This site is dedicated to the traditional Anglican expression of the One, Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church of Our Lord Jesus Christ. We profess the orthodox Christian Faith enshrined in the three great Creeds and the Seven Ecumenical Councils of the ancient undivided Church. We celebrate the Seven Sacraments of the historic Church. We cherish and continue the Catholic Revival inaugurated by the Tractarian or Oxford Movement. Not tepid centrist Anglicanism.
Monday, December 26, 2016
Thursday, December 22, 2016
Anglicans and the Historic Priesthood
By Alice C. Linsley
special to VIRTUEONLINE
www.virtueonline.org
December 22, 2016
I am writing this from the strength of my conviction that women's ordination to the sacred order of priests is a dangerous innovation, and as a woman who served as a priest in ECUSA from 1988 until the Sunday on which Gene Robinson was consecrated.
Some will view this article as an attempt to influence the 2017 decision of the Anglican Church of North America (ACNA). However, this is a question on which I have been speaking and writing for over 10 years, and I have no illusion that what is said here will change the minds of those who also hold their positions with firm conviction.
special to VIRTUEONLINE
www.virtueonline.org
December 22, 2016
I am writing this from the strength of my conviction that women's ordination to the sacred order of priests is a dangerous innovation, and as a woman who served as a priest in ECUSA from 1988 until the Sunday on which Gene Robinson was consecrated.
Some will view this article as an attempt to influence the 2017 decision of the Anglican Church of North America (ACNA). However, this is a question on which I have been speaking and writing for over 10 years, and I have no illusion that what is said here will change the minds of those who also hold their positions with firm conviction.
Some say that the opposing positions on women's ordination are predicated on equally valid arguments. That is problematic because the Church does not change sacred Tradition based on the validity of arguments. It has no authority to do so.
Given that Anglicans are comfortable with theological ambiguity and some bishops are pleased to act unilaterally, with little regard for uniformity, it may be impossible to achieve consensus on the question of women priests. As far as the Anglican Church of North America is concerned, the question has been under study for a good while. Out of concern for the growth and unity of that fledging body, it was not addressed early.
"At the inception of the Anglican Church in North America, the lead Bishops unanimously agreed to work together for the good of the Kingdom. As part of this consensus, it was understood that there were differing understandings regarding the ordination of women to Holy Orders, but there existed a mutual love and respect for one another and a desire to move forward for the good of the Church. This commitment was deeply embedded in the Constitution and Canons overwhelmingly adopted by the Inaugural Assembly (2009). [1]
While the Anglican tent has room for "both integrities" the issue remains contentious, and some clergy may leave ACNA should the ordination of women become an approved practice. For these clergy the ordination of women is deemed a first order issue.
Father Louis Tarsitano wrote, "The priesthood of Christ, and that representative priesthood rooted in Christ's priesthood is changeless. To change it is to change the New Testament itself."[2]
Father Richard L. Jones has written, "The established historicity of the priesthood extends back to Melchizedek, then the Levitical priesthood, then Christ and the Apostles, then the Apostolic Fathers, and on through the succeeding 1900+ years. Not only is women in the priesthood a recent innovation that defies the traditions of the past, it also has no basis in Scripture whatsoever."
The Most Rev. Walter F. Grundorf, Presiding Bishop of the Anglican Province of America, expresses that body's fidelity to holy Tradition in this statement:
"The Anglican Province of America, in common with the rest of the One, Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church, affirms that the Sacrament of Holy Orders of Bishop, Priest and Deacons is the perpetuation of Our Lord Jesus Christ's gift of Apostolic Ministry to his Church and that these Sacred Orders consist exclusively of men in accordance with Christ's will and institution as proven by Holy Scriptures and the universal Tradition of the Holy Catholic Church for two thousand years. We do believe in conformity with the Undivided Catholic Church of the First Millennium that the male character of Holy Orders is unalterably of Divine institution."
The Anglican Province of South America debated the issue of women's ordination for 20 years and feelings ran high. Nevertheless, that Province has agreed to differ. According to Gregory Venables, the Primate of the Anglican Church of South America, "it hasn't caused any division."
Some believe the ability to embrace opposing views is a strength. Michael Warren Davis, writing for the Imaginative Conservative, expressed exactly this view:
"By allowing these rival sentiments to work themselves out, by allowing different provinces and even different parishes to align with this or that camp, the Anglican Communion has grown to be the third largest Church body in the world. To pick the Communion apart now, either from the left or the right, is the only certain means of destroying Anglicanism entirely. Total uniformity is not only impossible--its expectation is un-Anglican."
Concern for the growth and unity of the Anglican Communion does not condone moving the boundary stones set up by our holy ancestors (Proverbs 22:28) that enable us to discern and avoid errant paths. Anglicans who uphold the all-male priesthood are portrayed as having "conservative separatist tendencies, such the Anglican realignment and Continuing Anglican movements."[3] In reality, the separatists are the innovators, and their departure from holy Tradition creates division.
C. S. Lewis observed, "The innovators are really implying that sex is something superficial, irrelevant to the spiritual life. To say that men and women are equally eligible for a certain profession is to say that for the purposes of that profession their sex is irrelevant. We are, within that context, treating both as neuters. As the State grows more like a hive or an ant-hill it needs an increasing number of workers who can be treated as neuters. This may be inevitable for our secular life. But in our Christian life we must return to reality." [4]
A woman standing at the altar as a priest represents a departure from the pattern of Scripture. The Bible does not explicitly state "Women shall not be ordained" because it was inconceivable to the Biblical writers that a woman would raise a knife to ritually slay an animal on the altar. This was the work of priests and the heads of households, both roles of men in the Judeo-Christian Tradition.
The priesthood is tied to the altar, and though the Christian priest enacts a bloodless sacrifice, the priesthood is about blood. According to Leviticus 17:11, "The life of the flesh is in the blood, and I have given it for you on the altar to make atonement for your souls, for it is the blood that makes atonement by the life." The blood of Jesus makes atonement, purifies, and sanctifies. He is both Sacerdos and Agnus Dei.
St. Paul refers to the Blood of Jesus no less than twelve times in his writings. Because God makes peace with us through the blood of the cross, he urges us to "Take every care to preserve the unity of the Spirit by the peace that binds you together" (Eph. 4:3).
The notion of a woman offering blood sacrifice was unthinkable to the Hebrew people. Such a thing would have been viewed as an affront to the Creator. He created women to bring forth life, not to take it. The blood work of women involves childbirth. The blood work of men involves hunting and warfare. Traditional gender roles speak of the distinction between life and death, a distinction that modernism has blurred. To the modern reader, this sounds bizarre. Today women fight in combat, hunt, and abort their unborn.
That men and women have distinct blood work is a given in the context of the Biblical writers. Women were not permitted at the altar and men were not permitted inside birthing chambers. This is an aspect of the Tradition the Church has received. Some view this as legalistic and patriarchal, but instead it is an invitation to contemplate a sacred mystery that is to be preserved by the Church.
A woman standing in persona Christi at the altar sends a distorted and confusing message. Likewise, a man standing in a Nativity scene as the Virgin Mary sends a distorted and confusing message. Jesus Christ is not the author of confusion. That comes from earthly and spiritual forces that oppose Christ and His Gospel.
Through the Church, God preserves right belief and right actions in the service of humanity. The conservation of holy Tradition is the responsibility of bishops and priests who follow the Apostles, upon whom the Church is founded. So-called "traditionalists" have been criticized for doing exactly what must be done to preserve the Gospel and the Church's witness.
Archbishop Shane B. Janzen, Primate of the Traditional Anglican Communion, has stated:
"The Traditional Anglican Communion, as with other Continuing Anglican Churches outside of the Canterbury Communion, holds to the Principles of Faith set out in the Affirmation of Saint Louis, 1977. We hold and believe that the Holy Orders of Bishop, Priest and Deacon are exclusive to men, affirming as we do the ancient tradition of the Church and the authority of Sacred Scripture. Though many in the secular world today see the ordination of women as a matter of human rights and equality between the sexes, it is in fact a matter of divine institution not human determination. No one has the 'right' to be ordained. The calling to the ordained ministry within the Church is from God who, in the person of His Son our Lord Jesus Christ, instituted the sacred ministry among men alone -- though He could very well have done otherwise given our Lord's pronouncements and actions which in many cases ran counter to the prevailing understanding and teachings of the then Jewish authorities. The ordained minister is an 'icon of Christ' -- persona Christi or alter Christus -- particularly in the celebration of the Holy Eucharist. To set aside the teachings of Christ and the sacred tradition of the Church universal in any unilateral way is contrary to the teachings of Christ, the ancient discipline of the Church, and the means by which doctrines of the Church are determined. The Traditional Anglican Communion continues in the beliefs and discipline of the one, holy, catholic and apostolic Church. We seek to conform to the model of Church left to us by our Lord, and as He did not grant authority to His Church to confer the Sacrament of Holy Orders on women, it is beyond our moral and canonical right to do so. We hold that no Church or body of bishops has the authority to alter the teachings of Christ and His Church in matters of faith and morals, including the ordination of women."
Christian leaders are to uphold values consistent with the Gospel and to resist dangerous innovations that threaten the unity of the Body of Christ. They are to preserve the pattern, rather than change the pattern based on vain arguments. As a philosophy teacher, I know that an argument can be valid and yet have no basis in reality. The Tradition of the Church is grounded in reality. It speaks about what is real and true. In an escapist society the Church is a troublesome reminder that God exists and is working in mysterious ways to redeem the world. The emotional fragility that is exhibited by many today is a sign that they are fleeing the reality of God. We escape reality when we fantasize new identities, immerse ourselves in virtual realities, hide behind addictions, and avoid pondering eternal verities.
This is what Lewis meant when he wrote, "With the Church, we are farther in: for there we are dealing with male and female not merely as facts of nature but as the live and awful shadows of realities utterly beyond our control and largely beyond our direct knowledge. Or rather, we are not dealing with them but (as we shall soon learn if we meddle) they are dealing with us." [5]
On the question of women priests, Archbishop Edmund Akanya of Nigeria has stated: "Our position as a church is that it runs counter to scripture and more so our culture. Even the women themselves are seriously opposed to women's ordination. This position has been held before I became a bishop. In fact, it [women's ordination] is looked at as something that led to the issue of human sexuality today.
Archbishop Akanya is justified in this view since the first woman "regularly" ordained to the priesthood in the Episcopal Church (ECUSA) was known to be a lesbian and served as co-president of Integrity.
Louie Crew, the founder of Integrity, worked to influence the decisions of the General Conventions, and the 1976 Convention passed resolutions supporting the "civil rights" of lesbians and gays. (And it came to pass that the salt lost its saltiness and is no longer good for anything.)
The theological ambiguity and biblical illiteracy with which Episcopalians were comfortable served to advance Crew's agenda. He wrote,
"Almost never in our history have we had the luxury of expecting a high degree of conformity in doctrine or liturgical practice. To avoid extinction, frequently individual Anglicans and even groups of us have needed to back off from actions with which we disapprove and allow them still to happen, preferably 'somewhere else.'" [6]
This live-and-let-live attitude became enshrined among American Episcopalians and paved the way for Integrity to work its wizardry. Crew wrote, "Episcopal polity, therefore, allows much air in which lesbigays may breathe our living witness."[7]
The Church's nature resists worldly corruption and it is able by God's grace to correct what is wrong within itself. Regardless of how one views the priest at altar - in persona Christi, in persona ecclesiae, an icon of Christ, the divinely appointed mediator in the pattern of the Mediator, etc., this is not a matter of secondary importance. No synod or jurisdiction has authority to change the received Tradition concerning Jesus Christ and his blood shed for the salvation of the world. C.S. Lewis is correct that when it comes to the Church's received Tradition, "We cannot shuffle or tamper so much."
Through Jesus Christ the eternal truth signified by the Priesthood comes into focus. He perfects atonement through His own shed blood. The Priesthood is necessarily tied to the blood of Jesus Christ. Where faith in the saving nature of His blood is denied, there can be no true Priesthood. A priest who denies the necessity of repentance and trust in Jesus' blood as the only means of atonement is a false priest.
Alice C. Linsley has been pioneering the scientific field of Biblical Anthropology for 30 years. Her research on the primitive understanding of blood is reflected in this article. She lives in North Carolina where she continues to teach Philosophy.
FOOTNOTES
1. From "Frequently Asked Questions" at the ACNA website
2. Tarsitano, "Some Scriptural References Applicable to the Question of the Ordination of Women"
3. "Ordination of women in the Anglican Communion" Wikipedia
4. C.S. Lewis, "Priestesses in the Church"
5. Ibid
6. Louie Crew, Changing the Church
7. Ibid
This article may be freely posted to websites and blogs with full recognition as to its source.
Given that Anglicans are comfortable with theological ambiguity and some bishops are pleased to act unilaterally, with little regard for uniformity, it may be impossible to achieve consensus on the question of women priests. As far as the Anglican Church of North America is concerned, the question has been under study for a good while. Out of concern for the growth and unity of that fledging body, it was not addressed early.
"At the inception of the Anglican Church in North America, the lead Bishops unanimously agreed to work together for the good of the Kingdom. As part of this consensus, it was understood that there were differing understandings regarding the ordination of women to Holy Orders, but there existed a mutual love and respect for one another and a desire to move forward for the good of the Church. This commitment was deeply embedded in the Constitution and Canons overwhelmingly adopted by the Inaugural Assembly (2009). [1]
While the Anglican tent has room for "both integrities" the issue remains contentious, and some clergy may leave ACNA should the ordination of women become an approved practice. For these clergy the ordination of women is deemed a first order issue.
Father Louis Tarsitano wrote, "The priesthood of Christ, and that representative priesthood rooted in Christ's priesthood is changeless. To change it is to change the New Testament itself."[2]
Father Richard L. Jones has written, "The established historicity of the priesthood extends back to Melchizedek, then the Levitical priesthood, then Christ and the Apostles, then the Apostolic Fathers, and on through the succeeding 1900+ years. Not only is women in the priesthood a recent innovation that defies the traditions of the past, it also has no basis in Scripture whatsoever."
The Most Rev. Walter F. Grundorf, Presiding Bishop of the Anglican Province of America, expresses that body's fidelity to holy Tradition in this statement:
"The Anglican Province of America, in common with the rest of the One, Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church, affirms that the Sacrament of Holy Orders of Bishop, Priest and Deacons is the perpetuation of Our Lord Jesus Christ's gift of Apostolic Ministry to his Church and that these Sacred Orders consist exclusively of men in accordance with Christ's will and institution as proven by Holy Scriptures and the universal Tradition of the Holy Catholic Church for two thousand years. We do believe in conformity with the Undivided Catholic Church of the First Millennium that the male character of Holy Orders is unalterably of Divine institution."
The Anglican Province of South America debated the issue of women's ordination for 20 years and feelings ran high. Nevertheless, that Province has agreed to differ. According to Gregory Venables, the Primate of the Anglican Church of South America, "it hasn't caused any division."
Some believe the ability to embrace opposing views is a strength. Michael Warren Davis, writing for the Imaginative Conservative, expressed exactly this view:
"By allowing these rival sentiments to work themselves out, by allowing different provinces and even different parishes to align with this or that camp, the Anglican Communion has grown to be the third largest Church body in the world. To pick the Communion apart now, either from the left or the right, is the only certain means of destroying Anglicanism entirely. Total uniformity is not only impossible--its expectation is un-Anglican."
Concern for the growth and unity of the Anglican Communion does not condone moving the boundary stones set up by our holy ancestors (Proverbs 22:28) that enable us to discern and avoid errant paths. Anglicans who uphold the all-male priesthood are portrayed as having "conservative separatist tendencies, such the Anglican realignment and Continuing Anglican movements."[3] In reality, the separatists are the innovators, and their departure from holy Tradition creates division.
C. S. Lewis observed, "The innovators are really implying that sex is something superficial, irrelevant to the spiritual life. To say that men and women are equally eligible for a certain profession is to say that for the purposes of that profession their sex is irrelevant. We are, within that context, treating both as neuters. As the State grows more like a hive or an ant-hill it needs an increasing number of workers who can be treated as neuters. This may be inevitable for our secular life. But in our Christian life we must return to reality." [4]
A woman standing at the altar as a priest represents a departure from the pattern of Scripture. The Bible does not explicitly state "Women shall not be ordained" because it was inconceivable to the Biblical writers that a woman would raise a knife to ritually slay an animal on the altar. This was the work of priests and the heads of households, both roles of men in the Judeo-Christian Tradition.
The priesthood is tied to the altar, and though the Christian priest enacts a bloodless sacrifice, the priesthood is about blood. According to Leviticus 17:11, "The life of the flesh is in the blood, and I have given it for you on the altar to make atonement for your souls, for it is the blood that makes atonement by the life." The blood of Jesus makes atonement, purifies, and sanctifies. He is both Sacerdos and Agnus Dei.
St. Paul refers to the Blood of Jesus no less than twelve times in his writings. Because God makes peace with us through the blood of the cross, he urges us to "Take every care to preserve the unity of the Spirit by the peace that binds you together" (Eph. 4:3).
The notion of a woman offering blood sacrifice was unthinkable to the Hebrew people. Such a thing would have been viewed as an affront to the Creator. He created women to bring forth life, not to take it. The blood work of women involves childbirth. The blood work of men involves hunting and warfare. Traditional gender roles speak of the distinction between life and death, a distinction that modernism has blurred. To the modern reader, this sounds bizarre. Today women fight in combat, hunt, and abort their unborn.
That men and women have distinct blood work is a given in the context of the Biblical writers. Women were not permitted at the altar and men were not permitted inside birthing chambers. This is an aspect of the Tradition the Church has received. Some view this as legalistic and patriarchal, but instead it is an invitation to contemplate a sacred mystery that is to be preserved by the Church.
A woman standing in persona Christi at the altar sends a distorted and confusing message. Likewise, a man standing in a Nativity scene as the Virgin Mary sends a distorted and confusing message. Jesus Christ is not the author of confusion. That comes from earthly and spiritual forces that oppose Christ and His Gospel.
Through the Church, God preserves right belief and right actions in the service of humanity. The conservation of holy Tradition is the responsibility of bishops and priests who follow the Apostles, upon whom the Church is founded. So-called "traditionalists" have been criticized for doing exactly what must be done to preserve the Gospel and the Church's witness.
Archbishop Shane B. Janzen, Primate of the Traditional Anglican Communion, has stated:
"The Traditional Anglican Communion, as with other Continuing Anglican Churches outside of the Canterbury Communion, holds to the Principles of Faith set out in the Affirmation of Saint Louis, 1977. We hold and believe that the Holy Orders of Bishop, Priest and Deacon are exclusive to men, affirming as we do the ancient tradition of the Church and the authority of Sacred Scripture. Though many in the secular world today see the ordination of women as a matter of human rights and equality between the sexes, it is in fact a matter of divine institution not human determination. No one has the 'right' to be ordained. The calling to the ordained ministry within the Church is from God who, in the person of His Son our Lord Jesus Christ, instituted the sacred ministry among men alone -- though He could very well have done otherwise given our Lord's pronouncements and actions which in many cases ran counter to the prevailing understanding and teachings of the then Jewish authorities. The ordained minister is an 'icon of Christ' -- persona Christi or alter Christus -- particularly in the celebration of the Holy Eucharist. To set aside the teachings of Christ and the sacred tradition of the Church universal in any unilateral way is contrary to the teachings of Christ, the ancient discipline of the Church, and the means by which doctrines of the Church are determined. The Traditional Anglican Communion continues in the beliefs and discipline of the one, holy, catholic and apostolic Church. We seek to conform to the model of Church left to us by our Lord, and as He did not grant authority to His Church to confer the Sacrament of Holy Orders on women, it is beyond our moral and canonical right to do so. We hold that no Church or body of bishops has the authority to alter the teachings of Christ and His Church in matters of faith and morals, including the ordination of women."
Christian leaders are to uphold values consistent with the Gospel and to resist dangerous innovations that threaten the unity of the Body of Christ. They are to preserve the pattern, rather than change the pattern based on vain arguments. As a philosophy teacher, I know that an argument can be valid and yet have no basis in reality. The Tradition of the Church is grounded in reality. It speaks about what is real and true. In an escapist society the Church is a troublesome reminder that God exists and is working in mysterious ways to redeem the world. The emotional fragility that is exhibited by many today is a sign that they are fleeing the reality of God. We escape reality when we fantasize new identities, immerse ourselves in virtual realities, hide behind addictions, and avoid pondering eternal verities.
This is what Lewis meant when he wrote, "With the Church, we are farther in: for there we are dealing with male and female not merely as facts of nature but as the live and awful shadows of realities utterly beyond our control and largely beyond our direct knowledge. Or rather, we are not dealing with them but (as we shall soon learn if we meddle) they are dealing with us." [5]
On the question of women priests, Archbishop Edmund Akanya of Nigeria has stated: "Our position as a church is that it runs counter to scripture and more so our culture. Even the women themselves are seriously opposed to women's ordination. This position has been held before I became a bishop. In fact, it [women's ordination] is looked at as something that led to the issue of human sexuality today.
Archbishop Akanya is justified in this view since the first woman "regularly" ordained to the priesthood in the Episcopal Church (ECUSA) was known to be a lesbian and served as co-president of Integrity.
Louie Crew, the founder of Integrity, worked to influence the decisions of the General Conventions, and the 1976 Convention passed resolutions supporting the "civil rights" of lesbians and gays. (And it came to pass that the salt lost its saltiness and is no longer good for anything.)
The theological ambiguity and biblical illiteracy with which Episcopalians were comfortable served to advance Crew's agenda. He wrote,
"Almost never in our history have we had the luxury of expecting a high degree of conformity in doctrine or liturgical practice. To avoid extinction, frequently individual Anglicans and even groups of us have needed to back off from actions with which we disapprove and allow them still to happen, preferably 'somewhere else.'" [6]
This live-and-let-live attitude became enshrined among American Episcopalians and paved the way for Integrity to work its wizardry. Crew wrote, "Episcopal polity, therefore, allows much air in which lesbigays may breathe our living witness."[7]
The Church's nature resists worldly corruption and it is able by God's grace to correct what is wrong within itself. Regardless of how one views the priest at altar - in persona Christi, in persona ecclesiae, an icon of Christ, the divinely appointed mediator in the pattern of the Mediator, etc., this is not a matter of secondary importance. No synod or jurisdiction has authority to change the received Tradition concerning Jesus Christ and his blood shed for the salvation of the world. C.S. Lewis is correct that when it comes to the Church's received Tradition, "We cannot shuffle or tamper so much."
Through Jesus Christ the eternal truth signified by the Priesthood comes into focus. He perfects atonement through His own shed blood. The Priesthood is necessarily tied to the blood of Jesus Christ. Where faith in the saving nature of His blood is denied, there can be no true Priesthood. A priest who denies the necessity of repentance and trust in Jesus' blood as the only means of atonement is a false priest.
Alice C. Linsley has been pioneering the scientific field of Biblical Anthropology for 30 years. Her research on the primitive understanding of blood is reflected in this article. She lives in North Carolina where she continues to teach Philosophy.
FOOTNOTES
1. From "Frequently Asked Questions" at the ACNA website
2. Tarsitano, "Some Scriptural References Applicable to the Question of the Ordination of Women"
3. "Ordination of women in the Anglican Communion" Wikipedia
4. C.S. Lewis, "Priestesses in the Church"
5. Ibid
6. Louie Crew, Changing the Church
7. Ibid
This article may be freely posted to websites and blogs with full recognition as to its source.
Tuesday, December 20, 2016
20th Anniversary of Priestly Ordination
21st December 2016, the Feast of Saint Thomas the Apostle, is the Twentieth Anniversary of my Ordination to the Sacred Order of Priests in the One, Holy, Catholic, and Apostolic Church of Our Lord Jesus Christ. The Ordination took place in the Anglican Catholic Church (ACC) Diocese of the Mid-Atlantic States; the ordaining Bishop was the Most Reverend John Thayer Cahoon, Junior, Bishop Ordinary. The Mass of Priestly Ordination was celebrated at Saint Paul's Church, Lexington, Virginia, where I served my title as Curate. Please pray for me and God bless you!
Thursday, December 15, 2016
The Operation of the Holy Ghost
1. Common humanity. The Holy Ghost has been present in creation since He established it and has always abided in the imminent creation, sanctifying, controlling, and ordering it. The Holy Ghost operates in His grace in the creation of every human being and endows every human being with his human soul, making each man the Image and Likeness of God. He, with the Father and the only-begotten Son/Logos/Word, continually loves, creates, governs, sustains, and gives life to the universe, including all living things, and especially human beings. God the Holy Ghost is the Person, source, and power Who gives life to all things, to all men: He is the 'Lord and Giver of Life' as the Creed declares. It is the Holy Spirit Who infuses divine aspirations, guidance, and knowledge into the minds and hearts of all men and Who leads all men to seek the true and living God. God the Holy Spirit has conferred all divine revelation in the history of the world and particularly to the covenant people of Israel, has inspired all of the Old Testament covenants, prophets, and writings, and has led and still leads the heathen to contemplate the truth about God. The Holy Ghost indwells all human beings only in the above sense, as Creator Spirit, as Life-Giver, as Wisdom - we call this ministry and operation of the Holy Ghost prevenient grace, 'grace that goes before.' The Holy Ghost leads and guides into all truth - He functions in common humanity to persuade men to enter into the Life of Jesus Christ.
2. The Church. The Holy Ghost indwells the crucified and risen Body of Christ, the Church, in a unique and supreme way: Christians possess the Holy Ghost in the fullness of His Person, in the fullness of His sevenfold Gift, in a way different from the common mass of humanity. The Spirit raised Jesus Christ from the dead, and the Spirit emanates from the risen and glorified Body of Jesus. It is only through the risen Body of Christ that the Holy Ghost infuses His full life, gifts, virtue, and power into the members of that Body, the new and renewed humanity, the new human race, the New Creation, which is the Church. The Holy Ghost is given for the remission of sins and regeneration, the New Life in Christ, in Holy Baptism; the Holy Ghost is given for strengthening and spiritual perfection in Holy Confirmation; the Holy Ghost is outpoured upon and within the Holy Gifts and upon and within us in the Holy Eucharist, changing the bread and wine into the True Body and Blood of Christ and us into the mystical Body. The Spirit is communicated sacramentally to those who are grafted into Christ. The Church is now the unique Home and Sphere of the Holy Ghost and of all grace. Whereas common humanity continues to receive the Holy Ghost for prevenient grace, the living members of the Body of Christ now receive the Holy Ghost in His fullness as sanctifying grace - grace to make us one with the Holy Trinity and to divinise us by entering us into the life of God - theosis - God-likeness, mutual indwelling, perichoresis, coinherence. Sanctifying grace, salvation, the Holy Ghost as Sanctifier, is received exclusively in the Church. Extra ecclesiam non salus est. The Spirit dwells in us only because we are members of that Body of Christ in Whom the Spirit dwells. 'In the One Body we are all made to drink of One Spirit.'
The indwelling of the Holy Ghost is complete and entire only within the Church, which is His Temple and dwelling-place, the Visible Sign and Sacrament of the Spirit. Wherever the Church is, there in covenant and promise is the Holy Spirit. Now uniquely, through the Church, the Holy Ghost sanctifies and consecrates the whole creation, and draws all men to saving communion with Jesus Christ in His mystical Body. What the Spirit does even now through the Church will finally enter into its fulfillment on the Last Day, wherein Christ completes the redemption of the universe and the Kingdom of God is fully realised. The Spirit is in the Church as the 'down payment' for the final glorification of the cosmos in Christ. 'The Spirit is in the Church and the Church is in the Spirit.' 'The Church is the place where the Spirit flourishes.' The Church is the Spirit-possessed Body of Christ. (Saint Irenaeus of Lyons). In fidelity to the ancient Tradition of the Church, we can only say where this Church, this communio sanctorum, is: we cannot say with certitude where it is not. We know for certain that the Church is found in those communions which bear the Four Notes of the Church, unity, holiness, apostolicity, and catholicity, and the Four Essentials of the New Testament Church, the canonical Holy Scriptures, the Three Great Creeds, the Seven Sacraments, and the Apostolic Succession of Faith and Order.
In summary, the Holy Ghost creates, loves, and sustains all human beings but only indwells in a salvific way those who are united to Christ in Holy Baptism, and are thus members of His mystical Body, and who seek to cooperate with Him for sanctification and salvation. Universalism, or the salvation of the whole of mankind without reference to one's moral state, sometimes described as apocatastasis, is a heresy. Not everyone will be saved because not everyone will desire to be saved. We may rightly hope and pray for the salvation of all, but some men will inevitably and finally refuse the grace of salvation - as we are informed in Scripture.
In summary, the Holy Ghost creates, loves, and sustains all human beings but only indwells in a salvific way those who are united to Christ in Holy Baptism, and are thus members of His mystical Body, and who seek to cooperate with Him for sanctification and salvation. Universalism, or the salvation of the whole of mankind without reference to one's moral state, sometimes described as apocatastasis, is a heresy. Not everyone will be saved because not everyone will desire to be saved. We may rightly hope and pray for the salvation of all, but some men will inevitably and finally refuse the grace of salvation - as we are informed in Scripture.
Christmas at Saint Barnabas Dunwoody
Please join us at Saint Barnabas Dunwoody for the Christmas solemnity: and let us keep Christ in Christmas by keeping Mass in Christmas!
Saturday, September 03, 2016
Messier Yet: The Case of the ACNA
S. M. Hutchens for First Things
C. S. Lewis has never been a patron of Anglicans favoring women’s ordination, his talent for going to the heart of the issue famously displayed in his essay “Priestesses in the Church?” where he made it clear that the question of whether we should have them concerns not simply modes of operation within the church resting on different interpretations of scripture, or theories of ordination, but nothing less than the symbolic identification of the Christian faith itself. His opening analogy, drawn from one of Bingley’s remarks inPride and Prejudice, was that just as a ball wouldn’t be so much like a ball without dancing, so the church wouldn’t be so much like the church if it had priestesses—understatement that could still be made playfully in the late 1940s–for a ball is defined by dancing. The reason did not lie (once again, a shot straight to the heart) in the man’s moral or functional superiority, but in the “mere maleness” required to re-present iconically the person of Christ in and to the church. The symbolic effect of placing women at pulpit and altar would be so radical and far-reaching that the religion that practiced it would not be Christianity any more than a ball without dancing would be a ball.
In a former posting, “The Conservative Anglican Mess,” I reported on the Anglican Church of North America’s (ACNA’s) current dealing with the question of women’s ordination, noting that the bishops are mostly against it, but that they would be considering it in an upcoming meeting. I can find nothing that makes one privy to the discussions in the House of Bishops in the meetings held June 21-24 in Charleston, nor would I expect it, but I did find, on the denomination’s website, a document (http://www.anglicanchurch.net/?/main/Charleston_2016 – scroll toDocument Center and use password ) of more than a hundred pages that contained the third of four reports by the Theological Task Force on Holy Orders, submitted at the Charleston meeting, which focuses on “the manner in which ecclesiology relates to ordination and holy orders.” It reports, “We also have begun the last phase of our work, Phase 4, in which we are examining the arguments for and against the ordination of women.”
The Task Force says it is not its role to formulate “the answer for the Province, but to “lead the College of Bishops [!] in a discussion about this important issue.” Its “final report [Phase 4] will be shaped with that purpose in mind.” The Task Force will be “spending the remainder of 2016 dealing with the arguments for and against the ordination of women.” Its goal is “to present our final report to the College of Bishops at their meeting in January 2017.” So, the bishops have not yet received the Task Force’s final report, commissioned to lead them in their deliberations on women’s ordination.
It is worth citing the Phase 3 report at length:
The examination conducted by the Task Force in the area of ecclesiology, has revealed that there are diverging perspectives within the Anglican tradition over the essential characteristics of ordained ministry, which have been acceptable positions to hold within our tradition. While we do not want to minimize the reality of our shared understanding and agreement on the theology of holy orders, anchored in the Ordinal and the Book of Common Prayer; yet we must recognize that the interpretation of the words of the Ordinal and the understanding of the theological context behind it are variously understood. Up until our own time, these differences have been held in tension, but they have not been the occasion for deep division. As long as someone was ordained through the proper form of the Ordinal, no one within our tradition questioned the validity of the ministry of the ordained person, even though its significance may have been differently defined. The ordination of women presents a different sort of challenge. Here the dispute is centered on the suitability of the ordinand herself. Of course, the question of suitability is rooted in the very differences mentioned above; however, the difference now is no longer in the realm of theory or opinion but in the actual application of ordination to particular persons. The issue before the Province is how we are to live with the divergent opinions over the theology of ordination . . . .”
The most telling part of the Report, however, is found near the end in Appendix VI where the Task Force makes its Case for Anglican Unity. It discovers three broad strains of Anglicanism, and within these “at least four different ‘families’ of ecclesiologies,” Anglo-Catholic, Reformed Evangelical, Revivalist Evangelical, and Charismatic, in which the understanding of the Ordinal differs, and the temptation is to regard itself as true Anglicanism, even though each of them “represents a vision of Christ’s will for the Church.”
The Task Force, however, has not discovered scriptural texts that require one of these ecclesiologies to the exclusion of the others, or is not open to debate, so it is uneasy about commending one of them as the “only legitimate option for Anglicans.” It notes that “order issues” “could very well fracture the Anglican Church in North America” and a number of other mediating groups that are agreed on essential Anglicanism that with their very different ecclesiologies they want to remain in communion on the basis of commonly held beliefs. It thinks the task of holding together these mutually corrective themes is worth attempting, emphasizing the tactical advantage unity in the face of neo-pagan North America.
All this is personalized. Choosing to follow what is presented here as a “particular ecclesiology” that excludes women’s ordination will affect “particular persons”– “the ordinand herself,” is going to be hurt. Thus those who would choose to sever the present bond of unity in the name of orthodoxy by moving against ordained women are preemptively charged with unkindness or even cruelty toward sincere Christians. Doing so would also hypocritically involve singling out ordained women for penalties not meted out to others, since “Up until our own time, these differences have been held in tension, but they have not been the occasion for deep division. As long as someone was ordained through the proper form of the Ordinal, no one within our tradition questioned the validity of the ministry of the ordained person.” The price of holding out against spirit of the age becomes ever higher as this massively tendentious report goes on. To oppose women’s ordination is in fact to do the devil’s work: “Divide and conquer,” the Task Force notes, “is the devil’s strategy.”
Well, enough of that. This report is very obviously the product of guiding hands skilled in the work of gaining their way in church assemblies. It is plainly an argument for retaining the ordination of women in ACNA that expects to lead the bishops’ deliberations to that end.
The reason I cited Lewis’s “Priestesses” at the beginning of this commentary was that I might demonstrate the radical difference between his views (which reflect the theology of the great majority of the Church, past and present) and the ones the Task Force wishes the ACNA to adopt, in fact makes it immoralnot to adopt. The view I identify with Lewis, is that the ordination of women is not in the first instance a matter of churchmanship within Anglicanism or anywhere else, but a involves the living symbolism in and by which the Church is defined and identified, so that a church with female priests cannot be identified as a Christian church any more than a church whose principal symbol is a circle instead of a cross. The Task Force has attempted to divert attention from this matter of indispensably central importance, presenting it a mere disagreement in which competing ecclesiologies, all defective in themselves and in need of others for completion, disagree on women’s ordination as one among issue others, and so can fall with the others into the category of things which reasonable and charitable people should overlook for the greater cause of unity. Once one sees the trick, it doesn’t really look all that clever.
If I am right about this, the long and impressive excursis on Anglican churchmanship—certainly worth reading on that subject–that comprises the largest part of this report is nothing but an immense red herring that leads not to the point but away from it, just where its authors wish their readers to be, especially the bishops–whom they must hope are both cowardly and weak-minded, for if they do not go the way of the Task Force, they will find themselves on high and perilous ground where they will face the daunting duty of being bishops, responsible for making decisions that will upset a great many people by marking certain popular ideas and institutions as heterodox. The bishops would have to take personal responsibility for deciding whether women’s ordination is right or wrong, and if wrong, what must be done about it in the ACNA.
This task force’s conclusions on Part 4 can easily be extrapolated from Part 3, where no convincing reason for the denomination-wide adoption of any one of what are presented in it as four family rules could be found. This is what one can expect in January from the Task Force, unless it is reconstituted or disbanded so the bishops can go it alone without the ring that is being installed in their collective nasal septum. Here is what the Task Force will conclude : Arguments pro and con (including the one found here) all carry some weight, but at the end of the day they are, taken as a whole, inconclusive because they are associated with conflicting and inconclusive ecclesiologies. On that account, for the sake of unity, no departure from the status quo, that is, the denominational acceptance of women’s ordination, can be urged. There you have it.
The question of whether women should be ordained to the office of presbyter or bishop is a binary matter: they either should or shouldn’t; there is no middle way. In this Report we find as the last gasping attempt a prophylaxis that those who come to a conclusion that harms the unity of the denomination (characterized throughout as the Church) are doing the work of the devil, whose strategy is to divide and conquer. In this one smells the old slogan heard so often in days when conservative Episcopalians were being moved out of the Episcopal Church and some of them would not leave: “schism is worse than heresy.” No, it’s not. Heresy forces schism and the heretics, not those who separate from them, are the ones who have created the division. Dividing light from darkness is the work of God, not the devil, and the authors of the Report have, it seems to me, taken a very great spiritual risk in making this application.
They have made their opinion clear enough, but I must say, depicting their opponents as the co-operatives of Satan is pretty cheeky. And there is no little irony here in that the Task Force’s strategy for conquest is dependent upon what it makes of its own tetrapartite division of the Anglican house—a division that need not bear theologically upon the question of women’s ordination at all. I hope the rascals don’t get away with it, but wouldn’t be the least surprised if they do.
Wednesday, August 31, 2016
Dedication Celebration - Sunday 4th September at Saint Barnabas Dunwoody
On Sunday 4th September, Saint Barnabas Church Dunwoody will celebrate the Tenth Anniversary of the Dedication of our Sanctuary and Nave: please join us for the one combined service of Holy Communion at 10am with a glorious luncheon to follow. This service is a Homecoming Celebration, so please invite friends and neighbours and anyone you might know who would like to celebrate with us!
Sunday, August 14, 2016
Dormition of Our Lady
Mother! whose virgin bosom was uncrost
With the least shade of thought to sin allied;
Woman! above all women glorified,
Our tainted nature's solitary boast...
A joyful Feast of the Dormition of the Blessed Virgin Mary to all - God bless you!
Thursday, May 19, 2016
Who is Saint Barnabas?
Saint
Barnabas, the Patron Saint of our parish and one accounted an Apostle of Our
Lord Jesus Christ in the New Testament (Acts of the Apostles 14.14), was a
Jewish Levite from Cyprus, a deacon of the Jewish community, who became one of
the earliest Christian disciples and followers at Jerusalem. He was well known
to the Jerusalem Church. His original, given name was Joseph, but, like many of
the other Apostles, he was given a Christian name and was surnamed Barnabas by the Apostles. Saint Luke in
Acts 4.36 tells us the name means, ‘son of consolation’ or ‘son of encouragement,’
(uios parakleseos). The root word of Saint Luke’s description is Paraclete,
Comforter, Strengthener, which term Our Lord uses to describe the Holy Ghost in
the Gospel according to Saint John. Barnabas served as a quintessential helper
and support in and for the primitive Church. He sold his goods and gave the
money to the Apostles at Jerusalem.
Saint
Barnabas is particularly important because he first introduced Saint Paul to
the Twelve Apostles after Paul’s conversion (Acts 9.27). Saint Barnabas had
known Saint Paul for a long time, as both men were possibly students of the
Rabbi Gamaliel at the same time. Barnabas was also sent by the Twelve to investigate
a situation in Antioch, where the Gospel of Jesus Christ was being preached to and
received by the Gentile population at an unprecedented level (Acts 11.22 and
following). Many ‘God-fearing’ Gentiles who attended the Jewish synagogues were
converting in large numbers to Christ. Subsequently, Saint Barnabas approved of
this mission and so was overwhelmed with the work that he brought Saint Paul
from Tarsus to assist him in the first missionary journey of the Apostolic duo,
which effort began at Cyprus (Acts 13 and 14). At one point, Barnabas and Paul
returned to Jerusalem with donations given to the Jerusalem Church’s poor by
the wealthier Antiochene congregation.
Saint
Barnabas and Saint Paul would return again to Antioch with Saint Mark, who is
traditionally identified as Barnabas’s cousin. Originally, Saint Barnabas was
the clear leader and director of the missionary project, but Saint Paul would
rise to prominence very quickly. Our Patron Saint defended the rights and
claims of Gentile Christians at the great Apostolic Council of Jerusalem in
opposition to Judaisers and a theology that would have Gentile Christians
subject to the Jewish ceremonial Law (Acts 15), and after the conclusion of the
Council, which was resolved in favour of the Gentile believers, he returned
with Saint Paul to Antioch. The Council
assigned Barnabas and Paul to the ministry of preaching to the Gentiles. Eventually, Saint Paul and Saint Barnabas
entered into a strident dispute over the role of Mark, called John Mark in the
narrative, and as a result, ‘they parted asunder one from the other’ (Acts
15.39). The two great missionary Apostles had what we would today colloquially
call ‘a falling out’ with each other. After this debacle, Barnabas sailed for
Cyprus. Although Saint Paul proved to be the more eloquent preacher and
evangelist of the pair, Saint Barnabas stands out as an indefatigable worker
and labourer. He continued to travel wide and far, covering much of the eastern
Mediterranean region, and made a total of at least four different missionary
trips to Antioch. Like Paul, Barnabas also worked a secular job in order to
fund his missions. Saint Paul insinuates that Barnabas was known to the
Galatians (Galatians 2.1, 13), the Corinthians (I Corinthians 9.6), and the Colossians
(Colossians 4.10).
Holy
Tradition reckons Saint Barnabas the founder of the Orthodox Church of Cyprus
and that he was martyred in AD 61 in Salamis, Cyprus by being stoned to death
by Jews after preaching in local synagogues and debating opponents. In the Great
Tradition, Barnabas is often numbered one of the seventy disciples mentioned in
Saint Luke 10.1. He may also have been the founder of the Church of Milan and
its first bishop. Interestingly, Tertullian, the famous second/third-century
Latin theologian, identifies Barnabas as the author of the canonical Epistle to
the Hebrews.
Please
join us for the Holy Eucharist at Noon on the Feast of Saint Barnabas the
Apostle, our patronal festival, on Saturday 11th June.
Sancte Barnaba, ora pro nobis!
God
bless you!
+Chad
Friday, May 13, 2016
Anglicanism and Eastern Orthodoxy - Historically Speaking
On the eve of the Great and Holy Council of the Eastern Orthodox in June 2016, the first general meeting of the majority of Eastern Orthodox Patriarchs and hierarchs in many centuries, it should be beneficial take a moment and reflect upon what the Eastern Orthodox Churches have historically held and taught concerning their closest ecumenical friend and partner, the Anglican Church. The impending Council will discuss the current relationship of the Eastern Orthodox with other Christian bodies, including Anglicanism.
Below are passages from a remarkable and rarely studied book, The Thyateira Confession - the Faith and Prayer of the People of God, an official catechism of the Greek Orthodox Church. It was published in 1975 by the Faith Press of England, with the blessing and authorisation of His All-Holiness the Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople Demetrios I. It is as official a doctrinal book as one could hope to procure from the Eastern Church; it recognises the unique relationship enjoyed between Anglicanism and Eastern Orthodoxy, a relationship which was once de facto sacramental communion, as it also affirms the validity of Anglican priesthood and sacraments. The text was almost certainly translated from Greek into English, so the language and syntax do not flow very smoothly in parts and places.
One cautionary note: Traditional Anglo-Catholics, naturally, will not agree entirely with all the assertions made in this text about ourselves or our Church. We may particularly dispute the explanations provided for the meaning of some of the Articles of Religion. But the cited text proffers us an understanding of where the Eastern Orthodox usually stand on these issues. Many traditional Anglo-Catholics maintain, a la Tract XC and the Tractarian theological movement, that the XXXIX Articles of Religion are patient of an orthodox catholic interpretation thoroughly compatible with the received Holy and Apostolic Tradition of the Undivided Church and the Seven Ecumenical Councils, and beyond this, that the Articles are so intentionally designed - being as they are Articles of Peace and theological limitations and not of dogma or Faith. The Articles must be subject to and interpreted by the Book of Common Prayer and the consensus fidelium and consensus patricum, not vice-versa. We may also find the claimed differences on Eucharistic doctrine to be semantic, linguistic, and not substantial, as well. The Common Prayer Book, the Great Creeds, and the Seven Holy Councils are the living magisterium of orthodox continuing Anglicanism. Such is the stuff of 'continuing' dialogue...
We must never forget the fact that all Christians are not Apostles as the Twelve were, though all are duty bound to participate in the Apostolic Mission of the Church. The Orthodox Church together with the Roman Catholic and the Anglican, etc., maintain the three Degrees of the Priesthood: those of Bishops, Priests and Deacons as indispensable for the Ministry of the People of God and the systematic dissemination of the Gospel of Christ.
Orthodox Christians believe that the following Churches have valid and true Priesthood or Orders: the Orthodox, the Roman Catholic, the Ethiopian, the Copto-Armenian and the Anglican. The Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople, the Patriarchate of Alexandria, the Patriarchate of Jerusalem, the Patriarchate of Romania and the Church of Cyprus half a century ago declared officially that the Anglican Church has valid Orders by dispensation and that means that Anglican Bishops, Priests and Deacons can perform valid Sacraments as can those of the Roman Catholic Church.
It is perhaps right to state here that there are still differences of opinion among Orthodox people in regard to Anglican Orders. There are Orthodox Churches and theologians who are more rigorous and others less so regarding the validity of the Priesthood and consequently of the Sacraments performed outside the Orthodox Church.
This difference of opinion among the Orthodox is based on the fact that the Orthodox Church as a whole has not yet examined these important questions. We hope, however, that the Ecumenical Orthodox Council which is to be called soon will investigate not only the Mystery of Unity but also the Mystery of disunity and answer among other matters the question of valid priesthood and the validity of Sacraments celebrated within non-Orthodox Christian bodies.
Orthodox Christians know that they have been in friendly relations with Anglican Christians for more than a century past. Orthodox Christians know that the Anglicans believe as the Orthodox do in the Holy Trinity, in Christ the God-Man, in the Paraclete or the Holy Spirit, in the Church and its mysteries and traditions. The Orthodox Christians know that the Anglicans acknowledge the two great Sacraments, that is, Baptism and the Holy Eucharist. For this reason Orthodox theologians at various theological discussions raise the question: What do the Anglicans believe about the remaining five Sacraments? The Anglicans answer that they accept them as being Sacraments. However, they distinguish the first two as being basic and indispensable for salvation.
It is rather evident that all the Anglicans do not agree with this interpretation because there are among them groups who prefer the Protestant views, and groups who as true Catholic and Orthodox Christians accept all the Holy Sacraments of the Church.
On account of friendly relations it has become customary for the Orthodox to perform funerals for the Anglicans and offer to them the Holy Eucharist in places where there is no Anglican clergyman available. This is reciprocated for the Orthodox Christians wherever there is no Orthodox clergyman available. This is done both officially and unofficially and in various localities it is a necessary practice expressing Christian sacramental hospitality. Furthermore it is certain that the Christian people themselves seek this sacramental hospitality. This is certainly a sign of the intention of the People of God by thus establishing practical unity because they see that both groups believe in the same Bible and traditions and confess the same Creed of Nicea-Constantinople.
Orthodox Christians know that in certain matters they disagree with Anglicans and these are as follows: ---
1. In the Mystery of the Holy Eucharist the Anglicans seem to reject the theory of transubstantiation and emphasise their faith in the Real Presence of Christ in the Eucharistic bread and wine. This view is not entirely acceptable to the Orthodox because the Presence of Christ seems to coexist in the bread and in the wine of the Eucharist. This coexistence means that Christ is present as He is present everywhere. However the Bread and Wine are not totally changed into Christ Himself. If the Eucharistic Bread and Wine are changed into Christ's Body then there is an identical agreement between the Anglicans and the Orthodox. If however Christ by His Presence coexists with the Bread and the Wine then the Orthodox disagree with this view because Christ said: 'This is My Body.' This means that Christ is not solely present in the Eucharistic Bread but rather that the Bread is changed into the Theandric Christ.
It is evident, however, that the Real Presence concept is an effort of Theologians to approach and explain the Mystery. This view does not seem to be the faith of the Anglican Christians because when they receive Holy Communion they believe that they take Christ the God-Man.
2. As to the question of the Ecumenical Councils some Anglicans declare that they accept only Four, that is, of Nicea AD 325, of Constantinople AD 381, of Ephesus AD 431, and of Chalcedon AD 451. The remaining three some Anglicans accept as ecumenical and others not. The differentiation has been evident in what Anglican theologians answer when the Orthodox enquire about the Fifth, Sixth and Seventh Ecumenical Councils.
3. The exercise of authority in the Anglican Church is another question which the Orthodox often raise and about which they frequently ask the Anglicans. The fact that some Anglican Bishops and Priests and theologians express and publish opinions in sermons and books that are in disagreement with the doctrine of Holy Scripture and the Church has led the Orthodox to seek an answer in order to determine the question of authority. Christian people and especially Anglican students of theology are often confused because they see that there is a difference between the teachings of some Bishops and theologians and the teachings of the Book of Common Prayer, in matters of great importance, such as, the Person of Christ, the Resurrection, the Seven Sacraments and the Apostolic Succession of Bishops. It is certain that the majority of Anglican Bishops and theologians see the centre of Church authority in the Faith proclaimed in the Book of Common Prayer, the Ecumenical Creeds and the hierarchical structure of the Church, and the faith and worship of her believers.
4. Another matter of disagreement between Anglicans and Orthodox is that of the well-known Thirty Nine Articles, which for historical reasons - and despite the wishes of many Anglican Bishops, priests and laity - are still to be found in the Book of Common Prayer. Some of these Articles are unacceptable to Orthodox Christians because they declare:
a. that the formulations of doctrine agreed by the Ecumenical Councils are not infallible (Article 21).
b. that adoration of the saints and their relics and ikons, being confused with veneration, is considered an impious invention (Article 22).
c. that Holy Communion is received in a manner that indicates denial of the Eucharistic Reality, since Article 28 states that it is given and received only in a heavenly and spiritual manner.
d. that the theory of predestination is advocated as a revealed truth to benefit the very few (Article 17).
e. that the Sacraments are only two in number, while the remaining Five are mere products of the 'corrupt following of the Apostles' doctrine' (Article 25).
However, we must not fail to observe that the [English] Book of Common Prayer contains the Offices of six Sacraments, although only two of them are considered to be Sacraments of the Holy Gospel. The seventh Sacrament, Holy Unction, is now widely practised after a recent decision taken at the Convocations of Canterbury and York.
All these questions have been thoroughly debated between Anglican and Orthodox theologians. We believe and pray that a blessed time will come when Anglicans and Orthodox Christians will eventually reach an understanding that will lead to the Unity of the Faith of the One, Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church.
This Unity does not mean unity of administration, and the submission of the one church to the other. It means freedom in the preservation of the characteristics of each church, and that unity in the Blessed Sacraments that is so dearly desired by Anglican and Orthodox Christians.
Monday, March 21, 2016
Continuing Anglican Leaders Set 2017 as Goal for Full Communion
On VirtueOnline...
March 18, 2016
Leaders of four Continuing Anglican jurisdictions have signed a letter setting a goal of full communion
by 2017.
They are Archbishop Mark Haverland of the Anglican Catholic Church; Presiding Bishop Brian Marsh
of the Anglican Church in America; The Most Rev. Walter H. Grundorf, Presiding Bishop of the
Anglican Province of America and the Rt. Rev. Paul C. Hewett SSC, of the Diocese of the Holy Cross.
A joint letter by the four leaders have agreed to:
Leaders of four Continuing Anglican jurisdictions have signed a letter setting a goal of full communion
by 2017.
They are Archbishop Mark Haverland of the Anglican Catholic Church; Presiding Bishop Brian Marsh
of the Anglican Church in America; The Most Rev. Walter H. Grundorf, Presiding Bishop of the
Anglican Province of America and the Rt. Rev. Paul C. Hewett SSC, of the Diocese of the Holy Cross.
A joint letter by the four leaders have agreed to:
• Pledge to "work cooperatively , in a spirit of brotherly love and affection, to create a
sacramental union and commonality of purpose that is pleasing to God and in accord with
godly purpose to our respective jurisdictions";
• Endeavor to "hold in concert our national and provincial synods in 2017" with a goal for
this meeting "to formalize a relationship of communion in sacris; and
• During the intervening period to work "in full accord toward that end, [seeking] ways to
cooperate with each other, supporting each others' jurisdictions and communicating on a
variety of ecclesiastical matters." The bishops also pledge to meet monthly by teleconferencing.
In his message in the January/February issue of the TRINITARIAN, the official house organ of the
ACC, Haverland said, "Unforeseen difficulties may arise, but our agreement states our clear
aspiration, intention and goals."
"The goal for 2017 is full communion. That, in turn, is not the same as institutional or organic merger,
which would be the step beyond, but which I also think we should pursue."
Bishops Grundorf, Hewett and Marsh all praised the joint letter as a positive beginning towards
establishing a working communion of Continuing Anglican Churches.
Grundorf said the last 30 years had seen much antipathy among so many of the major continuing
churches, with feelings of frustration and isolation by continuing churches when attempts were
made to reach out in other ecclesiastical directions to find common cause.
"As one of the bishops of longest standing, and having been through so many of these attempts, it is
a great blessing to be part of signing this commitment as the Presiding Bishop
of the Anglican Province of America.
The APA pledges, along with the others, to work and pray toward the establishment of full communion
among our churches by 2017.
"Although there are different church cultures that exist among the signing bishops, there is no doubt
that the commonality which exists far outweighs our differences."
Speaking on behalf of the Diocese of the Holy Cross, Bishop Hewett said his diocese is grateful to
Almighty God and to our sister jurisdictions for the statement of interjurisdictional and cooperation
signed by the ACC, the ACA, the APA and ourselves.
"It is vitally important that we are on converging paths. The more we can cooperate and do things
together, and enjoy complete reciprocity in our ranks, the more we will grow, as an emerging single
province for traditional, orthodox Anglicans in the United States. The hand of God is upon us as
Anglicans of our persuasion, because he has a very important vocation for us in the Body of Christ."
ACA Presiding Bishop Marsh said the coming together in communion is truly a glorious occasion.
"That was certainly true at the recent synod of the ACC in Athens, Georgia. In such a situation all our
divisions, conflict and history melt away in the presence of our Lord and savior Jesus Christ.
We have met each other and find that we are, as classical Anglicans, true brothers and sisters
in Christ.
"There is a joy in return, joy in forgiveness and joy in reconciliation. Truly,
this is an exciting and historic time to be in the Continuum."
sacramental union and commonality of purpose that is pleasing to God and in accord with
godly purpose to our respective jurisdictions";
• Endeavor to "hold in concert our national and provincial synods in 2017" with a goal for
this meeting "to formalize a relationship of communion in sacris; and
• During the intervening period to work "in full accord toward that end, [seeking] ways to
cooperate with each other, supporting each others' jurisdictions and communicating on a
variety of ecclesiastical matters." The bishops also pledge to meet monthly by teleconferencing.
In his message in the January/February issue of the TRINITARIAN, the official house organ of the
ACC, Haverland said, "Unforeseen difficulties may arise, but our agreement states our clear
aspiration, intention and goals."
"The goal for 2017 is full communion. That, in turn, is not the same as institutional or organic merger,
which would be the step beyond, but which I also think we should pursue."
Bishops Grundorf, Hewett and Marsh all praised the joint letter as a positive beginning towards
establishing a working communion of Continuing Anglican Churches.
Grundorf said the last 30 years had seen much antipathy among so many of the major continuing
churches, with feelings of frustration and isolation by continuing churches when attempts were
made to reach out in other ecclesiastical directions to find common cause.
"As one of the bishops of longest standing, and having been through so many of these attempts, it is
a great blessing to be part of signing this commitment as the Presiding Bishop
of the Anglican Province of America.
The APA pledges, along with the others, to work and pray toward the establishment of full communion
among our churches by 2017.
"Although there are different church cultures that exist among the signing bishops, there is no doubt
that the commonality which exists far outweighs our differences."
Speaking on behalf of the Diocese of the Holy Cross, Bishop Hewett said his diocese is grateful to
Almighty God and to our sister jurisdictions for the statement of interjurisdictional and cooperation
signed by the ACC, the ACA, the APA and ourselves.
"It is vitally important that we are on converging paths. The more we can cooperate and do things
together, and enjoy complete reciprocity in our ranks, the more we will grow, as an emerging single
province for traditional, orthodox Anglicans in the United States. The hand of God is upon us as
Anglicans of our persuasion, because he has a very important vocation for us in the Body of Christ."
ACA Presiding Bishop Marsh said the coming together in communion is truly a glorious occasion.
"That was certainly true at the recent synod of the ACC in Athens, Georgia. In such a situation all our
divisions, conflict and history melt away in the presence of our Lord and savior Jesus Christ.
We have met each other and find that we are, as classical Anglicans, true brothers and sisters
in Christ.
"There is a joy in return, joy in forgiveness and joy in reconciliation. Truly,
this is an exciting and historic time to be in the Continuum."
Thursday, March 17, 2016
Holy Week and Easter Week Schedule 2016 at Saint Barnabas Church, Dunwoody, Georgia
The Feast of Saint Joseph, Saturday 19th
March
Workshop
for Making Palm Crosses, 10am
Holy
Communion, 12 Noon
Palm Sunday, 20th March
Sung
Holy Communion
and
the Blessing and Distribution of Palms,
9am
and 11am
Monday in Holy Week, 21st March
Tuesday in Holy Week, 22nd March
and Wednesday in Holy Week, 23rd
March
Holy
Communion, 12 Noon
Maundy Thursday, 24th March
Sung
Holy Communion,
Stripping
of the Altar, and Watch before
the
Altar of Repose, 7pm
Good Friday, 25th March
The
Solemn Liturgy, 9.30am
Three
Hours’ Devotion, 12 Noon to 3pm
Sacramental
Confessions, 4pm-6pm
Stations
of the Cross, 7pm
Easter Even, 26th March
Easter
Egg Hunt, 10.30am
Sacramental
Confessions, 1pm-2pm
Easter
Flower Ministry, 9am-2pm
Sung
Holy Communion of the Easter Vigil, 8pm
Easter Day, 27th March
Sung
Holy Communion, 9am
Sung
Holy Communion, 11am
Monday in Easter Week, 28th March
Tuesday in Easter Week, 29th March
and Wednesday in Easter Week, 30th
March
Holy
Communion, 12 Noon
Thursday in Easter Week, 31st
March
Holy
Communion, 7pm
Friday in Easter Week, 1st April
and Saturday in Easter Week, 2nd
April
Holy
Communion, 12 Noon
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