Kinda thinking about becoming Episcopal

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Please think and pray about this for a really long time before making such a decision and also ponder the fact that the protestant churchs do not have most of the sacraments, including the Most Blessed Sacrament, Jesus Himself: Body, Blood, Soul and Divinity. Also please ponder the fact that Jesus really emphasized that He is litterally the Bread of Life and that we are to eat His Flesh and drink His Blood. There was another way He could have said it if His language was symbolic and yet protastant churches like the one you’re considering don’t believe He was being literal. Also, did you realize that the Episcopal Church is basically the Anglican Church with no monarch and that the Anglecican Church comes was started by King Henry the Eighth because he wanted a divorce? What did Jesus say about divorcing? He said:

"And some Pharisees came up to Him, testing Him, and began to question Him whether it was lawful for a man to divorce a wife. And He answered and said to them, “What did Moses command you?” And they said, “Moses permitted a man to write a certificate of divorce and send her away.” But Jesus said to them, "Because of your hardness of heart he wrote you this commandment. "But from the beginning of creation, God made them male and female. "For this cause a man shall leave his father and mother, and the two shall become one flesh; consequently they are no longer two, but one flesh. “What therefore God has joined together, let no man separate.” And in the house the disciples began questioning Him about this again. And He said to them, “Whoever divorces his wife and marries another woman commits adultery against her; and if she herself divorces her husband and marries another man, she is committing adultery.”–Mark 10:2-12
Well technically it is a little more complicated than that. The Church of England in Henry’s own time was not very different from the Roman Catholic Church. More than anything Henry desired that the Church would swing his way when he wanted.

If you look at the history of his relationship with his six wives, he uses very Catholic determinations in deciding to dissolve his marriage.

Catherine of Aragon?: Invalid marriage, married to his brother. Annulled.
Anne Boleyn?: Committed incest with brother, had sex with others before marriage. Marriage annulled.
Jane Seymour died in childbirth.
Anne of Cleves: marriage never consummated. Annulled.
Catherine Howard: Possible pre-contract of marriage before marrying Henry VIII. Marriage considered invalid and annulled.
Catherine Howard: survived.
 
Before you decide to join the Episcopalian Church, check out what its leaders are like. Take one (now retired) Bishop Spong for instance.

Ask yourself if you agree with all that. If you find you no longer agree with key Catholic doctrines, there are several other options out there that are more embracing of Biblical truth.
To be fair to the Episcopal Church, one should read its catechism (found in the back of the current Book of Common Prayer), not Bp Spong.
 
Well technically it is a little more complicated than that. The Church of England in Henry’s own time was not very different from the Roman Catholic Church. More than anything Henry desired that the Church would swing his way when he wanted.

If you look at the history of his relationship with his six wives, he uses very Catholic determinations in deciding to dissolve his marriage.

Catherine of Aragon?: Invalid marriage, married to his brother. Annulled.
Anne Boleyn?: Committed incest with brother, had sex with others before marriage. Marriage annulled.
Jane Seymour died in childbirth.
Anne of Cleves: marriage never consummated. Annulled.
Catherine Howard: Possible pre-contract of marriage before marrying Henry VIII. Marriage considered invalid and annulled.
Catherine Howard: survived.
Pretty accurate.

GKC
 
Please think and pray about this for a really long time before making such a decision and also ponder the fact that the protestant churchs do not have most of the sacraments, including the Most Blessed Sacrament, Jesus Himself: Body, Blood, Soul and Divinity. Also please ponder the fact that Jesus really emphasized that He is litterally the Bread of Life and that we are to eat His Flesh and drink His Blood. There was another way He could have said it if His language was symbolic and yet protastant churches like the one you’re considering don’t believe He was being literal. Also, did you realize that the Episcopal Church is basically the Anglican Church with no monarch and that the Anglecican Church comes was started by King Henry the Eighth because he wanted a divorce? What did Jesus say about divorcing? He said:

"And some Pharisees came up to Him, testing Him, and began to question Him whether it was lawful for a man to divorce a wife. And He answered and said to them, “What did Moses command you?” And they said, “Moses permitted a man to write a certificate of divorce and send her away.” But Jesus said to them, "Because of your hardness of heart he wrote you this commandment. "But from the beginning of creation, God made them male and female. "For this cause a man shall leave his father and mother, and the two shall become one flesh; consequently they are no longer two, but one flesh. “What therefore God has joined together, let no man separate.” And in the house the disciples began questioning Him about this again. And He said to them, “Whoever divorces his wife and marries another woman commits adultery against her; and if she herself divorces her husband and marries another man, she is committing adultery.”–Mark 10:2-12
Decree of nullity.

GKC
 
OVerisimilitude,

I share all the theological concerns you mentioned, but I didn’t start out Catholic, have never been Catholic. Instead, my previous church experience has been mainly Baptist and Pentecostal.

But I’m Episcopalian now (and ELCA Lutheran, since my parish has both formal affiliations), have been for almost a year, and it suits me very well. I can’t say that it would work as well for you, but I think you’re asking the right questions. May God grant you wisdom and discernment as you think this over.
 
I’m a former Protestant who converted to the Catholic Church around 1996 or 1997, from a Protestant position (Presbyterian with a brief fling in the Wesleyan Methodists and a Baptist wife). My Presbyterian pastor was a Methodist by training.

Now I have issues regarding “infallibility” (a doctrine which as far as I’m concerned is not necessary, and should not have been promulgated). I also don’t agree with the ban on contraceptives especially the Pill.

However I think the Catholic Church is “Closest” to the truth and for that reason I’ll be staying there. I’ve got a brain of my own, and as far as I’m concerned, God expects me to think for myself. That’s what He gave it to me for, and that’s the same reason He gave everyone else a brain.

So if anything, I’ve had to go against the grain to join the Catholic Church. When we married we were both Protestant. I’ve got good Protestant friends, no doubt some of whom think I’m mistaken. But the longer I’m in the Catholic Church, the more it makes sense, even if the Protestants are often more enthusiastic and sincere.

The OP has obviously done a lot research on these issues but the fact remains that his research is filtered through two lenses - one is his Aspergus syndrome, which means he probably becomes obsessive ie. “I have to make a decision based on this thinking” and not allow gray areas to co-exist. I’m prepared to differ with the church on contraception for example, and still stay a member. Likewise “Infallibility” - I wonder why the story of Christ rebuking Peter as “Satan” immediately after declaring Him the “Rock” is in the record. One almost sees a slightly cynical Christ foreseeing a future Pope declariing himself “infallibile” when Peter demonstrably wasn’t. But that’s for another thread.

I also don’t have a problem with married clergy. The wisest, most prophetic man I’ve ever met was a married pastor. If the Protestants can run their churches quite successfully with married clergy, then I fail to see whn the Catholic Church cannot do likewise.

The other filter is his Anglican fiance. I’d be surprised if she hasn’t had some influence, with all due respect.

I did hear a female Anglican pastor preach when we stayed with Anglican friends earlier this year during Easter. And to be honest, there seemed to be something missing.

If I were the OP, I’d stay with the Catholic Church, because in the long run, I think it’s **“closest” **to the truth, and will remain so. It’s also the church Christ founded on Peter, and there is no other.
 
Hi OVerisimilitude.

Here are your disagreements/doubts with the Church:
  1. Male-only priesthood
  2. How we treat Mary officially
  3. I am not a terribly big fan of the monarchical model. I am well aware that the monarchic bishop is not a teaching, and that we could govern the church more or less any way we like, but it really appeals to me.
  4. Infallibility really bothers me
  5. Catholic claims regarding itself as the true church
If I may, usually 1,3,4, and 5 don’t bother a Catholic too much.

Perhaps if you want to be a priest but want to marry, #1 may be a biggie. In reality, it does not because these are two different vocations and if you are deciding one of them, the other would be naturally not compatible. I understand your reason, and married priests may be a breath of fresh air to the Church but many Catholics would rather have celibate priests. It seems so natural that way for priests. I am not going into how a man must please two masters but the institution of celibate priests has been affirmed in a very long time and it is something to be proud of that the Church does not change.

You said “we could govern the church more or less any way we like”. It is certainly a recipe for chaos.

As Catholics, the Church claiming to be a true church should make us happy so how is that could be a reason for leaving the Church?

The Church infallibility should not bother us too much if we learn to submit to authority. And it is Biblical too.

Obey your prelates, and be subject to them. For they watch as being to render an account of your souls; that they may do this with joy, and not with grief. For this is not expedient for you. Heb 13:17

I think as a Catholic the one that could really trouble you is Marian spirituality. But remember for the most part, it is a devotion and therefore not an obligation for everybody.

I think you should pray hard about leaving the faith as your problem with the Church is not insurmountable. One of the posters above, benjohnson, gives a very good advice.

“ … then I would urge caution in that it might be wise not to trade one set of grievances for a different set of grievances.”

God bless.
 
OP,

From your posts you’re kinda already on the way out and sounds to me like your mind is already made up.

You don’t really need our opinion or want us to talk you out of it after all you were in a seminary and appear to have a grasp of Church teachings. Make up your own mind. 🤷

I will keep you in my prayers. Good luck on your journey
 
OP,

From your posts you’re kinda already on the way out and sounds to me like your mind is already made up.

You don’t really need our opinion or want us to talk you out of it after all you were in a seminary and appear to have a grasp of Church teachings. Make up your own mind. 🤷

I will keep you in my prayers. Good luck on your journey
I assure you my mind is far from made up. As I wrote, everything in the first two posts are things on my mind and not firmly held positions, and I concluded by saying that I am trying very hard to remember that I do not know everything and am not the wisest man to ever live, and try to remain open to being taught.

No rash decisions are being made, and I at the present hour have no plans to leave my church.
 
I assure you my mind is far from made up. As I wrote, everything in the first two posts are things on my mind and not firmly held positions, and I concluded by saying that I am trying very hard to remember that I do not know everything and am not the wisest man to ever live, and try to remain open to being taught.

No rash decisions are being made, and I at the present hour have no plans to leave my church.
Your posts sound reasonable. Things such as this need lots of prayers which I am sure you’re doing. Keep on doing it and really look into the depth of your heart and ask the Lord to tell you.

We can only say as much but ultimately it is your decision. Do heed some of the advice here for they are reasonable too and some are truly gems. Give them a thought especially through prayers. We are nothing on our own. It is because of God that makes who we are. We are nothing on our own authority but it by the authority of God makes who we are. We cannot see God and submitting to his authority can sometime be merely token face value but we can to people whom God has chosen to have authority over us. We are only as good as the authority we derive from.

Be blessed.
 
Imho you should pick one your many issue’s and put it up for a topic.
  1. Male-only priesthood
  2. How we treat Mary officially
  3. I am not a terribly big fan of the monarchical model. I am well aware that the monarchic bishop is not a teaching, and that we could govern the church more or less any way we like, but it really appeals to me.
  4. Infallibility really bothers me
  5. Catholic claims regarding itself as the true church
🤷

If I had a indictment sheet like that, I say, I would have serious doubt about my own reality in church life also.
 
Now I have issues regarding “infallibility” (a doctrine which as far as I’m concerned is not necessary, and should not have been promulgated). I also don’t agree with the ban on contraceptives especially the Pill.
However I think the Catholic Church is “Closest” to the truth and for that reason I’ll be staying there. I’ve got a brain of my own, and as far as I’m concerned, God expects me to think for myself. That’s what He gave it to me for, and that’s the same reason He gave everyone else a brain.
I recently converted to Catholicism. When I was welcomed into the Church I had to stand in front and confess that I believe everything that the Catholic Church teaches and commit to submitting to it. Your position above does not sound like you feel that way as you dissent from the Church on 2 important issues. Are your thoughts listed above something that have developed since your confession of beleiving everything at your welcoming into the Church or did you not have to confess like I did (or did you just not mean it?)?

I continue to be surprised at how many Catholics don’t agree with the Church, probably because of bad Cathechisation.
 
The OP pretty much set out precisely the reasons why I am a member of the Church of England.

If the Roman Catholic Church was a political party, I would join since I share pretty much all of its political views. However, it is not merely there to define its members’ relationship with the world. It is there, perhaps even more importantly, to determine their relationship with Almighty God. Since my views are often at variance with it, it would be wrong of me to become a part of it.

Comparing the EF Mass, which I suppose is the most authentic expression of Roman Catholicism, with the 1662 Prayer Book, settles the question for me.
 
The OP pretty much set out precisely the reasons why I am a member of the Church of England.

If the Roman Catholic Church was a political party, I would join since I share pretty much all of its political views. However, it is not merely there to define its members’ relationship with the world. It is there, perhaps even more importantly, to determine their relationship with Almighty God. Since my views are often at variance with it, it would be wrong of me to become a part of it.

Comparing the EF Mass, which I suppose is the most authentic expression of Roman Catholicism, with the 1662 Prayer Book, settles the question for me.
I think it is advisable to start with the question of authority. Is the Church of England the original Apostolic Church that Jesus formed by giving authority to the Apostles. If yes, you must align your views with the Church.

Starting with your views and finding a Church to match is common. Secular society often makes that mistake, it thinks the Church should change it’s morals to meet modern society, and the Catholic Church has stayed firm
 
I think it is advisable to start with the question of authority. Is the Church of England the original Apostolic Church that Jesus formed by giving authority to the Apostles. If yes, you must align your views with the Church.
This raises a whole host of questions. You are predicating the question itself on Catholic theological assumptions, which I do not share.
 
This raises a whole host of questions. You are predicating the question itself on Catholic theological assumptions, which I do not share.
No I’m not. Jesus started a Church with 12 Apostles, that Apostolic Church was split into Catholic and Orthodox. I would agree the Church of England contains as much truth as it received from the Catholic Church.
 
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