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About
Us
What is the Episcopal Church About?
The Episcopal Church is the American branch of the worldwide
Anglican Communion, the churches around the world that trace
their roots to the Church of England, and maintain a "communion"
with it, hence the name "Anglican." There are more than 40 other
members of the Communion worldwide with a membership of over 76
million in 164 countries.
The Episcopal Church came into existence as an independent
denomination after the American Revolution. It is made up of
between two and three million worshipers in about 7,500
congregations across the United States, and Central
America. These congregations are under the jurisdiction of the
Presiding Bishop of the Episcopal Church.
Bishops in the American Episcopal Church are elected by
individual dioceses and are consecrated into the Apostolic
Succession, considered to witness to an unbroken line of Church
leadership beginning with the Apostles themselves. For more than
two decades the American Episcopal Church has ordained women to
the priesthood.
The member churches of the Anglican Communion are joined
together by choice in love, and have no direct authority over
one another. The Archbishop of Canterbury, the head of the
Church of England, is acknowledged as the spiritual head of the
Anglican Communion, but while respected, the Archbishop does not
have direct authority over any Anglican Church outside of
England.
Protestant, yet Catholic, Anglicanism stands squarely in the
Reformed tradition, yet considers itself just as directly
descended from the Early Church as the Roman Catholic or Eastern
Orthodox churches. Episcopalians celebrate sacraments, such as
the "Mass" in ways similar to the Roman Catholic tradition, yet
do not recognize a single authority, such as the Pope of Rome.
The above are excerpts from
Anglicansonline and
The Episcopal Church
National Site.
For more information, please visits these sites. |