By Robin G. Jordan
The Anglican Church in North America in its constitution,
its canons, and its other doctrinal statements takes the position of unreformed
Catholicism ( Eastern Orthodoxy, Roman Catholicism, etc.) that bishops and episcopacy
belong to “the essence of Christianity.” This view had its adherents in the US
Episcopal Church at its founding – such as Bishop Samuel Seabury.
The Anglo-Catholic Movement that made major inroads into the
US Episcopal Church in the nineteenth century espoused this view to the point that
its adherents did not regard the ministers of evangelical denominations as
having valid orders since their respective denominations did not have bishops.
Since the ministers of these denominations were not in their estimation validly-ordained,
they did not regard the congregations of such ministers as a part of the
visible Church of Christ.
The Anglo-Catholic Movement’s adherents adopted measures
that prohibited evangelicals in the clergy of the US Episcopal Church from
fraternizing with their evangelical brethren outside that denomination. They
rejected evangelical proposals to revise the American Prayer Book to comprehend
evangelical views on baptism. Their rejection of these proposals was a departure
from an earlier policy of comprehension evident in the 1789 Prayer Book in the
rubrics permitting the omission of the signing of the cross on the
newly-baptized’s forehead at baptism and the optional use of an alternative formula
at the imposition of hands in the ordination service for presbyters. Anglo-Catholics
in the Diocese of Kentucky refused to permit the Bishop of Kentucky to leave the
diocese and assume the position of Presiding Bishop until he agreed in writing
not to give full authority to the Assistant Bishop who was a conservative
evangelical.
These actions were among a number of developments in the US
Episcopal Church that eventually led to the secession of conservative
evangelicals from the denomination in 1873 and their formation of the Reformed
Episcopal Church. The US Episcopal Church’s House of Bishops, which was at the
time dominated by Anglo-Catholic bishops, would adopt a resolution maintaining
bishops and episcopacy were one of the four parts of the “sacred deposit” of
the Christian faith in 1886.
Among the doctrinal positions that nineteenth century
Anglo-Catholics would take in relation to bishops and episcopacy was that
bishops as the successors to the apostles were the divinely-instituted governors
of the Church. All authority in the Church flowed from them. What authority
that was exercised by synods of clergy and laity was derivative. A bishop’s acceptance
of the decisions of such gatherings was voluntary and non-binding. A bishop
retained all authority even the authority that he delegated to these synods. Their
decisions had no force unless the bishop approved their decisions.
For the Anglican Church in North America the Articles of
Religion (1571) and the Book of Common Prayer (1662) are not authoritative
formularies that they are for historic Anglicanism and its modern-day
counterpart—confessional Anglicanism. The wording of the ACNA fundamental
declarations waters down their authority to nothing and substitutes other
standards of doctrine and worship by specific reference or inference. Its
attitude toward these formularies has its origins in the US Episcopal Church
from which it broke away, the Anglo-Catholic and Broad Church Movements, and
the more recent Convergence Movement.
The ideology that is observable in the Anglican Church in
North America is more a conservative form of Episcopalianism than it is a
variant of Anglicanism. There is clear continuity between attitudes toward bishops
and episcopacy and the Anglican formularies that were evident in the US
Episcopal Church from its founding and those that are evident in the ACNA today.
The ACNA may have broken away from the US Episcopal Church but it has not
entirely broken away from the ideology that dominated thinking in the US
Episcopal Church from the nineteenth century on.
How then does the Anglican Church in North America differ from
the US Episcopal Church? The ACNA differs from the US Episcopal Church in 12 ways:
1. The ACNA retains a traditional view of marriage and human
sexuality. The ACNA does not ordain individuals who involved in same sex
relationships. It does not bless or celebrate same sex relationships or
authorize liturgies for blessing or celebration of such relationships. It does
not lobby for the legalization and recognition of gay marriage.
2. While the ACNA has women deacons and presbyters, it does
not have women bishops. Women’s ordination is an issue that divides the ACNA.
3. While bishops play a large role in the governance of the
US Episcopal Church in practice if not on paper, bishops play a much larger
role in the governance of the ACNA. There is a widening gap between the form of
governance envisioned in the ACNA’s governing documents and its working form of
governance. While the ACNA Provincial Council may be its official governing
body, the real locus of power is its College of Bishops, which functions in
many respects like a conference of bishops in the Roman Catholic Church.
4. The laity plays a much more limited role in the
governance of the ACNA than they do in the US Episcopal Church. The largest
representative body in the ACNA, its Provincial Assembly, has no legislative
powers. It is a rubber stamp for the Provincial Council, which has increasingly
become the puppet of the College of Bishops. The College of Bishops strongly
influences the decisions of the ACNA task forces. Only legislation that enjoys
the support of the College of Bishops makes it to the floor of the Provincial
Council.
5. While modernism is not entirely absent from the ACNA, it
does not dominate the ACNA in the way that it dominates the US Episcopal
Church.
6. The ACNA is more creedal than the US Episcopal Church in
its beliefs. Both denominations recognize the catholic Creeds. The ACNA adheres
more closely to the teaching of the Creeds than does the US Episcopal Church.
At the same time the US Episcopal Church does have pockets of creedalism,
congregations and clergy that adhere to the Creeds’ teaching.
Note that I avoided describing the ACNA as more Scriptural
than the US Episcopal Church in its beliefs. Due to the influence of
Anglo-Catholicism in the ACNA and liberalism in the US Episcopal Church, both
denominations may be characterized as not fully accepting the Bible as canon—as
their guiding rule of faith and practice. Consequently, in the words of J. I.
Packer “their Christian profession… is flawed.”
The GAFCON Theological Resource Group in The Way, the Truth, and the Life: Theological Resources for a Pilgrimage to a Global Anglican Future
identifies Anglo-Catholicism and liberalism as the leading challenges to the
authority of the Bible and the classic formularies in the Anglican Church since
the nineteenth century (p. 32).
What is extremely weak in both denominations is Anglican
confessionalism, which recognizes not only the teaching of the catholic Creeds
but also the doctrine of the Articles of Religion and the Homilies. The Homilies are one of the earliest statements of the Protestant and Reformed
principles of the Anglican Church. The Articles of Religion commend the
Homilies as containing “Godly and wholesome doctrine.” Article 11 describes the
Homilies as going into greater depth and detail about the important New Testament
doctrine of justification by faith. The GAFCON Theological Resource Group in The Way, the Truth, and the Life: Theological Resources for a Pilgrimage to a Global Anglican Future stresses
that “the recovery…of the classic doctrinal and liturgical formularies” is
vital to “an adequate definition of Anglican orthodoxy" (pp. 32-33) The ACNA, like the US
Episcopal Church, does not share that view.
7. The ACNA officially as a denomination has shown greater
interest in church planting than the US Episcopal Church. Church planting has
been at low ebb in the US Episcopal Church since the events of 2003. It did not
receive the priority that it should have received in the abortive Decade of
Evangelism in the last decade of the twentieth century. What new churches that
the US Episcopal Church planted before 2003 were negatively impacted by the
events of that year as were existing churches in that denomination. There have
to my knowledge been no studies of how widespread interest in church planting
is at the diocesan and local levels in the ACNA. Some dioceses and local
churches are active in church planting; others are not. While the ACNA may
showcase church planting networks like Green House, there is nothing to
indicate that they are representative of church-planting throughout the
denomination. The statistics that the ACNA has published are not particularly
detailed or reliable. Some ACNA clergy doubt the need for research and accurate
statistics. As long as this attitude prevails, we will not have a complete
picture of church planting activity in the ACNA.
8. While we may not agree with the doctrinal views
articulated or inferred in them and their use of gender-inclusive language, and
feminine imagery for God, the commissions that prepared the 1979 Prayer Book
and its supplements have done a much better job in putting together rites and services than the ACNA Liturgy and
Common Prayer Task Force has done to date. It is noteworthy that the liturgies
of the 1979 Prayer Book is what attracted evangelicals and charismatics to the
US Episcopal Church in the closing decades of the twentieth century, not the
1549 Prayer Book, the 1928 Prayer Book, and the Anglican Missals. As well as
showing a strong affinity with Roman Catholic teaching in its liturgies, the
ACNA also displays a similar affinity with Roman Catholic liturgical practice. On
the other hand, the liturgies of the 1979 Prayer Book reflect the influence of
the Gallican and other non-Roman liturgical traditions of the Western Church
and the influence of doctrinal and liturgical traditions of the Eastern Church.
9. The ACNA differs from the US Episcopal Church in its view
of confirmation, penance, matrimony, ordination, and unction. The ACNA
catechism describes them as “sacraments of the Church.” The US Episcopal Church
catechism describes them as “sacramental rites.” The ACNA view of these rites
is very close to if not identical with that of the Roman Catholic Church. See “The Sacraments of the Church” in The Catechism of the Catholic Church.
10. The ACNA countenances the Roman Catholic Church’s
doctrine of eucharistic sacrifice in its liturgies. The US Episcopal Church
officially subscribes to the doctrine of eucharistic sacrifice that the 1958
Lambeth Conference commended to the provinces of the Anglican Communion. The
ACNA also admits this doctrine as acceptable in its liturgies.
11. The ACNA takes a definite position on the ordo salutis,
the order of the application of salvation, in its catechism. It takes the position of Anglo-Catholics,
Arminians, Wesleyans, and Pentecostals that faith precedes regeneration. While tying regeneration to faith and teaching the imparting of the Holy Spirit at baptism,
the ACNA catechism does not entirely exclude baptismal regeneration. The ACNA catechism,
however, does exclude positions of the conservative Evangelical school of
thought in Anglicanism. These positions are:
1. Regeneration precedes faith.
2. Regeneration may occur before, at, and after baptism. A person may be regenerate without receiving the sacrament of baptism. A baptized person may be unregenerate.
3. The imparting of the Holy Spirit is not tied to baptism and the gift of the Holy Spirit may be given apart from baptism.
These positions have a long history in the Anglican Church.
They were held by the English Reformers themselves. They represent legitimate
positions on regeneration, baptism, and the gift of the Holy Spirit in
Anglicanism. Their exclusion is evidence
of the anti-Reformed bias of the ACNA catechism, a bias that is not restricted
to the catechism.
12. The ACNA in its trial eucharistic rites and its catechism
countenance the omission of the filoque
clause from the Nicene Creed.
If one is familiar with the science fiction concept of
alternate time lines, the Anglican Church in North America is the Episcopal Church
in the USA in an alternate time line. In the twenty-first century the two time-lines
have intersected and merged, resulting in two Episcopal Churches, one
conservative and the other liberal. One
has to wonder what would have happened if the Anglo-Catholic and Broad Church
Movements had not made major inroads into the US Episcopal Church in the
nineteenth century or the Anglo-Catholics had accommodated the evangelicals in
US Episcopal Church in the same century and made room for them. Would the
crisis in doctrine, morality, and leadership that led to what is the ACNA to
break away from the US Episcopal Church have occurred in the first place? One
also has to wonder what the ACNA might have become if its leaders had sought to
comprehend conservative evangelicals rather than excluding them from that
denomination. On its present trajectory the ACNA appears to be headed in the
direction of becoming the latest Anglo-Catholic Continuing Anglican Church in
North America. The older Anglo-Catholic Continuing Anglican Churches have not
fared well on the North American mission field. Will the ACNA over the long
haul do any better? Will it be able to sustain its much-touted initial growth
spurt?
Also see
The
Anglican Church in North America: Pulling Back the Curtain
The Anglican Church in North America and the Struggle over Anglican Identity
The Anglican Church in North America: Different Emphases?
The Anglican Church in North America - a Church for All Conservative North American Anglicans?
The Anglican Church in North America and the Struggle over Anglican Identity
The Anglican Church in North America: Different Emphases?
The Anglican Church in North America - a Church for All Conservative North American Anglicans?
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