Òîïèê: The Church of England
Òîïèê: The Church of England
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«The Church of England»
Ìîñêâà, 2002
The Church of England
Content:
Introduction ………………………………………………………………..…………3
I.
History of the Church of England
1) Status of
Church in England up to 1530 ………………………..4
2) Reformation
of Church ……………………………………………4
Henry
VII…………………………………………………………….4
Edward
VI……………………………………………………………6
Mary
I………………………………………………………………...6
Elizabeth
I……………………………………………………………7
Charles
II…………………………………………………….……….8
Victoria
……………………………………………………….………8
II. The Church of England today…………………………………………………..9
1) The
essence of being an Anglican………………………………………..9
2) Organisation
of the Church of England ………………………………….11
III. Church of
England becomes an International Church……………………...12
Conclusions………………………………………………………………………….13
Bibliography.…………………………………………………………………………14
Introduction
Everything in this life has its own
history, especially Religion, as it is a great institution. With the
development of history of a particular country, there will always be
development of Religion, since the Church is an integral part of State System.
Heathenism, Orthodoxy, Judaism etc.. They have been living for centuries. And
some of them were changed, penetrated each other or reformed dramatically.
England was not exception.
The English are not a deeply religious race. Hundreds of
years ago they decided that Roman Catholicism with its teachings about original
sin and the unworthiness of the human race could not really have been meant for
them. So they designed a Church of their own – the Church of England.
The
English Reformation was a result of the chain of events that eventually altered
England and Englishness forever. So much in history is a bastard child of both
long-standing, simmering emotion and the opportunistic seizing of a moment. By
its nature unexpected, it is also unpredictable, and shaped as much by
environment and chance as by its progenitors. The Reformation was no different.
It was going on through the ages and reigns.
I. History of the Church of
England
1. Status of Church in England up
to 1530
Until
1054 there was only one Christian Church - the Catholic Church. Its
leadership was centered in five great Patriarchates -- Jerusalem, Antioch,
Alexandria and Constantinople in the East and Rome in the West. After the Roman
Empire became Christian some bishops increasingly became involved in political
matters, and the bishops of Rome in particular began to claim power over the
whole Church. This led to a tragic division in the Church, the "Great
Schism" of 1054, when it split into the "Orthodox" East and the
"Roman Catholic" West.
Not
directly involved in that split was the Church in England, which the Bishops of
Rome were determined to claim - especially after 1061, when a rival Papacy in
Lombardy claimed allegiance from the See of Canterbury. In 1066, the Duke of
Normandy (William "the Conqueror"), with the support and formal
blessing of Pope Alexander II, invaded England. After seizing the English
Crown, William replaced all but one of the English bishops with Norman bishops
loyal to Rome. The CHURCH OF ENGLAND was to remain under Papal jurisdiction for
nearly 500 years, until the reign of King Henry VIII.
2. Reformation of Church
England
in the sixteenth century was a land of contrasts. Much less urban than either
Germany or the Netherlands, it nevertheless possessed a thriving international
trade centre in London and in Oxford and Cambridge, two universities of
outstanding reputation. The universities, in fact, would play a significant
role in the early campaigns against Luther. Henry VIII turned to their finest
theologians for arguments allowing him to enter the lists against the growing
threat of Lutheran heresy. This initiative would earn him from a grateful Pope
the coveted title, Defender of the Faith.
The
progress of the Reformation in England was closely bound up with Henry's
personal affairs. His increasing desperation to secure release from his
marriage to Catherine of Aragon forced him to contemplate radical steps that
went very much against the grain of his own instinctive theological
conservatism.
Henry VIII
It was
the only Henry’s chance to go outside the boundaries of the orthodoxy. Until
this event, Henry had never questioned the Pope’s authority or the validity of
the Bible passage, it banned the marriage of a brother- and sister-in-law. It
was as early as the end of 1529 that Henry first considered a complete
dissociation from the Roman church.
Henry
forced Wolsey to retire, as his entire foreign policy had collapsed and he was
now of no help to the King. In July of 1531, Henry sent Catherine to Ampthill,
never to see her again. He took back her royal jewels and gave them to Anne.
When Parliament reconvened in January, 1532, Henry ordered that no further
funds would be transferred to Rome, but hinted to the Pope that the money would
be restored if the annulment was passed.
Meanwhile,
most of the bishops had been persuaded that they would not lose any power or
income if the English Church were to split from Rome. In March, the Convocation
formally announced their readiness to separate: “May it please your Highness to
ordain in the present Parliament that the obedience of your Highness and of the
people be withdrawn from the See of Rome.” On May 15, they printed a pledge to
submit all its legislation to a new committee, formed of laymen and clergymen,
called the “Reformation Parliament” and Convocation. This is where the Church
of England was born.
On
January 15, 1533, Henry and Anne, who was four months pregnant, were married.
However, the King still did not have his first marriage annulled. He submitted
his request for annulment to the new Convocation, led by Thomas Cranmer. On May
23, Cranmer declared Henry and Catherine’s marriage to be unlawful and void.
Five days later, he pronounced Henry and Anne legally wed. On May 31, 1533,
Anne was coronated as Queen of England. Although the King and new Queen
rejoiced, the silence from the crowd at the coronation spoke for much of
England. Pope Clement excommunicated the King, stating that the new marriage
was null, and that any children would be illegitimate. On September 7 Elizabeth
was born.
Henry
swiftly transformed the English Church by passing various Acts through
Parliament. In March of 1534, The Act of Succession declared the
marriage to Catherine invalid, and therefore Mary illegitimate. Elizabeth was
named heir to the throne unless Anne produced a son. Royal commissioners rode
through the countryside, stopping at every house, castle, monastery, and
convent to exact oaths of loyalty to the King from every man and woman. Only a
few refused; those that did were sent to the Tower of London to be put to
death.
On November 11, 1534, the Statute of
Supremacy was passed by Parliament. This Act announced that “… the
king, our sovereign lord, his heirs and successors, kings of this realm, shall
be taken, accepted, and reputed the only supreme head in earth of the Church of
England, called Anglicans Ecclesia”. And the King “…our said
sovereign lord, his heirs and successors, kings of this realm, shall have full
power and authority” to do everything “most to the pleasure of Almighty
God”. It was done to “… increase virtue in Christ's religion, and for
the conservation of the peace, unity, and tranquility of this realm” (pp.
97-98, Milton Viorst, The Great Documents of Western Civilization, NY,
Barnes and Noble, 1965)
Innovative
from the first, the new Church simplified the liturgy, ensured it was in English
rather than Latin and set it out in a new Book of Common Prayer which
was designed to give the people of England a commonly held pattern of worship,
a sense of oneness of Church and people, with the Church sanctifying every side
of national life, giving society a Godward purpose and direction. It introduced on Day of Pentecost. It is
written in English, emphasizes the people's participation in the eucharist, and
requires the Bible to be read from cover to cover. Fast days are retained
(supposedly to help fishermen), but saints' days are not.
The
political nation was, for the most part, obediently compliant rather than
enthusiastic. There is no evidence of any great hostility towards the church
and its institutions before the Reformation; on the contrary, both the English
episcopate and parish clergy seem to have been, by the standards of other
European lands, both well-trained and living without scandal. Cardinal Wolsey,
who fathered an illegitimate son, was very much the exception. On the other hand,
few were prepared to defy the King to defend the threatened institutions of the
old church. Many benefited from the windfall of church property that followed
the confiscation of monastic lands.
Edward
VI
During
Edward's reign (Henry’s son), the Church of England became more explicitly Protestant
- Edward himself was fiercely so. The Book of Common Prayer was introduced in
1549, aspects of Roman Catholic practices (including statues and stained glass)
were eradicated and the marriage of clergy allowed. The imposition of the
Prayer Book (which replaced Latin services with English) led to rebellions in
Cornwall and Devon.
“Images"
ordered removed from all churches by the council of regents. This also means no
vestments, ashes, palms, holy water, or crucifixes. This causes so much
resentment that an order suppressing all preaching follows.
Mary
I
Edward
VI dies. People are tired of Protestant looting of churches. Mary Tudor
("Bloody Mary"), a militant Roman Catholic, becomes queen, she returned the
English church to communion with Rome. She was Popular at first, but soon
marries the hated Philip II of Spain. Persecution of Protestants begins; Mary
appoints new bishops and fires all married priests. During her reign, about 300
Protestants were burned, including 5 bishops, 100 priests, and 60 women. An
attempt by Cardinal Pole (Mary's archbishop of Canterbury) to restore
monasticism fizzles when, among 1500 surviving monks, nuns, and friars, fewer
than 100 are willing to return to celibacy. All this ensures Roman Catholics
will remain unpopular in England.
Elizabeth
I
Mary
dies. Elizabeth I, (a Protestant), becomes queen. Despite many problems
(including frequent assassination plots from Roman Catholics), she supports the
enterprising middle class and England prospers. With her accession an
independent church was restored and steered along a middle ground between Roman
Catholicism and Calvinism.
Since
1564 the Era of Puritanism had began. The word "Puritan"
appears for the first time. It was biblically based on Calvinistic
Protestantism - with emphasis upon the "purification" of
church and society of the remnants of "corrupt" and
"unscriptural" "papist" ritual and dogma. The
characteristics of their movement were the following: a disciplined, godly
life, and the energetic evangelical activities. They want:
- a skilled,
educated preaching ministry, based on the Bible
- as few
ceremonies in church as Biblically possible (no surplice, no signing of
the cross)
- abolition of the
traditional role of bishop, and replacement of the episcopate by a
presbyterian system
- one legal
government church, controlled by Puritans.
By the
1660s Puritanism was firmly established amongst the gentry and the
emerging middle classes of southern and eastern England, and during the Civil
Wars the Puritan "Roundheads" fought for the parliamentary cause and
formed the backbone of Cromwell's forces during the Commonwealth period. After
1646, however, the Puritan emphasis upon individualism and the individual
conscience made it impossible for the movement to form a national Presbyterian
church, and by 1662, when the Anglican church was re-established, Puritanism
had become a loose confederation of various Dissenting sects. The growing
pressure for religious toleration within Britain itself was to a considerable
degree a legacy of Puritanism, and its emphasis on self-discipline,
individualism, responsibility, work, and asceticism was also an important
influence upon the values and attitudes of the emerging middle classes.
Thirty-Nine
Articles (1571) drafted as a doctrinal statement by a
convocation of the Church of England. The Thirty-nine Articles of Religion,
along with the historic Creeds, are the doctrinal standard for Anglicanism. They are printed in the back of most
editions of the Prayer Book and tell us not only about the main postulates
(e.g. Of faith in the Holy Trinity, Of the Word, or Son of God, which was made
very man; Of Original or Birth Sin; Of Free Will etc.), but also about Sin
after Baptism, Of the Church, Of the Authority of the Church, Of the authority
of General Councils, Of speaking in the Congregation in such a tongue as the
people understandeth etc.
Charles II
With accession of Charles
II in 1660 the Restoration of the monarchy began. Everyone is tired of
Puritan rule. Puritan laws and censorship are repealed; the theaters re-open.
The "Declaration of Breda" results in tolerance for Puritan views
within the Anglican fold. The conflict with Puritanism leaves distrust for
religious individualism and emotionalism ("enthusiasm") among
Anglicans. This will continue
through the "Great Awakening" (1738-1784: Christian revival in
England and America). This coincides with the Enlightenment, or Age of Reason,
during which many educated people cease to consider themselves Christians.
Act
of Toleration (1689),
partially restores civil rights to Roman Catholics and Dissenters. The events
since the Reformation have finally convinced most Anglicans of the virtues of
tolerance and mutual forbearance.
Victorian
Era
The
trend during this period will be rediscovery of liturgy and church history - High
church - and spreading Christianity – Low ñhurch.
The
Evangelical branch of the Anglican Church coincided very nearly with the
"Low Church" party. Evangelical, a term literally meaning
"of or pertaining to the Gospel," designated the school of theology
adhered to by those Protestants who believed that the essence of the Gospel lay
in the doctrine of salvation by faith in the death of Christ, which atoned for
man's sins. Evangelicalism stressed the reality of the "inner life,"
insisted on the total depravity of humanity and on the importance of the
individual's personal relationship with God and Savior. They put particular
emphasis on faith, denying that either good works or the sacraments (which they
perceived as being merely symbolic) possessed any salvational efficacy.
Evangelicals, too, denied that ordination imparted any supernatural gifts, and
upheld the sole authority of the Bible in matters of doctrine
High
church was associated with the Tractarian movement began about
1833 and ended in 1845 with John Henry Newman's conversion to Roman Catholicism.
It was also called the Oxford Movement because Newman, a fellow of Oriel
College (part of Oxford University) and vicar of St. Mary's, the University
church, and others were based there when they began the Tracts for the Times
in 1833. There were exactly 90 Tracts, the majority written by Newman, arguing
in general that the truth of the doctrines of the Church of England rested on
the modern church's position as the direct descendant of the church established
by the Apostles. Pretty obviously, such an argument was a conservative answer
to the various contemporary challenges to the authority of religion in general,
Christianity in particular, and specifically Anglicanism Catholicism, fueled by
the same need for reassurance as was the Evangelical revival. Since the 16th
century the Church of England had prided itself on being the via media, or
middle road, between Roman Catholicism and a more radical Protestantism.
The Church of England has, in its several ways, been
the Church to uphold the dignity of the individual. It gave the lead, for
example, not only in the abolition of slavery but it played a critical
role in stopping the slave trade itself. Today, of course, it is a Church at
the forefront of the practical fight to right injustices, restore the dignity
of people everywhere and put the world on a sustainable economic footing
without ruining the planet upon which God put us.
II. The Church of England today
We are
now in what many call the post-modern era and the Church of England is
experiencing a resurgence of interest in matters of faith as well as in the
Church itself. Calls to the ministry are up, giving for the Church's work is up
and the Church is confident that, with and by God's grace, it can make an
increasingly valuable contribution to the life of the nation, its people, and
do so far beyond its borders as well.
Anglicans are numerous on every
continent and constitute the principal Christian community in many areas,
notably in Africa.
The Book of Common Prayer exists in 170 languages. There are about 45 million
Anglicans worldwide. There are three million Episcopalians in the US.
At least one survey indicates that, among all denominations in this country, we
have the highest percentage of members who take time for daily prayer.
There is little doubt that, among all groups of Christians, we Anglicans are
the most diverse and the most tolerant. Anglicans are still facing persecution
in Iran and other Middle Eastern countries, Communist China, the Soviet bloc
nations, Central Africa, and Central America.
Throughout the world, over one thousand new Christian churches open their doors
each Sunday. As always, Christianity flourishes wherever it shows people its
highest ideals.
1) The essence of being an Anglican
The Scriptures and the Gospels,
the Apostolic Church and the early Church Fathers, are the foundation of
Anglican faith and worship. The basic tenets of being an Anglican are:
* They
view the Old and New Testaments 'as containing all things necessary for
salvation' and as being the rule and ultimate standard of faith.
* They
understand the Apostles' creed as the baptismal symbol, and the Nicene creed as
the sufficient statement of the Christian faith.
* The
two sacraments ordained by Christ himself - Baptism and the Supper of the Lord
- are administered with unfailing use of Christ's words of institution, and the
elements are ordained by him.
* The
historic episcopate is locally adapted in the methods of its administration to
the varying needs of the nations and peoples called of God into the unity of
his Church.
Anglicans
uphold the Catholic and Apostolic faith. Following the teachings of Jesus
Christ, the Churches are committed to the proclamation of the good news of the
Gospel to the whole creation. In practice this is based on the revelation
contained in Holy Scripture and the Catholic creeds, and is interpreted in
light of Christian tradition, scholarship, reason and experience.
By
baptism in the name of the Father, Son and Holy Spirit, a person is made one
with Christ and received into the fellowship of the Church. This sacrament of
initiation is open to children as well as to adults.
Central
to worship for Anglicans is the celebration of the Holy Eucharist, also called
the Holy Communion, the Lord's Supper or the Mass. In this offering of prayer
and praise, the life, death and resurrection of Jesus Christ are recalled
through the proclamation of the word and the celebration of the sacrament.
Other important rites, commonly called sacraments, include confirmation, holy
orders, reconciliation, marriage and anointing of the sick.
Worship
is at the very heart of Anglicanism. Its styles vary from simple to elaborate,
or even a combination. The great uniting text is The Book of Common Prayer,
in its various revisions throughout the Communion. The Book of Common
Prayer, alongside additional liturgies gives expression to the
comprehensiveness found within the Church whose principles reflect that of the via
media in relation to its own and other Christian Churches. The Lambeth
Conferences of the 1950s and 1960s called for more up-to-date national
liturgies and this is going on today. No matter how distinctive each is, they
are all clearly of the lineage of The Book of Common Prayer.
Another
distinguishing feature of the corporate nature of Anglicanism is that it is an
interdependent Church, where parishes, dioceses and provinces help each other
to achieve by mutual support in terms of financial assistance and the sharing
of other resources.
To
be an Anglican is to be on a journey of faith to God supported by a fellowship
of co-believers who are dedicated to finding Him by prayer and service.
2) Today’s Organisation of the Church of England
The Church of England is
organised into two provinces; each led by an archbishop (Canterbury for
the Southern Province and York for the Northern). These two provinces
cover every inch of English soil, the Isle of Man, the Channel Islands, the
Isles of Scilly and even a small part of Wales.
Each
province is built from dioceses. There are 43 in England and the Diocese in
Europe has clergy and congregations in the rest of Europe, Morocco, Turkey and
the Asian countries of the former Soviet Union.
Each
diocese (except Europe) is divided into parishes. The parish is the heart of
the Church of England. Each parish is overseen by a parish priest (usually
called a vicar or rector). From ancient times through to today, they, and their
bishop, are responsible for the 'cure of souls' in their parish. That includes
everyone. And this explains why parish priests are so involved with the key
issues and problems affecting the whole community.
Her
Majesty the Queen is the Supreme Governor of the Church of England, and
she also has a unique and special relationship with the Church of Scotland,
which is a Free Church. In the Church of England she appoints archbishops,
bishops and deans of cathedrals on the advice of the Prime Minister. The two
archbishops and 24 senior bishops sit in the House of Lords, making a major
contribution to Parliament's work.
The
Church of England is episcopally led (there are 108 bishops) and synodically
governed. The General Synod is elected from the laity and clergy
of each diocese and meets in London or York at least twice annually to consider
legislation for the good of the Church.
The Archbishops'
Council was established in 1999 to co-ordinate, promote, aid and further
the mission of the Church of England. It is composed of 19 members and 7
directors whose task is to give a clear sense of direction to the Church
nationally and support the Church locally.
The
Church of England issues its own newspaper: The Church Times,
founded in 1863. It has become the world's leading Anglican weekly newspaper.
It has always been independent of the Church of England hierarchy. It was a
family concern until 1989, when ownership passed to Hymns Ancient & Modern,
a Christian charitable trust. The Church Times was started to campaign for
Anglo-Catholic principles, which it did with vigour and rudeness. But in the
1940s and '50s the paper began the move to broaden its outlook and coverage. It
now attempts to provide balanced and fair reporting of events and opinions
across the whole range of Anglican affairs. The rudeness we now leave to our
readers. For a longer history of the paper
III. Church of England becomes
an International Church
Anglicans
trace their Christian roots back to the early Church, and their specifically
Anglican identity to the post-Reformation expansion of the Church of England
and other Episcopal or Anglican Churches. Following the discovery of the
"New World", Anglicanism spread to the Americas, Asia, Africa and
Oceania (the central and south Pacific). Some 37 national and regional Anglican
Churches were established in various parts of the world, which together became
known as the Anglican Communion.
Historically,
there were two main stages in the development and spread of the Communion.
Beginning with the seventeenth century, Anglicanism was established alongside
colonisation in the United States, Australia, Canada, New Zealand and South
Africa. The second state began in the eighteenth century when missionaries
worked to establish Anglican churches in Asia, Africa and Latin America.
As a
worldwide family of churches, the Anglican Communion has more than 70 million
adherents in 38 Provinces spreading across 161 countries. Located on every
continent, Anglicans speak many languages and come from different races and
cultures. Although the churches are autonomous, they are also uniquely unified
through their history, their theology, their worship and their relationship to
the ancient See of Canterbury.
The
Anglican Communion has no constitution, governing body, central authority or
common liturgy. It is merely a loose association of autonomous Churches with
similar origins. Since 1970 it has been disintegrating, as some member churches
have brazenly tampered with essential elements of the Faith and con no longer
claim to have the same Scriptures, Creeds, Sacraments and Ministry as the rest
of the Catholic church. Since 1987 those Churches have included the CHURCH OF
ENGLAND herself.
Conclusions
There have been Christians in Britain since AD200 and
probably earlier. Through war, peace, famine and prosperity, the Church was
critical in the development of society, law, buildings and the quiet piety of
the people. English civil power and the Church developed in an increasingly
uneasy parallel. Two points of contention were the Church's wealth and its ties
with Rome. These differences came to a head in the 1530s, when King Henry VIII
wished to obtain a divorce from Queen Catherine of Aragon. And Act of
Supremacy was issued. This Act reaffirmed the King’s sovereignty over the
English Church and State and gave Henry power over all moral, organizational,
heretical, and ecclesiastical reform which until this point had been left to
the Church. The new church was christened Ecclesia Anglicana.
But in 1550's, however, under Edward VI,
the English Church became Protestant in doctrine and ritual, and even then it
remained traditional in organization. Under the Roman Catholic Mary I a
politico-religious reaction resulted in the burning at the stake of some
prominent Protestants and the exile of many others, which led in turn to a
popular association of Catholicism with persecution and Spanish domination. When
Elizabeth I succeeded to the throne in 1558, however, she restored a moderate
Protestantism, codifying the Anglican faith in the Act of Uniformity,
the Act of Supremacy, and the Thirty-Nine Articles.
Under
reign of Charles II. Puritan laws and censorship are repealed; the theaters
re-open. The conflict with Puritanism leaves distrust for religious
individualism and emotionalism ("enthusiasm") among Anglicans. This
will continue through the "Great Awakening". During "Great
Awakening" Christian revival took place in England and America.
The
trend during Victorian Era rediscovered of liturgy and church history and
spreading Christianity. In the mid-nineteenth century, then, the Church of
England was disorganized. Though its adherents were largely conservative, a
considerable portion of its leadership was, ideologically speaking, perilously
close to Catholicism, and the religious census of 1851 showed that it was
reaching only about fourteen percent of the population of England.
When
the British Empire expanded in the 17th, 18th and 19th centuries, so too did
the Church. And today the Anglican Communion has more than 70 million adherents
in 38 Provinces spreading across 161 countries. Te Churches are committed to
the proclamation of the good news of the Gospel to the whole creation. In
practice this is based on the revelation contained in Holy Scripture and the
Catholic creeds, and is interpreted in light of Christian tradition,
scholarship, reason and experience. The Anglican Church is open for people who
are united in their creed and their love of Christ Jesus, the Son of God and
what He means for them and for the world around them.
Bibliography
1.
The Anglican Catholic Church, second edition, 1998, published by The Anglican Catholic Church
2.
Dickens, A.G. The English Reformation.
Second Ed. University Park, PA: The Pennsylvania State University Press, 1989
3.
Rupp, Gordon. Religion in England 1688-1791.
Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1986
4.
Morgan, Kenneth O., ed. The Oxford
Illustrated History of Britain. New York: Oxford University Press, 1986.

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