Property | Value |
rdf:type | |
rdfs:label | |
rdfs:comment | - The Anglican Catholic Church is a worldwide body of Anglican Christians in the continuing Anglican movement which grew out of the 1977 Congress of St. Louis. The Congress was called in response to the Episcopal Church's heavy revision of the Book of Common Prayer, which was felt to abandon a true commitment to both scripture and historical Anglicanism. The decision to allow the ordination of women was just one part of a larger theological shift introduced by the revisions and opposed by the Congress of St. Louis. As a result of the desire to maintain the Apostolic tradition of male-only clergy and the exclusive use of historical Anglican liturgical forms, the church was separated and the advocates carry on with the tradition under the name of "Anglican Church in North America". The name wa
|
owl:sameAs | |
dcterms:subject | |
dbkwik:religion/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate | |
Orientation | |
associations | - Inter-Communion with Anglican Province of Christ the King, United Episcopal Church of North America
|
Name | |
Caption | |
main classification | |
Members | |
separations | - Anglican Church in America, Holy Catholic Church
|
imagewidth | |
congregations | |
Area | - United States, India, Latin America, Australia, Southern Africa
|
separated from | - Episcopal Church in the United States of America
|
founded place | |
polity | |
founded date | |
abstract | - The Anglican Catholic Church is a worldwide body of Anglican Christians in the continuing Anglican movement which grew out of the 1977 Congress of St. Louis. The Congress was called in response to the Episcopal Church's heavy revision of the Book of Common Prayer, which was felt to abandon a true commitment to both scripture and historical Anglicanism. The decision to allow the ordination of women was just one part of a larger theological shift introduced by the revisions and opposed by the Congress of St. Louis. As a result of the desire to maintain the Apostolic tradition of male-only clergy and the exclusive use of historical Anglican liturgical forms, the church was separated and the advocates carry on with the tradition under the name of "Anglican Church in North America". The name was later changed to the Anglican Catholic Church. The Congress's statement of principles, the "Affirmation of St. Louis," summarized the new church's reason for being as follows: “…the Anglican Church of Canada and the Protestant Episcopal Church in the United States of America, by their unlawful attempts to alter Faith, Order and Morality (especially in their General Synod of 1975 and General Convention of 1976), have departed from Christ's One, Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church.”
|