A Survey of the ACNA Doctrinal Statements and Their Theological Leanings: The Canons - Part 1
By Robin G. Jordan
By Robin G. Jordan
In this article I examine not only the theological leanings
of the canons of the Anglican Church in North America but also the implications
of a number of provisions in the ACNA canons. An understanding of the implications
of these provisions is essential to an understanding of the significance of the
canons’ theological leanings. The canons are divided into four parts. I examine
each part in the order that it appears in the canons. I have divided the article
itself into two parts. I begin my examination of the canons in the first part
and complete it in the second part.
The canons of the Anglican Church in North America may be
found here.
Title I Organization
and Administration of the Church
Canon 7, Section 1.
Mission partners, affiliated ministries, and religious orders must subscribe
without reservation to the ACNA fundamental declarations stated in Article I of
the ACNA constitution. Ministry partners are the founding entities of the
Province listed in Article II of the ACNA constitution and jurisdictions or
coalitions deemed to have a special relationship with the ACNA (Canon 7,
Section 2). Affiliated ministries include seminaries, mission agencies,
ministry organizations, religious societies and sodalities and dioceses and
other entities that are a part of a jurisdiction other than the ACNA (Canon 7,
Section 3).
The position that ACNA takes in its fundamental declarations
as to what defines core Anglican identity is not the same position as the Global Fellowship of Confessing Anglicans (GFCA) takes. The GFCA believes that Canon A5 of the Canons of the Church of England expresses the doctrinal foundation
of Anglicanism, which defines core Anglican identity. Under the provisions of
Canon 7,Section 1 an ecclesial organization or network that fully accepts the
authority of Holy Scripture and the Anglican formularies and agrees with the
position of the GFCA as to what defines core Anglican identity but has
reservations concerning the doctrinal positions set out in ACNA fundamental
declarations – specifically the third, sixth, and seventh declaration - would
not qualify for affiliation with the ACNA. This includes any such organization
or network that accepts the principles of Prayer Book revision articulated by
the GAFCON Theological Resource Group in Being Faithful: The Shape of Historic Anglicanism Today that all new liturgies should be measured against the
1662 Prayer Book. Those that depart significantly from the 1662 Prayer Book
should be subject to Communion-wide scrutiny.
Title II Worship and
the Administration of the Sacraments
Canon 1, Section 2.
Section 2 of the Canon 1 reiterates the sixth fundamental declaration of the
ACNA. It also includes a provision not found in the ACNA constitution. It
restricts the use of only the “authorized Books of Common Prayer of the
originating jurisdictions” in ACNA congregations. It permits their use until
such time as a Prayer Book for use in the ACNA has been adopted. Under the
provisions of this section only the 1662 Book of Common Prayer, the 1928
American Prayer Book, the 1979 American Prayer Book, An Anglican Prayer Book (2008), the 1962 Canadian Prayer Book, the
Anglican Church of Canada’s The Book of
Alternative Services (1985), the Anglican Church of Kenya’s Our Modern Services (2002, 2003), the
Nigerian Prayer Book, the Southern Cone Prayer Book, and the Reformed Episcopal
Church Prayer Book (2005) and its contemporary language edition may be used in
the ACNA.
These Anglican service books differ significantly in their
doctrine and liturgical usages. For example, the 1662 Prayer Book, like the
1552 Prayer Book on which it is based, excludes anything suggestive of
eucharistic sacrifice and takes the position that Christ is not substantively
present in the eucharistic elements. On the other hand, the 1928 American
Prayer Book is open to interpretation as teaching the medieval Roman Catholic
doctrine that the eucharist is a reiteration or representation of Christ’s
sacrifice. The 1979 American Prayer Book
affirms the 1958 Lambeth doctrine that the eucharist is a participation in
Christ’s ongoing sacrificial activity.
Both the 1928 Prayer Book and 1979 Prayer Book take the position that
there is an objective real presence of Christ in the eucharistic elements.
Excluded under its provisions is the Church of England’s Alternative Service Book 1980 and Common Worship (2000), An Australian Prayer Book (1978), A Prayer Book for Australia (1995), and the Diocese of Sydney’s Sunday Services (2001) and Common Prayer: Resources for Gospel-Shaped
Gatherings (2012) and other more recent Anglican service books. It is
noteworthy that the excluded Anglican service books include several books that
seek to accommodate the different schools of Anglican thought represented in
their respective provinces or are designed for the use of conservative Anglican
Evangelical congregations.
The ACNA ordinal, the two trial ACNA eucharistic rites, the
ACNA catechism, and the proposed ACNA rites for admission of catechumens,
baptism, and confirmation exhibit a definite theological bias. They for the
most part reflect Roman Catholic teaching and liturgical practice. There is a
strong likelihood that the final version of the ACNA Prayer Book will exhibit
the same theological bias. Once it is adopted, it will be the only service book
authorized for use in the ACNA. This has serious implications for congregations
and clergy that are evangelical in their theological outlook and loyal to the
Protestant and Reformed principles of the Anglican Church based on Holy
Scripture and set out in the Thirty-Nine Articles and 1662 Book of Common
Prayer. They will be required to use a service book that on key doctrinal
issues conflicts with what they understand the Bible to teach and the Anglican
formularies to uphold. The canons leave them with no other option.
Canon 4, Section 2. Section
2 of Canon 4 requires all ACNA clergy to instruct their congregations “in the
doctrine, sacraments, and discipline of Christ, as the Lord has commanded and
as they are set forth in the Holy Scriptures, in the Book of Common Prayer, and
in the Church Catechism.” The Book of Common Prayer and the Church Catechism to
which this section refers is not 1662 Prayer Book and its Catechism but the
ACNA prayer book and the ACNA catechism.
Canon 4, Section 3. Subsection
4 of Section 3 of Canon 4 permits the admission of “young baptized children” to
the Holy Communion. It does not specific at what age they may be admitted and
under what conditions. It appears to leave their admission solely to the
priest, subject presumably to any instructions that the bishop of the diocese
might give the clergy of the diocese. The subsection does not require any
uniformity of practice on the admission of young baptized children to the Holy
Communion. Nor does it require young baptized children to evidence repentance
and a vital faith before they may be admitted to the Holy Communion
Article 25 of theThirty-Nine Articles sets out the doctrine that the sacraments “have a
beneficial effect or working only in those who receive them worthily.” On the
other hand “those who receive them unworthily bring condemnation on
themselves.” This doctrine does not distinguish between adults and children.
Article 29 of the Thirty-Nine Articles sets out the doctrine that those who are unrepentant
or devoid of a vital faith, while they may eat the bread and drink the cup,
they are in no way “partakers of Christ.” Rather they eat the bread and drink
the cup to “their condemnation.” This applies to unrepentant, unbelieving
children even though they may be baptized.
Subsection 5 of this section permits “members in good
standing of other branches of Christ’s Church, who have been baptized, with
water, in the Name of the Father, and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit.” It
contains a reference to what it describes as the “qualifications” of receiving
the Holy sacrament of Holy Communion “rightly, worthily, and with faith” in
Article 28 of the Thirty-Nine Articles—one of the few references to the
Articles in the ACNA canons. However, the specific passage to which it alludes
does not concern “qualifications” for receiving the sacrament but rather sets
out the doctrine that only to those who “rightly, worthily, and with faith”
receive the sacrament are the elements of bread and wine a participation in
Christ’s Body and Blood.
Whoever drafted this subsection either did not properly
understand the passage in question or they deliberately misrepresented its
meaning—an example of what GAFCON Primates’ Council Chairman and Kenyan
Archbishop Iliud Wabukala has described as taking the Articles and doing whatever
one pleases with them.
The subsection applies what it describes as the
“qualifications” of a right, worthy, and believing reception to “members in
good standing of other branches of Christ’s Church, who have been baptized, with
water, in the Name of the Father, and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit.” It
does not apply these “qualifications” to young baptized children.
Subsection 4 represents “a desertion of the Articles” and
subsection 5 a putting of one’s own sense to the meaning of a particular Article.
See the Royal Declaration of Charles I prefaced to the Thirty-Nine Articles.
Canon 7, Section 1.
Section 1 of Canon 7 describes matrimony as a “sacrament” whereas Article 25
describes matrimony as a state of life allowed in the Scriptures. Article 25
emphasizes that matrimony does not “belong in the same category as the
sacraments of Baptism and the Lord’s Supper” as it has it has “no visible sign
or ceremony commanded by God.” The Form of the Solemnization of Matrimony in
the 1662 Book of Common Prayer describes matrimony as “an honourable estate,
instituted of God in the time of man’s innocency.” The view that matrimony is a
sacrament reflects Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox teaching. It is also the
view of matrimony set out in the ACNA catechism. Under the provisions of Canon
4, Section 2 it is the view of matrimony in which all ACNA clergy are required
to instruct their congregations even though it conflicts with the teaching of
the Bible and the doctrine of the Anglican formularies, which are in agreement
with the teaching of the Bible.
TITLE III Of
Ministers, Their Recruitment, Preparation, Ordination, Office, Practice and
Transfer
Canon 2, Section
1. According to Section 1 of Canon 2
clergy in an ACNA diocese owe canonical obedience to the bishop of the diocese
and the bishop of the ACNA diocese in turn owes canonical obedience to the
archbishop of the ACNA. This obedience
is “in all things lawful and honest,” which includes teaching and liturgical
practice. Under the provisions of this section clergy are expected to obey the
bishop in such matters and the bishop, the archbishop.
As we shall see clergy may, under the provisions of the ACNA
canons, be disciplined for disobedience to their bishop and presumably bishops
for disobedience to the archbishop. A priest in a diocese may disagree with the
ACNA doctrine that matrimony is a sacrament but the canons require him to
instruct his congregation in that doctrine and the bishop of the diocese may
require him to do so. If he does not, disciplinary proceedings may be
instituted against him for violating the canons and disobeying the bishop of
the diocese.
Under the provisions of the ACNA canons clergy and bishops
may be disciplined for conforming to the teaching of Holy Scripture and the
doctrine of the Anglican formularies. This should give us pause. There are
those who argue that the institution of such disciplinary proceedings will
never happen but they have no real basis for their opinion. The ACNA
constitution and canons do not recognize freedom of conscience or diversity of
opinion upon matters over which Anglicans have historically been divided. The
two documents side with one particular school of thought on a number of key
issues.
Canon 2, Section 1. Section 1 of Canon 2 gives a bishop full
discretion in determining whether a candidate for ordination is “sufficiently instructed
in Holy Scripture and in the doctrine, discipline and worship of this Church,
as defined by this Province.” If the bishop is a strong proponent of the
particular school of thought favored in the ACNA constitution, canons, and
other doctrinal statements or simply an institutionalist, this section enables
the bishop to delay the ordination of candidates whom he does not believe are
fully indoctrinated in that school of thought’s teaching and liturgical
practice or to deny ordination to them altogether. It permits ACNA bishops both
individual and collectively to exclude from ordained ministry in the ACNA individuals
who are in their estimation too evangelical in their theological outlook and
too loyal to the Protestant and Reformed principles of the Anglican Church
based on Holy Scripture and set out in the Thirty-Nine Articles and the 1662
Book of Common Prayer. Bishops who do ordain such individuals may be subject to
disciplinary proceedings on the grounds that they did not ensure that they were
“sufficiently instructed in Holy Scripture and in the doctrine, discipline and
worship of this Church, as defined by this Province.”
Canon 2, Section 7 prohibits the ordination of anyone who “has
not been properly trained in Holy Scripture, and the Doctrine, Discipline and
Worship of this Church.” It does not
explain what it means by “properly trained,” presumably leaving that final determination
to the ecclesiastical authority of the diocese. The Anglican Standards Task
Force has prepared a set of seminary standards
which were approved by the ACNA College of Bishops in 2011. These standards are not binding upon the bishops. Their compliance with the standards are voluntary. A canon would be required to make the standards mandatory. Based upon their past actions such a canon would offer no assurance that the bishops would comply with the standards.
Canon 3 is related to deacons and their ordination. Among
the provisions of this canon, which are worthy of note, is the provision in
Section 1 requiring candidates for the ACNA diaconate to demonstrate “sufficient
knowledge of Holy Scripture, the Doctrine, Discipline and Worship of this
Church, and any other topics the Bishop shall deem necessary for the office and
ministry of Deacons.” This means that the bishop may require examination of a
candidate in his knowledge of the theology, vesture, and ceremonial that the
particular school of thought favored in the ACNA doctrinal statements associates
with the office and ministry of a deacon. To this end the bishop may require a
candidate to receive instruction in this theology, vesture, and ceremonial. To
put it more bluntly, the bishop may require the candidate to undergo
indoctrination in the teaching and liturgical practice of that school of
thought. Since ordination as a deacon is a prerequisite to ordination as a presbyter,
such indoctrination will be an integral part of the formation of clergy in ACNA
dioceses in which the bishop is a strong proponent of the same school of
thought or an institutionalist. Clergy whom the teaching and liturgical
practice of this particular school thought has not influenced will be a rarity
in the ACNA.
Section 2 of this canon is also noteworthy. It requires subscription
without reservation to the following declaration as a condition of ordination
to the diaconate in the ACNA.
“I do believe the Holy Scriptures of the Old and New Testaments to be the Word of God and to contain all things necessary to salvation, and I consequently hold myself bound to conform my life and ministry thereto, and I do solemnly engage to conform to the Doctrine, Discipline and Worship of Christ as this Church has received them.”
The key phrase in this declaration is “as this Church has
received them.” It is a reference to the
Anglo-Catholic and high church tradition and unreformed Catholic theology given
prominence in ACNA doctrinal statements. In subscribing to this declaration a candidate
for Holy Orders in the ACNA is agreeing to conform to this particular tradition
and theology. If he fails to conform to the official doctrine, discipline, and
worship of the ACNA once he is ordained, disciplinary proceedings may be
instituted against him. His subscription to the declaration may be used as evidence
against him in such proceedings. This also should give us reason for
hesitation.
Canon 4 is related to presbyters and their ordination. Among
the subjects on which candidates for the presbyterate must demonstrate satisfactory
knowledge is doctrine, which the canon defines as “the Church’s teaching set
forth in the Creeds and the Offices of Instruction.” This wording comes from an
earlier version of the canons of the Episcopal Church in the USA. “The Offices
of Instruction” in this earlier version of the Episcopal Church’s canons is a
reference to the offices of instruction in the 1928 Prayer Book. In the case of
the ACNA this reference would presumably be now to the ACNA catechism. As we
shall see when we examine the ACNA catechism, it is in doctrine for a large
part Roman Catholic and to a lesser extent Eastern Orthodox and
Arminian/Wesleyan. Nowhere in the list of subjects on which such candidates
must demonstrate satisfactory knowledge is found any reference to the Book of
Homilies, the Thirty-Nine Articles, and the 1662 Book of Common Prayer—historic
formularies of the Anglican Church based on the Holy Scriptures and setting out
the Anglican Church’s Protestant and Reformed principles.
Only in the ACNA seminary standards are found references to “the Articles of Religion and the
classical prayer books.” They set out the following standard: “Approved
Anglican Seminaries and Approved Anglican Tracks must provide dedicated course
work on the Catholic Creeds, the 39 Articles of Religion and an approved Book
of Common Prayer.” Note that it does not require study of the 1662 Prayer Book
and the 1552 Prayer Book on which it is based—only “an approved Book of Common
Prayer.” There is no mention of the Book
of Homilies.
Like Canon 3, Canon 4 contains a provision that enable a
bishop to require a candidate for the presbyterate to undergo indoctrination in
the teaching and liturgical practice of the particular school of thought
favored in the ACNA doctrinal statements.
Canon 4 also requires subscription to the same declaration as in Canon 3
as a condition of ordination to the presbyterate.
Photo credit:Pixabay, public domain
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