Anglo-Lutheran Catholic Church | |
Official logo | |
Classification | Lutheran |
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Orientation | Evangelical Catholic and Papist |
Polity | Episcopal |
Associations | Augustana Catholic Communion |
Founder | Irl A. Gladfelter |
Origin | 1997 Kansas City, Missouri |
Branched from | Lutheran Church–Missouri Synod |
Merge of | Athanasian Catholic Church of the Augsburg Confession |
The Anglo-Lutheran Catholic Church (ALCC), formerly the Evangelical Community Church-Lutheran (ECCL), is a church in the Lutheran Evangelical Catholic tradition. The ALCC claims to be unique among Lutheran churches in that it is of both Lutheran and Anglo-Catholic heritage and has also been significantly influenced by the traditions of Roman Catholicism. The church was founded in 1997 by former members of the Lutheran Church–Missouri Synod. Its headquarters are in Kansas City, Missouri. The ALCC has long had a policy of reunion with the Catholic Church and announced in 2011 that it would accept the conditions of Anglicanorum coetibus and join the personal ordinariates as they are established.
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The Anglo-Lutheran Catholic Church considers Lutherans to be Catholics in a temporary, involuntary schism imposed on it by the Roman Catholic Church when Martin Luther's attempt to start a renewal movement within Roman Catholicism slipped out of his control.[1][2][3][4] The ALCC teaches that Lutheranism in general is a form of non-Roman Catholicism, and considers the other Lutheran churches to be "Protestant" only to the extent that they have accepted insights from the Calvinist and Zwinglian phases of the Reformation.[5]
The Anglo-Lutheran Catholic Church accepts the Unaltered Augsburg Confession,[6][7] the Apology of the Augsburg Confession, and Martin Luther's Small Catechism only insofar as they are in agreement with Roman Catholic faith and order, doctrines, and traditions. The ALCC recognizes the other documents contained in The Book of Concord—except for the Formula of Concord—only insofar as they accord with Roman Catholic faith, order, doctrines and traditions. It does not accept the Formula of Concord on any level, nor is it bound by any of its terms and provisions, though it does respect it as a historical Lutheran document.[8]
The ALCC has accepted major modifications in sacramental theology and principles of church government from the Church of Sweden (Lutheran), the Oxford Movement of the Anglican Communion, and the documents and teachings of the magisterium of the Roman Catholic Church which includes the Catechism of the Catholic Church (1994).
The ALCC claims to be unique among Lutheran churches in that it accepts, as additional confessional documents, the Articles of Religion from the Book of Common Prayer as interpreted by John Henry Newman in Tracts for the Times[9] (insofar as they do not conflict with authentic Catholic faith and tradition); the Roman Catholic–Lutheran Joint Declaration on the Doctrine of Justification (Augsburg, Germany, 1999);[10] the Catechism of the Catholic Church; and the documents and decrees of all Ecumenical Councils recognized by the Roman Catholic Church. The ALCC's strongest connections are with the Roman Catholic Church and some form of visible, corporate unity with that church is the ecumenical goal of the ALCC.
Since June 2008, all clergy of the ALCC are required to sign a version of the Roman Catholic mandatum,[11] a legally binding contract requiring the signatories not to teach, preach, write, or publish anything contrary to the magisterium of the Roman Catholic Church.
The Anglo-Lutheran Catholic Church accepts Papal primacy and Papal infallibility even though it is not under papal control at this time.[12][13]
The ALCC is theologically and socially conservative, with the same view of the nature and authority of scripture as the Roman Catholic Church as stated in the Vatican II document, The Dogmatic Constitution on Divine Revelation - Dei Verbum[14] and the Pontifical Biblical Commission's document, The Interpretation of the Bible in the Church.[15]
The worship of the Anglo-Lutheran Catholic Church is dignified and sacramental. It differs from other Lutheran churches by recognizing and celebrating the seven sacraments.[16] The primary liturgy of the ALCC is from the Book of Divine Worship, a Roman Catholic Anglican Use book of rites authorized by the Roman Catholic Church.[17] Any other rites currently approved and authorized for use by the Roman Catholic Church are also used by ALCC clergy. Anglican, Lutheran, and other Protestant rites are not authorized for use by ALCC clergy.[18]
The polity of the Anglo-Lutheran Catholic Church is episcopal rather than congregationalist and follows the model of the Roman Catholic Church. The ALCC is governed by a metropolitan archbishop assisted by a Vicar General and the Holy Synod (which consists of the bishops of the church and is concerned with matters of doctrine and polity) and the National Standing Committee (which includes lay members and is concerned with temporal administration and finance) and together they comprise the corporate Board of Directors. The ALCC operates in accordance with the 1983 Code of Canon Law of the Roman Catholic Church[19] in areas not covered by its own canon law code[20].
The Anglo-Lutheran Catholic Church has five archdioceses and three dioceses in the United States, an archdiocese in Africa and two non-geographic archdioceses; one serving Sub-Saharan African immigrants in the United States and the other serving Vietnamese immigrants in the United States.[21] The ALCC is organized and active in Canada, Germany, Sudan, Uganda and Kenya. It is a member of the Augustana Catholic Communion, the Sudanese Council of Churches USA and the Sudanese Council of Churches, and is in Full Communion with the Traditional Church of England, the Anglican Church-Traditional Rite (England, Scotland, and Wales,) the Evangelical Marian Catholic Church, and the Anglican Church of the Americas.[22]
Where ordination, the priesthood, the episcopacy, and the Papacy are concerned, the ALCC rejects the teachings of Lutheranism and accepts all Roman Catholic teachings. Other than not requiring celibacy of its clergy, there are no differences between the teachings of the Roman Catholic Church and those of the ALCC regarding the Sacrament of Holy Orders.[23] All ordinations and re-ordinations—without exception—are performed using the rites of ordination (Ordinal) of the Roman Catholic Church, with the specific intention that ordination is into a sacrificing (sacerdotal) priesthood—a sacerdotium—instead of into a ministerium; admitting, both in theory and in practice, all that is involved in the Catholic doctrine of the sacerdotium. All ordinations are performed using the rites of ordination found in the most current edition of the ordinal from the pontifical of the Roman Catholic Church set within a celebration of the Mass of Pope Paul VI (Novus Ordo) or the Mass from the Roman Catholic Anglican Use Book of Divine Worship exclusively.
All clergy entering from other churches who have not been ordained in the historic apostolic succession must be re-ordained. The clergy of the Anglo-Lutheran Catholic Church have all been ordained (or re-ordained) as deacons, priests and bishops in the historic apostolic succession, which it obtained in 2004 from Archbishop Peter Paul Brennan, O.C.R. of the Ecumenical Catholic Diocese of the Americas[24] and Archbishops Francis C. Spataro, O.C.R. and Paget E. J. Mack, O.S.B.M. of the Apostolic Episcopal Church.[25] The ALCC's primary apostolic lineage is the Rebiban or Vatican succession, derived from the Roman Catholic Church through Archbishop Carlos Duarte Costa[26] and the Brazilian Catholic Apostolic Church (ICAB). It also holds the Gerardus Gul lineage of the Old Catholic Church of the Netherlands among several others.
The Anglo-Lutheran Catholic Church has never had female clergy for the same reasons the Roman Catholic Church rejects the ordination of women,[27] [28] and has placed a moratorium on the ordination of women until such time as it is ordered by a Pope (for the diaconate) or an Ecumenical Council (for the priesthood and episcopacy). The ALCC has the same policies as the Roman Catholic Church on the ordination of homosexual persons and the blessing of same-sex unions, permitting neither.[29] [30] [31] [32]
On May 15, 2009, the Anglo-Lutheran Catholic Church officially filed a formal petition to enter the Roman Catholic Church "as a unified body" in whichever form the Pope and the Curia decides is the most appropriate. The ALCC's petition was filed with the Council for Promoting Christian Unity, and is now before the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith. It is a separate petition from that of the Traditional Anglican Communion.[33][34][35]
On February 21, 2011, it became public that Catholic authorities in Rome have invited the Anglo-Lutheran Catholic Church to join the Catholic Church through the provisions of Anglicanorum Coetibus and that the ALCC has officially and unconditionally accepted that invitation.[36]
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