| Confessing Anglican Church | |
|---|---|
| Seal of the Confessing Anglican Church | |
| Abbreviation | CAC |
| Classification | Western Christian |
| Orientation | Convergence |
| Polity | Episcopal |
| Bishop Primus | G. Vijay Raju |
| Region | International |
| Origin | 2019 |
| Separated from | Communion of Evangelical Episcopal Churches |
| Congregations | 10,703 |
| Members | 2,100,000 |
| Bishops | 91 |
| Missionaries | 1,775 |
| Other name | Continuing Evangelical Episcopal Communion |
| Official website | ceec.church |
The Confessing Anglican Church (CAC) is a Christian denomination in the Convergence Movement, established in 2019. Originally known as the Continuing Evangelical Episcopal Communion, the denomination separated from the Communion of Evangelical Episcopal Churches. [1] The Confessing Anglican Church is led by Bishop Primus Vijay Raju of the Province of India. [2]
In October 2019, Communion of Evangelical Episcopal Churches adopted new regulations titled, Instruments of Unity. In November 2019, the Province of India within the communion began operating as the "Continuing Evangelical Episcopal Communion," adhering to the Communion of Evangelical Episcopal Churches previous canons. [3] [4] [5]
In February 2023, the Continuing Evangelical Episcopal Communion condemned the Church of England's general synod and the Archbishop of Canterbury regarding same-sex blessings. [6]
In August 2025, the Continuing Evangelical Episcopal Communion reconstituted itself as the "Confessing Anglican Church." [7]
As of December 2023, the denomination claimed an estimated 2,100,000 members, 10,703 churches and 91 bishops, 10,655 clergy, and 1,775 missionaries internationally. [8] According to its self-reported statistics, the denomination has become one of the largest within the Convergence Movement.
The Confessing Anglican Church adheres to the Apostles, Nicene, and Athanasian creeds as its statement of faith. [9] It also subscribes to the Jerusalem Declaration of the Global Fellowship of Confessing Anglicans and Global Anglican Future Conference. [10]
After three years of internal debate over the necessity of an overarching Canon Law, the CEEC.CHURCH's largest provinces have unanimously agreed to stand together. They continue to operate under their current version of Canon Law, adopted in 2016. In a decision guaranteeing the continued historicity and validation of the CEEC.CHURCH, 98% of original churches and clergy choose continuing communion and remain globally united, with only slight adaptation to their name.
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