Dictionary Definition
Anglicanism n : the faith and doctrine and
practice of the Anglican Church
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
- The beliefs and practices of the Anglican Church
Extensive Definition
Anglicanism is rooted in the beliefs and
practices of Christian
churches which either have historical connections with the Church of
England or maintain a liturgy compatible with it. The
word Anglican originates in ecclesia anglicana, a mediæval Latin
phrase dating to at least 1246 meaning the English Church.
Adherents of Anglicanism are termed Anglicans. The great majority
of Anglicans are members of churches belonging to the Anglican
Communion. However, there are a great variety of nonaffiliated
Anglican churches, most notably the
Continuing Anglican Churches.
The faith of Anglicans is founded in the
Scriptures and the Gospels, the traditions of the Apostolic Church,
the apostolic
succession--"historic episcopate," and the early Church
Fathers. Anglicanism forms one of the branches of Western
Christianity; having definitively declared its independence
from the Roman pontiff at the time of the
Elizabethan Religious Settlement. By the mid 17th century the
Church of England (and associated episcopal churches in Ireland
and in England's
American colonies) came to be seen as comprising a distinct
Christian tradition with theologies, structures and forms of
worship representing a middle ground, or via media,
between Roman
Catholicism and Protestantism.
Following the American
Revolution, Anglican congregations in the United States and
Canada were
each reconstituted into an independent church with their own
bishops and self-governing structures; which, through the expansion
of the British
Empire and the activity of Christian
Missions, was adopted as the model for many newly formed
churches, especially in Africa, Australasia and
the regions of the Pacific. In the
19th century the term Anglicanism was coined to describe the common
religious tradition of these churches; as also that of the Scottish
Episcopal Church, which, though originating earlier within the
Church
of Scotland, had come to be recognised as sharing this common
identity.
The degree of distinction between Reformed and
western Catholic tendencies within the Anglican tradition is
routinely a matter of debate both within specific Anglican churches
and throughout the Anglican
Communion. Unique to Anglicanism is the Book
of Common Prayer, the collection of services that worshippers
in most Anglican churches used for centuries. While it has since
undergone many revisions and Anglican churches in different
countries have developed other service books, the Prayer Book is
still acknowledged as one of the ties that bind the Anglican
Communion together. There is no single Anglican Church with
universal juridical authority, since each national or regional
church has full autonomy. As the name suggests, the Anglican
Communion is an association of those churches in full
communion with the Archbishop
of Canterbury. With over seventy-seven million members the
Anglican Communion is the third largest Christian communion in the
world, after the Roman
Catholic Church and the Eastern
Orthodox Church.
Terminology
The word Anglicanism is a neologism from the 19th century; being constructed from the much older word Anglican. As an adjective, Anglican is used to describe the people, institutions, and churches as well as the liturgical traditions and theological concepts developed by the Church of England.Although the term Anglican is found referring to
the Church of England as far back as the 16th Century, its use did
not become general until the latter half of the 19th Century. In
British parliamentary legislation referring to the English Established
Church, it is described as the Protestant Episcopal Church,
thereby distinguishing it from the counterpart established Protestant
Presbyterian Church in Scotland. High
Churchmen, who objected to the term Protestant, initially
promoted the form Reformed Episcopal Church; and it remains the
case that word Episcopal is
preferred in the title of The
Episcopal Church (the province of the Anglican Communion
covering the United States) and the Scottish
Episcopal Church. Outside of the British Isles, however, the
word Anglican Church came to be preferred; as it distinguished
these churches from others that claimed an episcopal polity;
although the Church of
Ireland and the Church in
Wales continue to use the term only with reservations.
Anglicanism defined
Anglicanism, in its structures, theology, and forms of worship, is commonly understood as a distinct Christian tradition representing a middle ground between Roman Catholicism and Protestantism and, as such, is often referred to as being a via media (or middle way) between these traditions. The faith of Anglicans is founded in the Scriptures and the Gospels, the traditions of the apostolic Church, the historic episcopate, the first four Ecumenical Councils, and the early Church Fathers. Anglicans understand the Old and New Testaments as 'containing all things necessary for salvation' and as being the rule and ultimate standard of faith. Anglicans understand the Apostles' Creed as the baptismal symbol, and the Nicene creed as the sufficient statement of the Christian faith.Anglicans uphold the catholic and apostolic faith
and follow the teachings of Jesus Christ. In practice, Anglicans
believe this is revealed in Holy Scripture and the catholic creeds,
and interpret these in light of the Christian tradition of the
historic Church, scholarship, reason, and experience.
Anglicans celebrate the traditional sacraments,
with special emphasis being given to the Holy
Eucharist, also called Holy Communion, the Lord's Supper or the
Mass. The
Eucharist is central to worship for most Anglicans as a communal
offering of prayer and praise in which the life, death and
resurrection of Jesus Christ
are proclaimed through prayer, reading of the Bible, singing, and
the reception of bread and wine as instituted at the Last Supper.
Whilst many Anglicans celebrate the Eucharist in similar ways to
the predominant western Catholic tradition, a considerable degree
of liturgical freedom is permitted, and worship styles range from
the simple to elaborate.
Unique to Anglicanism is the Book
of Common Prayer, the collection of services that worshippers
in most Anglican churches used for centuries. It was called common
prayer because all Anglicans used to share in its use around the
world. In 1549, the first Book of Common Prayer (BCP) was compiled
by Thomas
Cranmer, who was then Archbishop
of Canterbury. Whilst it has since undergone many revisions and
Anglican churches in different countries have developed other
service books, the Prayer Book is still acknowledged as one of the
ties that bind the Anglican Communion together.
Anglican Identity
Development
By the Elizabethan
Settlement, the Churches of England and Ireland had been
established through legislation in Parliament;
and assumed allegiance and loyalty to the British Crown in all
their members. However, from the first, the Elizabethan Church
began to develop distinct religious traditions; assimilating some
of the theology of Reformed
churches with the services in the Book
of Common Prayer, under the leadership and organisation of a
continuing episcopate ; and over the years these traditions
themselves came to command adherence and loyalty. Potentially this
would create a crisis of identity, were secular and religious
loyalties to conflict - and such a crisis indeed occurred in 1776
with the
American Declaration of Independence, most of whose signatories
were, at least nominally, Anglican . For these American Patriots,
even the forms of Anglican services were in doubt, since the Prayer
Book rites of Matins, Evensong and Holy Communion, all included
specific prayers for the British Royal Family. Consequently, the
conclusion of the War of Independence resulted in the creation of
two new Anglican churches,
The Episcopal Church in the United States of America in those
States that had achieved independence; and
The Church of England in Canada in those North American
colonies remaining under British control and to which many Loyalist
churchmen had migrated. Reluctantly, legislation was passed in the
British Parliament (the
Consecration of Bishops Abroad Act 1786) to allow bishops to be
consecrated for an American church outside of allegiance to the
British Crown (whereas no bishoprics had ever been established in
the former American colonies) . Both in the United States, and in
Canada, the new Anglican churches developed novel models of
self-government, collective decision-making, and self-supported
financing; that would be consistent with separation of religious
and secular identities .
In the following century, two further factors
acted to accelerate the development of a distinct Anglican
identity. From 1828 and 1829, Dissenters and
Roman
Catholics could be elected to the
House of Commons , which consequently ceased to be a purely
Anglican body; but which nevertheless, over the following ten years
, engaged in extensive reforming legislation affecting the
interests of the established churches of both England and Ireland.
The propriety of this legislation was bitterly contested by the
Tractarians ,
who in response developed a vision of "Anglicanism" as religious
tradition deriving ultimately from the Ecumenical
Councils of the patristic church. Those within the Church of
England opposed to the Tractarians, and to their revived ritual
practices, introduced a stream of Parliamentary Bills aimed to
control innovations in worship ; but this only made the dilemma
more acute, with consequent continual litigation in the secular and
ecclesiastical courts.
Over the same period Anglican churches engaged
vigorously in Christian
Missions, resulting in the creation, by the end of the century,
of over ninety colonial bishoprics ; which gradually coalesced into
new self-governing churches on the Canadian and American models.
However the case of John
William Colenso Bishop of Natal, reinstated in 1865 by the
English
Judicial Committee of the Privy Council over the heads of the
Church in South Africa , demonstrated acutely that the extension of
episcopacy had to be accompanied by a recognised Anglican
ecclesiology of ecclesiastical authority, distinct from secular
power.
Consequently, at the instigation of the Bishops
of Canada and South Africa, the first Lambeth
Conference was called in 1867 ; to be followed by further
conferences in 1878 and 1888, and thereafter at ten year intervals.
The various papers and declarations of successive Lambeth
Conferences, have served to frame the continued Anglican debate on
identity, especially as relating to the possibility of ecumenical
discussion with other churches. This ecumenical aspiration became
much more of a possibility, as other denominational groups rapidly
followed the example of the Anglican Communion in founding their
own transnational alliances: the
Alliance of Reformed Churches, the Ecumenical
Methodist Council, the
International Congregational Council, and the Baptist
World Alliance.
Theories of Anglican Identity
In their rejection of absolute parliamentary authority, the Tractarians - and in particular John Henry Newman - looked back to the writings of 17th Century Anglican divines, finding in these texts the idea of the English church as a via media between the Protestant and Roman Catholic traditions. This view was associated - especially in the writings of Edward Bouverie Pusey - with the theory of Anglicanism as one of three "branches" (alongside the Catholic and Orthodox churches) historically arising out of the common tradition of the earliest Ecumenical Councils. Newman himself subsequently rejected the theory of the via media, as essentially historicist and static; and hence unable to accommodate any dynamic development within the church. Nevertheless, the aspiration to ground Anglican identity in the writings of the 17th Century divines, and in faithfulness to the traditions of the Church Fathers reflects a continuing theme of Anglican ecclesiology, most recently in the writings of Henry Robert McAdoo..The Tractarian formulation of the theory of the
via media was essentially a party platform, and not acceptable to
Anglicans outside the confines of the Oxford
Movement. However, the theory of the via media was reworked in
the ecclesiological writings of Frederick
Denison Maurice, in a more dynamic form that became widely
influential. Both Maurice and Newman saw the Church of England of
their day as sorely deficient in faith; but whereas Newman had
looked back to a distant past when the light of faith might have
appeared to burn brighter, Maurice looked forwards to the
possibility of a brighter revelation of faith in the future.
Maurice saw the Protestant and Catholic strands within the Church
of England as contrary but complimentary, both maintaining elements
of the true church, but incomplete without the other; such that a
true catholic and evangelical church might come into being by a
union of opposites. Central to Maurice's perspective, is his belief
that the collective elements of family, nation and church represent
a divine order of structures through which God unfolds his
continuing work of creation. Hence, for Maurice, the Protestant
tradition maintains the elements of national distinction which are
amongst the marks of the true emerging universal church, but which
have been lost within Roman Catholicism in the parasitic
internationalism of centralised Papal Authority. In the coming
universal church, each national church would maintain the six signs
of Catholicity: baptism, eucharist, the creeds, Scripture, an
episcopally ordered ministry, and a fixed liturgy; of which the
latter would take a variety of forms in accordance with divinely
ordained distinctions in national characteristics.
In the latter decades of the 20th Century,
Maurice's theory, and the various strands of Anglican thought that
derived from it, have been criticised by Stephen
Sykes; who argues that the terms Protestant and Catholic as
used in these approaches are synthetic constructs denoting
ecclesial identities unacceptable to those to whom the labels are
applied. Hence, the Roman Catholic Church does not regard itself as
a party or strand within the universal church - but rather
identifies itself as the universal church. Moreover, Sykes
criticises the denial, implicit in theories of via media, that
there is no distinctive body of Anglican doctrine, other than those
of the universal church; accusing this of being an excuse not to
undertake systematic doctrine at all. Contrariwise, Sykes notes a
high degree of commonality in Anglican liturgical forms, and in the
doctrinal understandings expressed within those liturgies. He
proposes that Anglican identity might rather be found within a
shared consistent pattern of prescriptive liturgies, established
and maintained through canon law, and embodying both a historic
deposit of formal statements of doctrine, and also framing the
regular reading and proclamation of scripture. Sykes nevertheless
agrees with those heirs of Maurice who emphasize the incompleteness
of Anglicanism as a positive feature, and quotes with qualified
approval the words of Michael
Ramsay:
For while the Anglican church
is vindicated by its place in history, with a strikingly balanced
witness to Gospel and Church and sound learning, its greater
vindication lies in its pointing through its own history to
something of which it is a fragment. Its credentials are its
incompleteness, with the tension and the travail of its soul. It is
clumsy and untidy, it baffles neatness and logic. For it is not
sent to commend itself as ‘the best type of Christianity,’ but by
its very brokenness to point to the universal Church wherein all
have died..
Doctrine
Catholic and Reformed
In the time of Henry VIII the nature of Anglicanism was based on questions of jurisdiction—specifically, the belief of the Crown that national churches should be autonomous—rather than theological disagreement. The effort to create a national church in legal continuity with its traditions, but inclusive of certain doctrinal and liturgical beliefs of the Reformers, was joined by a real concern to make the institution as hospitable as possible to people of different theological inclinations, so as to maintain social peace and cohesion. The result has been a movement with a distinctive self-image among Christian movements. The question often arises as to whether the Anglican Communion should be identified as a Protestant or Catholic church, or perhaps as a distinct branch of Christianity altogether. The official position of the Anglican Communion is that, like the Roman Catholic and Orthodox communions, it is a full and distinct branch of the "One, Holy, Catholic, and Apostolic Church," created by Christ.The distinction between Reformed and Catholic,
and the coherence of the two, is routinely a matter of debate both
within specific Anglican Churches and throughout the Anglican
Communion by members themselves. Since the Oxford
Movement of the mid-19th century, many Churches of the
Communion have revived and extended liturgical and pastoral
practices similar to Roman Catholic theology. This extends beyond
the ceremony of High Church
services to even more theologically significant territory, such as
sacramental theology (see Anglican
sacraments). While Anglo-Catholic practices, particularly
liturgical ones, have resurfaced and become more common within the
tradition over the last century, there remain many places where
practices and beliefs remain on the more Reformed or Evangelical
side (see Sydney
Anglicanism).
Guiding principles
For 'High Church' Anglicans, doctrine is neither
established by a magisterium, nor derived
from the theology of an eponymous founder (such as
Lutheranism or
Calvinism), nor
summed up in a confession of faith (beyond those of the creeds). For them, the earliest
Anglican theological documents are its prayer books, which they see
as the products of profound theological reflection, compromise, and
synthesis. They emphasise the Book
of Common Prayer as a key expression of Anglican doctrine. The
principle of looking to the prayer books as a guide to the
parameters of belief and practice is called by the Latin name
lex
orandi, lex credendi ("the law of prayer is the law of
belief"). Within the prayer books are the so-called fundamentals of
Anglican doctrine: The Apostles'
and Nicene
Creeds, the Athanasian
Creed (extremely rarely recited, nowadays), the scriptures (via
the lectionary), the sacraments, daily prayer, the catechism, and apostolic
succession in the context of the historic threefold ministry.
Evangelical
Anglicans point more to the more Reformed Thirty
Nine Articles, with their insistence on justification by faith
alone and predestination, and their hostility to the Roman Catholic
church (see Anti-Catholicism).
Following the passing of the 1604 Canons, all Anglican clergy had
formally to subscribe to the Articles. Nowadays, however, they are
no longer binding, but are seen as an historical document that has
played a significant role in the shaping of Anglican identity. The
degree to which each of the Articles has remained influential
varies. Arguably, the most influential of them has been Article VI
on the sufficiency of Scripture, which states that ''Scripture
containeth all things necessary to salvation: so that whatsoever is
not read therein, nor may be proved thereby, is not to be required
of any man, that it should be believed as an article of the Faith,
or be thought requisite or necessary to salvation.'' This article
has informed Anglican biblical exegesis and hermeneutics since earliest
times.
Anglicans look for authority in their so-called
"standard divines" (see below). Historically, the most influential
of these - apart from Cranmer - has been the sixteenth century
cleric and theologian
Richard Hooker who after 1660 was increasingly portrayed as the
founding father of Anglicanism. Hooker's description of Anglican
authority as being derived primarily from Scripture, informed by
reason (the intellect and the experience of God) and tradition (the
practices and beliefs of the historical church), has influenced
Anglican self-identity and doctrinal reflection perhaps more
powerfully than any other formula. The analogy of the "three-legged
stool" of scripture, reason, and tradition is often incorrectly
attributed to Hooker. Rather Hooker's description is a hierarchy of
authority, with scripture as foundational, and reason, and
tradition as vitally important, but secondary, authorities.
Finally, the extension of Anglicanism into
non-English cultures, the growing diversity of prayer books, and
the increasing interest in ecumenical dialogue, has led to further
reflection on the parameters of the Anglican identity. Many
Anglicans look to the
Chicago-Lambeth Quadrilateral of 1888 as the "sine qua non" of
Communal identity. In brief, the Quadrilateral's four points are
the Holy Scriptures, as containing all things necessary to
salvation; the Creeds (specifically, the Apostles' and Nicene
Creeds), as the sufficient statement of Christian faith; the
dominical sacraments of Baptism and
Holy
Communion; and the historic
episcopate.
The corpus produced by Anglican divines is
diverse. What they have in common is a commitment to the faith as
conveyed by Scripture and the Book of Common Prayer, thus regarding
prayer and theology in a manner akin to that of the Apostolic
Fathers. On the whole, Anglican divines view the via media of
Anglicanism, not as a compromise, but "a positive position,
witnessing to the universality of God and God's kingdom working
through the fallible, earthly ecclesia Anglicana." These
theologians regard Scripture as interpreted through tradition and
reason as authoritative in matters concerning salvation. Reason and
tradition, indeed, is extant in and presupposed by Scripture, thus
implying co-operation between God and humanity, God and nature, and
between the sacred and secular. Faith is thus regarded as incarnational, and authority
as dispersed.
Among the early Anglican divines of the sixteenth
and seventeenth centuries, the names of Thomas Cranmer, John Jewel,
Richard Hooker, Lancelot
Andrewes, and Jeremy
Taylor predominate. The influential character of Hooker's
Of the Laws of Ecclesiastical Polity cannot be overestimated.
Published in 1593 and subsequently, Hooker's eight volume work is
primarily a treatise on Church-state relations, but it deals
comprehensively with issues of biblical
interpretation, soteriology, ethics, and sanctification.
Throughout the work, Hooker makes clear that theology involves
prayer and is concerned with ultimate issues, and that theology is
relevant to the social mission of the church.
The eighteenth century saw the rise of two
important movements in Anglicanism: Cambridge
Platonism, with its mystical understanding of reason as the
"candle of the Lord," and the Evangelical
Revival, with its emphasis on the personal experience of the
Holy
Spirit. The Cambridge Platonist movement evolved into a school
called Latitudinarianism,
which emphasised reason as the barometer of discernment and took a
stance of indifference towards doctrinal and ecclesiological
differences. The Evangelical Revival, influenced by such figures as
John
Wesley and Charles
Simeon, re-emphasised the importance of justification
through faith and the consequent importance of personal
conversion. Some in this movement, such as Wesley and George
Whitefield, took the message to the United
States, influencing the First
Great Awakening, and created an Anglo-American movement called
Methodism
that would eventually break away, structurally, from the Anglican
churches after the American Revolution.
By the nineteenth century, there was a renewed
emphasis on the teachings of the earlier Anglican divines:
Theologians such as John Keble,
Edward
Bouverie Pusey, and John
Henry Newman had widespread influence in the realm of polemics,
homiletics, and theological and devotional works, not least because
they largely repudiated the Old High Church tradition and replaced
it with a dynamic appeal to antiquity which looked beyond the
Reformers and Anglican formularies. Their work is largely credited
with the development of the Oxford
Movement, which sought to reassert Catholic identity and
practice in the Anglican Church. Through such works as The
Kingdom of Christ, Frederick
Denison Maurice played a pivotal role in inaugurating another
movement, Christian
socialism. In this, Maurice transformed Hooker's emphasis on
the incarnational
nature of Anglican spirituality to an imperative for social
justice. In the nineteenth century, Anglican biblical scholarship
began to assume a distinct character, represented by the so-called
"Cambridge triumvirate" of Joseph
Lightfoot, F. J. A.
Hort, and Brooke
Foss Westcott. Their orientation is best summed up by
Lightfoot's observation that "Life which Christ is and which Christ
communicates, the life which fills our whole beings as we realise
its capacities, is active fellowship with God."
The twentieth century is marked by figures such
as Charles
Gore, with his emphasis on natural revelation,
William Temple's focus on Christianity and society, J.A.T.
Robinson's provocative discussions of deism and theism, Darwell
Stone's and E. L. Mascall's thomism and defence of Catholic
orthodoxy, and Kenneth Kirk's Moral Theology. Outside England, one
sees such figures as William
Porcher DuBose, William
Meade, and Charles
Henry Brent in the United States. More recently, theologians
such as Henry Chadwick, John
Macquarrie and Don Cupitt,
who rejected all the doctrines of historic Christianity in favour
of a "Christian Buddhism", Jeffrey
John, N.T. Wright,
and Rowan
Williams have added to the mix.
Churchmanship
"Churchmanship" can be defined as the
manifestation of theology in the realms of liturgy, piety and, to
some extent, spirituality. Anglican diversity in this respect has
tended to reflect the diversity in the tradition's Reformed and
Catholic identity. Different individuals, groups, parishes,
dioceses and provinces may identify more with one or the other, or
some mixture of the two.
The range of Anglican belief and practice became
particularly divisive during the 19th century when some clergy were
disciplined and even imprisoned on charges of ritual
heresy while, at the same time, others were criticised for
engaging in public worship services with ministers of Reformed
churches. Resistance to the growing acceptance and restoration of
traditional Catholic ceremonial by the mainstream of Anglicanism
ultimately led to the formation of small breakaway churches such as
the Free
Church of England in England (1844) and the Reformed
Episcopal Church in North America (1873).
Anglo-Catholic
(and some Broad Church) Anglicans celebrate public liturgy in ways
that understand worship to be something very special and of utmost
importance. vestments
are worn by the clergy, sung settings often used and incense may be used. Nowadays,
in most Anglican churches, the Eucharist is celebrated in a manner
similar to Roman Catholics and some Lutherans though, in many
churches, more traditional, "pre-Vatican II", models of worship are
common, (e.g., an "eastward orientation" at the altar). The
Eucharist may be celebrated with a priest, deacon and subdeacon dressed in
traditional vestments, with incense and sanctus
bells and with prayers adapted from the missal or other sources by the
celebrant. Such churches may also have forms of Eucharistic
adoration such as Benediction of the Blessed Sacrament. In
terms of personal piety some Anglicans may recite the rosary
and angelus, be involved
in a devotional society dedicated to "Our Lady" (the Blessed
Virgin Mary) and seek the intercession of the saints.
In recent years the prayer books of several
provinces have, out of deference to a greater agreement with
Eastern Conciliarism
(and a perceived greater respect accorded Anglicanism by Eastern
Orthodoxy than by Roman Catholicism), instituted a number of
historically Eastern and Oriental
Orthodox elements in their liturgies, including introduction of
the Trisagion and
deletion of the filioque clause from the
Nicene
Creed.
For their part, those Evangelical
(and some Broad Church) Anglicans who emphasise the more Protestant
aspects of the Church stress the Reformation theme of
salvation by grace through faith. They emphasise the two
dominical sacraments of Baptism and Eucharist, viewing the other
five as "lesser rites". Some Evangelical Anglicans may even tend to
take the inerrancy of Scripture literally, adopting the view of
Article VI that it contains all things necessary to salvation in an
explicit sense. Worship in churches influenced by these principles
tends to be significantly less elaborate, with greater emphasis on
the Liturgy of the Word (the reading of the scriptures, the sermon
and the intercessory prayers). The Order for Holy Communion may be
celebrated bi-weekly or monthly (in preference to the daily
offices), by priests attired in choir habit,
or more regular clothes, rather than Eucharistic vestments.
Ceremony may be in keeping with their view of the provisions of the
controversial Ornaments
Rubric of the historic English prayer books — no candles, no
incense, no bells and a minimum of manual action by the presiding
celebrant (such as touching the elements at the Words
of Institution). In recent decades there has been a growth of
charismatic
worship among Anglicans. Both Anglo-Catholics and Evangelicals have
been affected by this movement such that it is not uncommon to find
typically charismatic postures, music, and other themes evident
during the services of otherwise Anglo-Catholic or Evangelical
parishes.
The spectrum of Anglican beliefs and practice is
too large to be fit into these labels. Many Anglicans locate
themselves somewhere in the spectrum of the Broad Church tradition
and consider themselves an amalgam of Evangelical and Catholic.
Such Anglicans stress that Anglicanism is the "via media"
(middle way) between the two major strains of Western Christianity
and that Anglicanism is like a "bridge" between the two
strains.
Sacramental doctrine and practice
As befits its prevailing self-identity as a via media or "middle path" of Western Christianity, Anglican sacramental theology expresses elements in keeping with its status as being both a church in the Catholic tradition as well as a church of the Reformation. With respect to sacramental theology the Catholic heritage is perhaps most strongly asserted in the importance Anglicanism places on the sacraments as a means of grace, sanctification and salvation as expressed in the church's liturgy and doctrine.Of the seven sacraments, Anglicans recognise
baptism and the Eucharist as being directly instituted by Christ.
The other five sacraments are regarded variously as full sacraments
by Anglo-Catholics
or as "sacramental rites" by Evangelicals.
The seven sacraments are Baptism, Confession
and absolution,
Holy Matrimony, Holy Eucharist
(also called Holy Communion or Mass), Confirmation,
Holy
Orders (also called Ordination), and Anointing
of the Sick (also called Unction.)
Whilst infant baptism is the norm in
Anglicanism, services of thanksgiving and dedication of children
are sometimes celebrated, especially when baptism is being
deferred. Anglicans regard baptism as an unrepeatable sacrament.
People baptised
in other traditions will be confirmed without being baptised again
unless there is doubt about the validity of their original baptism.
Already confirmed Roman Catholic and Orthodox Christians are simply
received into the Anglican Church.
Eucharistic theology
Anglican Eucharistic theology is divergent in practice, reflecting the essential comprehensiveness of the tradition. Some very few Low Church Anglicans take a strictly memorialist (Zwinglian) view of the sacrament. In other words, they see Holy Communion as a memorial to Christ's suffering, and participation in the Eucharist as both a re-enactment of the Last Supper and a foreshadowing of the heavenly banquet -- the fulfillment of the Eucharistic promise. Most Low Church Anglicans believe in the Real Presence but deny that the presence of Christ is carnal or is necessarily localised in the bread and wine. Despite explicit criticism in the Thirty-Nine Articles, many High Church or Anglo-Catholic Anglicans hold, more or less, the Roman Catholic view of the Real Presence, as expressed in the doctrine of transubstantiation, seeing the Eucharist as a liturgical representation of Christ's atoning sacrifice with the elements actually transformed into Christ's Body and Blood.Most Anglicans, however, implicitly or explicitly
adopt the Eucharistic theology of consubstantiation,
first articulated by the Lollards, or Sacramental Union, first
articulated by Martin Luther. Luther's analogy of Christ's presence
was that of the heat of a horseshoe thrust into a fire until it is
glowing. In the same way, Christ is present in the bread and the
wine.
The classical Anglican aphorism regarding
Christ's presence in the sacrament is found in a poem by John
Donne:
- He was the Word that spake it;
- He took the bread and brake it;
- and what that Word did make it;
- I do believe and take it.
- He took the bread and brake it;
An Anglican position on the Eucharistic sacrifice
("Sacrifice of the Mass") was expressed in the response Saepius
Officio of the Archbishops of Canterbury and York to Pope Leo
XIII's Papal Encyclical Apostolicae
curae.
Anglican and Roman Catholic representatives
declared that they had "substantial agreement on the doctrine of
the Eucharist" in the
Windsor Statement on Eucharistic Doctrine from the Anglican-Roman
Catholic International Consultation and the
Elucidation of the ARCIC Windsor Statement. Despite this
agreement, other ecclesiological differences between the two
churches prevent full intercommunion.
Practices: prayer and worship
- see also Evensong and Prayer of Humble Access
In Anglicanism there is a distinction between
liturgy, which is the formal public and communal worship of the
Church, and personal prayer and devotion which may be public or
private. Liturgy is regulated by the prayer books and consists of
the Holy Eucharist (some call it Holy Communion or Mass), the other
six Sacraments, and the Divine Office or Liturgy of the
Hours.
Book of Common Prayer
The Book of Common Prayer (BCP) is the foundational prayer book of Anglicanism. The original was one of the instruments of the English Reformation and was later to be adapted and revised in other countries where Anglicanism became established. The BCP replaced the various 'uses' or rites in Latin that had been used in different parts of the country with a single compact volume in the language of the people so that "now from henceforth all the Realm shall have but one use".With British colonial expansion from the
seventeenth century onwards, the Anglican church was planted across
the globe. These churches at first used and then revised the use of
the Prayer Book, until they, like their parent, produced prayer
books which took into account the developments in liturgical study
and practice in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, which come
under the general heading of the Liturgical
Movement.
Anglican worship: an overview
see also Church of England parish church Anglican worship services are open to all visitors. Anglican worship originates principally in the reforms of Thomas Cranmer, who aimed to create a set order of service like that of the pre-Reformation church but less complex in its seasonal variety and said in English rather than Latin. This use of a set order of service is not unlike the Roman Catholic tradition. Traditionally the pattern was that laid out in the Book of Common Prayer. Although many Anglican churches now use a wide range of modern service books written in the local language, the structures of the Book of Common Prayer are largely retained. Churches which call themselves Anglican will have identified themselves so because they use some form or variant of the Book of Common Prayer in the shaping of their worship.Anglican worship, however, is as diverse as
Anglican theology. A contemporary "low church" or
Evangelical service may differ little from the worship of many
mainstream Protestant churches. The service is constructed around a
sermon focused on Biblical exposition and opened with one or more
Bible readings and closed by a series of prayers (both set and
extemporized) and hymns or songs. A "high church"
or Anglo-Catholic service, by contrast, is usually a more formal
liturgy celebrated by
clergy in distinctive vestments and may be almost
indistinguishable from a Roman Catholic service, often resembling
the "pre-Vatican II" Tridentine rite. Between these extremes are a
variety of styles of worship, often involving a robed choir and the
use of the organ to accompany the singing and to provide music
before and after the service. Anglican churches tend to have
pews or chairs and it is
usual for the congregation to kneel for some prayers but to stand
for hymns and other parts of the service such as the Gloria,
Collect, Gospel reading, Creed and either the Preface or all of the
Eucharistic Prayer. High Anglicans may genuflect or cross
themselves in the same way as Roman Catholics.
Until the mid-twentieth century the main Sunday
service was typically morning
prayer, but the Eucharist has
once again become the standard form of Sunday worship in many
Anglican churches; this again is similar to Roman Catholic
practice. Other common Sunday services include an early morning
Eucharist without music, an abbreviated Eucharist following a
service of morning prayer and a service of evening
prayer, sometimes in the form of sung Evensong, usually
celebrated between 3 and 6 p.m. The late-evening service of
Compline
was revived in parish use in the early 20th century. Many Anglican
churches will also have daily morning and evening prayer and some
have midweek or even daily celebration of the Eucharist.
An Anglican service (whether or not a Eucharist)
will include readings from the Bible that are generally taken from
a standardised lectionary, which provides
for the entire Bible (and some passages from the Apocrypha) to be
read out loud in the church over a three year cycle. The sermon (or homily) is typically about ten to
twenty minutes in length, though it may be much longer in
Evangelical churches. Even in the most informal Evangelical
services it is common for set prayers such as the weekly Collect to be read.
There are also set forms for intercessory
prayer, though this is now more often extemporaneous. In high
and Anglo-Catholic churches there are generally prayers for the
dead.
Although Anglican public worship is usually
ordered according to the canonically approved services, in practice
many Anglican churches use forms of service outside these norms.
Many Evangelical churches sit lightly to the set forms of morning
and evening prayer, though generally respecting the canonical order
of Holy Communion. Liberal churches may use freely-structured or
experimental forms of worship, including patterns borrowed from
ecumenical traditions such as those of Taizé
Community or the Iona
Community.
Anglo-Catholic
parishes might use the modern Roman Catholic liturgy of the
Mass
or more traditional forms, such as the Tridentine
Mass (which is translated into English in the English
Missal), the Anglican
Missal, or, less commonly, the Sarum Rite.
Traditional Catholic devotions such as the Rosary, Angelus and
Benediction of the Blessed Sacrament are also common among
Anglo-Catholics.
Eucharistic discipline
Only baptized persons
are eligible to receive communion. In the past, it was common to
restrict communion to those who had not only been baptised but also
confirmed. In
many Anglican provinces, however, all baptised Christians are now
often invited to receive communion and some dioceses have
regularised a system for admitting baptised young people to
communion before they are confirmed.
The discipline of fasting before communion is
practised by many Anglicans. Most Anglican priests require the
presence of at least one other person for the celebration of the
Eucharist, though some Anglo-Catholic
priests (like Roman Catholic priests) may say private Masses. As in
the Roman Catholic Church, it is a canonical requirement to use
fermented wine for the
Eucharist, Unlike in Roman Catholicism, however, the consecrated
bread and wine are always offered to the congregation. In some
churches the sacrament is reserved in a tabernacle or aumbry with a
lighted candle or lamp nearby. Only a priest or a bishop may be the
celebrant at the Eucharist, though Sydney
Anglicans may soon authorise lay people to celebrate the
Mass.
Divine office
All Anglican prayer books contain offices for Morning Prayer (Matins) and Evening Prayer (Evensong). In the original Book of Common Prayer these were derived from combinations of the ancient monastic offices of Matins and Lauds; and Vespers and Compline respectively. The prayer offices have an important place in Anglican history. Prior to the Catholic revival of the nineteenth century, which eventually restored the Holy Eucharist as the principal Sunday liturgy, and especially during the eighteenth century, a morning service combining Matins, the Litany and ante-Communion comprised the usual expression of common worship; while Matins and Evensong were sung daily in cathedrals and some collegiate chapels. This nurtured a tradition of distinctive Anglican chant applied to the canticles and psalms used at the offices (although plainsong is often used as well).In some official and unofficial Anglican service
books these offices are supplemented by other offices such as the
Little
Hours of Prime and
prayer during the day such as (Terce, Sext, None and
Compline).
Some Anglican monastic communities have a Daily Office based on
that of the Book of Common Prayer but with additional antiphons and
canticles, etc. for specific days of the week, specific psalms,
etc. See, for example,
Order of the Holy Cross http://www.holycrossmonastery.com
and Order of St Helena, editors, A Monastic Breviary (Wilton,
Conn.: Morehouse-Barlow, 1976). The All Saints Sisters of the Poor
http://www.geocities.com/xnomad4/index.html,
with convents in Catonsville, Maryland and elsewhere use an
elaborated version of the Anglican Daily Office. The Society
of St. Francis publishes Celebrating Common Prayer which has
become especially popular for use among Anglicans.
In England, the United States, Canada, Australia,
New Zealand and some other Anglican provinces the modern prayer
books contain four offices:
- Morning Prayer, corresponding to Matins and Lauds
- Prayer During the Day, roughly corresponding to the combination of Terce, Sext and None (Noonday Prayer in the USA)
- Evening Prayer, corresponding to Vespers
- Compline
Some Anglicans who pray the office on daily basis
use the present Divine
Office of the Roman Catholic Church. In many cities, especially
in England, Anglican and Roman Catholic priests and lay people
often meet several times a week to pray the office in common. A
small but enthusiastic minority use the Anglican
Breviary, or other translations and adaptations of the
Pre-Vatican II Roman Rite and Sarum Rite,
along with supplemental material from cognate western sources, to
provide such things as a common of Octaves, a common of Holy Women
and other additional material. Others may privately use
idiosyncratic forms borrowed from a wide range of Christian
traditions.
"Quires and Places where they sing"
In the late medieval period, many English cathedrals and monasteries had established small choirs of trained lay clerks and boy choristers to perform polyphonic settings of the Mass in their Lady Chapels. Although these "Lady Masses" were discontinued at the Reformation, the associated musical tradition was maintained in the Elizabethan Settlement through the establishment of choral foundations for daily singing of the Divine Office by expanded choirs of men and boys. This resulted from an explicit addition by Elizabeth herself to the injunctions accompanying the 1559 Book of Common Prayer (that had itself made no mention of choral worship) by which existing choral foundations and choir schools were instructed to be continued, and their endowments secured. Consequently, some thirty-four cathedrals, collegiate churches and royal chapels maintained paid establishments of lay singing men and choristers in the late 16th Century . All save four of these have - with an interruption during the Commonwealth - continued daily choral prayer and praise to this day. In the Offices of Mattins and Evensong in the 1662 Book of Common Prayer, these choral establishments are specified as "Quires and Places where they sing".For nearly three centuries, this round of daily
professional choral worship represented a tradition entirely
distinct from that embodied in the intoning of Parish
Clerks, and the singing of "west
gallery choirs" which commonly accompanied weekly worship in
English parish churches. However, in 1841, the rebuilt Leeds
Parish Church established a surpliced choir to accompany parish
services; drawing explicitly on the musical traditions of the
ancient choral foundations; and over the next century, the Leeds
example proved immensely popular and influential for choirs in
cathedrals, parish churches and schools throughout the Anglican
communion . More or less extensively adapted, this choral tradition
also became the direct inspiration for robed choirs leading
congregational worship in a wide range of Christian
denominations.
In 1719 the cathedral choirs of Gloucester,
Hereford
and Worcester
combined to establish the annual Three
Choirs Festival, the precursor for the multitude of summer
music festivals since. By the 20th century, the choral tradition
had become for many the most accessible face of world-wide
Anglicanism - especially as promoted through the regular
broadcasting of choral evensong by the BBC; and also in the
annual televising of the festival of Nine
lessons and carols from King's
College, Cambridge. Composers closely concerned with this
tradition include Edward
Elgar, Ralph
Vaughan Williams, Gustav
Holst, Charles
Villiers Stanford and Benjamin
Britten. A number of important 20th century works by
non-Anglican composers were originally commissioned for the
Anglican choral tradition - for example the Chichester
Psalms of Leonard
Bernstein, and the Nunc
dimittis of Arvo
Pärt.
Organization and mission of the Church
Principles of governance
Contrary to popular misconception, the British monarch is not the constitutional "Head" but in law "The Supreme Governor" of the Church of England, nor does he or she have any role in provinces outside England and Wales. The role of the crown in the Church of England is practically limited to the appointment of bishops, including the Archbishop of Canterbury, and even this role is limited, as the Church presents the government with a short list of candidates to choose from. This process is accomplished through collaboration with and consent of ecclesial representatives (see Ecclesiastical Commissioners). The monarch has no constitutional role in Anglican churches in other parts of the world, although the prayer books of several countries where she is head of state maintain prayers for her as sovereign.A characteristic of Anglicanism is that it has no
international juridical authority. All thirty-nine provinces of the
Anglican Communion are independent, each with their own primate
and governing structure. These provinces may take the form of
national churches (such as in Canada, Uganda, or Japan) or a
collection of nations (such as the West Indies, Central Africa, or
South Asia), or geographical regions (such as Vanuatu and Solomon
Islands) etc. Within these Communion provinces may exist
subdivisions called ecclesiastical
provinces, under the jurisdiction of a metropolitan archbishop.
All provinces of the Anglican Communion consist of dioceses, each under the
jurisdiction of a bishop.
In the Anglican tradition, bishops must be consecrated according to
the strictures of apostolic
succession, which Anglicans consider one of the marks of
catholicity.
Apart from bishops, there are two other orders of ordained
ministry: deacon and
priest. No requirement is
made for clerical
celibacy, though many Anglo-Catholic priests have traditionally
been bachelors. Because of innovations that occurred at various
points after the latter half of the twentieth century, women may be
ordained as deacons in almost all provinces, as priests in some,
and as bishops in a few provinces. Anglican
religious orders and communities, suppressed in England during
the Reformation, have re-emerged, especially since the
mid-nineteenth century, and now have an international presence and
influence.
Government in the Anglican Communion is synodical, consisting of three
houses of laity (usually
elected parish representatives), clergy, and bishops. National,
provincial, and diocesan synods maintain different scopes of
authority, depending on their canons and
constitutions. Anglicanism is not congregational
in its polity: It is the diocese, not the parish church, which is
the smallest unit of authority in the church, and diocesan bishops
must give their assent to resolutions passed by synods. ''(See
Episcopal
polity).
Focus of unity: The Archbishop of Canterbury
The Archbishop of Canterbury has a precedence of honour over the other primates of the Anglican Communion, and for a province to be considered a part of the Communion means specifically to be in full communion with the See of Canterbury. The Archbishop is, therefore, recognised as primus inter pares, or first amongst equals even though he does not exercise any direct authority in any province outside England, of which he is chief primate. The current Archbishop of Canterbury as of 2003, Rowan Williams is the first appointed from outside the Church of England since the Reformation: he was the former Archbishop of Wales.As "spiritual head" of the Communion, the
Archbishop of Canterbury maintains a certain moral authority, and
has the right to determine which churches will be in communion with
his See. He
hosts and chairs the Lambeth
Conferences of Anglican Communion bishops, and decides who will
be invited to them. He also hosts and chairs the
Anglican Communion Primates' Meeting and is responsible for the
invitations to it. He acts as president of the secretariat of the
Anglican Communion Office, and its deliberative body, the
Anglican Consultative Council.
Instruments of unity
The Anglican Communion has no international juridical organization. All international bodies are consultative and collaborative, and their resolutions are not legally binding on the independent provinces of the Communion. There are three international bodies of note.- The Lambeth Conference is the oldest international consultation. It was first convened by Archbishop Charles Longley in 1867 as a vehicle for bishops of the Communion to "discuss matters of practical interest, and pronounce what we deem expedient in resolutions which may serve as safe guides to future action." Since then, it has been held roughly every ten years. Invitation is by the Archbishop of Canterbury.
- The Anglican Consultative Council was created by a 1968 Lambeth Conference resolution, and meets biennially. The council consists of representative bishops, clergy, and laity chosen by the thirty-eight provinces. The body has a permanent secretariat, the Anglican Communion Office, of which the Archbishop of Canterbury is president.
- The Anglican Communion Primates' Meeting is the most recent manifestation of international consultation and deliberation, having been first convened by Archbishop Donald Coggan in 1978 as a forum for "leisurely thought, prayer and deep consultation."
Ordained ministry
Like the Orthodox
and Roman
Catholic churches (but unlike most Protestant churches), the
Anglican Communion maintains the threefold ministry of deacons,
priests, and bishops.
Episcopate
The bishops, who possess the fullness of Christian priesthood, are the successors of the Apostles. The primates, archbishops and metropolitans are all bishops and members of the historical episcopate, and derive their authority through apostolic succession — an unbroken line of bishops that can be traced back to the apostles of Jesus.Priesthood (Presbyterate)
Bishops are assisted by priests and deacons. Most ordained ministers in the Anglican Communion are priests, who usually work in parishes within a diocese. Priests in charge of the spiritual life of parishes are usually called the rector or vicar. A curate (or, more correctly, an 'assistant curate') is a term often used for a priest (or deacon) who assists the parish priest.Non-parochial priests may earn their living by
any vocation, though these are usually related to the educational,
social service or healing professions. Many other non-stipendiary
priests will work in Christian-related fields such as chaplains of
hospitals, schools, prisons and the armed forces.
An archdeacon is a priest
responsible for administration of an archdeaconry, which is
often the name given to the principal subdivisions of a diocese. An archdeacon is an
episcopal vicar who represents the diocesan bishop in his or her
archdeaconry. In the Church of
England the position of archdeacon can only be held by someone
in priestly orders who has been ordained for at least six years. In
some other parts of the Anglican Communion the position can also be
held by deacons. In parts
of the Anglican Communion where women cannot be ordained as priests
or bishops, the position
of archdeacon is effectively the most senior office an ordained
woman can be appointed to.
The Anglican Communion recognises Roman Catholic
and Eastern Orthodox ordinations as valid. Outside the Anglican
Communion, Anglican ordinations (at least of male priests) are
recognised by the Old
Catholics and various Independent
Catholic Churches.
Diaconate
In Anglican churches, deacons often work directly in ministry to the marginalised inside and outside the church: the poor, the sick, the hungry, the imprisoned. Unlike Orthodox and Roman Catholic deacons who may be married only before ordination, deacons are permitted to marry freely both before and after ordination, as are priests. Most deacons are preparing for priesthood, and usually only remain as deacons for about a year before being ordained priests. However, there are some deacons who remain deacons. Many provinces of the Anglican Communion ordain both women and men as deacons. Many of those provinces that ordain women to the priesthood previously allowed them to be ordained only to the diaconate. The effect of this was the creation of a large and overwhelmingly female diaconate for a time, as most men proceeded to be ordained priest after a short time as a deacon.Deacons may baptise and in some dioceses are
granted licenses to solemnize matrimony, usually
under the instruction of their parish priest and bishop. They sometimes officiate
at
Benediction of the Blessed Sacrament, in the churches that have
this service. Deacons are not permitted to preside at the eucharist (but can lead
worship with the distribution of already-consecrated Communion
where this is permitted), absolve
sins or pronounce a
blessing in the name of the Church http://www.katapi.org.uk/ChristianFaith/LXIII.htm#IV,
(however, these last two are sometimes permitted in an indirect
form). It is the prohibition against deacons pronouncing a blessing
in the Church's name that leads some in the church to believe that
a deacon cannot properly solemnize matrimony. In most cases,
deacons minister alongside other clergy.
Laity
All baptised members of the Church are called Christian faithful, truly equal in dignity and in the work to build the Church. Some of the non-ordained exercise formal, public ministry in the name of the church, often on a full time and life-long basis. Lay Readers, also known as Readers, churchwardens, vergers and sextons are auxiliaries who do not hold holy orders.Religious life
A small yet influential aspect of Anglicanism is its religious orders and communities. Shortly after the beginning of the Catholic Revival in the Church of England, there was a renewal of interest in re-establishing religious and monastic orders and communities. One of Henry VIII's earliest acts was their dissolution and seizure of their assets. In 1841 Marion Rebecca Hughes became the first woman to take the vows of religion in communion with the Province of Canterbury since the Reformation. In 1848, Priscilla Lydia Sellon became the superior of the Society of the Most Holy Trinity at Devonport, the first organised religious order. Sellon is called "the restorer, after three centuries, of the religious life in the Church of England." For the next one hundred years, religious orders for both men and women proliferated throughout the world, becoming a numerically small but disproportionately influential feature of global Anglicanism.Anglican religious life at one time boasted
hundreds of orders and communities, and thousands of religious. An important aspect
of Anglican religious life is that most communities of both men and
women lived their lives consecrated to God under the vows of poverty, chastity
and obedience (or in
Benedictine
communities, Stability, Conversion of Life, and Obedience) by
practicing a mixed life of reciting the full eight services of the
Breviary
in choir, along with a daily Eucharist, plus
service to the poor. The mixed life, combining aspects of the
contemplative orders and the active orders remains to this day a
hallmark of Anglican religious life. Another distinctive feature of
Anglican religious life is the existence of some mixed-gender
communities.
Since the 1960s there has been a sharp decline in
the number of professed religious in most parts of the Anglican
Communion, especially in North
America, Europe, and Australia. Many
once large and international communities have been reduced to a
single convent or monastery with memberships of elderly men or
women. In the last few decades of the 20th century, novices have
for most communities been few and far between. Some orders and
communities have already become extinct. There are however, still
thousands of Anglican religious working today in approximately 200
communities around the world, and religious life in many parts of
the Communion - especially in developing nations -
flourishes.
The most significant growth has been in the
Melanesian
countries of the Solomon
Islands, Vanuatu and
Papua
New Guinea. The Melanesian
Brotherhood, founded at Tabalia,
Guadalcanal, in 1925 by Ini Kopuria, is now the largest
Anglican Community in the world with over 450 brothers in the Solomon Islands,
Vanuatu, Papua New Guinea, the Philippines and
the United Kingdom. The Sisters
of the Church, started by Mother Emily
Ayckbowm in England in 1870,
has more sisters in the
Solomons than all their other communities. The
Community of the Sisters of Melanesia, started in 1980 by
Sister
Nesta Tiboe, is a growing community of women throughout the
Solomon Islands. The Society
of Saint Francis, founded as a union of various Franciscan
orders in the 1920s, has experienced great growth in the Solomon
Islands. Other communities of religious have been started by
Anglicans in Papua New Guinea and in Vanuatu. Most Melanesian
Anglican religious are in their early to mid 20s — vows may be
temporary and it is generally assumed that brothers, at least, will
leave and marry in due course — making the average age 40 to 50
years younger than their brothers and sisters in other countries.
Growth of religious orders, especially for women, is marked in
certain parts of Africa.
Worldwide distribution
Anglicanism represents the third largest Christian communion in the world, after the Roman Catholic Church and the Eastern Orthodox Churches. The number of Anglicans in the world is slightly over 77 million. The 11 provinces in Africa saw explosive growth in the last two decades. They now include 36.7 million members, more Anglicans than there are in England. England remains the largest single Anglican province, with 26 million members. In most industrialised countries, church attendance has decreased since the 19th century. Anglicanism's presence in the rest of the world is due to large-scale emigration, the establishment of expatriate communities or the work of missionaries.The Church of
England has been a church of missionaries since the
seventeenth century when the Church first left English shores with
colonists who founded what would become the United States,
Australia, Canada, New Zealand and South Africa and established
Anglican churches. For example, an Anglican chaplain -Robert
Wolfall - with Martin
Frobisher's Arctic expedition
celebrated the Eucharist in 1578 in Frobisher
Bay. The first Anglican church in the Americas was built at
Jamestown,
Virginia,
in 1607. By the eighteenth century, missionaries worked to
establish Anglican churches in Asia, Africa and Latin America. The
great Church of England missionary societies were founded; for
example the
Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge (SPCK) in 1698.
Society for the Propagation of the Gospel in Foreign Parts
(SPG) in 1701, and the Church
Mission Society (CMS) in 1799. The nineteenth century saw the
founding and expansion of social oriented evangelism with societies
such as the
Church Pastoral Aid Society (CPAS) in 1836, Mission
to Seafarers in 1856, Mothers'
Union in 1876 and Church Army
in 1882 all carrying out a personal form of evangelism. The
twentieth century saw the Church of England developing new forms of
evangelism such as the Alpha course
in 1990 which was developed and propagated from
Holy Trinity Brompton Church in London. In the
twenty-first century, there has been renewed effort to reach
children and youth. Fresh
expressions is a Church of England missionary initiative to
youth begun in 2005, and has ministries at a skate park
through the efforts of St
George's Church, Benfleet, Essex - Diocese
of Chelmsford - or youth groups with evocative names, like the
C.L.A.W (Christ Little Angels - Whatever!) youth group at Coventry
Cathedral. And, for the un-churched who don't actually wish to
visit a bricks and mortar church there are Internet ministries such
as the Diocese
of Oxford's on-line Anglican i-Church which
appeared on the web in 2005.
Ecumenism
Anglican interest in ecumenical dialogue can be traced back to the time of the Reformation and dialogues with both Orthodox and Lutheran churches in the sixteenth century. In the nineteenth century, with the rise of the Oxford Movement, there arose greater concern for reunion of the churches of "Catholic confession." This desire to work towards full communion with other denominations led to the development of the Chicago-Lambeth Quadrilateral, approved by the Third Lambeth Conference of 1888. The four points (the sufficiency of scripture, the historic creeds, the two dominical sacraments, and the historic episcopate) were proposed as a basis for discussion, although they have frequently been taken as a non-negotiable bottom-line for any form of reunion.Role of the Church in civilization
Anglican concern with broader issues of social justice can be traced to its earliest divines. Richard Hooker, for instance, wrote that "God hath created nothing simply for itself, but each thing in all things, and of every thing each part in other have such interest, that in the whole world nothing is found whereunto any thing created can say, 'I need thee not.'" This, and related statements, reflect the deep thread of incarnational theology running through Anglican social thought - a theology which sees God, nature, and humanity in dynamic interaction, and the interpenetration of the secular and the sacred in the make-up of the cosmos. Such theology is informed by a traditional English spiritual ethos, rooted in Celtic Christianity and reinforced by Anglicanism's origins as an established church, bound up by its structure in the life and interests of civil society.Repeatedly, throughout Anglican history, this
principle has reasserted itself in movements of social justice. For
instance, in the eighteenth century the influential Evangelical
Anglican William
Wilberforce, along with others, campaigned against the slave
trade. In the nineteenth century, the dominant issues concerned the
adverse effects of industrialization. The usual Anglican response
was to focus on education and give support to 'The National Society
for the Education of the Children of the Poor in the principles of
the Church of England'. Lord Shaftesbury, a devout Evangelical,
campaigned to improve the conditions in factories, in mines, for
chimney sweeps, and for the education of the very poor. For years
he was chairman of the Ragged School Board. Frederick Denison
Maurice was a leading figure advocating reform , founding so-called
"producer's co-operatives" and the Working
Men's College. His work was instrumental in the establishment
of the Christian
socialist movement, although he himself was not in any real
sense a socialist but, "a Tory paternalist with the unusual desire
to theories his acceptance of the traditional obligation to help
the poor", influenced Anglo-Catholics such as Charles Gore, who
wrote that, "the principle of the incarnation is denied unless the
Christian spirit can be allowed to concern itself with everything
that interests and touches human life." Anglican focus on labor
issues culminated in the work of William
Temple in the 1930s and 1940s.
Pacifism
A question of whether or not Christianity is a pacifist religion has remained a matter of debate for Anglicans. In 1937, the Anglican Pacifist Fellowship emerged as a distinct reform organization, seeking to make pacifism a clearly defined part of Anglican theology. The group rapidly gained popularity amongst Anglican intellectuals, including Vera Brittain, Evelyn Underhill and former British political leader George Lansbury. Furthermore, the Reverend Dick Sheppard, who during the 1930s was one of Britain's most famous Anglican priests due to his landmark sermon broadcasts for BBC radio, founded the Peace Pledge Union a secular pacifist organization for the non-religious that gained considerable support throughout the 1930s.Whilst never actively endorsed by the Anglican
Church, many Anglicans unofficially have adopted the Augustinian
"Just
War" doctrine. The
Anglican Pacifist Fellowship remain highly active throughout
the Anglican world. It rejects this doctrine of "just war" and
seeks to reform the Church by reintroducing the pacifism inherent in the
beliefs of many of the earliest Christians and present in their
interpretation of Christ's Sermon
on the Mount.
Confusing the matter was the fact that the 37th
Article of Religion in the Book of Common Prayer states that "it is
lawful for Christian men, at the commandment of the Magistrate, to
wear weapons, and serve in the wars." Therefore, the Lambeth
Council in the modern era has sought to provide a clearer position
by repudiating modern war and developed a statement that has been
affirmed at each subsequent meeting of the Council. This statement
was strongly reasserted when "the 67th General Convention of the
Episcopal Church reaffirms the statement made by the Anglican
Bishops assembled at Lambeth in 1978 and adopted by the 66th
General Convention of the Episcopal Church in 1979, calling
"Christian people everywhere ... to engage themselves in
non-violent action for justice and peace and to support others so
engaged, recognizing that such action will be controversial and may
be personally very costly... this General Convention, in obedience
to this call, urges all members of this Church to support by prayer
and by such other means as they deem appropriate, those who engaged
in such non-violent action, and particularly those who suffer for
conscience' sake as a result; and be it further Resolved, that this
General Convention calls upon all members of this Church seriously
to consider the implications for their own lives of this call to
resist war and work for peace for their own lives."
After World War II
The focus on other social issues became increasingly diffuse after the Second World War. On the one hand, the growing independence and strength of Anglican churches in the global south brought new emphasis to issues of global poverty, the inequitable distribution of resources, and the lingering effects of colonialism. In this regard, figures such as Desmond Tutu and Ted Scott were instrumental in mobilizing Anglicans worldwide against the apartheid policies of South Africa. Rapid social change in the industrialised world during the twentieth century compelled the church to examine issues of gender, sexuality and marriage.These changes led to Lambeth Conference
resolutions countenancing contraception and the
remarriage of
divorced persons. They led to most provinces approving the ordination
of women. In more recent years it has led some jurisdictions to
permit the ordination of people in same-sex relationships and to
authorise rites for the blessing of same-sex unions (see
Anglican views of homosexuality). More conservative elements
within Anglicanism (primarily African churches and factions within
North American Anglicanism) are opposed to these changes. Some
liberal and moderate Anglicans see this opposition as representing
a new fundamentalism within
Anglicanism. The lack of social consensus among and within
provinces of diverse cultural traditions has resulted in
considerable conflict and even schism concerning some or all of
these developments (see Anglican
realignment). Some Anglicans opposed to various liberalising
changes, in particular the ordination
of women, have converted to Roman Catholicism.
These latter trends reflect a countervailing
tendency in Anglicanism towards insularity, reinforced perhaps by
the "big tent" nature of the movement, which seeks to be
comprehensive of various views and tendencies. The insularity and
complacency of the early established Church of
England has tended to influence Anglican self-identity, and
inhibit engagement with the broader society in favour of internal
debate and dialogue. Nonetheless, there is significantly greater
cohesion among Anglicans when they turn their attention outward.
Anglicans worldwide are active in many areas of social and
environmental concern.
References
Further reading
- The Call to the Cloister: Religious Communities and kindred bodies in the Anglican Communion
- Hein, David, ed. (1991) Readings in Anglican Spirituality. Cincinnati: Forward Movement.
- The Episcopalians
- The development of the Anglican Liturgy, 1662-1980
- Anglicanism }}
External links
- Anglican Communion - The official site of the Anglican Communion.
- What it means to be an Anglican: Official Church of England site
- Anglican Historical Texts
- Anglicans Online - An unofficial site of the Anglican Communion. One of the biggest resources of Anglicanism in the world.
- Anglicanism: ReligionFacts.com - Articles on Anglican history, ritual, and organization, plus an image gallery of people and places.