Anglican Catholic Church

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Anglican Catholic Church

The ACC Crest.
Classification Continuing Anglican
Orientation Anglo-Catholic
Polity Episcopal, (with Apostolic Succession)
Origin 1977
St. Louis, Missouri
Separated from Episcopal Church in the United States of America
Separations Anglican Church in America, Holy Catholic Church (Anglican Rite)
Associations Inter-Communion with Anglican Province of Christ the King, United Episcopal Church of North America
Geographical Area United States, India, Latin America, Australia, Southern Africa
Statistics
Congregations 135 (In the U.S.)
Members 5,000 (In the U.S.)
Part of a series on the
Continuing
Anglican
Movement


Background

Christianity · Western Christianity
English Reformation · Anglicanism
· Book of Common Prayer
Ordination of women
Homosexuality and Anglicanism
Bartonville Agreement

People

James Parker Dees · Charles D. D. Doren
Scott Earle McLaughlin · William Millsaps
Robert S. Morse . Council Nedd II
Stephen C. Reber

Churches

Anglican Catholic Church
Anglican Catholic Church in Australia
Anglican Catholic Church of Canada
Anglican Church in America
Anglican Episcopal Church
Anglican Orthodox Church
Anglican Province of America
Anglican Province of Christ the King
Christian Episcopal Church
Church of England (Continuing)
Diocese of the Great Lakes
Diocese of the Holy Cross
Episcopal Missionary Church
Evangelical Connexion of the Free Church of England
Free Church of England
Orthodox Anglican Church
Orthodox Anglican Communion
Reformed Episcopal Church
Traditional Anglican Communion
Traditional Protestant Episcopal Church
United Episcopal Church of North America

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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[1]. 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, a new church was founded - the 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.[2]

Contents

[edit] History

By 1978 four bishops had been consecrated. What had provisionally been called the Anglican Church in North America (Episcopal) was eventually divided. The Canadian parishes formed the Anglican Catholic Church of Canada, while the United States saw the formation of the Anglican Catholic Church and the Anglican Province of Christ the King.

In 1984 the five dioceses of the Church of India (Anglican) were received by the Anglican Catholic Church and constituted as its Second Province. Since 1990 the Anglican Catholic Church has expanded to twelve dioceses in the Americas, the United Kingdom and Australia. Also during this time period a number of parishes left the Anglican Catholic Church to merge with the American Episcopal Church in forming the Anglican Church in America. It further suffered the loss of additional parishes which formed themselves into the Holy Catholic Church (Anglican Rite).

[edit] Present

In October 2005 the Most Reverend Mark D. Haverland replaced the Most Reverend Brother John Charles as Archbishop and Metropolitan.

On May 17, 2007, Archbishop Mark D. Haverland of the ACC and Archbishop Stephen C. Reber of the United Episcopal Church of North America signed an intercommunion agreement at Saint Stephen's ACC Pro-Cathedral in Athens, Georgia.

The presiding bishop of the Anglican Province of Christ the King, responding to the ACC-UECNA intercommunion agreement, has extended his support and approval.

At the 17th Provincial Synod, October 2007, the Rt. Rev. Wilson Garang and his Diocese of Aweil in Sudan were received into the the Anglican Catholic Church. Today the Anglican Catholic Church (Original Province) has over 250 parish churches and missions worldwide, not including the Second Province of India.

[edit] Province I

[edit] Province II - Church of India (Anglican)

  • Diocese of Amritsar
  • Diocese of Bombay
  • Diocese of Delhi
  • Diocese of Lucknow
  • Diocese of Nagpur

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ News & Annoucements
  2. ^ Excerpt from the Affirmation of St. Louis as printed in an ACC brochure, “Who we are

[edit] External links

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