G
GKMotley
Guest
Your terminology needs tightening. There is no single entity entitled The Anglican Church. I suspect you may have in mind the Anglican Communion, that group of autonomous Churches that originally sprang from the Church of England, and retain communion (occasionally impaired) with each other. The children, in a loose sense, of Canterbury.
Many of these Churches, of late (last 30+ years, or so), do consider that males are not the only valid subjects to receive the sacrament of Holy Orders. Some of the other Churches in the Communion will ordain to the diaconate, some retain the orthodox historical position.
Which gives you a glimpse at the well known Anglican spectrum (or motleyness) of doctrine/praxis. But does not exhaust that spectrum. Outside of the Anglican Communion lies the area of the Continuing Anglican Churches (or the Continuum), none of which seeks to ordain beyond the position of the historical Church. And then there is the sort of hybrid ACNA, partially one thing, partially another, not in the Communion, not a part of the Continuum, but with mutual friends each way. In the ACNA, some bishops do. some don’t. Complex.
There once was a time when some progress might have been made to reduce the distance between the Anglican world and the RCC, particularly at the time of Paul VI and Archbishop Ramsey and the establishment of the ARCIC. That time is long gone.
If by received, you mean received in their orders, no. Not ever. If you mean meet, sure.
Many of these Churches, of late (last 30+ years, or so), do consider that males are not the only valid subjects to receive the sacrament of Holy Orders. Some of the other Churches in the Communion will ordain to the diaconate, some retain the orthodox historical position.
Which gives you a glimpse at the well known Anglican spectrum (or motleyness) of doctrine/praxis. But does not exhaust that spectrum. Outside of the Anglican Communion lies the area of the Continuing Anglican Churches (or the Continuum), none of which seeks to ordain beyond the position of the historical Church. And then there is the sort of hybrid ACNA, partially one thing, partially another, not in the Communion, not a part of the Continuum, but with mutual friends each way. In the ACNA, some bishops do. some don’t. Complex.
There once was a time when some progress might have been made to reduce the distance between the Anglican world and the RCC, particularly at the time of Paul VI and Archbishop Ramsey and the establishment of the ARCIC. That time is long gone.
If by received, you mean received in their orders, no. Not ever. If you mean meet, sure.
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