
. But I know what it was that caused the break with EUSA in the first place, after the St. Louis meeting, in 1978. It was the liturgy, not homosexuality.
And yet I have always had trouble getting traditional Anglicans to list the precise articles of Faith that are denied in the 1979 BCP. It always seems to boil down to questions of emphasis, and the emphases found in the older BCPs and not in 1979 do not always strike me as genuinely orthodox, often instead reflecting particular characteristics of early modern Western Christianity (such as the Cranmerian Eucharistic Prayer’s leap over the Incarnation straight to the atoning death of Christ).

As I’ve said elsewhere, I understand why those Anglicans whose position is essentially Reformed would object to 1979–there is no doubt that the Reformational doctrines are severely watered down there. But obviously that is not your position.

Also, I am not talking about which BCP is preferred, but about the claim that 1979 is actually unorthodox. (I myself would have preferred a Rite 1 that was 1928 with some Catholic elements added–I don’t have a particular problem with Rite 2, though I think Eucharistic Prayer C is an unnecessary curiosity. Even it is not, however, remotely unorthodox as far as I can tell.)
And I know what the next major issue was. It was female “ordination”, not homosexuality. And the Episcopalians who espoused the heterodox positions in question, who now own ECUSA, were revisionists. Apostates, too.
Isn’t apostasy the denial of the Christian Faith as a whole? Aren’t we heretics at worst:D

Bishop Spong, now, I’ll grant you–apostate.

I would respond to the poster myself, since I also disagree with his characterization (on different grounds than you do), but he has been suspended.

Are you familiar with the work of Ephraim Radner? He would also deny that the conservatives in TEC can rightly call ourselves “orthodox.” But he does so on rather different grounds, and his argument would apply to the Continuers (and I believe also to the RCs and the Eastern Churches, though I find that far more dubious) just as well.

I responded to a number of posts in this thread without realizing how old the thread was. I’m surprised to see that I didn’t originally respond to it–perhaps it was during one of my periods of absence from the board.

I won’t delete this post, since it still seems relevant–respond or not as you wish.

Edwin
 
I just wanted to say that I attended Rite II service this morning for the first time and I very much enjoyed it and felt the presence of God. I have been trying to revert to the RCC for the last 2 years and just can’t seem to make it work. At the Episcopal church I found a beautiful church, that looked like a church (many RC churches in my area don’t look like churches), beautiful music, by Mozart and in Latin, reverence for the liturgy instead of children running up and down the aisles and adults who should know better, chatting during the homily. Prior to reverting back to RC, I was an Eastern Orthodox inquirer. At this point, I’m not sure where I’ll end up, but I doubt it will be RCC.

SAHmommy
What were your reasons for giving up on the EO?

Edwin
 
As a RC I have been attending an Episcopal Church -it is nice but is fraying around the edges the Anglican versus Episcopalean divide is taking its toll
To refer to the “Anglican versus Episcopalian divide” is to imply that Episcopalians have ceased to be Anglicans. If you are prepared to do this, and to articulate what makes members of the present ACNA Anglicans and members of TEC not Anglicans, then go ahead–I’m not concerned to argue the point at the moment. I just want to understand that you know what you are saying.

It’s like saying “Catholics vs. Roman Catholics” (with the implication that RCs are not really Catholics). Members of the Roman Communion would understand that as a quite inflammatory, polemical statement.

Edwin
 
Wow -have not heard the term Hereticand Apostate in a long time-Guys the differences between Roman Catholics -Old Catholics-Orthodox-Episcopaleans and High Lutherans are very little indeed

I still consider myself Catholic but attend TEC and Old Catholic congregations -the RC Church in which I was raised has committed mistakes and has slowly admitted them-but Roman Catholic doctrine is not the final arbiter of “what is right” -all the Clerics and faithful from brother Catholic denominations are all wrong???

At the Episcopal Church that I go to they say “Jesus is here” at communion the issue of trans versus consubstantiation never turned up & Luther believed in the real Presence as do my Lutheran friends

If you look for services that are closest to early Christianity -the Orthodox services likely are closest

On another thread one person implied that under Canon law if one attends a “Protestant” service one is excommunicated (please’’’’)

so the differences all boil down to issues of Human Sexuality and control and authority
No female Priests because the Apostles were male-what about Mary Magdalene “The Apostle to the Apostles” and the early female church leaders referred to by the early Church fathers

If the egos of the leaders of the above denominations ever were deflated imagine the joyous ecumenical and shared communion services and worship that could be had

Love & Mercy

Affiliation -Catholic
 
I think Episcopalians would find the description more offensive than ACNA Anglicans, etc. 😛
To refer to the “Anglican versus Episcopalian divide” is to imply that Episcopalians have ceased to be Anglicans. If you are prepared to do this, and to articulate what makes members of the present ACNA Anglicans and members of TEC not Anglicans, then go ahead–I’m not concerned to argue the point at the moment. I just want to understand that you know what you are saying.

It’s like saying “Catholics vs. Roman Catholics” (with the implication that RCs are not really Catholics). Members of the Roman Communion would understand that as a quite inflammatory, polemical statement.

Edwin
 
To refer to the “Anglican versus Episcopalian divide” is to imply that Episcopalians have ceased to be Anglicans. If you are prepared to do this, and to articulate what makes members of the present ACNA Anglicans and members of TEC not Anglicans, then go ahead–I’m not concerned to argue the point at the moment. I just want to understand that you know what you are saying.

It’s like saying “Catholics vs. Roman Catholics” (with the implication that RCs are not really Catholics). Members of the Roman Communion would understand that as a quite inflammatory, polemical statement.

Edwin
ACNA members aren’t the only Anglicans who would make this case. A lot of real Provinces certainly believe the same thing.
 
Prior to Missionaries to Britain, like St Augustine of Canterbury, Britain’s inhabitants were largely pagan.
That is not true. How many of the Romano-Britons were Christian by 400 we can probably never know for sure. Ramsay MacMullen suggests that about 50% of the population of the Roman Empire was Christian by that time, with the majority of the remainder converting in the course of the fifth century if I remember rightly. MacMullen may or may not be right, and Britain may have been higher or lower than the empire-wide average. The primary sources of which I’m aware (some of which, like Bede, were written a couple centuries later, so are only “primary” sources because our earlier sources are so sketchy) seem to assume that the Britons were as a whole Christians by the time of the Saxon invasions. Bede faults the Britons for not converting the Saxons (which I think is unfair).

You are confusing the Britons (by all accounts predominantly Christian) with the Saxon invaders. Britain was “re-paganized” by virtue of being conquered by the Saxons. Pope Gregory’s mission was directed toward these new pagan invaders. But there had been a strong Christian presence in Britain for centuries before this. I forget how many British bishops are listed as participating at 1 Nicea, but it was quite a few.

Edwin
 
That is not true. How many of the Romano-Britons were Christian by 400 we can probably never know for sure. Ramsay MacMullen suggests that about 50% of the population of the Roman Empire was Christian by that time, with the majority of the remainder converting in the course of the fifth century if I remember rightly. MacMullen may or may not be right, and Britain may have been higher or lower than the empire-wide average. The primary sources of which I’m aware (some of which, like Bede, were written a couple centuries later, so are only “primary” sources because our earlier sources are so sketchy) seem to assume that the Britons were as a whole Christians by the time of the Saxon invasions. Bede faults the Britons for not converting the Saxons (which I think is unfair).

You are confusing the Britons (by all accounts predominantly Christian) with the Saxon invaders. Britain was “re-paganized” by virtue of being conquered by the Saxons. Pope Gregory’s mission was directed toward these new pagan invaders. But there had been a strong Christian presence in Britain for centuries before this. I forget how many British bishops are listed as participating at 1 Nicea, but it was quite a few.

Edwin
Moorman says that no known British bishops attended I Nicea, but that Athanasius expressly mentioned that the British Church accepted the Council’s decisions. Jennings says the British attended.

OTOH, by 314, at least three sees existed in the country: York, London and (probably) Colchester, who attended the Council of Arles that year

Wakeman says the same. and adds Ariminum/359 as a Council attended by British bishops (this was the one, IIRC, that the British had to have their way paid to, to attend) and mentions Sardica/347, as another that, if the British did not attend, they gave consent to.

GKC
 
Moorman says that no known British bishops attended I Nicea, but that Athanasius expressly mentioned that the British Church accepted the Council’s decisions. Jennings says the British attended.

OTOH, by 314, at least three sees existed in the country: York, London and (probably) Colchester, who attended the Council of Arles that year

Wakeman says the same. and adds Ariminum/359 as a Council attended by British bishops (this was the one, IIRC, that the British had to have their way paid to, to attend) and mentions Sardica/347, as another that, if the British did not attend, they gave consent to.

GKC
Oops–I was mixing up 1 Nicea with Ariminum, I think.

Thanks for setting me straight!

Edwin
 
Oops–I was mixing up 1 Nicea with Ariminum, I think.

Thanks for setting me straight!

Edwin
You are very welcome. It’s not all that often that I can do that.

But you have a defensible case, at least in Jennings’ eyes. But then, he is an older writer.

I can’t find my usual source on this question. In fact, I can’t remember what my usual source usually is. But it says the same as all this, whatever it is.

GKC
 
I agree with Edwin…oops, wait a minute, that’s your line? 😛
You are very welcome. It’s not all that often that I can do that.

But you have a defensible case, at least in Jennings’ eyes. But then, he is an older writer.

I can’t find my usual source on this question. In fact, I can’t remember what my usual source usually is. But it says the same as all this, whatever it is.

GKC
 
Anglicans are a motley crew…dang it I did it again! Sorry! I can’t stop using GKC cliches in my replies! 😃

History is complicated…

Apostolicae Curae is my hobby…

AAAAGHGHG! 😛

Hey, if you’re going away for a couple of weeks, somebody needs to keep up the sayings! :cool:
Everything that rises must converge.

GKC
 
Anglicans are a motley crew…dang it I did it again! Sorry! I can’t stop using GKC cliches in my replies! 😃

History is complicated…

Apostolicae Curae is my hobby…

AAAAGHGHG! 😛

Hey, if you’re going away for a couple of weeks, somebody needs to keep up the sayings! :cool:
It’s all in your hands.

GKC
 
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