G
GKC
Guest
There is only one Church of England, though it has a few dioceses in territory outside of England. The Anglican Churches which comprise the Anglican Communion are not a part of the Church of England, though they mostly started from there. Originally, “Anglican” was synonymous with “Church of England”; there were no other Anglicans. As the British spread outward into colonies, the Church of England followed, under the Bishop of London, originally, in charge of colonial territories. As the colonies grew and matured, colonial bishops were appointed into them, still as part of the Church of England. And as the colonies matured into dominions, and eventually into independent nations, the colonial Churches became independent (eventually) too. Fully independent, self governing Churches, split from the Church of England. While the CoE does have a continued presence in portions of the old Empire (Gibraltar, for example), those Churches that you refer to as Church of England operating in Africa and Asia are not Church of England, but independent Churches sprung from the CoE, the mother Church of all Anglicanism. Usually (not always) these offspring Churches have “Anglican” in their name, as the Anglican Church of Canada, of South Africa, of Australia, you name it.But there are Church’s of England operating in Africa and Asia. Are you saying that these congregations outside of England do not submit to their authority?
I’m confused if each national church of CofE has full autonomy does that mean they define their own Dogma and Discipline which is what is occurring in this instance?
These independent Churches form what is called the Anglican Communion, independent Churches in communion with the Archbishop of Canterbury, who is both the Primate of the Church of England, and the head of the Anglican Communion. This office is not a Papal analogue; he has no actual authority over the Communion, but does exercise some influence. The analogy could be made to the British Commonwealth. The Monarch is the figurehead of the Commonwealth but no longer exercises any authority over the now independent countries, formerly colonies.
For all practical purposes, the first such independent Anglican Church to be established was the Episcopal Church, in the US. A fall-out of the Revolution.
It is all even more complicated than all that; this is the condensed version. But there is not an Anglican Church, referred to as the Church of England. There are 38 Anglican Churches, of various names, who are loosely associated in the Anglican Communion.
And this does not consider the Anglicans who are not in the Communion. As I said, complicated.
GKC