By Robin G. Jordan
When they are compared with the Holy Communion Service of
the classical Anglican Prayer Book – the 1662 Book of Common Prayer, the three
forms of the Holy Eucharist that the Anglican Church in North America's Liturgy Task Force and Bishops Review
Committee have developed to date and which the ACNA's College of Bishops has endorsed,
depart significantly from that service. They show not only the strong influence
of the pre-Reformation Latin Mass but also that of the more recent Roman Rite
eucharistic liturgies. These influences are evident in the Liturgy of the Word
as well as the Liturgy of the Table. While the three forms do not go as far as
the Romanized version of the Anglican Communion Service authorized for the use of
traditional language congregations in the Anglican Ordinariate in the United Kingdom,
they do show a marked leaning in that direction.
Any resemblance that the three forms bear to the 1662 Holy
Communion Service is purely superficial. Where doctrine and liturgical usages
are concerned, they fall far short of the standard of the 1662 Holy Communion
Service, which is based upon the Reformed eucharistic liturgy of the 1552
Prayer Book. The Romanization of these forms renders them both unacceptable and
unsuitable for use by Anglican clergy and congregations faithful to the
teaching of the Bible and committed to the doctrinal and worship principles of
the English Reformation and the Elizabethan Settlement.
In addition to the pre-Reformation Latin Mass and the more
recent Roman Rite eucharistic liturgies (including the eucharistic rites of The
Book of Divine Worship authorized for use in the Pastoral Provision parishes),
two other influences are discernible in the three ACNA forms. These influences
are the late nineteenth century-early twentieth century Anglican Missals and
the more recent Anglo-Catholic Anglican
Service Book. These liturgical books themselves show the strong influence
of the Roman Rite.
In light of the diversity of doctrinal and liturgical views
in the Anglican Church in North America, the College of Bishop’s endorsement of
the three forms raises serious questions about its commitment to authentic
historic Anglicanism and to what J. I. Packer has called the “evangelical comprehensiveness”
of Anglicanism. Rather the College of Bishops appears to be intent upon forcing
the clergy and congregations of the Anglican Church in North America into the same
ideological mold. The ideology with which the College of Bishops appears to be
intent upon saddling the ACNA is an unreformed Catholic ideology that runs
counter to the principles of doctrine and worship articulated in the historic
Anglican formularies- the Thirty-Nine Articles of Religion of 1572, the Ordinal
of 1661, The Book of Common Prayer of
1662, the two Books of Homilies, and Alexnder Nowell’s Larger Catechism – an ideology
that is antithetical to the biblical and reformed character of authentic
historic Anglicanism.
Whatever the official and unofficial spokesmen of the
Liturgy Task Force, the Bishops Review Committee, and the College of Bishops
may say to justify the direction of the three forms, indeed of the entire
proposed 2019 Prayer Book, it is clear that the ideological agenda of one
segment of the Anglican Church in North America is the driving force behind
this direction, an agenda which this segment of the ACNA is pursuing with
little or no regard for the views of the other schools of thought represented in
the ACNA. Much as the liberal ideologues have done in the Episcopal Church,
this segment of the ACNA is doing all that it can within its power to firmly
establish its ideology as the doctrine and practice of the ACNA, and to make
any possibility of change difficult if not unlikely.
In pursuing its ideological agenda at the expense of the
other schools of thought represented in the Anglican Church in North America,
this segment of the ACNA has repeatedly shown that it really does not value the
unity of the denomination, to which it often appeals. If that was truly the
case, it would not be pursuing its ideological agenda so recklessly. It would
be open to genuine compromise, compromise that involves mutual give and take,
rather than requiring the other schools of thought to make major concessions
without making such concessions itself.
At this stage those who have concerns about the proposed
2019 Prayer Book need to go public with their concerns. The response of the
Liturgical Task Force to the concerns of clergy and others has to date been
dismissive of these concerns. As was the case with the constitution and canons
of the Anglican Church in North America, there is no openness to making major
changes in the proposed 2019 Prayer Book even though such changes are
warranted. From their conversations with official and unofficial spokesmen for
the Liturgical Task Force, the Bishops Review Committee, and the College of
Bishops, those who have expressed concerns about the proposed book have come
away with the strong impression that it is a “done deal.” In this case the next
step is to move discussion of the proposed book into the public arena and to
put pressure upon these three bodies to make much needed changes.
A question that also needs to be brought into the bright
light of day is the College of Bishop’s usurpation of the authority of the
Provincial Council and the Provincial Assembly in matters affecting the worship
and the Prayer Book of the Anglican Church in North America. The constitution
of the ACNA very clearly gives the Provincial Council the authority to make
canons and regulations related to these matters, not the College of Bishops.
The decisions of the Provincial Council are in turn subject to the final
approval of the Provincial Assembly. The role of the College of Bishops envisioned
in the constitution and canons is purely consultative at best. The College may
make recommendations to the Provincial Council but the Council is not bound to
follow its recommendations. It is well within the authority of the Provincial
Council to censure the College of Bishops for its infringement upon the powers
and prerogatives of the Council and its arrogation of powers and prerogatives that are not vested in College by the constitution and canons or recognized as
inherent in the College by these documents.
What I see happening in the Anglican Church in North America
is that the College of Bishops is endeavoring to foist a Prayer Book upon the
ACNA without taking the necessary steps that the constitution and canons
require for its authorization. This includes avoiding public debate
of the merits, defects, and weaknesses of the book that the College wishes to
palm off onto the province.
Any Prayer Book that does not take into serious consideration
the several schools of thought represented in the Anglican Church in North
America and is not adopted by the Provincial Council and approved by the
Provincial Assembly after lengthy period of public debate is not going to be a
unitive influence in the ACNA. Indeed it is likely to further strain the ACNA’s
fragile unity.
5 comments:
What is the first ACNA? What is the second ACNA? Never heard the nomenclature.
I too would like to know what is meant here.
In 1977 a congress of Episcopal clergy and laity met in St. Louis in reaction to the ordination of women and the revision of the Prayer Book in the Episcopal Church. As well as issuing the document known as the Affirmation of St. Louis, they organized the first Anglican Church in North America. These two events are major events in the history of the Continuing Anglican Movement in North America. If you want to learn more about these events,read Douglas Bess' Divided We Stand: A History of the Continuing Anglican Movement (Tractarian Press: Riverside CA, 2002). Bess not only documents what happened but also identifies the factors that contributed to the disintegration of the first ACNA, particularly the divisions between those whom he describes as "Anglican Loyalists" and "Catholic Revivalists." Among those divisions was that the Anglican Loyalists believed that historic Anglicanism was sufficiently catholic while the Catholic Revivalists did not believe that it was Catholic enough. As well as disagreeing over doctrine, they also disagreed over the authority of the bishop. The Anglican Loyalists took a more comprehensive approach to worship than did the Catholic Revivalists. Similar divisions exist in the second ACNA formed in 2009.
It is important that input from all ACNA schools of thought are seriously considered and debated for inclusion in the new Prayer Book. The Provincial Counsel and the Privincial Assembly should then finalize the book. Input should in some way be solicited right down to priests and/or vestry, considered and filtered before sending on to the larger bodies. If the majority of ACNA has no voice, it will harm the unity so highly regarded by its members.
You suggest, at least concerning the new prayer book, that ACNA is in organization trouble, bishops making decisions apart from those who are responsible. This suggest that there may be more troubles within ACANA's organizational structure--in short, Bishops unfettered to the concerns of the wider church.
Why have they decided they need a new prayer book when they have so very many of them already available? And given how shortly ACNA has been around, liturgical reforms that suites the denomination seems a bit premature.
ACNA, I suspect, will ultimately be defined as its bishops choose.
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