Monday, June 29, 2009

A false start

I have decided that this blog was a bit of a false start so I have started a new one - called "The Old High Churchman" -http://theoldhighchurchman.blogspot.com

Tuesday, June 16, 2009

Second Order Issue; First Order Consequences

One of my Evangelical Anglican friends in the UK used to describe the ordination of women to the priesthood as a "second order issue with first order consequences," which I interpret as meaning, "no-one s going to hell for this, but it is unscriptural and tells you a lot about where this church is headed."

Now let's get a couple of things straight before we go any further.
(1) According to the New Testament, women do undertake ministries in the Church, but
(2) they were not ordained to the major orders of deacon, priest/presbyter, or bishop, neither do they rule over men. That remained the pattern until very recently - 1943/1972 in the case of Anglicanism.

The trouble with the ordination of women as deacons/priest/bishops is that it involves the Church setting aside the clear witness of the New Testament and the Early Fathers. This is not the way in which Anglicans have traditionally done theology. We have occasionally given direction where Scripture is all but silent - for example, the 1930 Lambeth Conferences limited permission for the use of Contraception, but until the 1970s the Church did not go again the clear witness of the Bible and the Early Fathers on any issue.

The indirect message that is given by practices such as the Ordination of Women, and the very permissive attitude of some Anglicans when it come to divorce and remarriage is that the Bible contains the Word of God and that we are free to pick and choose what we like. The tradition position is that the Bible is the Word of God and that we interpret it according to the tradition handed down to us by the Early Fathers.

The trouble is that if you start picking which Scriptural doctrines you uphold what is there to stop you embracing the whole Revisionist agenda should that become convenient for you? That is a question that the new ACNA is going to have to ask itself time and again.

Monday, June 15, 2009

The Central Churchman

Sadly, one does not hear much from Central Churchmanship Anglicans on the web. The web discussion about Anglicanism seems to be dominated by Anglo-catholics, Revisionists (sorry, but I cannot call them liberals anymore), and Evangelicals/Charismatics. It seems very few folks want to talk about Mere Anglicanism - perhaps there are very few mere Anglicans!

Americans may be wondering what I mean by "Central Churchmanship." I think it is what you might call "Middle of the Road" or "Conservative Broad Church," that is, theologically rooted in the Bible, the Early Fathers and the English Reformation, and middle of the road in ceremonial. The archetypal example of Via Media Anglicana. It evolved from the old High Church tradition in the late 19th century. They adopted the term "Central Churchmanship" in esponse to the Ritualist and Anglo-Catholic hijacking of the term "High Church."

For British Anglicans of a certain age, the Most Rev. Geoffrey Fisher (1887-1972), Archbishop of Canterbury 1945-61 was the typical Central Churchman - theologically moderate, morally conservative, content with the Prayer Book service as it stood, intent on making the machinery of the Church work as efficiently as possible. Many bishops and country parsons of the 1950s and 60s were of the same breed, and they were well regarded not just by their flocks, but by the population in general. Of course, the Central position has its problems - it used to be a bit too associated with The Establishment, and the Old School Tie, but it was the ballast that kept the Anglican ship stable.

Central Churchmanship began to decline in the late 1960s. Some of the old Central Churchmanship theological colleges closed and other embraced Liberalism. With the general drift in the Church of England and the Episcopal Church towards liberal, and later Revisionist, theology and an acceptance of the permissive society, it made it easy for what should have been the next generation of Central Churchmanship clergy to give it up and go Liberal. Of course, Central Churchmen and Central Churchwomen have not disappeared, but they do seem to be overlooked these days.

In my next few posts I am going to talk a little bit about "Central Churchmanship" and why I think it should be taken seriously. Also, if the chance presents itself, I will also take the time to comment occasionally on worship, contemporary issues, and maye even write a little about my hobbies and interests.