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American Anglican Church | |
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Abbreviation | AAC |
Classification | Protestant |
Orientation | Anglican (including Anglo-Catholic, High, Broad, Low, and Evangelical churchmanships) |
Scripture | Holy Bible |
Theology | Anglican Doctrine |
Polity | Episcopal |
Governance | Synodical |
Presiding Bishop | John Herzog |
Associations | Province of the Good Sheperd |
Full communion | United Anglican Church Province II |
Liturgy | Book of Common Prayer 1928 U.S. (official) Book of Common Prayer 1662 (authorized) Anglican Missal American Edition (authorized) English Missal (authorized)Contents |
Headquarters | Holy Innocents Anglican Church, New York, United States (de facto headquarters) |
Territory | United States |
Origin | Late 1990s New York, United States |
Separations | St. Stephen's Independent Anglican Church (2018) St. John's Community Church (2019) St. Matthew's Anglican Church (2020) |
Official website | http://www.americananglicanchurch.org |
Slogan | Lord Direct Us |
The American Anglican Church (AAC) is a Continuing Anglican jurisdiction that counts at present thirteen parishes and missions in North America, many of which serve the Kenyan diaspora population (in the United States). It was founded later in the history of the Continuing Anglican movement, ultimately deriving from controversies in the Episcopal Church. These were over the ordination of women to the priesthood, liberal or progressive theology, and a new revision of the Book of Common Prayer (adopted in 1979). Holy Innocents Anglican Church in New York serves as the AAC headquarters.
The American Anglican Church was founded as the product of an internal reorganization of the now defunct American Anglican Church of the Anglican Synod in the late 1990's, following unclear governance circumstances.
The American Anglican Church is a product of the Continuing Anglican movement and its doctrines are generally within the orthodoxy of that movement. It summarizes its doctrine, discipline, and worship in its mission statement:
We believe the Holy Scriptures of the Old and New Testaments to be the Word of God; The Creeds (as the standard of faith) mean exactly what they say; Christian morality of the New Testament is the sole guide of faith and practice. [1]
The denomination assents to the Affirmation of St. Louis, though was not organized at the time.
The American Anglican Church has one theological seminary. St. Andrew's Institute of Theology is an unaccredited seminary. [2]
While not a correspondence school, there is no physical seminary facility. Instruction is decentralized, and course work and teaching feedback come through a tutor system governed by the church. While courses are open to anyone, [2] the institute is primarily focused on training internal candidates for ordination.
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The following outline is provided as an overview of and topical guide to Christian theology:
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The Traditional Anglican Church (TAC), formerly the Traditional Anglican Communion, is an international church consisting of national provinces in the continuing Anglican movement, independent of the Anglican Communion and the Archbishop of Canterbury. The TAC upholds the theological doctrines of the Affirmation of St. Louis. Each of the respective jurisdictions utilizes a traditional Book of Common Prayer deemed to be free of theological deviation. Most parishioners of these churches would be described as being traditional Prayer Book Anglicans in their theology and liturgical practice. Some Anglo-Catholic parishes use the Anglican Missal in their liturgies. The TAC is governed by a college of bishops from across the church and headed by an elected primate.
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The September 14–16, 1977 Congress of St. Louis was an international gathering of nearly 2,000 Anglicans in St. Louis, Missouri, united in their rejection of theological changes introduced by the Anglican Church of Canada and by the Episcopal Church in the United States of America in its General Convention of 1976. Anglicans who attended this congress felt that these changes amounted to foundational alterations in the American and Canadian provinces of the Anglican Communion and meant that they had "departed from Christ's One, Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church." Theological liberalism, revisions to the Book of Common Prayer, and the ordination of women priests were not the only reasons for the split, but they were seen by these churches as evidence of the mainline church's departure from Anglican orthodoxy. The idea for a congress originated with the Reverend Canon Albert J. duBois in 1973 in preparation for the Louisville General Convention of the Episcopal Church. This congress was sponsored by the Fellowship of Concerned Churchmen, an organization founded in 1973 as a coordinating agent for laypeople and clergy concerned about the breakdown of faith and order within the Episcopal Church and the Anglican Church of Canada.
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